Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 29, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
f THE DAILY TAR HEL Sunday, October 29, Vzzo Two z Batlp Ear teel will, through the agency of the Federal Reserve system, extend that management to the all-im- .1 -r, tVof o-ricfSQ frnm hank de- ' The oScial newspaper of the Publications t,ion Board poxuim. xuxi ux UiUuCJ . - . cf the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where posits. The ultimate effect Will be a revamping lLeJ of the monetary systems of the world an effect matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under act that economists have asked for ever since inter- Of March 3, lSy. CjUDScripuua price, iui college year. definite action. X)o we or do we not want th system as it is? If we warjc it, how should it be made kffective? If we don't want it, what do we want? I, Pfrsonally, do not favor the hon or system as it stands. It leaves Claiborn M.'Carr. Thomas Walker Marcus Feinstein..: .Editor national trade gained its modern proportions, We look with optimism toward the day when too much in the way of tempta- -;n w f ni - in mndprn tion. It would, however, be too JIaiiagingEditx t - nrvo economy, money snuuiu ue uacvx umj o iv- . BusmeSs ManagerpTifaf.nTi that exchange abolished for a monitor system. PMitnrinl Staff of economic goods. And a managed currency I believe that there should be editorial BOARD Virgil J. Lee, Jr., chairman, Johnl js the only f orm of money that will attain the an honor system but that the , m n;n IT t. r Dursfar V Pat 1 i J 1 I ?t-i T U 1 " TiT XI r. Aiexanaer, Vv T ir iTnn S desired ends without an overempnasis on ine punisnmeut suouiu lie wun me 'commodity" nature of money. J.B.L. instructor rather than with the student council. The mstructor Can the Honor is more often in a better nosi- System Succeed? tion to judge than the student The last few days have seen a more or less council- he punishment should n,cVi Miltm, TT TTnlh. William II. Wansr, Robert B. BoltonrBen C. Proctor, H. Nelson Lansdale, John B. Lindeman, Jean S. CantreU, W. R, Eddleman, W. C Idol, Jr., Jeanne Holt, George Malone. FEATURE BOARD Joe Sugarman, chairman, Raymond Barron, Bill Marlowe, Walter Terry. . CITY EDITORS Carl Thompson, Phil Hammer, Jack Lowe, Bob Page, Irving Suss, Bob Woerner. DESK MEN Nick Powell, Walter Hargett, Eleanor Bizzell. concerted movement to put our honor system be severe, Sut it should not re into working order. So forceful has been the lt in expulsion from the -J4V,ii. .1.. - .... . t Jf I SPORTS DEPARTMENT Bill Anderson and Jimmie action and so stnlang nave neen tne resuitb goo!. We are all aware of the S&&&&S W that there is high probability that the tame- cheating going on. Yet we hesi. L. Simpson, Tom Bost, Jr., J. W. Conner, Aiex mariu mate oojecuve ui iue muvcuiaio wm uC tate when we consider the pres EXCHANGE EDITOR w. c. uvatee. lzed namely, tne eummation oi cneaung. rut t Dunishment which is almost n rami Harold By. W. BoMe, " the ehmmation of cneatingrmg aoout a always expuision. Reed Sarratt, Jim Daniels, Ed Goldenthal, Paul Teal, George MacFarland, Edwin Kahn, Francis Clingman, ornery fiaper, "" v, "; 7?.7" Un.9 w;n oof ,1ooWmiT W W r.pr caret McCauley, George etoney, Margaret uamro, mCu ; nm nut giw vwi.v.j.xwi tamty ot detection and punisnmenr, ratner xnan a high individual consciousness of honor. We do not say, however, that the system as an honor system cannot succeed with the pres ent measures that are being taken to bolster it. return of the honor system? Will not the sys tem then be based, for the most part, upon i Ralph Burgin, , Sam Willard. Business Staff ASST. BUSINESS MGR. (Sales) Agnew Bahnson, Jr. ASST. BUSINESS MGR. (Collections) Joe C. Webb. OFFICE MANAGERS L. E. Brooks, James Barnard. Again I ask, do we or do we not want the present honor sys tem? M. S. r d0 fhat the present .aftlonl a? Anderson, Hugh Primrose, Meivin uuiie, jrnu oiiiSct, merely superficial, temporary ones. Axter cuecti,- ing has been eliminated, then, perhaps, honor will come. Upon the foundation of a student body actively condemning all dishonesty a feel- THOSE NEW BOOKS Robert Sosnick. CmCULATION MGR. Ralto Farlow. CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: CARL THOMPSON Sunday, October 29, 1933 Carr, Sigma Nu, And U.GS.P. Are Winners (Continued from first page) j ature of Kenan stadium. They were closely pushed by a minia ture in the window of thej Orange Hardware company which was banked on the other. side by a model of the bell tow- er. " -v STATE ENGINEERS WILL MEET HERE "Days Without End'O'NeuTs HwnnH nlnv rvf RPflsnn will ing will emerge that cheating is; taboo not be- ltg appearnce Mate the cause uetecLion means expuisiun, uui uecause it is wrong. . , - ' This is our only hope. In the meantime great The Right Snirit - . ' - . . I ; a " " 'n..- i . : j i This campus has witnessed a demonstration progress is Demg maae, even inougn in xnem of school spirit which any student body should selves they no more constitute an honor system Bull's Head public sometime during the coming week. Be cause of its unusual approach in both subject matter and tech nique, it will no doubt engender (Continued from first page) j tion engineers. After serving5 as a captain in the signal corps in charge of telephones and ra dios during the World war he became a member of the engi neering faculty at Yale Univer sity. He served there until 1921 when he became associated with the American Telephone and Telegraph company. The lecture will be one of a series of eight on the subject of television given by Dr. Per rine throughout the United States this fall and winter, and the North Carolina section of A. I. E. E., is fortunate in se curing one of them, as it gives the engineers in this section an opportunity to hear about tele vision from recognized authori- ty. ' The American Institute of Electrical Engineers is one of the oldest engineering societies, being organized in 1884. It has at the present a membership of j more than 15,000 in the United States and foreign countries. he proud of. The pep meeting, tne oonnre, me x uv.o ' " 11,'J1"i A" a great deal of talk, and no lit burning of the "Rambling Wreck," were an evi- witxi xeu u. us nave . controvers and nonor yes Dut ratner a proctor system tnan . The rollicking authors of "Of Thee I Sing" have offered an other confection to Broadway, "Let Them Eat Cake." Like its prize winning- predecessor this play also deals with the political situation: Might we suggest as collateral reading; "Today," a new weekly edited by Raymond Moley, November "Harpers" exam room with staggered seats. Let us dprtpfl of the utmost in student interest m and support of our team, and a willingness to make an honor based even partially on the fear of yesterday's Homecoming the best welcome that public dishonor.--M.K.K. ; can be accorded to Carolina alumni. True But we must not overlook one fact that con- Greatness tributed so vitally to the success of Homecoming There is more to a great university than mar Day. This is the splendid spirit shown by the velous buildings, a learned "faculty, and an up decoration of fraternity houses and dormitories and-coming student body.. There is more than especially the dormitories, some of whose occu- a great football team, successful publications, pants, we understand, unselfishly gave up the and a ciuster of outstanding fraternities, if a onPortunity of going to Friday night's sopho- universitv is reallv ereat This addpd snmp. more dance in order to decorate their dorms for thing is adequately summed -up in "generosity carrying an illuminating article Saturday' game: ; f of spirit." Without this, other phases of a uni- he supreme court, and fnr thi,? was vpraitv'a lifo aro omnv moomnooc. , "Scribner's" with its treatise on mofo in"rliiiomaWf nF a "nriP. TTnrlnillltGdlv I TnrlQv wa nro -aa nvnnA f r 4?rrnrof in nnr VinofTo I the "Brain Trust. ' it was something more than that, and we be- to bring home the all-necessary bacon that while lieve that this unselfish effort" was entirely in we are carrying; away our share it will indeed the desire to cooperate with the general trend not cripple us to stoop and lend a helping hand of a rising ' school spirit and to make of this to some less fortunate forager than we are. This Mrs. Jarrett, author of "Night Over Fitch's Pond," has often been a visitor in Chapel Till! QViq In o c ittti r-r OltTafCl 1 Homecoming Day the best that Carohna has spmt of helping is reaUr the fundamental of short stories, but this is her first had- ; : t novd She lives at Princton Eegardless of which dormitory came out on attain when considered on as things "per se" ? New Jergey b her book at top in the competition, the Daily Tar Heel It is what these things will enable us to do that Peterboro New Hampshire and wishes to commend all tjiose decorators who par- gives them their correct lue This is nothing completed'it at the home 0f the Licipateu ior tnexr guuu wurjv. xe ueiieve mat vuv vyuu nao uui auuxu in succeeding years this spirit, begun by them, to be more helpful than the individual still strug will continue to spread until this University has gling. This in turn can be summed up by the a Homecoming game second to none in the coun- strong helping the weak. try. A.T.D. . : REVIEWS PRAISE TEACHER'S BOOK Zimmerman's "World Resources' and Industries" Favorably Received. Welch's, "Windwhistle," in west ern Carolina. A good deal of favorable com ment has been given on Dr. Erich W. Zimmerman's book, "World Resources and Indus tries." The book, which is be ing used in 20 institutions, in cluding ten state universities, was published in August, ' and since then the author has re ceived numerous letters con gratulating him on his work. To quote from one review, "This book is an important con tribution in a field which is re ceiving increasing attention . . . 'World Resources and Indus tries' is a remarkable achieve ment. It has been written with i painstaking care over a period of years, and repeatedly revised to secure greater unity, clear ness, and smoothness. The re sult is a masterly volume. Managed Those who have delisrhted Perhaps this is a long side-thought, but this with "The Diarv of A Provincial is its application. The truly great university Lady" will welcome the coming ia timu "iic wiieie generosity oi spine ana neip- of E. M. Delafield's "Gay Life." iumess prevails not only among the organiza Currency President Roosevelt's latest departure from tioris, not only among the faculty and adminis- "Lamb in His Bosom" did not conservative government was tne oacKnanaea trative olhcers, hut also in the general attitude wm the Harper prize, but adoption of Professor Irving Fisher's long de- of the school toward those other sister institu- cried system of a compensated dollar. Though tions of its kind.- J.M.V.H. Professor Fisher advocated a periodical change Speaking The Campus IS mentioned time and again as a Pulitzer possibility. The author I has stood comparison with Eliza beth Maddox Roberts, and Mar- jorie Kinnan Rawlings "South Moon Under." The story is that of a pioneer family in a Georgia wilderness during the middle years of the previous century. In its sympathetic treatment of the past that was America, it can in the gold content of the dollar in order to sta bilize the price of basic commodities, Mr. Roose velt is, from necessity, changing the dollar value ofjgold to obtain the same effect. Most economists believe that the Fisher sys tem does not go far enough, and that it alone Forum- will not have the" desired effect. Witness the For What? fact that when all the gold was taken out of Editor, the Daily Tar Heel: me oouar, prices, roae oniy raouerateiy. rut , xne uuier ingnt a naa the privilege Of at- well take its place amid the the President will not' stop with a half-way re- tending a Union Forum meeting held to discuss longings of "The Farm" "The suit, nor do we believe that Dr. Fisher intended the present honor system. I say "honor sys- Bright Land "'arid "Ah Wilder- tnat nis system snouia not nave a ionow-up. tern oecause that is what it was called whenlness." xi. me puicii&e yiau is etenueu to muuue i ciilcxcu tne university, aitnough l have often Maurice Hindus continues foreign gold, and a free flow of gold is per- heard it said that the school has the honor and to interpret Russia in "The mitted, then the plan would have tremendous the students have the system. Great Offensive" as he did in international effect. And we believe that such How any group could act as foolishly as did "Humanity Uprooted" and "Red action win oe taicen, ior it win ciear tne way tne union u orum, 1 don t know. There were Bread." xux x gieauy neeueu luunewary xeiurni. cnuments uui notnmg was decided. A motion Just a verv few of the books , This, we believe, is only the first step in the was made that we strictly uphold the present have come in for mention in direction of a managed currency without ma- honor system, that is, each student must feel day Any time you are in the terial backing. The folly of translating the it his duty to report anyone guilty of cheating, vicinity of the T building we Vdluc ux uiy cuniiiiuuities mtu texms ui a majunty voiea in iavor ot.this motion. A should be glad to have you drop a meuu ux mvuxiau e monetary vaiue m sucn econu motion was now made. This motion around and make your own dis- a way as to inaice tne relative economic values asiteu tnat wesmoaily the present punishment n vx tne uasic commouiues almost unuetermm- maae Dinamg upon the student council. This able, is the folly of our predecessors.: And the motion was also favorably passed by a majority President has repeatedly shown that he doesn't We have a situation wherein a majority voted give a uuuii iui picteueut. upon wo amerent and somewhat The United States will undoubtedly adopt a things. system of thoroughly managed currency ; and Mary Catherine Dirnberger. opposing ACT IN BEHALF OF HONOR SYSTEM In a situation of this sort there must be some! Dierlamm to Preach The Reverend C. R. Dierlamm will speak at the United church this morning at the 11:00 o'clock service on "The Shal - lows r and the Deep." Sunday ! school will be held at 10:00 ! o'clock. 40 DISCOUNT on all FOUNTAIN PENS Sutton Drug Co. iE PINNER at Gooch Bros. ; & Brooks Cafe on SUNDAY Should become part of your regular program. To enjoy a perfect meal amidst pleasant surroundings pre pared as only Gooch Bros. & Brooks know how is to add great ly to your day's repose. Served from noon until 8 p.m. Sunday Is Incomplete without its share of Newspapers & Magazines enjoyed while indulging in Your Favorite Tobacco Visit . Gooch Bros & Brooks Gafe For these Sunday pleasures - and select from their complete stock c nF Chapel Hill Movie Guild Presents II VIE MOTHERS ARE CRUEL ... Our love makes us cruel. We cling to our sons. Deep down in our hearts we'd rather see them dead than have some other woman get them! You'll be swept to tre mendous emotional hsf-hts by this pewsrful drecio of a mother who loved her son too we!!. Sunday Doors Open At 1:30 P.M; 5 Wio)v jVMjSi
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1933, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75