Two Cfte Datip Ear Ieei The official newspaper of the Publi cations Union Board of the University of ' North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it i3 sprinted daily except Mon days, and the Thanksgiving, Christ mas, and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, ?4.00 for the college year. Offices ''on the second floor of the Graham Memorial Building. Chas. G. Rose, Jrl . Editor G. W. Wilson, Jr. Mng. Editor John Planning. Business Mgr. EDITORIAL BOARD Don Shoemak er, chairman, Heuderson Heyward, Dan Lacy, Kemp Yarborough, J. F. Alexander, E. C. Daniel, Ervin Jaf fee, Bon Phillips, Karl Sprinkle. CITY EDITORS W. R. Woerner, Tom Walker, W. E. Davis, T. H. Brough ton, Claiborn Carr, T. W. Blackwell. FEATURE BOARD Ben Neville, chairman, Charles Poe, W. R. Eddie man, Joseph Sugarman, A. T. Dill, Robert Bolton. FOREIGN NEWS BOARD Frank Hawley, John Acee, Ed Spruill, C. r G. Thompson. REPORTERS J. H. Morris, W. O. Marlowe, Harold Janof sky, P. "W. Markley, Paul Schallert, Milton ' Bauchner, J. S. Cook, P. C. Smith, J. P. Lentz. A. D. Steele, Julien D. Winslow, K.iY. Young, L. L. Hutch inson, A. S. Taub. Business Staff CIRCULATION MANAGER T. C. - Worth. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Assist ants: R. D. McMillan, Pendleton Gray. Bernard Solomon. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT Howard Manning, manager; Bill Jones, H. Louis Brisk, Joe Mason, Dudley Jennings. COLLECTION DEPARTMENT John Barrow, manager; assistants: Ran dolph Reynolds, Joe Webb, Jim Cordon, Agnew Bahnson, Roy McMillan. Thursday, May 26, 1932 The Only Sane Solution For. several years it has been threatened that unless the ef ficiency of the honor system is considerably increased, steps will be taken to introduce another method of student discipline. However, if the suggested plan to be considered at the mass meeting of the student body to morrow 'night is passed, this threat will no longer be in order. The students will have taken a long stride towards a perfection of the honor system. Under the new arrangement students entering the University .will be required to sign a pledge that they wiH not violate the re quirements of the honor system themselves and will be held re sponsible for reporting all viola tions coming to their attention. Last year the student council's records show that hardly ten cases came up in which the vio lators were reported to students other than council members. Un der such conditions the present system can hardly be expected to work efficiently. The students argued that they could not make themselves feel the responsibil ity to report the guilty persons. But under the proposed plan each student will be given this responsibility when he enters the University, and if he fails in this task he will be held equally as guilty as the man whom he re fused to report. On the other hand, if he reports the guilty party he himself will not be look ed on as a "squealor" but in stead as just another student who did what was required of him. . This will save considerable embarrassment for those spine less individuals who are afraid to report violations under the present plan. It will give them a chance to ease their weak minds by saying that they were required to report and hence had no other alternative. .This proposal has been pre sented. Its benefits are self-evident. The rest is left to the stu dents. If they accept the plan, they will give themselves a work ing system of student discipline. If they refuse the plan, they place themselves in danger of having a faculty proctor system forced upon them. "A Souvenir of The Dark Ages The present trend in penology is to regard the treatment of the criminal as corrective rath er than retaliatory, and with the acceptance of this principle, capital punishment loses its only justification. While this taking of human life has been with mankind from the remotest eras of antiquity men have constant ly expressed grave doubts as to its justification and efficacy. To many it does not seem right that human beings, themselves not free from sin and wrong, should have the power to de prive a fellow man of his right to live. Certainly it is a cruel and inhumane practice that might be retained if nothing else could protect human wel fare; but this is not the case. In addition to the ethical and moral objections there exists the actual facts which prove that capital punishment has failed to reduce the numbers of the crimes.it is intended to prevent. Countries and states that have abolished it have found that there is no increase of murders, and in many cases there has been a considerable decrease. This is due to a great extent to the extreme reluctance of jurors to return a verdict which they know means death to the accused man before them. Hence many men guilty of crimes call ing for the supreme penalty have been acquitted or found guilty of lesser crimes , with less drastic punishments. The very small number of men electro cuted in proportion to the num ber tried for first degree mur der demonstrates that there is a strong revulsion on the part of most men to the taking of life even though legally. A further consideration is the murderer himself. Unlike other criminals the murderer is peculiar to no particular race, clime, occupation or degree of education. Most murderers 'are individuals who have been driv en to actions of which they are normally incapable and are com mitted though they know their lives are at stake. Many of them are first offenders who have never been in trouble with society before and are guiltless of other crimes. Some are vic tims of insanity who are ob viously not answerable for theirj actions, and in other cases the lines between sanity and insan ity, between murder and homi cide . are so fine that it is a dangerous one to draw and kill on the balance. - It is certain that many murderers might be subject to punishment and cor rection that would satisfy soci ety and create a good and useful citizen. The horrible possibility that innocent men 'may be convicted and sentenced, though perhaps slim, as almost reason enough to do away with a punishment that cannot be corrected if an error is made and there can be no doubting that many men have gone to their deaths through circumstantial evidence, perjury and the imperfections of human justice. An eye for an eye has been outgrown by the human race and it is a question of time only before the electric chair will grace our museums along with the thumbscrew and the rack. J.F.A. Are You Listenin'? Disgusted with radio pro grams similar to ours, Canada has taken the first step in fol lowing England in regulation. In the British Isles, a private monopoly licensed by Parlia ment, the British Broadcasting Co., Ltd., has control. The monopoly does not make its money from advertising but from a tax of about $1.80 that is imposed on all owners of re ceiving sets. Canadians plan to reduce advertising to not more than five per cent and to super vise and gradually buy in sta tions. If Canadian stations are di rectly comparable to ours this THE DAILY ado seems rather silly. There are, of course, poor programs, but it is obvious to all those who listen in on broadcasts that the level of excellence of entertain ment is steadily becoming high er. The Canadians already have a tax of about two dollars on receiving sets. Cutting adver tising to a very low minimum would cut off most of the in come, from advertising. As Frank Mason of the National Broadcasting Co. said, "They're killing the goose that lays the golden egg !" More money would have to be gotten from some where. It would have to come in the form of a tax whether on radios or not. The American system seems, in spite of criticism, the best. Radio programs have a great deal of cultural value and are a quick means of getting impor tant information to the whole country. Thus the possession pf sets should be encouraged. Let advertising foot the bill for the programs. The natural competition of station and sta tion and advertiser and adver tiser will see that the programs improve. H.H. Once in a Lifetime "If dis ain't a mess, I never seed one!'- This well-Known expression of Amos and Andy, when ap plied to the approaching com mencement exercises, seems hardly adequate to describe the situation. No one seems to know what anybody is supposed to do. Everybody apparently is relying on somebody else to do some thing. The result is that nobody has done anything, and every body is blaming everybody else for doing nothing. As yet, no announcement has been made as to who will be the commencement speaker. It is extremely doubtful that he has been chosen. Perhaps the "pow ers that be" are planning to make this an all-Carolina affair by having President Graham de liver the final address. This meets with our approval, not on ly because he is a good speaker but because we believe he won't talk long. But why has no for mal announcement been made? The senior invitations commit tee did nobly in its choice of, in vitations, but, here again, some one has failed to co-operate, for there has not been printed any program of the exercises to in clude in the invitations. We do not know who is to blame for this negligence, but the lack of these programs will likely cause much confusion on the part of the recipients of the invitations, for the time for the presentation of diplomas has been changed. This business of being gradu ated is getting on our nerves, especially when we know so little about it. We are glad it hap pens only once. B.H.N. Toward a Native Drama The recent fur-flying over the Playmakers' production of The Butter and Egg Man gives rise to a questioning of the policies and accomplishments of that or ganization. With perhaps more than a dignified measure of fan- NOW PLAYING Irving Pichel Marguerite Churchill "FORGOTTEN COMMANDMENTS" Also Comedy News TAR HEEL fare the Playmakers have set themselves up as the distillers of home-drama, the group that will keep the fires burning for folk-plays. This highly com mendable aim has elicited na tional recognition for the Play makers and has played no slight part in publicizing the Univer sity in a decidedly agreeable light. Yet, the time has "come when the drama group faces a certain lack of regard at home that it most surely enjoys abroad. This might be explained by the fact that the Playmakers have insist ed on being more than a folk drama institution in Chapel Hill. The vast field of dramatic possi bilities has called to them and they have proceeded to dabble in areas other than their chosen one. It is here that the group has come to grips with the home folks. Do the Playmakers, fly ing their homespun banner, have the right to offer fourth-rate imi tations of Broadway, when they could be doing top-notch work in the field for which they are pe culiarly suited? Does the group have the privilege to select a play for local presentation mere ly because it is endowed with sufficient humorous situations and wise-cracks to get across re gardless of the production? The past season of the Play makers answers some of these questions. There is little oppo sition to the statement that Strike Song was the most signi ficant piece of work presented this year. Although the writing was in need of polishing and the acting scarcely finished, the pro duction shines brighter than the machine-made efforts. Faults in Strike Song are condoned, even expected, due to the very nature of the presentation. But the sketchiness of the acting, staging, and management in The Butter and Egg Man are stains on the Playmakers' reputation and annoyances to a critical au IMPORTANT NOTICE to CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES 1932 This Is to Call to Your Attention: 1. 2. 3. The $5.00 diploma fee which is now due. After May 27 it will be too late to get your name engr6ssed on the diploma by the engraver in time for Commencement. After June 2 it will be too late to get your name on the Commencement Day Program. The University Of North Carolina The most popular ready-to-eat cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eating clubs and fraternities are made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. They in clude Kellogg's Corn Flakes, PEP Bran Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat Krumbles and Kellogg's WHOLE WHEAT Biscuit. Also Kaffee Hag Coffee real coffee 'that lets you sleep. " '"" rt-- j RELIEVES CONSTIftKTIOM If fr ALL-BRAN KELLOGO COMPANY dience. . It is to the organization's own advantage that it realizes its limitations as well as its mani fest destiny. The group is a unit of actors that can complete ly spoil the splendid impression made with a Strike Song by of fering a shoddy performance of The Butter and Egg Man. Rather let us have revival upon revival of Paul Green and Tom Wolfe than murder upon murder of Manhattan drama. The road toward a native drama, be it remembered, does not lie through Broadway. J.S. It's Worth Knowing That Eamon De Valera, presi dent of the Irish Free State, was born in the United States. ' In air, sound travels from l,130Ho 1,140 feet per second; in water at a rate of 4,700 feet per second. Bullets of stone were used N in 1514. Figures in arithmetic were introduced into Europe by the Saracens from Arabia in 991, until then letters had been used. HELP WANTED ' Carolina Inn desires the ser vices of two or three summer school female students. (3) .We Wish to Express Our APPRECIATION For Your Patronage During The Past Year Herman's Dept. Store Inc. Keep Healthy. The prizes in class and campus life go to the men with energy and enthusiasm. But you can't have pep with out health. N A treacherous enemy of health is consti pation. It often brings headaches, listless ness, loss of appetite. Your college days are clouded. You can overcome constipation so eas ily. Just eat a delicious cereal : Kellogg's ALL-BRAN. Two tablespoonfuls daily will promote regular habits. Ask that it be served at your favorite eating place. u 'ALL-B Thursday, May 26, 1 93 The student body of Harvard University consists of students from forty-six different coun tries. Canada, with sixty-nrier coasts the highest number. Chha is next with forty. Abbyssinla, Persia, Palestine, Syria, and tie Virgin Islands are also repiv sented. On June 1st all dormitory rooms signed for by pres ent occupants will be open for general assignment. H eres 10 Smoke for IET the little girls toy "with their -i long, slim holders let them park scented cigarettes with their powder compacts. That's the time for you to go in for a REAL MAN'S smoke. And what can that be but a PIPE! There's something about a time-proven, companionable pipe that does satisfy a man's smoking in stincts. You become attached to it like the way it clears your head, stirs your She won't borrow your pi-pel imagination, puts a keen edge on your thinking. And you know the heights of true smoking satisfaction when you keep your pipe rilled with Edgeworth. It's the finest blend of choice, selected burleys. And its mellow flavor and rich aroma have made Edgeworth the favorite among pipe to baccos in 42 out of 54 leading American colleges and universities. Edgeworth? You can buy Edgeworth wherever good The smolce you can call your own tobacco is sold. Or, if you wish to try before you buy, send for special free packet. Address Larus &'Bro. Co., 105 S. 22d St., Richmond, Va. EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO Edgeworth is a blend of fine old burleys, with its natural savor enhanced by Edge worth's distinctive and exclusive elev enth process. Buy Edgeworth any where in two forms EdgeworthReady Rubbed and Edge worth Plug Slice. All sizes, 1 5 pocket package to $1.50 pound hamidor tin. rrrpa Hrr.nr.oanE RFADV.RHEBE! ! A,X ' r-ri RAN M N 1 4 Ill 1