Page Two THE DAILY TAR HEEL Thursday, 3Iarch 31", 1932T Zl)t Eailp Ear $eel The official newspaper of the Publi cations Union Board of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Trhere it is printed daily except Mon days and the Thanksgiving, Christ mas, and -Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $4.00 for the college year. Offices on the second floor of the Graham Memorial Building. Jack Dungan .Editor Ed French ...Managing Editor . John Manning .. Business Mgr. Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Charles G. Eose, chairman, Don Shoemaker, R. W. Barnett, Henderson Heyward, Dan Lacy, Kemp Yarborough, Sid ney Rosen, J. F. Alexander. FOREIGN NEWS BOARD E". C. Daniel. Jr.. chairman: Frank Haw- ley, C. G. Thompson, John Acee, Claiborn Carr, Charles Poe. FEATURE BOARD Ben Neville, T. W. Blackwell, E. H., Joseph Sugar man, W. R. Eddleman, Vermont Royster. . CITY EDITORS George Wilson, Tom Walker, William McKee, W. E. Davis, W. R. Woerner, Jack Riley, Thomas H. Broughton. LIBRARIAN E. M. SpruilL HEELERS J. H. Morris, A. T. Dill, W. 0. Marlowe, E. C. Bagwell, R. J. Gialanella, W. D. McKee, Harold Janof sky, F. C. Litten, N. H. Powell, M. V. Barnhill, W. S. Rosenthal, C. S. Mcintosh, Robert Bolton. Business Staff CIRCULATION MANAGER T. C. Worth. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Assist ants: R. D. McMillan, Pendleton Gray, Bernard Solomon. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT Jimmy Allen, manager; assistant: Howard Manning; Bill Jones, H. Louis Brisk, Joe Mason, Dudley Jennings. COLLECTION DEPARTMENT-John Barrow, manager; assistants: Ran- rlnlnVi PornnlHs Jrto WhV Jim Cordon, Agnew Bahnson. Thursday, March 31, 1932 Ignoring All But Themselves The spring holidays and at tendant loss of opportunity for editorial expression has appar ently given the German club its chance to escape from the cam pus eye long enough to allow the original selection of commence ment marshals to be put through and photographed for the com mencement section of the Yack ety Yack, despite the decision a few weeks ago that the selec tion of these officers is not with in the jurisdiction of the dance organization. It was under stood by many prior to the vaca tion period that the German club election of marshals would be i ruled void and referred to the junior class for official election, but apparently the club has re fused to relinquish this power, which it is said to have assumed unofficially due to the negligence of class officers in calling elec tions in the last few years. With this turn of affairs the campus finds itself in precisely the same predicament of former years. Usurping the power of dance control which it has proven that it should hot possess, the or ganization has over-stepped its bounds still more to resume a practice with which it has no conceivable connection. The German club is ignoring the issue. It has refused to give the campus any satisfaction in the control of dances and the election of commencement mar shals. Agitation against this or ganization is increasing, not de creasing. It is rumored that the law school has gone on record as threatening to discontinue its annual dance set, as long as it must -come under the jurisdic tion of the German club. The Phi assembly and the Di senate as well as independent groups organized SDeciallv for this nur- pose are also arrayed against the German club. It is even whis pered about The Tar Heel of fice that the guns will begin pop- ping early next week and that the zero hour is Thursday morn ing "n r. s Too Many Riding The "Band Wagon" In the coming campus elec tions, nearly thirty officers are to be named. The bewildered voters must choose the presi dent and vice-president of the student body, editors of the four publications, class officers, cheer- leaders, debate councilmen, Ath letic Association officers, Publi cations Union board members, and others. Besides these, many other officers, as in the Y. M. C. A., Di and Phi, Ger man club etc., are chosen at special elections.- All in all, the number of offices to be filled in the student body and in more or less public organizations must run into the hundreds. This is an absurd figure for a student body of twenty-eight hundred. Every tenth student has an office either in the stu dent body or in some organiza tion open to the students, not including fraternities, honorary societies and the like, which add their hundreds. The result of this superfluity of offices is to bring hopeless confusion into elections and to increase the strength of the political ma chines. Many of these offices are en tirely useless and could be easily abolished. The best example is the freshman class offices. The election of freshman officers is held in February, and the rising sophomore officers are inaugu rated in April: The men chosen in the February . elections hold office for only a few weeks dur ing which time they have noth ing to do. . The president may preside over one smoker. The secretary may keep the. minutes of a couple of meetings. The freshman treasury is practically non-existent. But the prize non entity is the Vice-President of the Freshman Class. His one duty is to 'Write home to mother and to his girl to let them know he was elected. Many of the other class offices are equally as useless. In - a university of this size, there is very little class feeling or co herence. The men are divided according to their schools, ma jors, or fraternities, not accord ing to their years. There is really no need for a, detailed class organization. Inasmuch as the three upper classes do give dances, they probably do need a chairman or president to ap point committees and preside over meetings. But the office of vice-president is entirely un necessary. The duties of the sec retary and the treasurer are light, and the offices could easily be combined. These minor offices are not only unnecessary; they do a good deal of harm. They con fuse the voters, particularly the freshmen, and add complexity to the elections. But more im portant, they are a great aid to political machines. The Gamma Gamma Gamma's will vote for John Doe for president of the student body if their pledge Joe Brown can be vice-president of the sophomore class next year. By a judicious allotment of these minor class offices, an -astute politician can win six or eight fraternities to his banner. They are perhaps the main links in forging together political parties on the campus. The freshman elections in particular are nothing but opportunities for fraternity political machines to try their strength. The Daily Tar Heel pro poses the abolishing of all fresh man offices and the vice-presidencies of the other classes and the combination of the offices of secretary and treasurer. This would do away with ten offices, thus simplifying catmpus elec tions, and would make possible fairer and more open elections through, the weakening of the political machines. Perhaps a system may be devised in the future whereby the whole class system may be done away with and a more logical plan of or ganization by schools adopted. D.M.L. The attitude of Japan reminds one of the sheep-stealer whose excuse was that a sheep tried to bite him. Shoe and Leather Re porter (Boston). I With i i j Contemporaries j The Business Man In College Several years ago an Indian apolis business man, having made enough money to last him the rest of his life, came to But ler. Since that time he has moved to another school still studying. This kind of thing has been happening all over the country of late the business man going to school. And perhaps it is a healthy sign. Since nineteen hundred, there has been consistent criti cism directed toward the busi ness men who are so busy mak ing money they do not have time to acquire culture. Of course today their sons are getting it before they enter business. Yes terday the fathers had to make their own way and did not haVe time' for cultural improvement. Now they are coming back. They are beginning to realize that money is not all there is to live for and they are finding cul ture practical. In order to spend their middle age and old age in more pleasant ways' than seek ing more money, they believe in reading, learning and studying. Say, if you will, that the busi ness men are going highbrow, but the fact cannot be denied that in this one thing lies a ma jor solution for the evils inherent in our system of competition and capitalism. If, when a man has reached a place in finance where he has fulfilled his duty of car ing for himself and family and has. fitted himself in reasonable security, he then seeks education and culture, he will be stepping out of the business rush and making room for another busi ness man to take his place. Competition will not be so keen, depressions will not be so frequent and life may be hap pier both for those still engaged in business and those seeking culture. The business man in college today may seem out of place. Tomorrow he may be far ahead of those who keep to their industry. The Border-Line Intellectual "growing pains" like tonsils and wisdom . teeth, are a part of the life process which every normal individual experiences. Distressing yet necessary to healthy develop ment, these "pains" offer certain dangers to the individual. Not the least of these is the task of making the "scientific attitude" yield us that tolerance so neces sary in the sphere of human re lations. . In adjusting one's perspective towards moral, ethical and re ligious problems, to which our early training has conditioned us in a definite fashion, we often have difficulty in determining the point at which approved tolerance becomes a condemned laxness in judgment. Non-conformity in a superior individual may become socially productive. But as most of us can produce only as we fit ourselves into the accepted standards, it can be come destructive to all our finer capacities. A college campus, with its multitudinous contacts with new and different persons and ideas is liable to place the bewildered student in this position. The in dividual discovers that many students have standards which differ from his, and in his at tempt to develop a tolerant atti tude, accepts for himself a code which cannot possibly fit in or complement his own personality. .1 Tolerance is a word which finds its truest significance only in our attitude towards others. The adoption of a personal stan-. dard below which our own be havior must riot fall is the only way we can keep a distinction between broad-mindedness and laxness. Tolerance toward oth ers, but not to oneself, seems the guiding principle which offers the best development for individ ual mental growth. Syracuse Daily Orange. . A Course For Illiterates It would not be generally sup posed that the question of illit eracy could constitute a very serious problem on the Prince ton campus. A recent comment coming from the faculty, how ever, reveals the fact that this evil is sufficiently prevalent here to warrant the serious considera tion of a course designed to teach members of the Univer sity the rudiments of English grammar and composition. Under the present educational system the ability to present ideas written in a clear and con cise form plays a large part in the undergraduate's curricular life. Yet frequently, even in junior and senior years, profes sors are forced to administer severe penalties to students who have submitted papers, which, whatever may be their intrinsic merit, are materially handi capped by their illiterate presen tation. In many cases, it may be presumed that this fault is to be accounted for on the score of carelessness, but since the situation exists, whatever may be its cause, a course designed to correct it would be justified. The mechanics of the course would be such as .to keep a man in it only as long as his con tinuance of the work was deemed necessary. The man whose work had suffered from carelessness would remain in the class for only a short time, while the student whose ignorance of composition was a real handicap would be detained until he had mastered the essential ground work. By this system careless - "- - mmm 1 and that's what the statistician does for industry Definite knowledge of "where we are" and "what lies ahead" is as vital in business as in flying. For this expert navigating, the Bell System has long relied upon statisticians. These men study present and prospective industrial, economic and social conditions in all parts of the country. They gather facts analyze them, correlate them, discover their significance to the telephone business, draw guidance from them. They study and fore A NATION-WIDE SYSTEM OP INTER. CONNECTING TELEPHONES ness could be measurably cut down and the general literate standard of the University ma terially raised. Harvard has with success, run a similar course at Cambridge for sev eral years, and the experiment might well prove worth the trouble expended in establishing it at Princeton. Daily Prince- tonian. The Speed With Which Roosevelt Travels One wonders at the moment um of the Roosevelt-for-Presi- dent campaign. It grows and grows. In the few States where primaries have been held in which his name is presented, he has run away with the field. No body seems to be a serious chal lenger. The easiest answer that comes to mind in respect to this phe nomenon is that Mr. Roosevelt's forces have effective organiza tions already. That is a much more acceptable decision to reach than one which would attribute his success to the flaming qual ities of a great personality whose appeal is to popular fancy. Mr. Roosevelt does not make spectacular incursions upon the imagination. He is not of that type. Around him is woven no halo that the exceptional man some times presents. On the other hand, he is exceedingly practical, prosaic, unimaginative himself and somewhat commonplace in his constant qualities. Not at all the kind of man at the mention of whose name the multitudes would run into ecstasy. Yet he has driving power as a candidate. That is not to be denied. He is getting some where. In fact, he is going at a tempo that must be very alarm ing to others who may be covet ing the honor of the Presidential nomination in the Democratic ranks. The Charlotte News. cast the changing requirements of the public for telephone service. They estimate the probable future demand for new services, such as radio telephony to foreign lands and ships at sea. They keep the executives advised as to current progress towards the objectives thus carefully determined. Only by plotting a course saentifically can the Bell System continue to develop along, sound lines. j BELL SYSTEM Dr. Haoptmann Likes Us Dr. Gerhart Hauptmann, the German dramatist who has. achieved international fame, re cently confessed after a three week visit to the United States that he was "tremendously im pressed" with the "progress to ward esthetic and intellectual maturity" of the American peo ple and by the "easy natural ness which he found to be a dominant national characteris tic. "The outstanding national characteristic that impressed me most about American" he told reporters in parting, "is your easy naturalness of approach. Americans are cordial and dig nified without being stiff or con ventional. The phrase 'be your (Continued on last page) It Is Worth Knowing That ; The White House was the first public building erected in Washington, the corner-stone having been laid on October 13, 1792. The national wealth of the United States was estimated by the National Industrial Conference Board in 1929 as. $361,837,000,000. The deepest place in the ocean yet found is in the Min dinao, between the Philippines and Japan, where soundings of 34,210 feet have been reported. San Bernardino county, Cal ifornia, ' is the largest in the United States, having an area of 20,175 square miles. Areas which in other states would be called counties in Louisiana are called parishes.