Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 13, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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t it), t 1 1 1 t i : i 1 1 Page Two Che Car Hfcl "The Leading Southern College Semi. Weekly Newspaper" Member of N. C. Collegiate. Press Association ' : Published twice every week of the col lege year, and is the official news paper of the Publications Union of the University of North Caro lina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscrip- J tion price, $2.00 local and ?3.00 out of town, for the college year. Offices on first floor of New West Building Entered as second class mail mat ter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. EDITORIAL STAFF C. B. Colton Editor W. M. Saunders Assistant Editor F. M. Davis, Jr. ... Assistant Editor J. M. Saunders Managing Editor . D. Apple Assignment Editor REPORTERS H. R. Fuller C. L. Haney J. E. HAwkins S. E. Vest H. N. Parker W. B. Pipkin J. M. Roberts W. S. Mclver M.M.Young M.P.Wilson W. T. Rowland W. D. Maddry . A. Cardwell, Jr A. R. Poston J. O. Bailey E. S. Barr Geo. Stephens, Jr. L. A. Crowell W. H. Hosea J. R. Parks Bessie Davenport ; BUSINESS STAFF Augustus Bradley, Jr. ; .... Bus. Mgr. Harold Lineberger Asst. Bus. Mgr. LOCAL ADVERTISING DEPT. G. L. Hunter Manager Assistants W. T. Rowland H. L. Rawlins FOREIGN ADVERTISING DEPT. .; , Manager Assistants F. S. Griffin C. G. Reeves CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT William Way, Jr.,... Circulation Mgr. Assistants M. M. Fowler : IJ, L, WiUGO.x I. L. Jackson Anyone desiring to try out for Business Staff apply Business : Mgn You can purchase any article adver tised in The Tar Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver tises is guaranteed to be as repre sented. We will make good imnidr diately fi the advertiser does not. Vol. XXXII Nov. 13, 1923 No. 16 Carolina pitted against V. M. I. at Richmond now seems to be ao established annual affair. A tense rivalry has sprung up between the two teams that threat ens to equal that of the Carolina-Virginia classic, and Richmond lias proved to be an ideal football city. Leading business men ' in Richmond are now boosting a movement to erect a large stadium as a drawing card for college elevens. Saturday's game was a dis tinct success from the standpoint of tiie game, crowd, and financial return, and no time was lost in tendering Carolina and V. M. I. a contract for next rear. The athletic moguls of the. University, now come out with a strong statement that i .1 . . wroiina seni ine nest defensive team available to meet the Yale terror. Grant ed that their statement is justified, why should they delay so long in explaining an affair that afforded the newspapers an opportunity to poke ragged holes in the University's spontsmanship and ath letic policy? If the statement had been issued when the first derisive howl was raised, a lot of unnecessary talk and comment would have been averted. The second .Issue of the Magazine shows a vast improvement over the first appearance in style and literary matter, and approaches the standard that a col lege magazine with a circulation over 2,000 should possess. A well balanced diet is served of humor, satire, poetry, seriousness, and editorial thrusts with emphasis on the thrusts. The Magazine does not yet represent the best literary efforts of the campus, but the present is sue shows a stride forward. It is evi dent from the general tone of the Maga zine that the editors and staff are work ing constructively and that alone should be a guarantee of future improvement. , The seminar course offered by' the De partment of History during the week of December 3rd to December 8th in cele bration of 100th anniversary of the Mon roe Doctrine on the relations of the United States and the Latin American countries should draw a large enrollment of students. Dr. William R. Shepherd, who will conduct the course, I.asl a thor ough knowledge of his subject and a widely known, reputation as V teacher and lecturer. His interpretation oft the doctrine that was designed for Sn'occa, sion and that later grew in influenceiand meaning until it now represents ont ,.f the chief paints in American .'diplomacy will be a timely and enlightening niei- - -- i rt1 ' THE DEAN SHIP STILL HANGS IN THE 3ALANCE ' M" , After considerable reflection, Judge Stacy has declined to -accept the dea'nship of the University Law School unanimously tendered him last week by the' executive 'committee of the Board of Trustees. This decis ion was reached no doubt by a se riovs consideration on the part of the jurist. It is to be regretted by those who look forward to- the up-building of the law school that he finally reached the conclusion that he did. However, it was a matter for Mr. Stacy, himself, to decide and he has decided and his decision is taken as final. That the committee made the best selection possible when it offered the position to Judge Stacy is unques tioned throughout the state. Those who have followed the career of the justice see in it that spark of prog- ressiveness that has been character istic of the rapid development of the state in the past few decades. He is a comparatively young man and would have undoubtedly raised the standard of the law school to a degree that would be more credit to the Univer sity and the state at large. . But now that Mr. Stacy has decided to remain on the bench, the commit tee will soon offer another man the important position. It is not our pur pose here to nominate a possible can didate, but it is our purpose to give several of our qualifications for a man. The committee, of- course, is taking into consideration the person al qualities of a man, his age, pro gressiveness and probable worth to the University. The qualification that might be overlooked or underestimat ed is that of securing a man who is native to this state, a man who knows the people of this state, their spirit, and who has mastered the fundamen tal legal code of the state. - We had much rather see a man at the head of the University's law school who had been a part of the progressiveness of the state than some master of. the law who is for eign to the spirit of the people. In holding such an opinion we do not believe that it is that of isolation or ?.r II 11 J'trary to the good intfie bringing in of new tloOo, buf ratST that it is one that will ia welcomed by the. students now pursuing the study of law in. the University as well as those who have gone out from its doors as lawyers in the state. The deanship of the law school is a position that requires much more responsibility that is usually given it in,-thought. I-The policies of the law school are. the policies of the legal profession in the state of the next generation of lawyers.- Upon the legal side of our state depends much of the progress of the state. The legal pro fession is among -the foremost in the promotion of the policy of higher education and other developments of the people, of the state; : , ' So it is,' when the committee goes to select another ; man who shall fill the place of the late Lucius Polk McGehee, we urge that they keep this qualification of common pur pose and spirit ever before them. NEW MEN ADDED TO THE ' CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT For the past week the Circulation De partment of the Tar Heel. has been con ducting a campaign the purpose of which was to solicit subscriptions among the members of the faculty and at the same time to find some good men for the circulation staff. The contest was carried on tin a -competitive basis, as the candidate's ability was judged by the number of subscriptions he got The re sult was that three men have just been added' to the staff: C. A. Moore, Tom Dibble, ami W. D. Toy, Jr. All of these men are freshmen. 'Hie circulation Department is now composed o'f the following: Bill Way, manager; ;Huth L. Wilcox, C. A. Moore, Toni Dibble, and W. D. Toy, Jr. : NEW BOOKS IX LIBRARY. ' The following books hate been added to the library of the School of Com merce for reference in Commerce A: Background of Economics Hunter and Watkins. " ... Forest Resources of the World Zon and Sparhawk. ' . : The New World Bowman. The Petroleum and Allied Industries Kewiey. , . . . ; . . Source Book for the Economic Geog raphy of North- America Coiby. A Smaller Commercial Geography Chisholm. , - The New- Stone Age Harrison E. Howe. . Tlie Shoe Industry Allen. "American 'Live Stock and Meat Indus try Clemen.' " ' ,; Industrial and Commercial Geography J. Russefl(Staitlv s , ,; :. Economics bif 'Petroleum P'ogue.' Commercial Gebfera'phy Brlgham. u Business, .Cfoography-r-Huntington and miliums. Principles of Human, , Geography Huntington and 'Cushing. ' ' ' " Industrial and ' Commercial South THE TAIMIEEL . Ragsdale Dons Red Shirt (Continued from Page 1) in this year of our growth, 1923 but it may be, one is not completely damned if he belongs not. We read the Sidelights on Success twice, ' and missed the point entirely both times. If it is a curtain-lecture on "Success," it stimulates 'us about as a dose of cabbage; and it is too rambly and uncertain to be worth a Continental as a character sketch. This sort of thing is interestiisr; the dialogue catches our notice at once, we read the story with avidity, but gradually as no conflict, plot, hero, complication, or masterfully drawn image appears, interest fizzles com pletely out to nil. A Handful by Earl Hartsell is worth a cart-load by the average would-be humorist. The thing he set out to do was first done, we dare say, on Papyrus and scrawled in the Egyp tian Beacon by the jester at the court of the great King Tut. But Hartsell does it much better than we have ever seen it done before; it is worth while to struggle through a magazine full of mediocrity if only one may find two pages of genuine chuckles at the end of the good old fight. A Reverie reminds us of the adver tisements we used to see of Velvet Joe Smoking Tobacco. Perhaps its author would have done better with it if he had written it in verse eight skillful lines, say, would have drawn a much clearer and far more effec tive picture. The story is too clut tered with side-track reveries this, that, and the other thing, to pro voke any real effect and, "else wherefore born" ? The cover this month is on a grade of paper that has a far better feel to the eye and the hand than that of the October issue. There is a cer tain dignity about the make-up and appearance of the Magazine this is sue that is connotative of real worth. On the whole, to summarize, the November Magazine makes a good impression: but one gets the idea that a number of the stories were run to fill up space and were by no means calculated to enlighten, or delight. Those in the infirmary this week! J. P. Glenn '27, cold; and W. M. R. ' Bender, who is recovering from a se vere case of pneumonia. NatLUXENBERG&Bros. .' showing f at Jack Sparrow's CLOTHES TOR THE COLLEGE MAN Every Meal i .' Have a packet in your pocket for ever-ready : ' refreshment. ? ; Aids digestion. - i Allays thirst. I . Soothes the throat. : 5 For Quality, Flavor and E the Sealed Package, Damon "What ore you doing, Pyth writing Her another letter?" Pythias ." , "No not this time. Something more to the point, as one would say. I'm writing the Pater to end me a dozen Eldorado pencils. They are all sold out down at the store." ;11 mmm pis? TV. H I IfATlJlllfl a SCANLON TO SPEAK. Dr. David H. Scanlon, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Durham, will deliver the second University ser mon of the year in Gerrard Hall at 7:30 o'clock next Sunday night. The Durham'' preacher Is one of the lending Presbyterian divines of the state, a very aetive and energetic man, a mem ber of the Davidson Board of Trustees, and one of the few preachers considered prominent enough to find a place in Who's Who in America." It is ex pected that a large number of Uni versity students will hear the sermon. The Di Society had as its princi pie speaker last Saturday night, ex President Wilson. It was decided at the beginning of the meeting to post phone the order of exercises, in or der that the members might hear Wil son's speech. After the roll call ard the committee reports, the society ad journed and went lamost to a man to the Carolina Cafeteria where Itib speech was heard over Nick3 radio. On account of numerous requests from the student body, Mr. C. M. Baker has made arrangements to have the library kept open through the snppper hour. Previously it has been closing from six to seven. Hence forth it will be. open continuausly from eight-thirty A. M. to ten P. M. This will be greatly appreciated by those who have work to do and do not have to go to supper from six to seven, since they can come in dur ing the afternoon and stay as long as they wish, without being put out while the student assistants are go ing to supper. There will be some one at the desk at all times of day to care for the wants of the stu dents. . The French Club will meet Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock at the Y. M. C. A. PROFESSOR asked the other day how we managed to keep track of all the pieces sent US. We J. DID NOT tell him but insisted that he come to the Laundry He did and he does KNOW just how we do it. We know you dont know half as much as you think you know until you know us. Now is the time to know. Come Visit the Laundry U. N. C. Laundry Dept. What a difference, just a few cents make !1 E. V. HOWELL, President : LUECO LLOYD, Vice-Pres. THE PEOPLES BANK Chapel Hill, N. C. imamamttaamttmmm:: Fitch-Riffgs Lumber Company Carrboro, N. C. When in need of . ' Flooring, Ceiling, Sash, Doors, Sliding, Cement, Lime and Plaster PHONE 233. BUDD-PIPER ROOFING CO. DURHAM,, c'. G. Roofing and Sheet Metal Work g anu oneci meisii "um li'iiiitiiiKituitity COMPLIMENTS OF THE INDUSTRIAL PAPER COMPANY Baltimore, Maryland SOUTHERN REPRESENTATIVES: air. Harry W. Turner , Mr. James S. Lewis 3 : 4 ILrYliJUl YiU III A " ' ; You can't make clothes like machines they must be tailored The standardized, one-like-the-other product has its place. Steel rails, tractors, radiators must be made that way good clothes must not. Only tailor shops can make fine clothes and give them character factories can't. Our tailor shops at Fashion Park work the cus tom way on ready-to-put-on clothing. Markham-Rogers Co. DURHAM, N. C. Tuesday, November 13, 1923 v timii'tiniiiiimiiii!iimtnmfflimmtauuttt; C. B. GRIFFIN, Cashier K. P. ANDREWS, Asst. Cashier 1 :::;:::;::;::;Knttt isa:anaa:t u JYDl llKJxx J .i vi x. i a FATIMA kA.merjoaifcEecki..... 4i. ....i.v.-i...;,,,,:,,; irMf llJIf . ""Be- " . ' ' '"
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1923, edition 1
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