Page Two THE TAR HEEL Thursday; March 24, 19? tSI)C to tyttl Leading Southern College Tri weekly Newspaper Member of North Carolina Collegiate Press Association . Published three times every week of the college year, and is the official newspaper of the Publications Un ion of the University of North Car olina. Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscript tion price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out 01 town, for the college year. Offices in the basement of Alumni Building. Telephone 403. J. T. Madey.............. .........Editor F. F. SiMON..,.........i?M$iness Mgr. Editorial Department Managing Editors J. F. Ashby.. Li. ..Tuesday Issue Byron White.-...-.Thursday Issue L. H. McPHERSON.......Saturday Issue D. D. CarrolL..... Assistant Editor J. R. Bobbitt, Jr Assignment Editor J. H. Anderson J. M. Block Walter Creech ( J. R. DeJournette E. J. Evans D. S. Gardner Glen P. Holder ' John Marshall H. L. Merritt T. W. Johnson Staff W. P. PeTy J. P. Pretlow T. M. Reece D. T. Seiwell S. B. Shephard, Jr, J. Shohan F. L. Smith W. S; Spearman Wm. H. Windley Henry Lay i Business Department W. W. Neal, Jrlj4t. to Bus. Charles Brov G. W. Ray- Mgr. Collection Mgr. : Accountant Managers of Issnea Tuesday Issue : -W. Thursday Issue Saturday Issue R. Hill James Styles -Edward Smith Advertising Department Kenneth R. Jones Advertising Mgr. Yeung M. Smith Asst. Adv. Mgr. U. W. Breman- Local Adv. Mgr. William K. Wiley Ben Schwartz G. W. Bradham C. J. Shannon Oates McCullen Edwin V. Durkaa J. H. Mebane M. Y. Feimster Walter McConnell A. J. McNeill Cirenlation Department Henry C. Harper Circulation Mgr. R. U. Mulder J uer of Issues C. W. Colwell Tom Raney Douglas Boyce W.i W. Turner You can purchase any article adver tised in the Tax Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver tises is guaranteed to be as repre sented. The Tar Heel solicits ad vertising from reputable concerns Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. Thursday, March 24, IP 27 PARAGRAPHICS Thes nominations last night for student offices settled the' ques tion of "who is going to run." Now for the next two weeks members of the student body will hear more appealing and elo quent speeches and feel more pats on the back than during any other fortnight of the year. Scientists are always getting their share of the blame for ev erything that goes wrong. Some people blame them for every thing from births to earth quakes. One minister, speak ing from his pulpit last Sunday in a nearby town, attributed happenings of today, particular ly the large number of student suicides, to ,the smattering of science taught in many of the educational institutions. "Teach a child of 10 that he is only a high class monkey ; and when he is 18 teach him, as the Behav iorists do, that he is not a soul arid is not even a person, and that there is no such thing, as spirit, either human or Divine in the universe, and you lay the foundations for infidelity, pessi mism and suicide," said the min ister. Pity the poor scientist! Paree will have on the state of affairs. The five students who were ex pelled from the University of Georgia a few days ago for pub lishing The Iconoclast at that in stitution have declared that they will continue to publish the journal in a town near the uni versity. ; The paper appeared on the campus for the first time a week ago, containing articles criticizing the policies and meth ods of certain departments of the university and charged that athletes were "bought" by the use of scholarships. The facul ty and chancellor decided that the publication was "disrespect ful and scurrilous, if not actual ly libelous," The Carolina Faun and Yellow Journal appear to have a competitor in the south ern field. ' KIRBY PAGE SAYS WARS MUST GO Editor of the World Tomorrow Believes Universal Peace Is Today's Problem. CAN SET A HIGH MARK Propinquity of the two sexes is marring the real purpose of the Floating University, accord ing to members of the faculty f the Ryndam, which is carry ing the drifting school around the world. The ship seems to be too highly permeated with ro mance. Twelve engagements, two marriages and countless ourtships on board the vessel five cause enough for the au thorities to segregate the sexes in an attempt to inculcate learn ing. The university is now in the French capital, and we are just wondering what effect gay An institute on human rete tions furnishes an approach to problems of whatever magni tude is desired. The prospect is virtually limitless. It is presum ed that the experiment at Chap el Hill this week has well defin ed objectives and therefore will confine itself to restricted areas Certainly the quality of the men who are placed on the program to. start the discussions is high enough to insure 'an intelligent eadership, and if there is suf ficient response , this institute can' set a high mark in North Carolina. There is satisfaction here in he evident emphasis to be devot ed to problems relating to the negro. Men 01 the calibre of W. C. Jackson, W. W. Alexander and James Weldon Johnson, with the special knowledge in the field that they possess, can add in this state to the new realiza tion of the capacities of the race and therefore to the shifting re- ation of the white race to it. The attention likewise to be given to international affairs is a similar response to the slowly but surely changing attitude which has marked all American thought in the years since the war. Here are two great fields where -conventional theories have been upset by the progress of actual events. It is no long er possible to deny to the race the opportunity, to develop when the race is. proving every day that it can develop ; and it is no longer possible to think of American affairs in relation only America itself when the whole course of world history has drawn this country far closer to other continents than anyone had a right to prophesy a dozen years ago. These realizations sink in slowly. But they appear now as inevitable as anything that can be seen in the future. An insti tute, intelligently planned and directed, can , make a material contribution to .the thought of the state ; . can serve to break down prejudices, shake ; out worn conventions and question mental attitudes, and that is al ways worth while. Greensboro Daily News. Georgians Thrown Out "War is a question of today, declared Kirby Page, editor of The World Tomorrow, speaking before a fair-sized audience for the Human Relations Institute in Memorial Hall Monday eve ning, "and it is the problem of every citizen to aid in its out lawry by building up a public opinion which will compel gov ernmental action . for an inter national agency for settlement of disputes, by building attitudes that will help people to use the agencies when created, by tear ing down the attitudes, tempers and hatreds which lead to war and by tearing down the machin ery of war by disarmament, In his opening remarks, Mr. Page asserted the paradox that although all men hate war as the greatest enemy of civiliza tion, still there are "wars and rumors of wars." He stated that although economic interests are the avowed cause of wars, there would be no wars if economic causes alone operated, for these can be settled off the battlefield, Political factors centering in nationalism have always entered in and the cause of war is a com plicated combination of national interest, national sovereignty, national honor, and national pa triotism. He denounced war as a ghast ly failure in that it fails to solve the problems ' for which it was undertaken, namely, to protect life, to preserve honor, to protect money and property, and to set tle disputes. It destroys the lives of thousands of innocent people in order to protect a few other innocent people. It does not preserve honor, as nothing is more disnonoraDie tnan tne practices of war. It obviously destroys money and property and fails to settle disputes by leaving matters a thousandfold worse than in the beginning. The evidence is conclusive, he stated, that in all four respects war as a means is a miserable failure, Mr. Page maintained that the need of the world at large for the settlement of disputes is that same threefold method as in gov ernment legislation, adminis tration, and' judication. There must be an' agency through which nations may make agree ments which when ratified will become international law. There must be an . international agen cy to carry out agreements, and an international institute or court to tell us what the agree ments mean. He cited the League of Nations and the World Court as having made , remarkable strides in the direction of inter national understanding. ; ' BARNES WINS LATIN PRIZE FOR WILSON Roxboro High School Rates Sec ond With Highest Average. The third .annual .Latin con test, held under the auspices of the Latin Department of the University and the University Extension Division, was won by Harper Barnes representing the Wilson high school. The judges announced their decision this week after some time spent in correcting and comparing the papers submitted They declared that the papers as a whole were very good and that a great deal of interest had been shown in the high schools throughout the state. The best paper of the lot was submitted by Harper Barnes who won the contest for Wilson The highest average for the three papers submitted was that 'jtr Roxboro high school. First honorable mention won for Roxboro high school by Wm D. Merritt, Jr. Second honorable mention won for Shelby high school by Maude Rollins. Third honorable mention won for Shelby high school by Milan Bridgers. Fourth honorable mention won for Roxboro high school by Edwin Long, Jr. In addition to the schools mentioned above, the following high schools sent in at least one paper the grade of which was ninety lor better: Asheville, Charlotte, Concord, Greensboro, Morganton'. The judges of the contest were the members of the Latin De partment: Dr. George Howe: Dr. G. A. Harrer, Prof. S. G, Sanders, and M. H. Griffin. Two Dances This Week-End Horses will become extinct, say scientists. It will not hap pen soon enough to be any re- ief to the Prince of Wales. Charged with "disrespectful and scurrilous, if not actually libelous" attacks made upon the trustees and heads of several departments at the University of Georgia, the three edi tors, business manager and circula tion manager of the new independent newspaper, "The Iconoclast," were di rected by Chancellor Charles if. Shell ing to withdraw from the University. The chancellor announced his ac tion after considering a report of a special faculty committee which in vestigated the publication. The news paper appeared a short time ago, crit icizing the policies and matters of certain departments and charged, that athletes were bought through the use of scholarships. . New England is a slok, backward, unenterprising section which didn't have a single bank failure last year. Dallas News. If a rich man can't get a seat in the Senate, and a poor man can't get - elected, perhaps the thing will be abolished. Detroit News. ' - World peace will come when nobody wants to fight any of t ener than a world's champion does. San Diego Union. (Continued from page one) for the many functions which will mark the spring social sea son. The Buccaneers have been engaged to play for the unlucky number dance. The Sigma Chis are scheduled to keep the ball rolling with a dance at their house Saturday night.- invitations have been sent to the campus, and the Duke University chapter of. the fra ternity will be honored guests at the affair.- Kike Kyser and His Orchestra will play. The dance planned at Duke for the afternoon of the same day has been postponed. Class Nominees Cause of Little Stir in Politics (Continued from page one) , the men to run for the offices Half of those at the meeting were prospective candidates and the other half were there to make the nominations. Speeches were eliminated by common consent of the class members; each name was mere ly put in nomination. -, 'Those receiving the nomina tions were : President,. Red Ellison, Steve FOR RENT Single room two blocks from Postoffice, All modern conven iences. , Apply , to Mrs. J. E. Lear, 2 Cobb Terrace. Good enough for Dad . good enough ' for you it- : vrs Edgeworth Furches; Student council repre sentative, Buster Manning, Ty Crabtree; Vice-president, Soap Sandlin, Buck Carr; Secretary, Henry Brown, Bill Wall; treas urer, Lincoln Kesler Edison Foard. ' Freshman Nominations s Members of the rising sopho more class, meeting in Gerrard Hall Tuesday night, nominated class officers for the general elec tions to be held April 6. A fair ly large crowd was present, and keen interest was evinced in the nomination speeches. Nominees for president were Jack Ward, Jimmie Ward, Pat Patterson, and D. L. McBryde. Bill Adams, Nelson Callahan and Sam McNeely were nomin ated for student council repre sentative. Vice-presidential nom inees were Phil Jackson and Marion R. v Alexander. Men nominated for Secretary were Jack Watson, Chick Perry, and John Thornton. J. F. Wiley and D. L. Moore were nominated for treasurer. TV u T hy Razors Seem Sharper with Williams TTTHEN you lather up with Williams Shaving V V Cream you do a real job of beard-softening. For Williams lather is saturated with moisture . moisture which sdaks the stubble so soft that razors - justg& through That's why there's no razor "pull" with Williams, why all razors seem sharper. In 35c and 50c tubes at all dealers, Villioms Shaving Cream rpn f , No use trying to rise and shine . while you''e keeping yourself half - dead from self - generated poisons. 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