Page Two
DAILY TAR HEEL
THE DAILY tak hkl,
: ' r
i i i
, rt1 hold just as outstanding a place
iUt SUP BX ipm in the final selection. Several of
The ofScial newspaper of the Publi- those men who have thus far
been mentioned fulfill this first
where it is printed daily except M on- necessity exceptionally well. But
S2f S?M,S2SC",SSSi in the matter of their -contacts
as second class matter at the post throughout the state, they drop
office of Chapel Hill, N. C., under act iwAi-nd trip other Possible
of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, far behind tne Otner pobbime
$4.00 for the. college year. selections.
Offices on the second floor of the irv,0i cnrh a the4e when
Graham Memorial Building. . In times SUCh as tnese, wnen
,., the University is facing finan-
?aSw wnS, JTVnfiteEmte cial barriers on every hand, it
llX:3X is imperative that the hea of
this Chapfel Hill branch of the
Editorial Staff Greater University be able to
EW.7fe P Ms cause to the people
John Alexander, Edith Harbour, 0f North Carolina in a convm-
Mayne. Albright, B. B. Perry, A. l. . manner It is true that Dr.
Graham as President of the
Greater University will still be
able to use his unparalleled in
fluence in the state. But the ef
Nelson fectiveness of the Vice-Fresi-
lonf "hpr at Chanel f ill in
DiU, J. M. Joy, F. A. Wortnrup,
Ppe-2-v Ann Harris, Robert Berry-
man. Vereil J. Lee.
r.xrrv TrnTTOP S Boh Woerner, Bill
Davis, L. L. Hutchison, W. .R. Eddie
Otto Steinreich.
tt?cxt " itTTTM anre-e Malone. Phil
Markley, J. D. Winslow,
Robbms
em.
Certainly, it cannot be denied
that the dishonest man should
be punished or in some manner
be shown the error of his ways.
E.C.D. .
Music in
The Air X
Chapel Hill, long known as a
center of literary interests, has
turned to another one of the arts
in an effort to find an anesthetic
for those strong minds which
have only recently become weary
of liberalistic ballyhoo.
Authors may have been able
to relieve
FEATURE BOARD Joseph gaH pleading his case will be a large
v-:,. rrTi-kVi TTnnlrs. Frank I r . . . . . . i
man, fcpw n riPtPTmiTiiti? tne re-
Hawley, Carl inompson. -
SPORTS DEPARTMENT rClaiDorn suits ne Will get.
M jffif SS In looking over the probable
J. H. Morris, Crampton Trainer, successors to Graham, there can
Morrie Long, Lane Fulenwider, , rplativelv small
t t -it -IT TirKh I1TVTTV1TT VI f- I XUUilli v - -- - ' -
ilUgn W van j .pn.r
Gurk, Jack Lowe. group wnicn can success unj
REPORTERS B. R. Weaver, Ray- thege two qualifications.
mond Barron, dames d. vi"" " , . , nA w 1or
Walter Hargett, T. W. Hicks, jaraes aiiu oi uu numuucu
W. Keel, Nelson Lansdale, Robert i f ot more than one or two
C. Page, George noaaes, irumip . n,nna mHh h
TTsiTnTnpi Irvine Suss, uiarence wno nave vuutuvio -
7 w . -r-ii; i 4.- I . i i i T
Hartman, Eleanor isizzeu, juzauem memDers of the Student DOQy
Johnson, W. B. ureet, iave xu AOeoT,tiai i s,ir.
I WHICH tlC BW TOOtuwut
Business Staff mg the whole-hearted co-opera-
dottf the mother look out for her chil-
'les to dSver one W
io go- -nmps mto town to
dlf- . AS? rlv get his laun-
scnooi
c. l. y.
UnemDloyed
The ATcw Republic,, our fav
orite iournal of opinion, took the
90 I -
presidential election pretty hard dry.
o-rfo-r all Not narticularly pleas-
uxvva - x: i
ed with any of the candidates r EFFORT TO
U- liVtn thP re LUI 11 I -n-r-
".T"?. ATH SPIRIT TU'JSJBi
from last .Tuesdays . " .TTVTnrnAnAV
didn't heln the matter much L,AUiNL;il ivux
more. Skeptical to the last f
i i 1 I 1 IT LiVlini'f V I J-l I I
ditcn, tne .rT-' Plans are under way for a
. . ; .The really drf thu & pep mting
to explain is tomorrow night. Two promin-
ceededm capturing the few r,. are being secured for
states he did win. lk d lans have been made
Roosevelt, . . . A large p e and ft snake.dance.
of the successiui canuiu MS7 rt! Carolina
may ncivc ci ... , j onncict tin iuuuwv ,
. . . , , maianhr Hnpa not even COnSlSL , i
to relieve incn vvyxx iiiihuu -, vn inntit uauu
. . Lf riomncrats who can De count- . , - , .
those of their readers, Dut wnat 1 : w
Thursday, November 17, 1932
Holidays Begin Wednesday
Thanksgiving holidays will of
ficially begin at 1:00 o'clock next
Wednesday afternoon and end at
8:30 o'clock the following Mon
day morning. Students missing
classes the days before and after
the holidays will be placed on
immediate probation.
Confined in Infirmary
W. G. Parker, A. F. McGuire,
J. W. Kirkpatrick, James Thomp
son, A. L. Williams, and Miss
Laura Thomas were confined in
the infirmary yesterday.
tnose oi tneir readers, uut wut lty fo the
power have they to silence these ea "P011 TO
i,, ; r. -p 4-,n ioT-al mii5p? party . . . etw.
UllCtllipiUlO Ji UU-i"' . . .
SongS, hymns, and classical I .. ss - f " -
t o; m me same way wwt
music seem tu nave ucxx uuaux-
mously selected to drown the
weary turmoil which can not be uuv 7 " a
.... w ,?r, policy and Hoover is without a
cerely believe that they can be JobvJhe.gOV" H to
J.1 J 1 nvOOTTOO I UU IV eto il"' '
smotneieu uy uiuiWvi, Hoover thereby giving the can-
symphonies, and crooners-the er: wnrt1.
. , i,,, uiuate-reject Buiucwiina
rest can hum. Might even- make
waie JutoennB institution of it and give
lection, Danse Mohmque, which rtefMtell candidate -a
Thn ipprlpaders have an-
XXIV vaaw. -
nounced a surprise for the meet
ing but would not disclose its
nature.
Carolina's support at the game
Saturday-will be supplemented
by over 350 girls from the Wo
man's College of the University
who will journey to Chapel Hill
by special train.
magazine to edit.
Tom Worth, Lion of the student element. This
I i t'j J. 4- ei-J-i-ii-ncs rTT
Gray Jr., aDinxy to meet tne otuucnw
CIRCULATION DEPT
Manager.
Ass't Bus. Mgr., John narrow, ass i their own grounds ana sun nuiu
Bus. Mgr., W. B. Robeson: Ax, nAxri-nr resn'fict and ad-
A D VRRTISING STAFF Uowara " , .
AUVIiltlloiinu oax ;j; nln,ra a oriror nurt in
TVyTonniTio- A riv't. MST.. W. Kj. dOHCS, XHliatlUll Miavo , ""6 -
Av't Mgr., J. W. Callahan, James SUCCessfulness of a college
SXeruVc than one would first
Farlow, Joe Mason. imastine. In a ratner large
COLLECTION STAFF Randolph it ia the. attitude of the
has received wide recognition,
may not be credited to the above
it will undoubtedly play its part
in the results. Alan's new
marching song which is soon to
appear can be used by everyone
and on Sundays, Peery's new
wr I XX - 1
university nymn may ue Baxcijr Ahnilf
sung even under the blue laws ot Laundry
Carolina.- L.M.J.
-r llc PrnofTinn ATbTT.. Joe J.
Aornpw Eamson. L. lij.
Brooks, Armistead Maupin, -Robert
, P. Phifer, J. T. tsarnara.
Thursday, November 17, 1932
Not to Be Compared
To Dr. Graham
students that determines the
feelings of their families, who in
turn have their weight on the
nf thp. entire state. A
man who doesnot have this abil
ity of forming student friend
shins, regardless of his other
port.
Tn find a man who has al
these characteristics is a prob
lem for. the Board of Trustees.
But for the benefit of the man
who is selected, it would be well
for the people of the state as
well as the students and faculty
not to measure his ability by a
comparison to Dr. Graham for
no man yet in educational circles
in this state will profit even in
a small measure by such a com
parison.
. lamps, legrtiuicoo
With the problem of finding a lifi . will find himself
successor Dr. Frank Graham &t & decided handicap if at any
nn their hands, the members of .. - ncf fflli -har.lc on the
7 - l lio
the Board of Trustees are now tudents and their families for
faced with a tasK iar more uu- b th financial and moral sup-
ficult than tnat oi selecting tne
nresident of the Greater U m
versity; for so long as Dr. Gra
ham was available for that office,
that selection was relatively.
simple. But now that Graham's
hands will be filled with his new
duties, the Board finds itself
dealing with an even more per
plexing task, the solution of
which should not be too hastily
attempted.
Several members of the pres
ent faculty as well as University
administration officials have at
one time or another been men
tioned to take over the Vice-
Presidency of the Greater Uni
versity here at Chapel Hill. But
as ye't no one man in the eyes of
the public holds what might be
called a leading place m the en
tire array of eligibles. Regard-
Ipcs rf this fart, however, the
Qualifications of " this one man,
whoever he may be, are fairly
well fixed in the minds of those
persons who have had any con
nection with the work of the
University thus far.
True enough every individual
has his own standard by which
he guages the capability of the
' man to fill the office. But even
so, all indications point to the
fact that Graham's successor
must of necessity be a man who
. is liberal-minded enough to
carry on the policies of Jhe Uni
versity which have been in force
during these last few years. The
.more conservative element of
the board jvill possibly try to
Virincr in a man who does not
hJ
have the liberal tendencies as
' our present .leader. But the fol-
- SPEAKING
the
CAMPUS MIND
OUR TIMES
By Don Shoemaker
Suggestion
First let me clear ur a noint which
Mr. Wadsworth has not caught on to
about the manner o doing up shirts.
.Everyone understands tnat a poorly
laundered shirt here costs 10 cent
and a starched one 15. ( Because o:
the expense I, do not have my shirts
starched.) My point is that m other
daces the ordmarv nrice (which m
most commercial laundries is 15 01
20 cents) includes starch in practically
all instances. As lor comparative
mi ,1C1 v,zi prices ot this sort, however, there is
The campus seems to us to beluch to be gai(L Commer'cial price
in imminent danger of a big lists are utterly fallacious as a basis
SDlit over this laundry queoiL r'BSH
Every day someone dashes into I transients uses the regular commer-
.m -i j llj. 1-n iic ciai service wnen seiiumg ciouies 10 a
the office with a wild look in. his lan . Therfi rfi Jt Mr. Wads.
eyes and f urtively deposits a red-1 worth does not point out, various types
, , j. ,m tVioIOi service witn various prices, me
hot open forum letter on the , . J. .
editor's desk. It's getting to be students here being "Family Wash"
m most cases, ramnv vvasn is in
everv case I know of. or anv of mvJ
hand we hear little murmurs friends know of, cheaper than the
about this and that side. Every- fSe?&,
bodv has a different opinion ing: Trio and May's laundries, At-
, , -i i w.rtw rw looa if lanta, ua. an omer Axiama launanes
about how much more or less it . . . r . , r. T
rrica r hnvA laimdrv done UD drv. Columbia. S. C.z Piedmont and
in his home town. It's more at 5"? SirSn.SKB
tioned give Georgia . Tech students
it ii t -r i
mi i i t- rates lower tnan tnose nere. i Know
boro. -ine wnoie xning uxi ui.m rsnTinl pvrieripT1P.p. haviritr hsiA
. 0
1 l J I i i i ii i .1
pretty mucn wrougni up. my laundry done beautituny by these
Farrar Sp eaks to Teachers
Dr. Preston C. Farrar of the
school of education addressed
the Tuesday evening meeting of
the Schoolmasters' club of Or
ange county at Aycock high
school on "Standards for Promo
tion in English." The club will
convene at Carrboro for its De
cember meeting, at which Presi
dent Frank P. Graham will be
the guest speaker.
Avoid the Rush in Charlottesville
after the
N. C-VIRGINIA GAME
Thanksgiving Day
Have dinner and spend the night
at the
Hotel William Frank
Fork Union, Virginia
40 miles south of Charlottesville
on U. S. Route 15
A Real ThanksgivingDinner
Thoroughly Modern Rooms
Write for reservations
J. P. SNEAD, Mgr.
Shut up... and kiss me!
5
lUEfl'TgCH'S
PARADISE
wilk MIRIAM HOPKINS uyFRANCIS
HERBERT MARSHALL
' Charlie Ruoqles Edward Ewttt Horto
'Ptimunutt "ftrbikt
mm
Here's breath
less romance
for every girl
who want s
strong arms
about her', . ..
for every-boy
who risks ca
resses that in-timate!
Other Units
Comedy News
NOW PLAYING
. lowers of Graham's policies
must see to it that this conserva-
vp err mm does not carry out
r va C3 i" -
their point.
Admitted that this libera
characteristic is the most im
portant qualification for the man
. to fill Graham's shoes here at
Chapel Hill, there are still other
factors which in many ways
To Put It
Crassly
"I am generally opposed to the
proposition of the student coun
cil to establish classroom honor
committees," said one student,
"but, to put it crassly, it looks
like some people are getting
away with a lot of cheating.
Naturally, they object to any
plan that would stop it."
This statement is hardly true.
It is an unfair accusation against
;he integrity of ' the student
body as a whole
As a matter of iact, though,
the honest man should have
nothing to fear from the pro
posed system. It would not take
away any of the rights and priv
ileges that he now has under the
honor system. As usual, the stu
dent council would assume a
man's innocence until he had
been proved guilty. The class
room committees would not be
strateericallv stationed during
' v -
examination periods to seek out
violators of the honor system.
The whole purpose of the plan
is that it shall serve as a deter
ring and educating influence on
weak students who need the vis.
ible presence of authority to im
press them' with the conse
nf dishonesty. It is the
dishonest man who might suf
fer anything from the quaver
ine of conscience to expulsion
from school from the new sys
j i ' i i ' r avr n
, . . m j-, i two institutions ior $o.uu a moiiLn ur
Our solution for the problem h00, nn nni1T14. nf ft dirt
and we offer it absolutely and extra money collected m a city 1 J
.... i sent out two or tiiree mure aim ts- a
gratis as a patriotic gesture week and correspondingly more other
is to suspend all Classes until ciotnes tnan l sena out nere. v
,-, , it-,j Second: at the end of the summer
eleven o'clock every Monday sehool this vear t had aimost eXact-
rvmimi'nn- Tlion Onci thp ln.iin- lv the same amount of laundrv I sent
UlUilUl. .x.w .
dry and send everybody down to tion) and had it done by the Spar-
T Tr-n. nfnnlr onrl -m olro 'om tnnhiTrcr TiSMinHrv. Thf list, inclnrlps
1T nyn-oTi nr-aolr nnrl mnlco. Pin tanburer Laundrv. The list includes
, , . 4-; rn, nine shirts and a proportionate amount
wash out their own stutt. then of other clotheSf towels, and bed lin-
ln'f Vp nnv mnrA talk en. The bill here: $2.31. . The bill
I j.i . a oer t i l j 1 :
tnere ; $i.oj. x uiso iiaa two mien
suits washed and splendidly finished
about ripped shirts and plucked
buttons, unless of course, you
want to feel at home and tear up
a shirt or two each week.
Arson
for $.70 bv the H. Lee Smith Co. of
Spartanburg at the same time,, mak
ing the charge for all this summer
work less than the work done for me
here last week.
Third: the services snoken of here
Seldom do we give way m this are not the Wet Wash" service which
i i -I I 1111. II UUO VT J- Ifli VV V UlU Ml J KrC wi.V
COlUmn tO What We ieel IS tne Tar TTppI rPaHrs to think. Tn everv
SOphomoric urge of most of Our case the laundry was finished better
I tVian if is Vipvo and nnv torn traT
contemporaries writing about ments (not worn socks, of course, but
.AintYiniot ThP PmiTifi torn smrts ana snorts) were eitner
- , , - , , , mended or replaced. At this sitting I
migm crurnpit; tu uic orw have on a snirt glven me Dy the Tri0
mark crowns might totter Laundry ot Atlanta tor one which was
.' .. i . i accidentally torn there.. Since com-
'neath the teet oi marcnmg raD- in to Chanel Hill this fall I have
ui t 4- T-iTVI rm r"n mil-tfott Hiflfi three sets of shorts returned so
. . - badly ripped that I cannot wear them,
lotting dOWn little bltS OI thlS nTld nothine- was done about it.
-w- T l 1 All 1 1 nr TTT 1 tt 1 .
and that. l3Ut wnen thlS Al- rourtn: xvir. vvaaswonns comment
i j ion tn uibLauce wnicn u. j. o. r.
bright ienow neany geus us in
rli fated for arson, that's a dif
ferent matter.
Albright mentioned this de
partment in his column the other
morning and pretty soon we got
a call from the state fire mar
shal, at least he said he was the
state fire marshal, raking us
over the coals for nearly turning
in a false alarm. But Albright
started it all. He called us into
his office several days ago to see
his new one-armed telephone
and suggested that we . try it
out. A fellow member of the
editorial board, nothing loath,
picked up the instrument and
gave the message that caused
the trouble. That's our side of
it. )
laundry trucks must travel to deliver
a bundle is most interesting. Would
the laundry deliver bundles to the
other side of Durham? How kindly
Specials for
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
We have received another large
shipment of suede jackets in a
great variety of styles and colors,
Bought when prices were low and
priced accordingly. $4.95 thru $9.85.
Special Une lot of suedes with
zipper or button front. McGregors,
etc., reduced to $4.95
CORDUROY SLACKS
Hundreds of pairs in many colors
to select from. $2.45 and $2.85.
te Yoiing Men's Shop
126-128 E. Main Street
DURHAM
t haunted clerks
for generations
"The first of the month" used to be a time of
feverish activity for ledger clerks. But the Bell
System accounting staff breaking away from
tradition simplified the keeping of accounts and
rendering of monthly statements to customers.
They applied a modern system of rotation bill
ing to the telephone business which now spreads
this work evenly throughout the month. In co
operation with manufacturers, they devised special
typewriters and bookkeeping machines. Thus
they did away with inefficient rush' and achieved
greater accuracy, speed and neatness.
This is but one example of a point of view found
throughout the Bell System. Even long accepted
routine is constantly studied it's always worth
looking for the more efficient way!
BELL SYSTEM
m
NATION-WIDE SYSTEM OF INTER. CONNECTING TELEPHONES