Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 13, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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M i Sunday, November 13, 193 Page Two i f t I' V I 1 i 1 u 1 : 1 1 &)t Wail? Ear tjeei The official newspaper of the Publi cations Union Board of the University nf North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is printed-daily, except Mon- . m mmm 1 ATI days, and the Thanksgiving, Christ- mas, ana spring nonaays. i,ni,ereu as i. second class matter at the post office of Chapel HiUN C, jmder 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. RoseJr...... .......Editor Geo. W. Wilson, Jr....Mgr. Editor R. D. McMillan....... ........Biis. Mgr. Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Don Shoe--maker, chairman; E: C. Daniel, Jr., John Alexander, Edith Harbour, Mayne Albright, Nelson Robbins, B. B. Perry, Milton Kalb, A. T. Dill, J. M. Joy, F. A. Northrup, Peggy Ann Harris. - CITY ED'ITORS Bob Woerner, Bill DavisrL. L. Hutchison, W. R. Eddie man, Otto Steinreich. DESK MEN George Malone, Phil Markley, J. D. Winslow. FEATURE BOARD Joseph Sugar man, chairman; Vermont Royster, Donoh Hanks, FranklHawley, W. 0. Marlowe,- Carl Thompson, J erome Kessler. . - SPORTS DEPARTMENT Claiborn Carr, Bill Anderson, Jack Bessen, Lawrence Thompson, Matt Hackett, J. H. Morris, Crampton Trainer, Morrie Long, : Lane Fulenwider, Hugh Lane, Van Webb, Jimmy Mc Gurk, Jack Lowe. . .. REPORTERS B. R. Weaver, Ray mond Barron, James B. Craighill, Walter Hargett, T. W- Hicks, James "W. Keel, Nelson Lansdale, Robert C. : Page, George Rhoades, Phillip Hammer, Irving Suss, Clarence Hartman, Eleanor Bizzell, Elizabeth Johnson, W. B. Greet, Hugh Lane, Dave Mosier. Business.. Staff CIRCULATION DEPT. Tom Worth, Manager. ; OFFICE STAFF F. P. Gray, Jr., Ass't Bus. Mgr., John Barrow, Ass't Bus. Mgr., W. B. Robeson. . ADVERTISING STAFF Howard Manning, Adv't Mgr., W. C. Jones, Adv't Mgr., J. W. Callahan, Jim Cordon. James- Mehaffy, - Butler French, Esley Anderson, Buddy Up efcureh, J, Kalto Farlow, Joe Mason. COLLECTION STAFF Randolph Reynolds, Ccliection Mgr., Joe G. Webb. Aenew Barnson, Brooks. Armigtead. Maupin, Robert .FY rmxer, j. 1. .Barnard, j Sunday, November 13, 1932 At the Portals With four per cent beer, one hundred per cent prosperity and iv . . Vrtj Democracy just around the cor- r, , Qvt- . -. ner,-the three political parties , ' , , , , -n have already begun to wipe the i i. 1 rr.rtr,j0,T slate, asof last Tuesday, quite as clean as y6ur grandmother's kitchen floor. Now they point to 1936 .- , , epuuncau iua: nounces a complete snaKe up 01 the party, ana prontmg oy vn de-centralized campaign work of the 'Democrats in the last four x years, which must be given; its just due in the landslide of 1932, seeKS to re-organize immeoiaujiy in every section of the country. ine party 3 slock, iney say, musu t begin to show an immediate up- . turn. Nor are the Socialists and tne democrats taruy m orui- j j.i . j .:j zanon towaru xne next presiuen- tial marathon. The country will not ue anoweu 10 iorgu uie Democratic victory and the fact tnat arepetition.oi sucnis xne order of the day in March, 1936. wnatever aissatisiaction xne Socialists may recognize m their late efforts they will dispel with a vigorous program in behalf of their creed over the next four years. . In the midst of the battle, tf o ' , whieh must be termed so if it the" latter case, he writes his lie retains the same proportions in a quiz -book and swears at later in. the period which it as- the end that it is the truth, sumes now, youth has- become Likewise, no student shows more and more embroiled. In hesitancy in reporting the com the past, the politicos have lean- mon thief who stole his last five ed toward the younger and more dollars. But he declares that he ardent members of their factions could not report the same man for campaign ballyho and fan- for stealing five of his best ideas fare. Today, . their . undemon- from an examination paper. In strati ve berth at the helm is other words, he doesn't give a , . being gradually usurped by the a particular damn about what V youngsters, whose rising knowl- the other fellow does, so long as " edge of the finer points of politi- intakes nothing out of his own ' cal science has put them on an hide. That attitude is irrespon equal footing vith their elders. sjble and anti-social. Says F. Vinton Lindley, chair- - Finally, if these-critics would " man of the Yale Literary Maga- prevent the establishment of zine in a recent article for the local honor groups, they would ' New Outlook: . . the answer also abolish the student council, (in reference to youth in.poli- Their conception of the honor tics) is complex. It is, in part, system denies the need for any the answer which has been so ultimate control or final judicial 4much discussed in college papers authority, .' - - , .r - and In the general press through- - The classroom honor commit- out the-country. Young man, go into politics' . . . He is going in. He really is . . ; There has never been anything like it be fore in t.hp histnrv of trip pnnn. . . . ?. ' . , wj, umcao 11, was u mc uajrs Vi the Revolution.' We are going into politics 50,00 strong University trained men, not everyone a Lincoln perhaps, but all intelligent and sincere . . ." With this : new era, youth must be given its chance. America, like Great Britain, has come to the realization that the field must be open to the young aspiring college graduate. Our British cousins, however, have become-reconciled to this fact al ready, and today we find vast numbers of J English political science colleges turning... out young men for the service of their country. The will is with us, we turn now to a new era which must fling wide the gates to the clamor of youth. D.C.S. More, Anarchy - T And Less System The critics of the recent pro posal of the student council to establish classroom honor, com mittees are evidently honest in their objections to the plan. They contend that it would es tablish a monitor system. And, as they say, this would be con trary to the spirit of the honorJ system. . . ;'.r --i:. -Their conception of the honor system is an idealone which disregards historical fact. Ac cordling to their notion, the system means putting every stu dent on his honor not to cheat, leaving the matter wholly to the individual. Then, if . he is de- " " 7 termmed to cheat the loss is his own; tne aisapprovai 01 nis own conscience will be a "sufficient punishment for him. - Certainly, that is the ideal of an anarchial society. It is strange that a prominent cam- Pus .socialist, an aavocate 01 complete subordmatjon of he individual to society as a whole, , i. should be a proponent of anar- . chy, which is the extreme op- . . .j posite of socialism, m student ' government ; .These- critics apparently ig- nore three important principles of student government. First, the original success of the sys- tem depended upon the idea that honor memt being honest your - lf , hplniT1 to keen our fei L . ff , h . In the davs . th Universitv was small and contacts between students Wepe intimate. this idea was Ben ally accepted and carried into practice. Xhe pr0posed plan of the stu"dent council" is intended to revive that idea by makin 01lt of each dass a unit that will I correSpond in ' its intimacy of contacts and in'its form of gov ernment to the smaller Univer- sity 0f a former day. Secondly, the critics of the plan geem to have forgotten that th honor svstem also includes lying and stealing, as well as cheating. ' A man who resents bein called a liar will cheat with no qualms of conscience; . 1 -it.. " . 1 ' yet, the only difference between lvintr and cheating is that, in tees would have the same'pow ers as the council in determin ing the I- guilt of offenders; al ways, however, the right of final judgment and the powerof imposing sentence would be re served for the supreme council! of the whole campus. " " The studentr council is not a monitorial group. It makes no effort to apprehend offenders by snooping, spying, or detective methods. If, in. the course of his regular campus duties, ' a councilman comes upon evidences of dishonesty, he reports them to his tribunal.. The classroom honor" committees, being elected just as the student council is, would work in an identical man ner They would not be sta tioned at vantage points in the classroom ; they would not police the aisles ; nor would they make an effort to apprehend cheaters except as they happened to see them, or as they were reported by other students. Apparently, what the critics of this plan want is anarchy in campus government. They would have the group deny all respon sibility for the individual. . They would deny the responsibility of the individual to the group. While not contributing one iota to deter the .individual from cheating or to' educate him in the principles of honor, they would expedThim automatically, by in stinct, to become a good citizen of the campus and of the state. r Actually, they are not arguing for a system, -but for the absence of a system : for anarchy. E.C.D. - Sunday, Nov. 6 The Daily Tar Heel, in a canvass of faculty members on their views of the several pres idential candidates, tallies : Dem ocrats, thirteen; Socialists, one; Republicans, none. Others so licited unable to give views, thus possibility of Republicans in faculty ranks darkly hinted. Belford Forrest, prominent English playwright, reads his new "How It All -Began," a chronicle of the " early English theatre and its sidelights. Re sult: audience unanimously charmed. Monday, Nov. 7 A. W. Hamilton, finance and debt authority, Charlotte, tells freshmen in chapel service that the real reason for the economic denression "eroes back to the time of the United States entry into the World War." Further; "The' trouble was due to the fact that we did not conscript Wealth and property instead of. flesh and blood. We, our children and grandchildren must slave in or der that the war profiteers might collect what is due them." And stereotyped Mr. Hamilton in conclusion: "All men-of the Al Capone type should be lined hip against a stone wall and ex up , ' 4.1. CtULCU, oaYiiig . wV neonle of the United States $400.00 per capita." Tuesday, Nov. 8 Sbdication of Herbert the first hailed over campus and state as early returns indicate Democratic landslide. All, North Carolina Democrats victorious in state campaigns. ..Student council presents new honor system to student body for discussion and vote when pros rand cons have been exhausted Tar Heel's President Weeks : "The proposed plan will , not take anything from our existing sys tem ; instead it '.will '.add greatly to it . . . and will give the indi vidual student more responsibil ity in it . . ." - rai AssemDiy aeaaiocKs on bill favoring, freshmen segrega tion. '"Resolved: That the low tariff advocated by the Demo crats is a better policy for the I-' The Week 1 I United States than a: high pro tective tariff as exemplified by the Sinoot-Hawley bill 'which is sponsored by the Republicans, results : guess ' Wednesday, Nov. 9 Final state election returns in dicate University alumni have clean sweep. J. C. B. nrms- haus (1904), governor; A. 1. Graham (1912) lieutenant-gov- ernor; J. r. ateumau .Vxaw state treasurer ; -A. T. Allen (1897) superintendent of pub lic instruction ; W. A. oranam (1901) commissioner of agricul ture; A. L Fletcher (1905 commissioner of labor ; Stanley Windborne (1917) insurance commissioner ; Daniel C. Boney (1923) commissioner of insur ance; Robert R. Reynolds (19 06) United States senate; Lind- sey C. Warren (1910); Charles L. Abernathy (1895) Edward E. Pou (1894) the "grand old man of the house" all elected to the House of Representatives as well as ; Frank W. Hancock ( 1916) , William B. Umstea'd' (1916), J. Bayard Clark (1906), A. L. Bul winkle (1903) and Zebulon Weaver (1895).. : Thursday, Nov. 10 First year men nominate class officers. Two nominated by mis take and later withdraw names. Friday, Nov. 11 Freshman gridders find Uni versity of Virginia yearlings little opposition in 33-14 victory. National Symphony Orches tra announces audition of Dansj& Moronique this week in Wash ington, D. C, written by Univer sity student, Herbert Hazleman, who got his inspiration for his work from "whistling morons' theory as advanced by Colum bia professor last year. . No Human Being Can Sit Unmoved in the Tidal Sweep of This Heart-Pounding Drama, Magnificently Played by Three Distin guished Stars . . From the Play That Held Moist-Eyed Crowds En tranced a Year in London and New York. . John 66 A BILL OF DIVORGEMENT" with KATHARINE HEPBURN BILLIE BURKE TUESDAY LORETTA YOUNG GEORGE BRENT in .. "They Call It Sin" is this power has overv three gorgeous 'J. J beauties played by SATURDAY BERT WHEELER ROBT. WOOLSEY EDNA MAE OLIVER in "Hold 'Em Jail" - . 1 ? J A. songs. - . - - r Playmakers present initial bill of ten short plays written by students in playwriting courses. Young Socialists and Young Democrats inhale sharply .and launch programs leading to elec tion of 1936. - . DON SHOEMAKER The Ink Well By Nelson Bobbins , This department gives its wholehearted approval to" the plan debated by the Phi Assem bly for the segregation of fresh men! and suggests -that either Hillsboro or Pittsboro be accept ed as being sufficiently removed from the campus to serve as a suitable location for said segre gation. And while we are about it,"we might, also, . try to swap Spencer hall and a few dozen fraternities to the state game department for a pair of little white rabbits with pink eyes. Another great and momentous and much needed reform that should make Carolina hearts beat loyally in crusading har mony 'neath the '. blue sweaters and chiffon brassieres, and gath er strength for the fray, in thie interests of freedom and world ( Continued on last page) " - Dr W. Poteat, president emeritus of Wake Forest College, delivers Armistice day address before faculty and students in Memorial hall, y'? Saturday, Nov. 12 ' -New University Hymn pre sented to student body, compos ed by Rob Roy Peery, who wrote Dartmouth and Oberlin College !.::-::::;w:.v.....?..-- DAVID MANNERS OTHER "UNITS Then Came the Yawn A Vitaphone Act "Carnival Capers" Oswald Cartoon Paramount News MONDAY WEDNESDAY DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS Jr NANCY CARROLL ' in : .. "Scarlet Dawn" FRIDAY "j"wvv..?toft:.:v:v;v HtySirs.Jr-..ii--- - fjind out inMc j . '". ; j """"" I IIW I - -5 THOSE NEW - BOOKS During the past week many new books were added to the rental library in the Bulls Head. May we offer a brief de scription of those we recom mend. THE FLOWERING WILDER NESS, John Galsworthy (Scribner's) $2.50. The nov- x el' lately appearing in Scrib ner's Magazine. Much super ior to Maid In Waiting, in cidentally did you know that the author has just been ; awarded the Nobel Prize in literature, a fitting recognition for his fine work in The For syte Saga. OUR STREET, Comption Mc Kensie (Doubleday-Doran) $2.50. Written in the "modern-Victorian" ; that is, a nov el combining nineteenth cen tury seeting and "quaintness," with a working knowledge of popular psychology as a basis for characterdelineatioh. THE NARROW CORNER, W. Somerset Maugham (Doubleday-Doran) - $2.50. "Short therefore, is" man's life, and narrow is the corner of the earth wherein he dwells." The particular corner referred to is that portion of the east known as Malaysia. A novel said to rank with Human Bondage. NIGHT FLIGHT, a novel with a South American locale, which according to Dundas. Leavitt, "is the story of a man who (Continued on last page) A role of power, brilliancy and passion that will stand in timeless memory as a rec ord of his genius. It will stir the deepest emotions . .the story of the husband who re' turned from living death to find every thing changed.:, and of the wife whose heart was torn between the husband she pitied and the man she loved. Vj THURSDAY MIRIAM HOPKINS CHARLIE RUGGLES in "Trouble in. Paradise" C03IING WILL ROGERS in 4 Too Busy to Work' 1 1 i t I 1 V
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1932, edition 1
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