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L Page Two THE DAILY TAR HEEL Saturday, April 23, 1932 Etl ?Dlilt Eat Perhaps be imPr0Yea upon, dui est mat tins plan would arouse same line, bulletins aid m avoid- ' i ylil generai value should be ob- the interest of the entire cam- ing the evils of overproduction The official newspaper of the Publi- vious nor should approval of the pus, for the prize would be quite or underproduction by keeping of North CarolSa at ChapS mi proposal be confined to those de- worthy of the attention and en- as accurate a check as possible. sirous of changing our present deavors ot everyone. 11, now- America may De Headed to system of government in the ever, there is any doubt to the ward bankruptcy but the reme- direction of socialism. A gov- effect that someone might have dies of Mr. Leopold seem in eminent even more avowedly failed, to have observed the con- many ways shallow. H. H. capitalistic than burs has ever test and the following results, been could benefit by the intro- then the original committee duction into its machinery of should have numerous copies of features similar to those pro- this practical system printed posed by Mr. Thomas. Thepres- and distributed by hand (not ence of problems already receiv- mailed) to the individual stu- iner the care and attention of the dents. . . " , -r-r J I . I such as the tariff, It is hoped that some enter- Alexander, E. C. Daniel, William banking and currency regula- prising person will take it upon Education Pay? McKeer rvin jaaee, ison rniujps, tions 1 public works, himself to carry out the out- The statement of Dr. Harold CITY EDITORS W. R. Woernr, Tom etcetera, ought to make this ap- lined plan above and in that F. Clark, prof essor of education where it is printed daily- except Mon days, and the Thankseivin?. 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. Chas. G. Rose, Jr ...-....Editor G. W. Wilson, Jr. ... Mng. Editor John Manning Business Mgr. EDITORIAL BOARD Don Shoemak- With Contemporaries Does Walker, W. E. Davis, T. H. trough- narent n HP ITT mTn I pdi tut. At- daadh xtmi Boards and commissions re- dmons. KJ. rVinirmnn. Pharles Poe. W.R. Eddie- mntplv rpspmKlino trip features -iMJSfT-J' Uuwested are not lacking at Wasting Good Hawley C, G.Thompson, John Acee, present; m fact, a tariff com- &a oprum. mission was established halt a manner better the existing con- ivwUiii ivtvo"--J . t. Morris, vy. y. r5,f1irv Theie horh'p? how- Marlowe, e. c - Bagwell. Harold century ago. inese ooaies, now- Janof sky, F. C. Litten, N. H. Powell, ever, are principally or entirely Robert Bolton, Jr. W. Markiey. nr.aa.nY.a9 w loo-wlnnrp at Teachers College, Columbia University, that a college edu cation is a distinct detriment to the earning capacity of the youth of the land, warrants se rious consideration. Of course no statistics can be - Business Staff and of the executive, subject to CIRCULATION MANAGER T. C. the will and control of the lat- Worth. Time With economists and bankers denouncing the proposed sol diers' bonus bill and with the produced by any research work n J J . . 1 I . - - majority ot newspapers attacK- er wni pr0ve the statement, lit ing tne plan editorially, tne since there is no method by House of Representatives per- TchiVJi ia nVili for. and npviv is.fVir.o- thp m31"3 ilA ocxwoijr wuoiuwiiifi sons, one witu eQUcation ana one BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Assist- , , . nassaere. The latest to condemn U.uf w ;fQWw ants: R. D. McMillan, Pendleton sxrengtn ana prestige oi repre- - . ,. , . 4V Gray, Bernard Solomon. sentative, legislative, or consti- theplan is the soldier-diplomat pairecL Prof. Clark, like many ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT n,A hnancier Uharles uawes. who. seek to nrove a theorv bv Howard Manning, manager; BUI uo. vv oulu TirPPTit'-"hPflfl nf the "Recon- -u ,1 i . t,o Jones, H. Louis Brisk, Joe Mason, the government not presume to As Present head ot the Kecon- outright assertion, declares that Dudley Jennings. . a a struction Finance Corporation, "Vou can take a number of eaual- COLLECTION DEPARTMENT John J U1AC1' wuoliiCOi Dawes flaved the bill savagely. i ,ooW. wCnr,a rrUrtr nni tne capacity oi tne new Doaies . r . v . vuwh. Fw00, . ex, An issue ot treasury notes to group education and putting the You will English Prape,, Goat the Thing But You Must Be SIsndsr to Wear This Newest Garment With Bulging Breast and Tucked Sleeves THIS Spring it's the "English drape" coat for young men - but you must be slender. The "fatties' are just out of luck because almost the wLole smartness of the garment depends on a "suppressed" waistline. Snug and narrow at the waist and . hips, the coat la almost "bulgy" in the breast, back and Barrow, manaeer: assistants: Ran- dolnh Revnolds. Joe Webb, Jim i Cordon, Agnew Bahnson. Saturday, April 23, 1932 be larselv advisory and investi gative their opinions, reports, meet the bonus payment would, other group to work. and suggestions would carry We're Just Boys After All, Colonel The Charlotte Observer edi torial writers are worried. In the lead editorial column, under a black-face, italicized, capital ized, quoted , head, "Liberalism," they ask this question : "What's p-oinor on at the University of Why, nothing out of, the or dinary, Colonel, you may be as sured. We had another speaker down here this week-end, Dr. I Kpbert A. Millikan, who is some- more weight and receive more respect if emanating from inde j pendent departments of the gov ernment, representing economic iiK Dawes' opinion, have a dis- find then that an education does astrous effect upon the coun- not help much." But, we do not try's currency system, upon the believe that Professor Clark has credit of the federal govern- ever attempted to make this ment and upon the entire cred- demonstration. classes and technical professions system of our country. The college man of this gener- and co-equal in dignity with the Dawes is in a position to know ati on, even the student possessed legislative and the executive. wnat he is talking about, and 0f ambition and self-confidence, Should the economic life of is . only reiterating the opinion is increasingly a realist , in re the nation ever be definitely of other financial experts. gard to the world's probable at- 5? S5.-n" r frwu 11?" sheeted to political control, the ; Although the American i,e- titude toward him. It is the North Carolina, at Chapel Mill l , L'nii is dividfirl in its sunDort of nfW Tm n-F afnW nr.nn wTrnm institutions of this sort would the. measure, politicians are the problems of adjustment to be an absolute necessity. Even sure of obtaining some Legion the economic facts of post-college if our present system should votes when they support the mfe bear hardest; the type of continue largely unchanged, uui, wiuie; tney jseeiu tu ue un- wnom rroiessor iiarK notes however, their" desirability re- U.ihg little risk of losing any- that college training makes them in spite of its alleged shortcom ings, is as satisfactory as any other system. Fraternity lead ers may complain about the prob- em of moving pledges out of ooming houses, but their woe would be the greater if they aced the problems of deferred pledging. Purdue Exponent. he.has -; ,f .t. iui aim uiuuKiibiui consiucia- right. For, several years been about the business, of de stroying, old- ideas and theories on the nature.qf time . and the composition of matter. He came all the. way, over here- from Cali- tion. KP.Y. thing by this . action. Popular "too pensive and hesitant for opinion is too lax in permitting the task of money-making, when political . maneuvering of this courage and daring are the prime type. The House is wasting necessities." valuable time in considering a This nerhans is an unflattering bill which is; almost sure to fail anusion "to the fact that college Commercializing Honor The delicate auestion of the in the more courageous Senate, da forma to propagate his insidious cvstpm tVint. was sn Tniich nn wTiirVi. p.vp.n if it should nassl i., J.-U 1 ' I tr. -''-'"'. , ... " ' piuucnua medio, uiai uwl doctrines among the plastic MiSP,lssP a month or so aero has the unner house, is destined for i . , T , - 7 i , . . 7 7. ' civvU xi4yAijfiuaiuiig x 11 vnv uwa Canada has twenty-three col- eges, and universities. The argest. is Montreal University with 7,268 students. The old est is, the ' University of King's college, at Halifax, founded in nSd.The Daily Mini. minds of : the campus. But we fellows ; are not so easily taken in by these furrin ers as you might think. As for this fellow Thomas who was apparently been pigeon-holed in a presidential veto, lhe resent-R03Lr that it even might be said the minds of the University, ment of the voters towards any U0 decry, the present-day stand- This state of affairs is extreme- who, for political reasons, sup- ard of success, which is meas ly deplorable and should be rem- port this, unsound measure ure(j w ability to amass wealth edied at once, narticularlv since ouerht to be so aroused that it down here a week or so ago, he mid-term examinations are with will, clearly express itself at the The vrocs of accommodation has been forgotten by everybody us polls when next these misguided which will fit this fact into. the except our . zbum, socialists ana since the only reason a new- politicians run for election. exigencies of material competi - tneeunonai writeia-uu viic cam-. r and more practical honor sys- B.P. pus daily, incidentally, more oi ii , a f h ; nut into effect the bovs turned out to hear Mil- n nni. i,0 w Shallow Water Near likan than went to hear Thomas. auth0rities are unable to locate Thes .Shads of Bankruptcy As soon as we can get ria oi i no rhn i wnnld It is left for the oncoming be wise to follow the practices generation to face, one of the most difficult situations in the In all the colleges and univer sities of the United States there are a total , of 40,498,291 library volumes. The Daily Mini. Millikan, everybody will prob ably settle down to, enjoy the warm weather. In spring, you know, a college man's fancy turns to dances, and such things. You can't be bothered about soc ialism, and physics. when your best' girl ia around wearing, a good-looking new,, dress. , . in the throes of large advertise- I ment campaigns. ' The first step in the under taking would be to make a pub lic announcement that some of ficial student, or interested parl ty was going to promulgate a ion is indeed difficult to imagine, ; but despite this difficulty, and the genuine and, pressing, nature of the problem, it is an. ancient and honorable point of view which sees education primarily as a liberal and cultural asset. McGill Daily. In fact, one speaker, more or contest for students, faculty- vernment expenditure and less, never interferes with : the ori1 nwnaniA with salaries. He also stated that the """ r l , . i 1 j XT- TT:..J fo nhippf nf nnfainino- someJ law-maKing Doay Oi wi uiuu States aoes, not see.uit; uweBai history of economics, was a statement made by Joseph F. Leopold, manager of the south- Deferred west division of the United Fraternity Pledging States Chamber ot Commerce, A severe condemnation of de- before a group ot students in ferred fraternity pledging came Oklahoma. He attacked, mainly hast wvJ from the Univefsitv of Michigan, where both the routine,- of - Carolina students very much anyway. A day never passes in. Chapel Hill that some body doesn't mount a platform and- start expounding. The boys have become sort of hardened to speakers. They, don't laugh, at them orl boo. them. . They just listen courteously and then go home and read a. magazine or study for tomorrow's classes. -' : E.C.D. dean of men and student leaders are working to throw overboard a deferred pledging arrange ment which has been in opera- hracti csi honor svstem. nlan. Aff w ovo ornnnPPmMits of taking steps to save our coun- had been made to. the parties, in- try f rPm meviteble bankruptcy. tfon for only a single semester. terested. the next sten would, be must -have composed his 'Under the system used, fresh- to annomt a rommittee of. dis- speech before Congress started men were allowed. contacts with interested- persons (if such pushing through the, new tax the houfees at.dinners and smok could be locatedV and have them Rills- ers, and at the beginning of the judge the solutions. To.mafce The nature. of our economic 1 second! semester both freshmen the contest more interesting, the system and the size ot the coun- and fraternities submitted pref number . of words should be. lim- try- 'necessitate large . govern- erence lists to the dean of men. ited, there should be quite a ment expendit the xhe system was; all right on pa- number of useless rules, and propeny njuw ui iumviuua m per, duuiw truuuic woo uiau ii, then the iudees should fail to enterprises and ownership of simply wouldn't work. Out of observe them. property, a large group of of- 642 eligible freshmen, only 240 When the committee had fin- ficials is necessary. The size of were pledged through the dean s Throttling Politics on Government Economics Among the suggestions ad vanced bv Norman Thomas dur- allv decided nnon .th winnine: the country complicates; the Lffice, although sixty-seven fra ing his recent visit here was solution, another committee problem. ternities which handed in lists that of supersedinp; one of the should be annointed tn-investi- Mr. Leopold made one very named more than 1000 men on two houses of Congress bv an Unto thp ' nWt.iVnlifv nf flip nlnn. fnnlish rriticism of the present them Seven houses received no industrial bodv. and of associ- When this had finallv hen ac- svstem. He branded as useless men at all. atincr with the executive branch comnlished. then the committee the sums of money spent 6n With the weaker fraternities of the government an economic should make a public nroclama- statistical bulletins. One of the facing bankruptcy and ruin, the Vnnrd rpnrpspnfntive nf the en- tinn n-f fhp -ntx-ma nf -Hip -wrinniTior I mnaf. nhvi'nns raiises of denres- student leaders are naturally pineermo and workiner classes nprson and thp snlntinn snhmit- sinns is the ignorance of indivi- looking for a new system of of the country. ted. dual producers of the activities pledging. Perhaps they will soon Irl 14- ic AM-iaA n oi;."Uf f v vi-i,m. nrnliipprs in thp vofnrn to the old svstem, wmcn Xliv UCUtUO killO lUbU xi Ik) IIKJ 1 UUUULCU ill LUC SlltZlllj I ux lur UUICi uiuum.- I X v - ; " shoulders, although it has a nea. close-fitting neckline. A distinctu touch is found in the top of th. sleeves, which have several :tucks like those in trouser tops during th last few years. There is a slight bag giness at the shoulder blades and th sleeves taper to marked narrownes at the wrists Imported from Britisl custom tailors. he drape has foun instant popularity in America and a manufacturers are showing it. In color the young man's fanc turns to gray. Judging by what i? demanded and worn by college men and young business' men. the vogut is more definite than it was during the ' Fall and Winter and a greater and even more attractive variety of gray m both pattern and tone is offered The most distinctive development ip a trend toward lighter grays, in which the shades run from ice cream to sil ver. .Dark gray is also, popular but . the lighter, shades are in the ' lead. Even when young men ask for blues and browns they want them dusted with gray and some smart effects la this type of suiting are being worn. Plain, severe colors are evidently go ing out except in flannels and Can nel finished worsteds for sports and semi-sportswear. - - As might be expected, the lighter gray vogue in suits i3 accompanied by a tendency to brighter colors in shirts and ties. Shirts in solid blues and greens or white shirts with fine stripes of blue, green, tan or lavender are popular, either with tab collars or white starched collars. Ties witb cluster stripes In bright colors con tinue to prevail, with proper shirt and collar background. Spring surveys show that some browns, which were much in style during the winter, are being worn. The most popular shade Is very dark, verging on black, and is likely to be seen in an odd coat with gray trous ers for informal, outdoor occasions. Another shade In brown 13 bronze, which seems to strike the fancy of some young men for similar purposes. Tweed3 and crashes are said to hold about their usual popularity, especial ly for less formal wear when patch pockets or semi-sport3 clothes are ap propriate. There is greater variety than last year Li self-pattern goods. Among them are trellis weaves, pebble weaves and spangle weaves. Minia ture herringbones are also seen In large numbers. While spring check ups do not show a craze for checks they do reveal what may be the be ';nning of a revival of this pattern suits and odd coats. It is a quiet, modest revival, however, as the checks are fine small, sharp cut, 200 or more to the -uare inch, hut very -"art. 'J7 vv I air in - ! hi Vi'ifl TK.wipl r.V . si It's Worth Knowing That- Through government aid 25,000 houses have been built in the Irish Free State in the last ten years. .. . . . - . The first actual prohibition law was enacted in Maine in 1851, and is still in force. The dean of Nebraska Univer sity states that love is one of the main reasons for freshmen flunking out of college. No par icular reason was given for blaming it on the freshmen. Mr. & Mrs. Dollar TOLD ME THAT THERE ARE 431 DWELLINGS IN CHAPEL HILL Use -.The Daily Tar Eieel It Is Your Best Medium of Advertising I I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 23, 1932, edition 1
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