4 fc. 3 i J ii t! rflje Poetics '1 IJ . -JttUJ. wttl. iOf Bootinz ... - Published daily during the college , year except Mondays and except Thanksgiving, . Christinas and - Spring Holidays. - The official newspaper of the Publi cations Union of the University f North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C Subscription price, $2,00 local and $4.00 out of town, for the college year. , Offices in the Building. basement of Alumni Glenn Holder. ...-...- -Editor Will Yarboeotj g H..31gr. Editor Marion Alexander... Bus. Mgr. Hal y. Worth .Circulation Mgr. ASSOCIATE EDITORS John Mebane ' Harry Gafland ASSISTANT EDITORS , Robert Hodges - J." D. McNairy Joe Jones B. C. Moore J. C. Williams ; CITY EDITORS E. F. Yarborough K. C. Ramsay Elbert Denning - J. E. Dangan SPORTS EDITOR Henry L. Anderson ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS Browning RoachJ J. G. Hamilton, Jr. REPORTERS Holmes Davjs Kemp Yarborough Louis Brooks Clyde Deitz Charles Rose Mary Price J. P. Tyson Nathan Volkman E. C. Daniel W. A. Shulenberger G. E. French, Sadler Hayes George "She'ram Frank Manheim B. H. Whitton JM. Little Bill Arthur George Wilson Harold Cone Jack Bessen EveraTd Shemwell JTed Newland Jack Riley John Patric J. J. Dratler W. W. Taylor Vass Shepherd B. H. Barnes -. M. M. Dunlap Howard M. Lee George Barber BUSINESS STAFF Ashley Sea well Tom Badger John Jemi son , "Harry Latta inu opeigm wonam. aeaweu COLLECTION MANAGERS J. C. Harris T. R. Karriker Stuart Carr Thursday, January 30, 1930 Donald Seawell ' PURLOINED PARAGRAPHS It's fair enough. The wife eager to mend your ways is also the kind that mends your .clothes. Selected Webster crossed his 1 Washington crossed the Delaware And co-eds cross their knees. Idaho Argonaut. Our linotype operator is. having quite a time finding names for , his twins. We suggest Etaoin and Shrdlu, both words being used quite -often by linotype operators, and originated by them. Augusta (Kan.) Gazette. The Prince of Wales, who once de tested public speaking and found it difficult to do, has buckled down to it in earnest, and now finds it easy, he says. As easy, you might say, as falling off a horse. New York Eve ning Post. , Dean Bradshaw's Reply In the Readers' Opinion col umns of this page, Dean of Stu dents Francis F. Bradshaw an swers an editorial which ap peared in yesterday's issue, en titled "Dean Bradshaw and the Duke-Carolina Question." In his reply Dean Bradshaw points out that an incorrect interpretation was placed upon "a series of ad dresses which he delivered in chapel recently. Although we were not present when Dean Bradshaw made the chapel talks, we conversed with several persons who were in the audiences, and whom we con sidered representative of the en tire group. We accepted the im pressions of the addresses ex pressed by these men as indica tive of those of the entire audi ences. It is significant that all " these impressions were identi cal. - 'r - We do not question Dean Bradshaw's motives or the soundness of his views in the least. Indeed, we consider him a man of very high ideals and excellent ideas. But we believe that his recent chapel talks con-1 will be with us always; .human cerning Duke-Carolina relations nature will never be won over to were misinterpreted by a large the standardized virtue of the proportion of those who heard Horatio Alger hero, and boys them, and it was with these in- will always be boys. But boot terpretations that wertook issue Jng has been lifted to an art on- in yesterday's editorial. One of the most widespread f collesriate isractiW in the mm J try is that particularly virulent expression of weak human na ture known as booting. Al though possibly the habit is "not known by that term in other sections of the country, the cus tom itself is known every where. The Stanford University graduate and the boy from the Universityjof Maine can meet on the common' ground of this evil, either in a defiant practice or a mutual condemnation of it. Northwestern and Texas, Mc Gill and, no doubt, the Univer sity of Mexico, all have their booters, their lax individuals who practice this futile art in an efforf to obtain grades with out labor. ' The booter, or tuber as he is called in some colleges, occupies a peculiar position in the esteem of his fellow classroom suffer ers. Some undergraduates, em bryo diplomats or floorwalkers, compel a grudging admiration for their skillfulness inj;his in sidious practice. It is their habit never, to study, never to spend any energy, even to the extent of carrying a book to class. This, in their opinion, is only a needless encumbrance, and they come to class empty handed as well as empty headed where the lesson is concerned, anyhow and by listening with an apparently careful attention and ah intelligent interest re flected on, their countenances they distinguish themselves in Si. ' 1 - . ...' . a group oi more or less serious students who are frankly bored. They have thereby ingrained themselves, superficially at least, in- the mass of faces borne in mind by the instructor for that quarter. - But this is not enough for the clever booter. To insure success he draws from a mental back ground obtained by some means and engages in serious but re spectful controversies with the instructor. By this 'conduct he not only creates the illusion of having an intelligent interest in the subject, but at the same time he has brought - out his mental machinery and hodge podge of erudition for the bene fit of the instructor who can not help but be impressed. There are other ways of prac ticing this particular form of pulling the wool overa teacher's eyes, methods less clever and more represensiole. lne same students who delight in the ex hibition of the highest, type of booter have only contempt for that, species who stays after class to flatter the instructor, and who hang on to every word uttered by him as if it were in deed a pearl cast to them as swine. This type of individual usually does not succeed in his lowly intention; there are few instructors who cannot pierce the insincerity and shallow hy pocrisy of this attitude. When a booter of: this category does achieve success, however, the rest of the class is justified in its annoyance. This "yes man" booter is sim ilar to . his brother of the third and last distinctive class the sympathy seeker. The sym pathy seeker is an uncomfort able species, usually a poor freshman who has not yet adap ted himself to the requirements of a. university and, seeing him self falling behind, 'becomes frightened and pours out a tale of woe to the annoyed instructor in a futile attempt to avoid the consequences of his own incom petence. It is the last two types that jhave given booting its unpleas ant connotation. The practice ;ly by those individuals of the THE DAILY." first species; the others, which predominate, have made the Practice .what it is commonly thought of, and as such it de- serves only contempt. R. H. Give lis ' Simpler Laws . "The administration of crim inal justice in the United States is a disgrace to civilization." These are the words of William Howard Taft, chief justice of the ' United States supreme court. We have too many laws which are not lawsin the strict sense of the term. Laws jenacted a century ago remain on the sta tute books, even though they are ! no longer applicable to modern conditions. A citizen can hardly go about his daily business with out violating some law of which he has jiever heard and 'which nobody obeys. In the state of Connecticut it is illegal to travel on the road, or the railroad on Sunday. This law was, of course, formulated under the strictest of Puritanical condi tions in the earliest days of the commonwealth. That it should still ornament the statute books of, Connecticut is ridiculous. But the fact of the existence of the law makes Sunday travel on the highways and railroads il legal just the same. Until quite recently it was illegal in the state of New York to Operate a motor-propelled vehicle on " a highway, unless a man on horse back carrying a red flag or a lantern rode a quarter of a mile ahead of it! Such archaic laws are to be found in every state of the union. Congress and - state legisla tures are continually trying ,.to "make" laws. The number is steadily increasing. Why not erase the old, archaic ones as the new ones are accepted ? Law makers seem to ignore the fact that no law can be classed as a good one, unless the people whom it affects agree that it is a good one. We are told that in the early days of popular lawmaking people gather to tell each other what the law was in their dis tricts, the law being rules of conduct agreed upon by com mon consent. The all too prevalent idea that a congress or a legislature has the right to impose an unpopu lar law is a reversion to the old myth of the divine right of kings. The mere fact that a law is old is no proof that it is a goodjone. Times and conditions change, but the law habitually lags behind. As a result of this, law "and justice often mean two different things. Poor, hon est men often hesitate to go to the courts, in search of justice and redress of ""wrongs. They fear legal technicalities which have no relation to justice, but which have a very definite rela tion to the money-making tac tics of lawyers. The coinage of injustice into profit is the great stumbling-block in the way of the impartial administration of criminal justice in the United States. r.; A law ought tobe based on common sense and ought to be so plain and simple that any man with an average sense of fair play could tell, without asking a lawyer, whether he was violat ing the law or not. Although such a system would diminish the profits of lawyers consider ably, it has many good features. Public opinion would keep us all on the right side, or punish us severely when we overstepped the dividing line. J. C. W. Miss Kutz Visiting Here Miss Abilene Kutz of Fayette yille "is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur S. Kutz this week. Miss Kutz will go from here to Black stone, Va., where she will attend the initiation and parties of the Kappa Delta Phi and Delta Psi Omega sororities of Blackstone College. " TAR HEL Readers' Opinions DEAN BRADSHAW TO THE EDITOR Dear Glenn: " - Inasmuch as I have many friends at Duke University with whom I have both business and social relations, may I ask that you restore me to their confi dence? . ' ' - Q " - Your editorial of January 29, based on second-hand reports of my chapel talk, ""completely re verses the significance of that talk. My whole point was that the most effective way for this student body to improve body to improve the plane of athletic rivalry between the two institutions was forUs to make the effort required to raise our own standards of com petition, and trust the other group to respond with a similar, or greater, elevation of stan dards. Essentially this would mean that in addition to ath letic rivalry we would add rival ry in courtesy, sportsmanship, and good taste. I still feel that this would be the most practical and imme diately effective step toward progress. To take it, need not exclude the desirability .of a banquet or smoker such as has been suggested. The fact, how ever, that auditors of this par ticular chapel talk received such an erroneous impression as they did, illustrates the .difficulty of improving the situation by pub lic discussion of it. Let me urge, however, that in your effort to better our rela tions with any sister institution I should like to be counted your ally and be called down prompt ly, if I seem to be against your policy, of inter-collegiate good will and mutual respect. Sincerely yours, Francis F. Bradshaw. January 29, 1930. Student Naturalist Acquires Live Alli gator for Collection (Continued from-first page) the two slept any during the rest of the night. .. So yesterday the reptile's mas ter had a fifty-inch tin tank con structed and installed. Now Ran dolph floats contentedly in his poolj while the snake doctor sleeps or studies in peace. However, the alligator is by no means become tame and tract able. If placed upon the floor he will hiss and scramble about, and if anyone approaches he opens wide his yellow-f anged mouth, hisses shrilly, and blows bubbles out of -his eyes. He is extremely hard to . handle and it takes a very firm grip to hold on to him. Concerning the future of Ran dolph his roommate says, "At my home in Charlotte we have an artificial pond which is going to be his private swimming pool. I'll take him home with me the next time I go, and he'll get along fine there. Of course I'll have to muzzle him to keep -him from catching the goldfish, but we'll see that he gets plenty to eat. We also have an indoor pool where Randolph will enjoy spending the winter. The Show-Off Will Be x Given Here Tonight Continued from first page) ' boresome bluff, his 'loud rever berating 'barber-shop laugh,' he is not without his own peculiar charm. - " ; The cast ' is as follows : .. d.Iara, George ,Wjlcox ; Mrs. Fisher, Penelope ; Alexander ; Amyr Sara Falkener ; Frank Hyland, Eveland Davies; Mr. Fisher, Joseph p. Fox; Joe, Whitner .Bissell; 'Aubrey Piper, Richmond P. Bond ; Mr. Gill, DescumB. Roberts ; Mr. Rogers, George E. Stone. Campus Snapshot -f- . 1 J. C. WUliams Venturing from Chapel Hill into the surrounding country one passes from an atmosphere of progress into one of decay, i In the" village are new build ings, thriving businesses, traffic lights, the talkies, and the bright activity of youth. In the neigh boring wooded hills, mill-wheels rot by the streams; cabins,! empty and deserted crumble to ruins; wagon trails become dim and are obliterated by "weeds and vines; cotton patches are overrun with cockleburs and tall grass, then brush, finally to be come merged with the woods again. ' - Of course this is not true of the land bordering the high ways leading out of Chapel Hill ; nor is it true of all the land alongside the by-roads, there being some reasonably prosper ous farms in this part of Orange county. ut one cannot walk far in the woods without com ing upon the abandoned places, the" quiet,., dilapidated farm houses, the. clearings grown up in blackberry brambles and tall, waving grasses. , That great wooded tract lying between the Hill and Morgan's creek has its quota ; of such places. They are hidden away in the woods, and one out walk ing stumbles' upon them by ac cident. . On the hillside sloping southward to the creek is one of these places. Approaching from the north the traveler comes over the creek into one of these places. Approaching from any other direction one comes sud denly from thick woods into the clearing. - , , , The weatherboarded house has four rooms, a low porch in front, and a summer kitchen at the back. Clustered about it are a few elms, an oak, and a walnut." The little field is deep in orchard grass, but there is a scraggly peach tree, and tumble-down ar- bor of scuppernong vines, as well as a thicket of wild plum. All traces of cotton, tobacco, or any field crop are quite gone. Inside are a couple of open fireplaces, and near at hand .is plenty of wood. To be sure there are no chairs, but who has not sat on the floor before an open fire? The little porch is a most pleasant place to recline in the sunshine if the day is warm. 2 For drink there is a spring about fifty yards away. A wood ed ravine leads from its source to the creek far below, and down thisthe stream splashes over the rocks in a thousand white cascades. This is a very beau tiful spot, and albeit hard by the clearing it has a complete air of remoteness. Perhaps the empty house but serves to deepen the solitude. . There, are dozens of such places within a mile or two of Chapel Hill. They are worth searching out and learning to know. Each cabin' has about it some of that forlorn , charm which forsaken country places invariably possess. It is a fas cination that draws the explor ing hiker across the threshold, makes him go through each empty room, to peer into every closet, and at last to pause and wonder about the people who once dwelt there why they went away, and what has be come of them. There are now neckties made! of class which rrm h 101 n a ! conventionally-as anything made 'of silk or cotton. - ; ! i li? Il i h M J y, Janxnry 30, 1930 WILL OF CECIL RHODE CHANGED BYPAMMENT Candidates For Rhodes Scholar ships To Be Selected From Districts Instead Of States. SIX STATES TO DISTRICT Following action by the Brit ish Parliament in changing the will of the late Cecil Rhodes, the Rhodes scholarship cornrnit tee announced that instead of selecting students from indivi dual states for study in; Eng land the scholarships will be awarded from districts. Under the former plan each state was entitled to a scholarship two out of every three years. The re cent changes divides the country into eight districts. The British parliament made the change in Rhode's will at the request of the trustees. Frank Aydelotte, president of Swarthmore who is - American Secretary of the Rhodes Trust, suggested the change as he be lieved that regional plan would improve the standard of ap pointees. - The regional plan of distribu tion is based on ; the following grouping of the states : 1. New England . Maine , New Hampshire Vermont Massachusetts Rhode Island - -- Connecticut V 2. Middle Atlantic " New York New Jersey Pennsylvania ; Delaware Maryland-D. C. West Virginia 3South Virginia : North Carolina South Carolina Georgia ' Florida Tennessee ... - 4. Great Lakes Michigan . Wisconsin V Illinois' Indiana v Ohio Kentucky 5. Middle West Minnesota South Dakota Nebraska Iowa ; Missouri Kansas 6. Gulf Alabama Mississippi Louisiana Texas '' Oklahoma Arkansas 7. Southwest California Nevada ' Utah : , Arizona -Colorado New Mexico 8. Northwest v ' Washington Oregon ' Idaho Montana Wyoming North Dakota French Credit Notice All freshmen who have re ceived tentative credit for French 3 or 4 will see Mr. Thom as J. Wilson, III, in room 309, Murphey, during chapel period any morning except Friday. These men will be required to take an examination in order to receive credit for the course in which they are conditioned. . Miss Batts Is Well Mis3 Catherine Batts, secre tary to the department of ro mance languages, is now back on duty after having been ill for the past week. " A i w C4, i