THE DAILY TAR HEEL
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1935
AGE TWO
Wbt Batty Car eel
The official newspaper of the Publications Union Board
cf the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where
it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving,
Christmas, and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class
matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C., under act
of March 3-1879. -Subscription pncea-uu lor me
college year. -
A. T. Dill ...........
Robert C. Page, Jr....
Joe Webb
Joe Robinson.. ........
.. -Editor
......... Managing Editor
Business Manager
...Circulation Manager
Editorial Staff
EDITORIAL. BOARD Phil Hammer, chairman, Earl
Wolslagel, Franklin Harward, John Schulz, DuPont
Snowden, Margaret McCauley, Morty Slavin, Sam
Leager, Dick Myers, Charles Lloyd, Jake. Snyder, Pml
Kind, Charles Daniel, George Butler, Don Wetherbee.
FEATURE BOARD Francis Clingman and Willis Har
rison, co-chairmen, Nick Read, Bob Browder, J. E. Pom
dexter, XW. M. Cochrane, Nelson Lansdale.
CITY EDITORS Irving Suss, Walter Hargett, Don
McKee, Jim Daniel, Reed Sarratt.
TELEGRAPH EDITORS Stuart Rabb, Charlie Gilmore.
DESK MAN Eddie Kahn.
SPORTS DEPARTMENT Jimmy Morris and Stuart
Sechriest, co-editors, Tom Bost, Lee Turk, Len Rubin,
Fletcher Ferguson, Lester Ostrow, Ira Sarasohn.
EXCHANGES MargaretTGaines.
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Don Becker.
REPORTERS Bill Hudson, Jhn Smith, J. F. Jonas,
Lawrence Weisbrod, Hazel Beacham, William Jordan,
Morton Feldman, Ralph Sprinkle, Newton Craig.
Butler French
.Herbert Osterheld
- Business Staff
ASST. BUSINESS MANAGER.
COLLECTION MANAGER
OFFICE MANAGERS Walter Eckert. Roy Crooks
NATIONAL ADVERTISING Boylan Carr
DURHAM REPRESENTATIVE Joe Murnick.
LOCAL ADVERTISING Hugh Primrose, Robt. Sosmk,
Eli Joyner, Niles Bond (managers), Louis Shaffner, Bill
-MacDonald, Page Keel, Bill McLean, Crist Blackwell.
CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: WALTER HARGETT
Tuesday, April 2, 1935 ,
Something '
We,Liked ;U . -' '. : ; ; .
-. One thing we liked Sunday night, as' well as
Dean Wicks't talk; was President Frank "Graham's
pronunciation of the phrase, "Human Relations
Institute."
Familiarly, and unthinkingly we roll it off -our
tongues, slurring forgivably, perhaps -the
words. But President Graham gave them their
true and rightful meaning and emphasis. ;
Not the Human Relations Institute. Not' the
bare phrase we hear so of ten every four years
and so sporadically between. But as President
Graham said in introducing Dean Wicks, "the
HUMAN Relations . Institute." N
It was created by humans for humans, and
its great concern is with humanity. We cannot
be reminded of that too often.
PARAGRAPHICS
Roosevelt has gone fishing. In 1936 it'll be
with a different poll.
Dean Wicks said he knew a man who al
ways held out his left hand while walking.
The habit was all he had left of his automobile.
Only difference between Billy Sundayand
the brain trust: he thinks we goin' straight
to hell and they don't know.
Huey Got Some
Good Out of It
Interesting indeed as a sidelight on the char
acter of Huey the Kingfish Long is the f ol
lowing excerpt from remarks made by him: in
the Senate last week:
"Mr. Long The Senator from West Virginia
(Mr. Neely) wants to know what I did with it
(the 'it' referred to was Huey's admitted, annual
earning of $25,000). In order to set a good ex
ample I will say that I spent it for brass bands,
for football games, for drinks for my friends,
and things of that kind. I got some good out
of it." V;
He got some good out of it, says Huey!
What about nearly ruining the collegiate ca
reer of Abe Mickal, L. S. U. football star whose
sense of decency Huey so grossly insulted by at
tempting to make him a state senator?
What about the odious reputation he has given
Louisiana State due to his Kingfishy meddling
with the principles for which any university is
supposed, to stand ?
What about the pogrom he has instituted
there against any student who dares to criticize
him? The editor of the college paper, the' Re
veille, together with part of his. staff, were un
ceremoniously kicked out for even questioning
his tactics. '
Yet Huey, would-be president of the United
States, got some good -out of it.- That is the
wealth he is asking the voters of this country
to share.
A Man and . .
His System
At the Methodist church Sunday morning Dr.
Julian S. Miller of the Charlotte Observer, in his
talk, "How Much Better Is a Man Than a Gas
ket," made, the statement that the Duke Endow
ment has "dumped $40,000,000 into the lap of
the people of this commonwealth." Dr. Miller
was citing James B. Duke as an example of the
beneficent capitalist.
Our opinion of this praise is not a high one.
Dr. Miller may defend capitalism all he chooses,
that being his conviction, but his reasoning is
shallow when he goes td such lengths. .
It is no praise to any man to give what he
has taken away. Not James B. Duke, nor Wash
ington Duke, nor any of the Duke family is the
culprit. What is to blame is the system, of
which they are a part, that allows a man to take
unto himself so much of the world's wealth that
he cannot use it, that he gives it away.
To be sure, we have the benefits of the Duke
Endowment. But Mr. Duke leaves behind, in the
wake of an unrestricted capitalism, a young
matron with $30,000,000 and his contribution to
the tobacco industry, which pays the lowest
wages of anyin the'United States.
Straight
To Hell
"An age of American people indifferent to God
moral standards, and the ideals ol pioneering
forefathers are aiding -in, the destruction of al
that is American, by their passive attitude." So
says our good old baseball-playing preacher
friend, Billy Sunday. He feels that F.D.R. is
nothing short of a dictator and that this coun
try is headed hand over hand toward commun
ism, socialism, and fascism. This, of course, is
the idea of the intangible hell, and he sees the
United States two strides and a nose ahead of al
other nations in the common mad rush to the
brink of the fiery furnace.'
Billy would alter the present state of degra
dation by freeing American youth from all un
American influences. So boys and girls, if we
are to get away from the fire, we must take de
mocracy by one hand and God by the other, and
stopping only long enough to eat, sleep, and go
to school, proceed triumphantly to foil the plans
of our modern Nero (F.D.R., to you) . Then, in
later life hold as many children on our knees as
the crease in our trousers will permit and be
tween drags from a,two-for cigar tell them abou
how we saved Uncle Samuel s coat-tails from
the wrath of some invisible despotic dinosaur,
With this William the Straight says "Goo' nite
an' gowon ta bed."
'7 April 2, 1930 "
"Due to a misunderstanding,
both the, Carolina and Maryland
debaters had prepared to argue
he affirmative side of the ques
tion when the two teams met in
Gerrard hall last night" .
Non-drinkers outnumber drink
ers and repealers lead in the
Daily Tar Heel prohibition
poll . . . "AH Fools' Day passed
quietly, without a single mishap
o any of us," writes Jack Dun-
gan.
April 2, 1934
Lewis Barnes, campus crack
pot, escapes from Dix Hill . .
Led by Righthander Fred
Crouch, Carolina's baseball team
defeats Davidson 13-5, while the
tennis team gets . a 6-0 decision
over Boston College its 64th
win ... Dean Van Hecke's plan
o exclude ; graduate students
from eligibility to student body
presidency is deferred for later
action.
Close-up View '
Of the Speakers . ;
In such classes as desire and can obtain them,
the speakers of the Institute are conducting
seminars.
These informal, personal, and intimate talks
achieve what the public lectures fail to do. : They
make possible closer study of the various sub
jects by interested persons through their in
formal discussions and opportunities for ques
tioning. ........
Yesterday '.we witnessed the .admirable sue
a 1 ' a 1 1 ' i i ': a.
cess ot one oi tnese seminars, wnicn was at
tended by a large number of visitors as well as
students who were not members of the class. It
is unnecessary to say that nothing should be
allowed to stand in the way of missing a few
classes in ordef to hear talks on the vibrant
living subjects under discussion.
,
The action of the Foreign Policy League and
the Carolina Political Union in arranging open
banquets at which to entertain their guest speak
ers of the Human Relations Institute provides
an excellent opportunity for interested students
and faculty members to come into close persona!
touch and contact with these well-known per
sonages.
The line for tickets forms on the left but re
member that the number of reservations is lim
ited. So hurry and get your bid early.
Flaunting
The Worst
With a tone of resentment, fellow Georgians
have written to a popular weekly in prptes
against the stark realism which Erskine Caldwel
displays in his account of conditions in the south
He, together with other writers, are not conten
to picture the anomalies of our social order bu
seek out the most despicable conditions and leave
them bare before the limelight.
Valid as may be the realistic scenes which are
depicted, most of us are cognizant that there
is something other than starving negroes . and
mongrel bitches. Meritorious undoubtedly, has
been the work of recent writers in exposing these
wretched conditions in order, that a solution may
be reached. The continued exposes, however
seem to indicate that the financial returns fur
nish more incentive than any. altruistic motive
It is not unlikely that those who are unfamiliar
with conditions in the south are rapidly getting
a one-sided viewpoint. One man writes, "The
planters rank high in the south's citizenship, bu
they are being held up to the world as a lot o
semsh crooks, exploiting the weak and help
less."
Admitting the unsolved problems of the south
we deny they will ever be corrected by a half
penny sort of writer's realism.
JLookin Backward
. Qne and FiveY eats Ago
Today ik the frtiesef 'M'
the 1)aily; Tab Heel.
Securities-Acts
Continued, from page one)
and is approximately three times
the volume of the-trade on ex
changes, is where abusive prac
tices most frequently spring up.
"From the standpoint of con
trol of fraud," Landis said, "we
are now on the high. road to suc
cess. - 7;. " - . -
"Exchange operations that
look suspicious we scan," said
the 35-year-old law prodigy.
"Now we are planning to bring
into existence a system of reg
istration of . brokers, so that we
may help the honest investor."
Landis made it clear that he
did not favor dictatorship to cor
porations, but that he thought
supervision was indispensible. In
spite of the criticism that the
activities of the commission had
strangled new bond issues and
had frightened investors, Lan
dis said that .a $281,000,0.00
turnover during the month of
March established a record for
"many a year."
"Seek Perfection"
(Continued from page one)
supernatural" feeling . that, is
becoming an actual, live part -of
the student's life in this scared
world.
"That margin of vagueness,"
said Dean Wicks, "helps us live
with "patience, optimism and
freedom. What profiteth a man
if he gain the whole world and
never live anything more than a
sensible existence?"
v A
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LOST
Pair of silver-framed glasses
in brown leather case, bearin
the name Dr. Thompson, Wash
ington, D. C. Finder return to
Richard Cox, K. - A. house.
THE NEW
NTISTRY
A Phase of Preventive Medicine
College Men find in it unusual
. opportunities for a career
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
DENTAL SCHOOL
A competent course of prepara
tion for the dental profession.
A "Class A" School. Write for
LEROY M. S. MINER, D.M.D
M.D., Dean
Dept. 28, 188 Longwood Ave.,
Boston, Mass.
DE
CAROLINA
MIDNIGHT SHOW
FRIDAY NIGHT
Hours of Shows: 11:15 and 1 A.M.
This is Irene Ware.
who plays Diana, the
Goddess who can
make even a statue
come to life
And Does!
A - "
X.
IwV.v.v.-.-.-.ft.-.-.-.-.-.: .AtfwMKwa,-;.:
, Car Latmmla pntentM
Thame Smith's
iL.ni?
I. 4
A OnlrWMl Pk wltfc
ALAM MOWBRAY - FLORINE McKXNNET
PEGGY SHANNON RICHARD CARLE
WESLEY BARRY HENRY ARMETTA
FERDINAND OOTTSCHALX WM BOYD
Palmoliye
Ivory
Camay
And Other
Brands
4C
Second Floor
Specials For This
Week At
10 Cent
Size
Life Buoy
Cashmere
Bouquet
7C -
Second Floor
VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS
$2.00 Value now
,50
.$1,
ROCKINO CHAIR SHIRTS
Pippin $. Broadcloth, full
shrunk- , '
QJc each
Van Heusen and Arrow
SOFT COLLARS
Regular 3 for $1.00 now
for SI .00
4
'A
One lot
SHORTS AND SHIRTS
25c each
SHOES FOR GYMNASIUM
This week's Special
c and up
79"
One lot 50c value
SHORTS AND SHIRTS
3 pieces for $.00
Van Heusen . ;
FULL DRESS SHIRTS
$2.50 now
WHITE SHOES
from
$2-45 up
All Fiill Dress
-COLLARS
Such as Arrows, etc.,
35c now
25
One lot light
SPRING FELT HATS
q,95
FLORSHEIM SHOES
$850 now
$5
.95
3
WILSON'S HOSIERY
50c value
for $J.OO
3
One table odds and ends in
PANTS
to close out for
q.98
OTHER SPECIALS IN SOX
from
10c-15c-19c&25c
Also see our white ducks
in any size and length,
dress pants, and knickers.
Also see our" big display
of sweaters, pajamas, and
sweat shirts.
Also SWEAT SOX at
25c and up
One lot
SHORTS AND SHIRTS
JfjC each
SPECIALS ON COSMETICS
Medium size Colgate's Tooth
paste, regular 20c now
16'
2 tubes Colgate's Toothpaste
and brush combination
45'
Squibbs, Listerine, and
Phillips Magnesia
Toothpaste
21'
All
10c
Cosmetics and Stationery,
Tax Included
0 ) L.
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DEPARTMENT STORE
Be Sure to Visit Our Second Floor for 5 and 10c Articles, Gifts, etc.