Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 5, 1927, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE TAR HEEL Thursday, May 5, 1927 Leading Southern College Tri weekly Newspaper Member of North Carolina Collegiate .rress Association Published three times every week of the college year, and is the official newspaper of the Publications Un ion of the university of .North (jar ' elina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscrip tion price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, for the college year. Offices in the basement of Alumni Building. Telephone 403. J. F. Ashby i .... ....Editor D. D. CAKROhL..Associate Editor F. F. Simon .....Business Mgr. ials from in front of Saunders Hall will add much to the appearance of the southern end of the campus while it is in the season of its most glorious beauty. Way before the Jays when Ram ases' were the vogue as mighty mas cots on the athletic fields one was forced t6 view day after day the uri- sightly appearance of tarpaper-cov- ered sheds and shanties, a space lit tered with planks, and other materials that marred the view from the steps of the portico of South building. Now that is all to be banished, in a few weekshe green grass will be there, and another needed touch will have been added to make this the campus beautiful. . ' PHI DISCUSSES UNIVERSITY BANK Editorial Department Managing Editors Tom W. Johnson Tuesday Issue Judah Shohan .Thursday Issue Joe R. Bobbitt, Jr Saturday Issue I Also Take Up Question of Ad- Walter Spearman. Assistant Editor I Walter Creech Assignment Editor! mission of Co-eds to Assembly. Staff Marion Alexander Oatesv McCullen J. H. Anderson W. W. Anderson C. A. Carr George Coggins Calvin Graves Frank Howell Glenn P. Holder P. C. Hobson T. J. Gold til the government the people who ' should enforce it are straightened out. We try to en force the law by electing officers but the whole thing is so foolish. TTT ft 1 i 1 t we cant aoji xn&i way, we must do it through the courts." "None of our offices are filled competently," Mr. Morrison concluded. "The courts should have an almighty power to seek out and bring to justice every law-breaker in this great land. We might get along for a while if we didn't repeal or enact an other law but the country would nnauy DreaK aown. inis is a rather serious subject to discuss before young men on such happy evening as this but you are the ones to carry on and make the government clean to carry it on to higher and finer things." A few moYe men then filed in to the hall, thus making it about The meeting of the Phi Assembly three-eights full. - Hackney then P. G. McPherson W. L. Marshall H. L. Merritt John Mebane J. Q. Mitchell Louise Medley H. B. Parker Robert Murphy last Tuesday night was featured by a heated discussion of the resolution "Resolved, that the Phi Assembly go on record as favoring the establish ment of a University Bank." Mr. Carroll, in defending the reso lution, stated that the bank wiuld not B. B. Eendrick D. . Livingston J. C. Wessell. Aa Underwood fnate the fine of $1.00 per P. D. Uzzell ' Business Department W. W. Neal, JrAsst. to Bus. Mgr. Charles Brown : Collection Mgr. G. W. Ray. Accountant Managers of Issues Tuesday Issue. ; VW. R. Hill Thursday Issue Saturday Issue- month for keeping a checking ac count but would encourage the stu dents to open small savings accounts. Each depositor will be charged a small fee to defray the expenses of handling his account. Students will also be able to cash checks without having to pay a checking fee. Mr. Chappell, in opposing the rsolution, .James Styles Edward Smith I questioned the permanency of the in stitution and its ability to remedy the bad check matter. A motion was made and carried that the resolution be tabled for future discussion. Another resolution bringing forth much comment was made to the ef fect that the Phi favor the admit tance of Misses Ellen Melick and Kathryn Johnston and all other co eds who express a desire to join the Society. The resolution was intro duced by Representative Hardee with the consent of the Ways and Means Committee. He explained the bill, stating that the aforementioned young women had expressed a desire to par ticipate in the discussions of the As sembly. Immediately there was a motion made that the resolution be tabled indefinitely, However, the resolution was destined to bring forth much argument and before the motion could be seconded another speaker was Entered as second-class mail matter ion his feet to support the measure. Advertising Department Kenneth R. Jones Advertising Mgr. foung M. Smith Asst. Adv. Mgr. M. W. Breman Local Adv. Mgr. William K. Wiley Ben Schwartz G. W. Bradham C. J. Shannon Oates McCullen Edwin V. Durham J. H. Mebane M. Y. Feimster Walter McConnell A. J. McNeill Circulation Department Henrv C. HarnerCirculafion Mar, R. C. Mulder Filer of Issues C. W. Colwell J. L. Matthews E. L. Carson Dick Slagle ; S. W. Smiley 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. 1 he TAR xi eel solicits ad vertising from reputable concerns only. , at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C, Thursday, May 5, 1927 CAM SUGGESTS A BOOMERANG- ING REMEDY Nearly everyone in the Hall wished to speak a word either pro or con. The speaker interrupted the discus sion to announce that the meeting would have to be brought to a close, as it was time for the Golden Fleece ceremony, and tabled the resolution to be discussed at the next meeting. Two other resolutions were made, one to the effect that the Phi favor the placing of crosscountry as one introduced Dr. Horace Williams who founded the Golden Fleece in 1904. Dr. Williams gave short history of the Fleece and gave its origin. - He said : don't know the real origin of the Golden Fleece, but in 1904, two sudents came to my office to ask about starting an order for the recognition of men who had ex celled in work on the campus That was probably the start." Dr. Williams said that a man must have an excellent record behind him to be eligible for the Fleece; that the man in consider- aion was closely stuaiea ; his achievements compared with those of others and his ability weighed before being accorded the honor. Hadgins "First Man Then came the two hooded and masked figures. Breaths were bated and nerves tingled as the two black figures stalked slow- y up and down the aisles. Fre quent consultations were held with Frazier Glenn in the rear of the hall and then one of the figures pounced upon Ed Hud- gins who sat down amid echoing applause after having been pin ned with white and yellow rib- The extent of lawlessness and the numbers of scofflaws now prevalent in our commonwealth verges on a situa tion of precarity Honorable Camer- of the major sports; and the other, to on Morrison told his audience at the the effect that the Phi favor the using annuau vioiaen fleece tapping cere- 01 tne lund appropriated for the mony. Doing the very practical building of a library, for the purpose thing, the former governor finds the of building a gymnasium. The cross- remedy lies in a reformation in -our country bill was defeated and the li- judicial system, a better public senti- brary fund bill tabled. ment and less legal enactments for the while. Library's Record Circulation Honorable Cam, in touching on laws I The local library recorded a circu about which public sentiment is di-1 lation of 15,750 during the month of April. This is slightly less than the total circulation for March, but is an increase of 40 percent over April of last year. Fleece Taps Ten Men In Annual Ceremony Monday (Continued from page one) vided, declared that when the legis lative bodies of the nation wrote the Eighteenth Amendment) in the Con stitution that "ought to have settled the whole matter and put it to rest." And the same with all other laws. The prohibition act is used only as an ex ample. v Now that he has advised that we get public sentiment in a nice, sweet manner to observe, obey and demand the enforcement of the laws of the will it continue as it has, in .the land, Mr. Morrison avers that it is all past, a Weak figure-head' There right to make a man testify against has never been a government in himself on the witness stand. This, anv UnA w . wvI"a ln it is to be observed, would be a direct f"7 13 80 easllv broken and flagrant violation of one of the tnrougn; there is no set of laws fundamental rights of , man written anywhere that are easier to in our time-honored but more, re- break than ours. The executive cently mocked-biU of rights. and legislative branches of the When former Governor Morrison government have glorious his- t0es bf this country has never acted, when hejsuggests. that we bring enlorced "S laws well enough to about law enforcement by flouting fur- ommana tne respect Of the peo ther our once sacred bill of rights or parts thereof, he takes ship with the sentimental sob sisters who are di- vihed to save humanity from a Sim ple evil thought they damn it with a thousand1 more execrable evils. He goes fdr out in the sea of wildest imagery and mock reason. ONE MORE EYESORE WIPED OUT on The action of the committee grounds, or whoever may be respon sible, in ordering the removal of the1 hacks and waste construction mater- pie. Where is the trouble? This is it : any government, office may be sold to the, highest bid der and until this is eliminated we will continue to have a weak constitution. We passed the eighteenth amendment and yet we know that it is broken every day every where. 1 We have so cial gambling and vice that thrive unpunished for the law breakers show a decided con tempt for the law. We shall never have law enforcement un- Hurry! Hurry! There are a few of the $29.50, $32.50, and $34.50 yall wool and hand tailored suits Left on Sale 1 . for ' $21.75 at Jack Lipman's University Shop r bon. : More consultations f ollqw- ed and . the mysterious men con tinued to wander among the aisles until one of them sighted E. A. Cameron Who was jerked from his seat and pinned with the colors of the Fleece. . Nash Johnston, Bobby Wilkins, Jud Ashby, Syd Chappell, J. O. Alii- m -m or M t S 1 son, lius Mcrnerson ana uaien Elliott were next tapped respec tively. J. F. Brown was not in the audience. After the tapping was completed, the black figures walked down the center ajsle and disappeared behind the Ameri can flag that covers the door in the rear of Memorial Hall, thus ending the occasion. x Edgeworth makes your pipe do its stuff" Qromue 1 "With a Brownie you're ready for any picture chance that comes un whether at home or at college. t See the complete line at our store.- ; . a . m s oister s Chapel Hill, N. C. Cornell University Summer Session in LAW First Term, June 20 to July 27 CONTRACT, Professor White side of the Cornell Law School. PROPERTY, Dean Kirkwood of the Stanford ' University Law School. CONFLICT" OF LAWS, Pro fessor Lorenzen of the Yale University School of Law. COMPARATIVE LAW, . Pro " f essor Lorenzen. 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You will never be left with a cigaretty after-taste. Camels aren't made thaMvay. That is why modern smokers everywhere de mand them. That is why this age has discovered the tobacco phrase, "Have a Camel!" R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, WINSTON-SALEM, N. C C1927
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 5, 1927, edition 1
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