- " ... ...... Page Four" T HE TAR HEE L Tuesday, Slay 28, 1929 i - V DR. GRAKEf AICES ISSUE WITH DR. IQTCHIN ON LAW University Prof essor Replies to Dean Kitchin's Statements in Regard to Sterilization Law Commending the Millner. steriliza tion law passed, by the .1929 North Corolina Legislature, and advocating the "judicious" use, .of .sterilization to cope with the problem of . feeble ddness. Dr. - Harrv . W. Crane takes issue with Dr. . Thurman D Kitchen for his statements in .regard to the sterilization , law before the recent meeting of the State Medical Society. Dr. Crane is professor of abnormal psychology, at ' the Univer sity and is also director of the divi sion of mental health and hygiene for the State Board of Charities -and Public Welfare,. Dr. Kitchen is dean of the Wake Forest Medical School and former president of the State Medical Societey ,. . Dr. Crane's reply, in part is as fol lows: .. "Indiana back in 1807 was the first State to pass a sterilization law. We may consider this the" definite start ing in the United States of the move ment to prevent by operative mea sures the procreation of socially un desirable types of individuals. From that time on almost, if not quite, up to the present moment, - there has been a constant controversy centered upon this means of -attempt at social control. Both the; proponents of the measure and those antagonistic to it have had in their ranks $iose who were vehement, emotional, illogical . - ... 1 rather than scientific, in,teir atti tudes. There; iwere those extremists who saw in sterilization a panacea for all social ills. There were those ' just as far from the truth in the other direction claiming that no good could possibly result from the use o sterilization. -. . . :. . "May 13 to 15, inclusive, at Atlanta, marked the 53rd annual session of the American Association . for the Study of the Feeble-minded. There was during the entire series of meet ings of this body probably no other one question that was more frequent ly referred to. v by ; those . presenting papers, nor more frequently intro duced by those discussing the various papers, than that of the use of steri lization. . ; . ' "Particularly interesting was the fact that only two people, out of the entire group took the .floor against sterilization. , and even - these were Welfare Workers To, Gather Here July 8 According to an announcement of the State Board of Charities and iublic Welfare the tenth annual pub ic welfare institute will be held here July 8 to- 13. The State Board and the University sponsors the event. As in the past summer around two hundred welfare workers will gather here for a week of intensive study and for lectures in their special fields. Two main topics of discussion will be featured, mental hygiene and the juvenile court. Two of the speakers on these subjects will be Dr. Harry W. Crane, professor of abnormal psychology at the University and director of the division of mental health and hygiene for the State Board of Charities and Public Wel fare, and Judge W. M. York, of the juvenile court at Greensboro. In ad dition to these, two men a number of county superintendents of public wel fare and other members of the staff of the State Board will appear on the program; " Although the majority of speakers will be from North Carolina welfare workers there will be several speakers from other states. The discussions will center on problems of peculiar interest to this state. Reception Given , By House Mother At Spencer Hall Mrs. Irene Lee, house mother at Spencer Hall, and her daughter Miss Maude Lee, entertained at a reception yesterday in honor of Mrs. Charles A. White, of Greenville, and Mrs. Thomas S. Rollins, Jr., of Chapel Hill. Mrs. White is here on a visit to her mother and father, Dr. and Mrs. George W. Lay. Mrs. Rollins and her husband are leaving soon to make their home in Asheville. The reception was held in Spencer Hall. The guests were welcomed by Mrs. M. H. Stacey and Mrs. G. K. G. Henry and introduced to the receiv ing line by Miss Katherine Martin and Miss Mela Royall. Receiving with Mrs. Lee and Miss Lee were Mrs. White and her mother, Mrs. George W. Lay, Mrs. Rollins, and Mrs. Cale K. Burgess, of Raleigh. The reception hall was decorated with sweet peas, snap dragons, and green candles. The color scheme was rose and green. AT THE CAROLINA perfunctory protest either; North Carolina really stood aghast at the prospect of losing Chase, and the public relief when he declined the offer was not at all pretended.... "His fight against the anti-evolution bill unquestionably made Chase, as far as public opinion was con cerned. It did not sharpen the ran cor of the fanatical fundamentalists against the university, for that was already razor-edged; and it did arouse tremendous enthusiasm for the insti tution among the intelligent. The Poole bill, in fact, was beaten partly by the votes of legislators who were themselves fundamentalists in" reli gion, but wno were iairmmaea, ana who .admired courage, even in a col lege president. And the- appropria tion went through." 88 STUDENTS RECEIVE AWARDS LAST NIGHT business staff , The Publications Union Board awarded charms to its student mem bers Travis Brown, W. H. Yar borough, and Glenn Holder. Ten men received gol-monogarams i for debating. These were given Dy tne Debate Council and went to R: M. Al bright, G. P. Carr," EC 4N. Brown, E. H. Whitley, J. C. Harris, R. R. Fisher, . -rr TT R. B. Fisher, E. L. Haywood, n. a. Hobgood, and W. W. Speight. Debate Council certificates were awarded to J. C. Williams, J. A. Wil kinson, J. M. Newborne, D. E. Hud gins, John Mebane, R. M. Albright; G. P.Carr, H. N. Brown, E. H. Whit ley, J. C, Harris, R. R. Fisher, R. B. Fisher, E. L. Haywood, H. H. Hob- good, W. W. Speight, J. A. Stanly, L. T. Bledsoe, H. B. Parker, Charles R. Jonas, and Merced J. Blankenship. Y Holds Annual - Hillside Service The annual Hillside meeting of the Y. M. C. A. cabinets was held Sunday afternoon in Kenan Stadium, It has been the custom for many years to hold the final meeting of the year in this manner. The meeting was opened with de votional exercises by J. A. Lang. Mac Gray, the retiring president, gave a report of the Y. M. C. -A. activities during the past year, in which he stated that the Y cabinets had played an important part in various phases of University life during the past year. He commended the leaders of the cabinets for their cooperation in dealing with the campus problems. Parson" Moss then took charge of the meeting, and delivered a very interesting and enlightening talk on the subject of "Sensibilities." "Sen sibility," he said, "is the prime fact or in determining how far a man's influence will reach in life. To suc ceed in life-a man must possess some bf the finer sensibilities. The men who have figured in our history were not educated in the sense that we term it; it was their fine sensibilities that won them that success. Choose any outstanding man, and you will find that he is endowed with a love Hollywood boasts a large colony of Russian ex-patriots. Natacha Golit zen, a former princess who traces her ancestry back to the Jagollon kings of Poland, is now an extra girl. Lodijon ski, a former general attached to the Czar's private bodyguard, runs a cafe; and Watishevlav Savitski, the former Minister of War of Southern Russia, is "playing a bit in "Prisoners," Cor rinne Griffith's First National produc tion of 'Ferenc Molnar's famous novel of the same name, which Manager Smith has announced as the feature attraction at the Carolina tomorrow. ; In calling o fthe general from the ranks of extras sipping their beer at the tables of an outdoor cafe in Buda pest where the story of "Prisoners" is chiefly centered, she promoted him to a "bit" which would keep him oc cupied for the run of the picture. Previous to this engagement, Savitski had only seven days' work during a period of four months. , 1 ' "Prisoners" first presents . Miss Until th as a gay entertainer in a night club in Vienna and then as a cashier in a bakery in Budapest. Continued from first page) R. V. Brawley, and L. C. Plumly, on the business staff. ' The Yackety-Yack awarded keys to June Adams, Travis Brown, R. A. Hovis, Linwood Harrell, N. W. Dock ery, W. H. Yarborough, Jr., and Donald Wood, for work on the edi torial staff; and to G. E. Hill, J. C. Williams, C. H. Farrell, S. L. Silver stein, and Jimmy Cbnnell, on the DR. KNIGHT SPEAKS QN N. C. HISTORY IN LAST CHAPEL for the higher and finer things of moderate m 'their statements, while hife. only one person ' of the 'group was emotional or extreme in support of it. There seemed to be general agree ment among 'the other speakers, that it is absolutely impossible - to cope with the problem of f eeble-mindedness without a judicious use of .steriliza- Tar Heel Boys To Play In Virginia Finals The Carolina Tar Heels have been engaged to play finals at Hampden- Svrlnpv nnrl Vircrinia "Rnispnnal tion. A judicious use, seemed to in- School After thege danceg they volve for all of the speakers a re- , nry Wrt.woov tm,, nf Mnrtt, striction of sterilizatiqn , principally CaroliTia and Virginia. The orchestra to those defectives, who were judged will be together during the entire as incapable of making a fairly satis- summer and be found throughout factory social .adjustment outside of this secti0n, doing their booking out the institution and , in whose cases, 0f Phanpl Hill at the same time,, family and case history studies indicated the likeli hood of the defective condition being congenal. "While there is little doubt at the present time that those earlier writ ers who put the percentage of feeble mindedness that was of the inherited type is about 90 per cent were in cross errors there is also no less o ' doubt that there is a feeble-minded ness that is inheritable and that the study of case and family histories can in many; instances determine for the individual , case whether or not it is of the .inheritable type. It seems to me vthat every thinking in dividual, no matter how. cautious and conservative he may be, must accept the conclusions of , those making a special study - of f eeble-mindedness that in these demonstrable cases of congenial defectiveness, procreation must be nrev ited. Their further contention, that it is practically im possible to seeresrate at state ex The personnel of the orchestra, as it now stands, runs as follows: Alex Mendenhall, leader; Al Boren, di rector; Paul Wimbish, manager; O. H. Forehan, Frank Householder and Hillard Wilson, brass; Colbert Crutch- field, Calvin Todd, and Tye Sawyer, saxes; Beef Albright, violin; Carl Wessell, drums; Charlie Stonestreet, bass; and Bill Abernethy, piano. Modern Mystery Story Yesterday's papers headlined "A Man Mysteriously Shot in His Wife's Room." In the classicwords of the late Nat Goodwin, "What in Sam Hill was he doing in his wife's room?"- Buffalo Courier. Americanism: Wishing you could manage your own affairs more suc cessfully; wishing you had charge of the team long enough to show the manager a thing or two. (Continued from page one) fourth or fifth grade. These conditions are not the fault of the students said Mr. Knight, but rather that of the people who do not supply the money necessary for the carrying on of an efficient school sys- em. The problem of financing the public schools is an important one that is just as persistent now as it was be- bre the time of Aycock, who did so much for North Carolina's schools. 'We have not yet worked out a satis actory system of taxation for the ade quate support of the schools," and with out adequate, imancing support we cannot have an adequate educational system." said Dr. Knight. GERALD JOHNSON WRITES OF DR. CHASE'S CAREER there would be the further fallacy of forgetting that, could sterilization pense all cases of feeble-mindedness prevent a part of the lowest grades and that it, therefore, bcomes neces sary for institutions for the feeble minded to parole back into the com munity those cases that have so profited by their institutional train ing as to show the.liklihood of social adjustment, must also be accepted. Granting these two major premises, we must also accept the final con clusion of the great majority of this group of experts in the field of feeble mindedness, that before any such in dividual be placed back in the com munity, if he or she be of the congen tility defective type, that sterilization should be assured, sf "Of course, sterilization will not prevent some people from having less intelligence than others, but even were there not the fallacy just' indicated, from coming into the world the lower two per cent of that population would be of higher grade than tha coming in without, sterilization, and that most certainly is a desirable end." Girl's Hot Tip Steers Student to Favorite Pipe Tobacco San Francisco, CaL Larus & Bro. Co. Richmond, Va. Gentlemen: ; Since I first started to smoke, I have always smoked cigarettes. One day SHE said to me "Hid, dear, why don't you smoke a pipe. I think those long straight-stemmed pipes are so manly-looking." So, naturally, I had to buy a long stemmed pipe and a can of well, we'll call it Blubs Mixture tobacco. Im mediately with a certain feeling of pnde m my new pipe, I "lighted up and proceeded to have my tongue bit ten. I tried almost every brand I had ever heard of, but none satisfied me. Sadly, I had to confess to HER that as a pipe smoker I . was a good dietitian. " Did you try Edgeworth? " she asked. "That is what dad smokes, and he's always smoked a pipe." ; So I was forced to try Edgeworth, and all that I can say is that if every f ellow that has tried to accustom him self to a pipe, started with Edgeworth, there would be very few that would go back to cigarettes. Yours sincerely, Ed Maher Edgeworth Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco llead Taf Heel idvertlsements. Sheaffer's Lifetime Fountain Pen Sets are Graduation Gifts That Last Students' Supply Store - Everything in Stationery THE CURRENT STYLES IN CLOTHES. HATS. I. si;,,-- - " " '' SHOES AND HABERDASHER V FOR ' LOUNGE, SPORTS AND CAMPUS USAGE WILL BE EXHIBIT ED IN YOUR TOWN ON DATE GIVEN BELOW. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND. , .i:zzy At CAROLINA DRY CLEANERS Today and Tomorrow Harry Kusterf FIFTH AVENUE. NEW YORK JACKSON BLVD.. CHICAGO (Continued from page one)6 of ability is as high, to say the least, as that of any group of similar size to be found in the south. . "He came into office under the most difficult circumstances imagin able. Not only was he a stranger in a strange land, but he was the successor of the magnetic and mag nificent Graham. This man, Edward Kidder Graham, stands aside from all I categories. Technically, he was a schoolmaster, but in reality he was a flame. Being white-hot himself, he succeeded in igniting the state at large, while the alumni he raised to incandescence. Chase had to make good on the tremendous promise that Graham had held out to the state. It was a large order for an unemotional Yankee. "uut within six years . he had so far delivered the goods that when he received an offer from the west and was tempted to accept, the state, instead of seizing this opportunity to replace the Yankee with a true and tried Tar Heel, howled its pro test until the welkin rang. It was no SALE OF BOOKS Prices Reduced on over 150 Titles The Bull's Head Bookshop 214 Murphey . mA TvZvN. JS 4' "I . . :S;:-:fJ II I ' Delicious and Refreshing TOM oven MILLION A DAY X T HAD T O GOOD T O ALi A A t i J c3 a J. - 0 w .. . THE FELLOW THAT SHOUTS "klLL THE UMPIRE7 LOUDEST, USUALLY WOULDNT HURT A FLEA. ORDINARILY HE'S Just gotten all hot and BOTHERED AND NEEDS NOTHING SO MUCH AS AN ICE-COLD COCA-COLA AND THE PAUSE THAT REFRESHES. Millions have found that this pure drink of natural flavors, with its delicious taste and cool after-sense of refreshment, makes a little minute long enough for a big rest' The one who pauses to refresh Hmself laughs at the overheated fellow. The Coca-Cola Co.. Atlanta, Ga. 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