Page Two THE DAILY TAR HEEL Saturday, March 18, 19: Cije Batlp Car Heel The official newspaper of the Publications Union Board of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Spring Holidays. En tered as second class matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. O, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $4.00 for the college year. Offices on the second floor of the Graham Memorial Building. Chas. G. Rose, Jr. Geo. W. Wilson, Jr R. D. McMillan, Jr.... ..Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Don Shoemaker, chairman; E. C. Daniel, Jr., John Alexander, Edith Harbour, B. B, Perry, A. T. Dill, Vergil J. Lee, V. C. Royster, W. A. Sigmon, Robert Berryman, F. P. Gaskins. CITY EDITORS Bob Woerner, Bill Davis, L. L. Hutch ison, W. R. Eddleman, J. D. Winslow, T. H. Walker, Donoh Hanks, Carl Thompson. DESK MEN Nelson Robbins errantry" the losing of oneself in a cause is characteristic of the Fascist movement. (Incidentally, it is interesting to note here the connotation of the term Socialist in the mind of the average American and the average Ger man. In this country there is a strong prejudice against the word ; whereas in Germany the word smacks so much of constructive reform and pro gressive, judicious legislation that even the Fas cists or Nazis arch enemies of Marxian doc trines, the foundation of Socialism have adopt ed the nom de politique of "National Socialists.") With the rise of the Hitlerites to power, we witness one more slap at the now almost tragi cally farcical catch-phrase we used in our de luded war-time romancing: "Making the World Safe for Democracy." Junkerism, universal mili tary service, re-armament, and Chauvanism are re-ascendent to mock at the ideals of -Woodrow It remains to be seen whether Hitler possesses FEATURE BOARD Joseph Sugarman, chairman; Nel- Wilson. A prospect of rampant nationalism and son Lansdale, Milton Stoll, Irving D. Suss, Eleanor saber-rattling from Germany now seems in the rphpts nPAPTMFMT-nnibnm rw. Bill Ander- offing; persecution of Jews and Communists will son, J. H. Morris, Lawrence Thompson, Morrie Long, be the order of the day, Crampten Trainer, Lane Fulenwider, Jimmy Me- Gurk. Jack Bessen. REPORTERS James B. Craighill, Raymond Barron, the ability to organize and to integrate the forces Walter Hargett, James W. Keel, D. M. Humphrey, 0f public opinion in his favor to compensate for Allsbrook. J. C. Murphy, Jack Lowe, W. C. Durfee, the lamentable conditions which prevail m the A. Stein. ' country. Harry Elmer Barnes has predicted a Business Staff Communist revolution following the Fascist re- CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Thomas Worth, Mgr. gime. In that case, it seems likely that unless OFFICE STAFF F. P. Gray, Ass't. Bus. Mgr; Ran- something radical is accomplished in the way rMAUZ,lvt f spiking the guns of German discontent, the Mgr.; W. B. Robeson; Want Ad Mgr.; L. E. Brooks, future appears extremely dark for European Armistead Maupm, J. T. Barnard, J. L. bprunt. rieacp V T L t t t nfwnrrTOTXTn cm A Trim TT T -.r A jJcciCt". V .tl .i-J. ler French, Esley Anderson, Joe Mason, J. Kalto ar- low, W. Smith. CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: T. H. WALKER Saturday, March 18, 1933 Tocsin President Frank Graham has sounded the toc sin in his appeal to the student body to enlist in the campaign against the proposed 42.8 per cent reduction in state appropriations laced on the University and public education. The problem posal that declares itself so frankly to be a panacea, and it is extremely doubtful that "The Long Plan" could be engineered past Congress. But aside from the extravagant claims of his Plan, it may be safely stated that we have not yet realized the extent to which the income tax can be used as a federal mea sure. Andrew Carnegie, for in stance, recognized this by his belief in a fifty per cent tax on income over one million dollars. Is Huey, as we are so prone to gather from his senatorial an tics, all "hooey?" A.T.D. vit 1 lines By Don Shoemaker Lacking in the Present System Claiming that they do not have "sufficient of the University administration has become the time" many professors are denying their stu- personal problem of every student in Chapel Hill. dents the innumerable benefits to be obtained In solving his own problem, the student will aid from weekly, or bi-monthly conferences. In the cause of public education in the state, which cases where the class enrollment is so large that in the present crisis threatens to reach a peril such an arrangement would be impossible, the ously low ebb unless immediate action is taken professors have an excuse for their neglect. But All students should have a part in that action when the number of students in the class is small by writing, not to their parents alone, but to enough to allow these conferences without un- friends throughout the state, defending public due trouble to the instructors, there is no reason education against the proposed drastic cut. The why they should not be encouraged. student on the campus now has an effective wea- As a matter of fact, as one nhilosonhv nrof es- V with which he 7 do battle with the forces sor has expressed it, the teachers owe it to their that endanger his very existence at the Univer- students to irive. them as much time in confer- Sltv- ences as the pupils themselves desire. But so Many parents of University students are not seldom are prof essors found who follow this pol- cognizant of the gravity of the situation iVv. that whpn the students are fortunate enough which confronts the University administration. to have such a teacher, they are at a loss to know By enlightening and winning the interest of these how to make the best use of the faculty-student People the student body will indirectly exert an conference. The ideal plan, of course, would be influence upon the General Assembly which may one whir armroaches the one used at Oxford. Pve efficacious in relieving the strain m the atmosnhere around the business office. Inter- with tutors. These tutors even live in the houses, ested persons in the state should be made to real as they are called, with the students, being ever that whereas educational institutions may be ready to confer with them on questions coming sadly disparaged or even abolished m insufficient up in their study. Recently Harvard has installed appropriation, a great liberal university is not a similar arrangement, and thus far it has proved fl species of phoenix which may arise again over most satisfactory " mt Irom its own asnes. It is entirely out of the question for the Uni- The University has acquired prestige over a versity of North Carolina to adopt such an ar- Penoa oi years m wmcn mnauons ana aepres rane-ement. For to do so would reauire an in- sions taken together have but given it a tradi crease in the number of faculty members as well tion of solidarity. These shall not perish now as a considerable increase in. the appropriation because a few near-sighted legislators have not from the state. A move of this sort at the pres- vision enough to see that in their frantic though ent time is entirely but of the question; earnest struggle to balance the budget tney are Tint. t. least the nrofessors here can make blindly attempting to undo in part all that has enough sacrifice of their time so as to allow regu- been achieved in the cause of literacy m the state lar student conferences. It is true that the stu- and in the south. Time after time the students dents are now at all times welcomed when they of the University have rallied to the call of their wish to confer with the instructors on various president and now, as in times past, they shall questions. There are numerous men in the stu dent body, however, who do not take advantage of this opportunity, and it is the part of the faculty members themselves to encourage these personal sessions. This can only be done by re quired faculty-student conferences. Actually there are three means by which stu Out of the Kegs By Christmas Beer by April ! That's what the boys in Washington have promised us. They first set it at 3.2 per cent, but the Senate thought that the folks back home could stand another cut of .15 per cent, the people being used to cuts. So beer will come back, a little weak from legisla tion and thirteen years stagnation. What worries this depart ment is the beer question in Chapel Hill. Will beer come to Chapel Hill in the balmy days of an April ?Spring? Where will it be sold? Will chapel hour be dope time or beer time? All these questions and many others will be answered on our next broad cast. not fail him. E.H.B. Not the Usual Huey The gentleman from Louisiana's newest prop aganda in favor of his schemes for a reorganiza tion of wealth distribution comes out under the j " i Kv name of "The Long Plan," which he explains ::::: .z,rr a pted handbm distributed through j j v , . , a rronnal tne mai1- Senator Huey's opening sentence is ture, and the third is by means of the personal . . a , T . . , T , j x... oo t promising enough: "With the one law which I mtci views uciwccii oiuucuu , , . n t j , , , lo za rt -nv. them propose to suDmit tne mmuie .ugiws uicclb, a deny the students this last plan is to roo tnem p- - ,u; u ...u- . a...., v,ft,v wawioi thmk most of our difficulties will be brought to oi an essentia unase ux txxxx wuuwvuui - development. an almost immediate end." In brief, the Kingfish proposes to tax away excess wealth. First, he wishes to levy a tax on fortunes above ten million dollars, graduated Spiking The Guns Amid the clamor and hubbub arising from our so that when a fortune of one hundred millions national financial crisis, the installation of a new is reached, the levy will take all the balance president, beer bills, and other occurrences of a above that sum. Secondly, there will be an in less formidable nature, can be heard the faint heritance tax, also graduated, which will pre rumblings of the major trends in the making of vent any person from inheriting a fortune over man's social history. five million dollars. And thirdly, he proposes a One of these trends has been the gradual more effective use of the income tax to the extent atrophy of the democratic spirit since the war. that no individual will be permitted to keep more This has been due usually, but 'not always, to than one million dollars from earnings of one the economic plight of the various nations. At year. Senator Huey estimates that "The Long the present time, the classic example is Germany. Plan will bring in to the Federal treasury ap- Beset by factionalism, stifled by the manifestly proximately fifteen million dollars per year. unfair treaty of Versailles, and plagued by eco- which revenue he proposes to spend mainly for nomic evils, Germany has turned to the fantastic public works, thus creating jobs for the unem Adolf Hitler in a desperate attempt -to achieve ployed. 'some sort of unified national policy. The highly After the technocracy fiasco, the American romantic appeal and the strong flavor of "knight- public will undoubtedly be more wary of a pro- iterature The four most popular vol umes in the Bull's Head in peda gogical circles are The Student Fraternity Murder, The Kennel Murder Case, The Red Castle Mystery, and Dr. Priestley Lays a Trap. The above mentioned quartet sees pretty active cir culation in faculty circles, al though we understand that the young professors don't care for mystery stories much; read more weighty works that im prove and stimulate the mind. Dr. Bell's Scotty pup nearly wrecked one of the volumes, The Student Fraternity Murder. which might mean something or other. Drs. Van Hecke. Hender son, Caldwell, Pearson, Howell, and Paine are the best mystery story fans, however. They all ike 'em slightly gory but in volved in plot. That's why Egyptian Cross fell out of favor with the professors. It was so gory it kept most of them awake nights, which is a bad thing for anybody in the English depart ment who teaches an eight-thir ty class. Or Carl Sandburg and William . Morris, Or Gertrude Stein and Latin's Horace, Or Robinson, Edward A. Or T. S. Eliot and Percy Mac- Kaye, Or Dotty Parker and Boden- heim Or Robinson Jeffers and Oppen- heim But if you must write modern trash May Allah keep you from Og den Nash. ' Autopsy By Robert Berryman Poesy The Poets' Corner got togeth er the other evening in the Caro lina Magazine office and discuss ed ways and means of penning prize-winning odes for Poetry, a college anthology which the Poets Guild will publish this summer at the World's Fair. A spy with a long red beard and a green hat, doing under cover "i- n -i i worn ior tnis department, re ports that there were about seven poets present (he couldn't be sure, 'cause his hair kept falling down over his eyes) , in cluding the folks who write about trees, old shoes, rain on tne window-pane, etc. He also says that the headquarters of the Poets Guild is on Christa dora street (New York), which is rather a poetic location. But we wish the poets well, ana send this little blessing: Success, success, to all you mivs Here's hoping you may win the prize With odes inspiring and sonnets witty To satisfy the Guild committee. IT inow aii can't write like Miss Millay, Or Bobby Frost and Steve Benet, NEXT TO GODLINESS? Several days ago, Joe Smith, University student, went to the Y. M. C. A. to get his laundry. His supply of clean shirts was almost gone, so he needed his last laundry bundle of the term. Now, the laundry department is in the habit of refunding the balance of each student's laun dry deposit in the lobby of the Y, and of distributing the last bundles by having each student call at another room in the Y and paying cash. Joe Smith had no cash money for the banks were closed, and, besides, he rarely had much cash money at any time, for he was a self-help student and lived from hand to mouth. When he went to the desk where he was accustomed to .re ceiving his refund check, he found it unoccupied. Instead, there was a huge ugly sign : RE FUNDS WILL NOT BE MADE UNTIL CLOSE OF BANK HOLIDAY. The laundry owed him ap proximately three dollars as a refund he was a thrifty boy, and washed many of his clothes in his own room. He went to the window to receive his laun dry bundle and found another sign, equally huge and equally ugly. It read: "Unless Spring term registration slip is pro duced, laundry packages will be held for cash." Joe Smith, by the University schedule was not due to register for three days but he needed a clean shirt now. He asked the price of his bundle. "Eighty- eight cents," he was told. "You owe me about three dol lars," Joe said to the stern and unbeautiful woman with pencil stuck in her hair, the laundry's representative, "Couldn't you let me have my bundle and take the eighty-eight cents out of the three dollars which you have of mine?" "No," said the unsmiling laundry sentinel. So, Joe Smith, dejected at having to wear his not-so-clean shirt three days more, shuffled out of the Y's front door . . J There were many Joe Smiths last week. It is doubtful that their plight will cause the least of pangs to the hearts of those who live from the laundry's bounty. Joe Smiths are an un complaining lot; they are philo sophicthey could not be other wise and yet remain in school as self-help students. But if the laundry persists in its high-handed and unsym pathetic attitude, assumed not only in this example of stupid ity but in many other casts, some day, some one will rise to complain of it so vigorous!.-, that the laundry's back will be broken, and it can no longer act as high mogul of the required deposit of $8.50 per term of each student. Let us pray that that "some day" and that that "some one'' come soon to relieve us. NEGRO WILL SUE FOR ADMITTANCE INTO UNIVERSITY (Continued from first page) state. C. A. McCoy and C. 0. Pear son, attorneys, and S. C. Cole man, newspaper writer, were the first openly to announce themselves as sponsoring the movement. McCoy and Pearson drafted Hocutt's petition. They announced last month that they would make a formal applica tion for the admittance of Ne groes at the University and in timated that they would carry the fight to court if necessary. In the petition filed Wednes day, Hocutt alleged that he for mally demanded admission to the school of pharmacy and was denied on the grounds that he was a Negro. This action, the plaintiff maintains, was "wrong ful and fragrant violation and contravention of the constitu tional rights of the plaintiff as guaranteed to him by Act I, sec tions 17 and 27, of the Constitu tion of North Carolina and Amendment XIV, section 1, of the constitution of the United States." . Hocutt qualifies himself as "a person of African descent, - oi good moral character, twenty four years of age, and possess ing the necessary scholastic pre requisites for registration and admission to the University of North Carolina." -An order requiring that Ho cutt be admitted to the Univer sity or cause be shown why he should not be was placed in the hands of Judge M. V. Barnhill remained unsigned last night. The University and Dr. Thomas J. Wilson, Jr., registrar, were named defendants in the action. R. R. CLARK Dentist Office over Bank of Chapel Hill PHONE 6251 Have you thought of making DENTISTRY YOUR LIFE WORK? The Harvard University Dental School offers a comprehensive course in this field of health service, which is becoming in creasingly important in relation to medicine and public health. A "Class A" school. Write for catalog Leroy M. S. Miner, D.M J M.D., Dean, Dept. 28, 188 Longwood Ave., Boston, Mass. 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