Saturday, ISovember 16, 1929 0 THE DAILY TAR HEEL GI) Dail? Gat icl Published daily during the - college year except Mondays-and except Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. ' -h ' TVia ffifinl TiP-w!Tia-ner of the Publi- ; -cations Union of the University of ' XT-r. Pn-rnliTiij fTha-npl Hill. N. C. , 11U1VU X r - Subscription price, $2.00 local and- ?4.0U out oi town, ior uie cuuegc year. Offices in Building the ' basement of Alumni Glenn Holder Editor Will Yarborough.. Mgr. Editor Marion Alexander Bus. Mgr. ASSOCIATE EDITORS John Mebane . Harry Galland ASSISTANT EDITORS J. El win Dungan J. D. McNairy Joe Jones C. Moore J. C. Williams CITY EDITORS E. F. Yarborough K. C. Ramsay Elbert Denning Sherman Shore SPORTS EDITOR Henry L. Anderson ASSISTANT -SPORTS EDITORS Joe Eagles Crawford McKethan REPORTERS Howard Lee Holmes Davis Louis Brooks Kemp Yarborough Mary Price J. P. Tyson Browning Roach Al Lansford Joe Carpenter . Peggy Lintner E. C. Daniel W. A. Shulenberger G. E. French Frank Manheim Mary M. Dunlap Clyde Deitz George Sheram Robert Hodges John Lathan B. H. Whitton Nathan Volkman George Stone George Vick Jack -Riley T. E. Marshall R. T. Martin J. S. Weathers l J. J ! mania was carried to extra ordinary lengths here. , When the Marine Band played" in Kenan stadium Thursday after noon, scores of students made the difficult and dangerous as cent of the huge barb wire fence, tumbled to the ground on the inside, and crawled on their bellies like mongrel dogs to . the shielding screen of the fringe of cedar bushes which . surrounds the stands. There they groveled until the performance was over, although they could have se cured good seats and enjoyed the concert in respectable fashion by the payment of an inconsiderable sum. Again Thursday night the gate-crashers were on the job. They attempted to rush t -the doors of the Tin Can during the intermission : after their at tempts to massacre a few gate keepers were thwarted, they vented their, spleen by shower ing bricks and clubs against the tin walls of the structure, mean while hurling all manner of un complimentary epithets at . the student doormen. - The University's famed light of learning seems to have pene trated only feebly into the cran iums of these habitual student gate-crashers, if at all. Chances are so solid as to defy penetra tion anyway. Stanley Weinberg Saturday, November 16, 1929 Tar Heel Topics "Fruit fly conclave in Wash ington 16th" reads a headline in the Greensboro Daily News. Ye gods, and so they believe in or ganization too! : One newspaper tells us that a man was "fatally wounded in shooting at border." All of which goes to prove-that boun dary lines are dangerous things. One of the state newspapers 'informs us that Raleigh v must start its fight all over again for a new depot. And We thought that revolutions were restricted to Mexico! Well, we have all heard the United States Marine Band, and now we have one ambition to be President , of the United States. Then we could listen to it free of charge. f v ! The New York City Noise Abatement Commission recently sent out 1,500 questionnaires and found that "reverberations set , up by heavy trucks, promiscuous tooting of automobile horns, and the squaking of radios" consti tute the three chief noise wor ries in that city. Evidently the newspapers have been overdoing the stock market crash. Gate-Crashing At The Marine Band Concerts The desire to get something for nothing is strong in all men - but particularly so in women. Often people will waste hours of valuable time and expend a prodigious amount of energy in order to secure some - trifle of inconsiderable value, simply be" cause it costs them nothing in actual cash. s Gate-crashing is one of the most pronounced manifestations of the "get something for nothing" urge. With many per sons, especially college students, gate-crashing becomes an ob session, a passion fo which they will subordinate pride, common sense, everything of a reason able nature. They regard pay ing admission to an athletic event, musical program or per formance of any descriptions as a mark of weakness, of inability to outwit the gate-keepers. . All .newspaper men are familiar with the attentions upon a city edi tor or other journalistic slave driver, merely to secure a four bit pass to some attraction. Thursday this gate-crashing The Progressive South. All too often residents of other sections of therUnited States criticize- the Southland. And what is worse than this occasionally a native southerner, seemingly disgusted with his en vironment, refers to his native land, as "The Stagnant South." The writer of this editorial could never believe that the person who recently published a treatise in this paper bearing the afore mentioned title fully realized the heinous and unmistakably unjust implications accompanying such a group of words, for of all the word combinations in the Eng lish language, there is not one which is any further removed from the realm of the compli mentary: With, all due respect to this unnamed writer, let us proceed to a careful scrutiny in this misleading pharse The Stagnant South, From coast to coast the cul ture of the Southland is unsur passed. Southern hospitality looms up as the very emblem of satisfaction to the sojourner, and in other sections of the na tion the term southern hospi tality is the most flattering com bination that could be applied to a friendly effort. Within the last fifteen years the enrollment of many southern colleges and universities has doubled. Great highways have found their way across tne mtnerto well nigh untraversable sands of this and other southern states. And, to make the contention even strong er, this phase of development is yet in the infant stage. The South is rapidly becoming a manufacturing region. In many of the "Sunny States," notably our own state of North Carolina, the roar of . cotton and tobacco mills is by no means a unfamiliar sound. Northern manufacturers, in recognition of something not audacity to say that the South! has not advanced almost im-1 ... ii i . . measurably since tne days oi tne "Old South"? Yet to refer to this region as being stagnant is in effect the same thing. . Stag nancy; and progress are irrecon cilable opposites. - People are prone to forget the fact that the South has not yet fully recovered from the disaster of the War Between the States. That she is progressive,' how ever, is attested by her present condition which offers a strik ing contrast to her chaotic con dition of a comparatively few years ago. ine jsoutn is enam oured of her part in the devel opment of the American nation of tomorrow, the like of which the world has never yet seen. Our native land is a recognized part . of the Union and as such lays claim to a position in the affairs of the nation and . of the world which is never accorded a stagnant region. In point of rapidity of development in re cent years ; the South has no counterpart in all of American, history And yet this our native land "The Stagnant South?" It is true that many southern universities turn to the North or the West when in quest of a president. It is true, also, that some of the most prominent edu cators of these sections are solicited from the ranks of the Southland. It is 'time for all loyal south erners to turn a deaf ear to the showers of destructive criticism which continually descend upon their native jland both from within and from without, for this is our native land, and it is the Progressive South which bids fair to .take the lead in the America of tomorrow. J. C. W. THE POINTER By J. C. Williams even remotely akin to stagna tion, are establishing mills in this and other states of the. old order. Lives there a man, even Jin the depths of illiteracy, who can meditate upon these things and then say "This is my own, my native land" The Stagnant South? In the last half century the North and West have forged ahead, it is true ; but so has the South. Southerners were once prominent in education, com merce, and everything worth while, and they still are. Peo ple boast of coming from the Southland just as much as they did in the never-to-be-forgotten days of the great plantation and the negro slave.' Who has the The Proposed Income Tax Reduction secretary Mellon has now launched forth into a, project which no doubt he has been working on for some. time. It is his plan to reduce the income tax one percent for the year 1930, and thus effect a pet am bition of his to slash taxes. He realizes perhaps better than anyone else that the budget for the next fiscal year is much in excess of that of this year but rather . than increase taxa tion proportionally to the in crease in expenditures he would reduce the tax rate. " ' Of course Mr. Mellon knows that revenue must increase. He bases his proposition on the hy pothesis that big business is go ing to increase so much during the coming year that the re ve nue brought in by . the reduced tax on corporations (the one per cent rediiption affecting largely incomes of big corporations will adequately cover the added gov ernmental expenditures. He is, then, advocating a reduction not on a certainty but on an as sumption. - In case the earnings of big business do not come up to the expectations of Mr. 'Mellon the payment on the national debt will probably have to be reduced and that money diverted into other channels. At any rate instead of taking chances on a deficit, a surplus- which also is economically unsound should be anticipated in order to carry on public works when genera business conditions are at a low erebb than they are at the present time. r It is a well known fact that the proposed reduction will in crease the stocks of corpora tions, several corporations al ready having capitalized on the proposal. Thus in, the fina analysis it will result in the government's making a gift to stockholders in corporations the welfare of the average man being unaffected. If Secretary Mellon can reduce taxes and meet the increased govern mental expenditures, and at the same time 'promote the genera welfare, he is indeed a wizard. The Truth. Will Out Such was the opinion of the many students who found their names on the lists of deficiencies pasted on the walls of the regis trar's office. ."Whatsoever , a man soweth, that shall he also reap" is as true a statement now as it ever was. Something Unusual A thing, is generally desired in proportion fo the difficulty encountered in getting : .' it. "Grats" from professors who cut their classes every once in a while have little kick for the students concerned. But the situation is entirely reversed when some professor, with a conscience and a reputation for always being-there, fails to show up. This' seemingly small mat ter is received in the light of a great event. The impossible has happened ! We must 'cele brate! And so we do celebrate. Old Mother Nature is very kind to her children at Carolina. She instills in them a love for free dom and optional class attendance. Hot Air Artists Warming Up From the pages of this daily publication we learn that the lo- cal debaters are studying . the question of DISARMAMENT every Thursday night in 201 Murphey hall in preparation for coming contests with N. C. State and the University of South Carolina. In the case that the Tar Heels should win both sides of the question we wonder what the conclusion would be. Tears like we'd be right back where we started. If they lost both sides we'd still be con founded as to what to do. We wouldn't know whether to dis arm or not: At any rate, we'll wait and see what happens. , Artistic Justice . We've always contended that artistic justice was a fake. To prove our contention we detailed a Daily Tar Heel reporter the other day to stand at the en trance to the Carolina theatre and solicit the opinions of twen ty students regarding the pic ture rasking them "How was the picture" just as though he himself contemplated going in to witness the performance. The answers ranged an tne way from "damn good, pretty good, fair, pretty fair, not much, just ordinary, rotten to not worth a damn." A thing is beautiful or pleasing according to our own individual enthusiasms. After all, why should we care whether the crowd admires the same things that we do or not ? We feel certain, however, that we cannot possibly think of any favorable location for the man who aims to please everybody. Certainly, Chapel Hill would not (Continued on page four) Broadway's Greatest Actress in her most stirring role, as a half- caste bride of a fighting northern chief ... she succumbs to the lure of Nome's mad life. "Frozen Justice" ' ' with Louis Wolheim Added All-Talking Comedy "At the Dentist" ".. also Vaudeville Act T O D A Y mm IP MON. CLARA BOW in "Saturday Night Kid" It's-. The Thing to Do For Eight Years- The University Cafeteria has consistently served the bulk of Carolina's student leaders. One trial, and you will affirm their judgment. ' Dine at UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA Six $5.50 Tickets for $27.50 d fl BROOKLYN BRIDGE 41 span 1595 ft. . n tw. NRvvvvw ' 33S GILA BRIDGE jf TV XVV SSA pan 5373 ft. - 1 'XjSss ,ir--Sr r All in a day's work for telephone men , A specimen or construction work in the Bell System is the new catenary span carrying - telephone wires across the' Gila River, Arizona. The "natural" obstacle is no longer an obstacle while there are tele phone men to find a way through it or over it. This is but one example in a general ex pansion program: Others are such widely varied projects as linking New York to Atlanta by cable, erecting 200, telephone buildings in 19 29, developing a $ 1 5,000,000 factory at Baltimore. The telephone habit is growing apace, and the Bell System will continue to keep a step ahead of the needs of the nation. BELL SYSTEM A nation-wide system of inter-connecting telephones OUR PIONEERING VORK HAS TUST BE GUN