GRID GRAPH REPORT TENNESSEE GAME TIN CAN 3:00 P. M. t . 4 V s GRID GRAPH REPORT TENNESSEE GAME TIN CAN 3:00 P. 21. S S 4 K . v VOLUME XXXIX TAR HEEL WILL INSPECT ANNUAL ATiSTICS '30-'31 No Person To Be Permitted to List Honor Unless Earned. The two staffs of the Daily Tar Heel will meet tomorrow! night; as is usual. Last Sunday j night Oscar J. Coffin spoke to the staff about the work done during the week prior to his talk. The meeting Sunday will be shorter than usual but very im ' portant due to the fact that the managing- editor will re-assign all beats for the first time this year. A review of the work done to date will be made, in ad .. dition to announcements con cerning the editorial board. In past years a person in "com posing his statistics for classi fication in the Yackety Yack was allowed to credit himself with work on the Tar Heel for any period of time that he was a member of the ' staff. This year, for the first time, a very rigid inspection will be made of all Yackety Yack statistics and those who have not served a full year will not be allowed to credit themselves with Tar Heel service. " - A special ' Sunday edition is being considered which may pos sibly contain a science article somewhat similar to the "Believe It Or Not" series by Ripley .- In the future, beginning this - week, four reporters will- be "star" reporters of. each week on a basis of the total number of inches printed in the paper, enthusiasm and attitude regard ing their work, and the punc tuality with which they attend meetings. In addition, it is ex pected that valuable prizes will be awarded besides the regular course credit which may also apply to freshmen this year. The editorial men will meet in the Tar Heel office at seven o'clock, while the general meet ing will be held in Room 104 Alumni building afseven-fifteen. FEDERATION MEN APPEAR AT DUKE E. R. Murrow, president of the National Student Federation of America, and John Lang, president of the State' Federa tion, addressed the entire stu dent body .of Duke University during the chapel period Thurs day morning. The two speakers were introduced and welcomed by "Bill" Murray, president of the Duke student body. As well as describing the work and purposes of the two federations, Murrow and Lang urged the Duke student body to preserve and perfect its honor system which is just now being restored. These two officers and Red Greene, president of the Caro lina student body, attended the Eastern Convocation, of Student Government Officials in Raleigh Wednesday, and have had other appointments during Student Government week, at the North Carolina College , for Women, Friday night, and are to speak at Davidson tonight. BUCCANEER NOTICE All students who have not re ceived their Buccaneers-should call by the Buccaneer office and get them today from two to four o'clock, according to James C. Harris, business manager. UNDERGRADUATES ARE .WARNED OF FACULTY RULING Dean A. W. Hobbs .wishes to call to the attention of the stu dents the following ruling" by the undergraduate faculty : A freshman must pass" five courses in the first three quar ters. After the freshman year, a student must pass at least one course each quarter, four cour ses in two successive quarters and seven courses in three suc cesive quarters. Deficiencies may be made up by correspond ence or in summer school, in which case onty credits exceed ing one course credit so obtain ed shall count for readmisison. By two successive quarters is meant the last two quarters of residence, and by three succes sive quarters is meant the list three quarters of residence. REES AND SMITH SCHEDULED FOR LUNCHEON TALKS "The College Graduate ana1 Southern Industry" is the topic to be discussed at a luncheon meeting at 12:30 Friday, Octo ber 31, at the Carolina Inn. General R. I. Rees, assistant vice-president, American Tele phone & Telegraph Company, and W. Henry Smith, junior vice-president " and personnel manager, Retail Credit Com pany, Atlanta, will speak. (Mr. Smith is taking the place of Cator Woolf ord, who had expect ed to be here.) Frank Page, -for--mer highway commissioner of North Carolina . and recently elected chairman of the South eastern Council, will preside at the meeting. Mr. Smith will discuss "The Georgia College Placement Bu reau and Its Value to Industry," and General Rees will talk on "The College Graduate's Value to Industry.' Both of these men will give the viewpoint of industry toward college people and show how business assimi lates college men. A general discussion will follow the talks. A number of prominent edu cational , and industrial leaders from this section are expected to be present for the meeting. Members of the University fac- ulty, students or people of the community are cordially invited to attend. It is absolutely nec essary, however, that such peo ple who want reservations made get in touch with R. M. Grum man, University extension divi- sion, not later tnan i uesaay, October 28. , ? Male Teachers Are Increasing In State The number of men . school teachers has been increasing un til the percentage of male teach ers is now even with that of the year 1920, according to the State Department of Public In struction. Before 1920, women had re 1 i . . il m 1 . I placed the male pedagogue of the nineteenth century that only 15.8 per cent, of the total num ber of teachers included men. The percentage of male in structors in North Carolina compares favorably with that of other states. The North Caro lina figures show the state slightly lower than that of the entire United States. Among sixteen southern states, North Carolina ranks tenth in "this respect. Elemen tary schools employ 54 men out of every 100, while high schools employ the reroining forty-six in this state. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, liiUliUW Fioi 1 T7 in TAKEN Ui4 N. C. TRACK -LIEN Grantland Rice Has Arranged to Have Staff Here Men day Afternoon. Having so decisively won the Southern Conference track meet this spring, nation-wide atten tion was attracted to the Uni versity. As a result of this great interest, Grantland Rice, well known : sports writer, has arranged to ,have motion pic tures taken of - Carolina's relay teams Monday. At least four relay teams will be used in the filming of the picture. The pic ture will stress the important phases of running a relay, the exchange of batons especially. Any men interested in running should see Coach Ranson as soon as possible. . The men who will probably run in the -relays Monday are: j Charley Farmer, one of the best sprinters in the United States; L. Weil, stellar quarter miler ; K. A. Gay; J. K. Smith; K. L. Marland; C. G. Stafford, out standing hurdler on last year's freshman" track team; W. C. Mitcham, member of the' record breaking two mile freshman re lay team; T. Watkins, winner of last year's cake race; R. W. Drane, star sprinter of the freshman team last spring; J. F. Geiger; II. R. Garrett; R. B. Brock; W. C. Medford; and J. C. Goodwin, winner of the 120 yard high hurdles in the prep school meet. last spring. H. W. Odum's Book Wins Position Of Honor In The New York Times One of the many reviews in praise of Howard W. Odum's new book, An American Epoch, has the place of honor the front page in last Sunday's is sue of the book section of the New York Times. ""No one who writes of the South as it was and as it is," says the reviewer, ; Arthur Krock, "no outsider who wants to work among its people, and no Southerner who would like to see his own background clear- ed of its cluttering fictions, should neglect to own this book. For a great many years there has gone out from Chapel Hill, the seat of the University of North Carolina, a vibrant wave of light and healing fully com parable to that which shone in another day from the library windows of Monticello. No re sident of this Athenian settle ment has done more credit to its enlightening mission than Mr. Odum. He must have known that, for all the enthusi astic jacketeering of his pub lishers, for all his cover array of Northern endorsements, he was writing for limited royalties and for the dust of libraries to be disturbed frequently by the hands of students, but not to pass often through the hands of train butchers. Yet that de votion, that will to spread know ledge which is responsible for most of the useful writings of man, he gave for long years to a worthy task. And, partly be cause of liim, posterity will be able to shake off the" drenching scents spread by the romantic writers, dissipate the smell of the 1928 campaign, and see what the South was, what it is, and why;";. Here are some other passages from the Times review : "What a storehouse of facts 1930 ESSAYS ON WAR . STWEEN STATES' T0BRIKGPRIZ! Graduate and Undergraduate Students Have Chance to Win Baruch Prize. For the purpose of encouag-ing- research in the history of the South, particularly in the Confederate period, the United Daughters of the Confederacy are offering the Mrs. Simon Baruch University Prize of One Thousand Dollars which will be awarded biennially. The prize will be awarded for an unpublished monograph or essay of high merit in the field of Southern history, preferably in or near the period of the Civil War or bearing on the causes that led to the War be tween the States. Any phase of life of - policy treated will ' be considered. If no' essay of high merit is not submitted in any competition the prize will not be awarded for that year. . ; According to the require ments, essays must be in schol arly form and must be based, partly at lesat, upon the use of source materials. Important statements should be accompan ied with citations of the sources from which the data have been drawn and a bibliography should i be appended. - It is expected that essays will be not less than ten thousand words in length and it is prefered that they be of 'considerably, larger. In making the award, ttie.com - (Continued on page two) " ; and images is this book ! Mr. Odum sits in a priceless mint of information, showering his treasures with a lavish hand. The golden items lie in heaps behind him. But it is very dif ficult for the casual reader to bring away from their contem plation anything more than dazzled eyes. Although the au thor scorned the pure narrative style employed by McCaulay and chose to try a duo-biographical method, he has still produced far more of a textbook, a source mine, than v 'The History of England.' "The book the encyclopedia, rather is dedicated 'To the f Next Generation,' those Ameri- cans who in 1960 will be cele brating the centenary of the War of the States (falsely styl ed 'The Civil War'). Perhaps by that time man will be having enough of a holiday from the machines in the cogs of which he is now enmeshed to turn leisurely to such a study of the past as An American Enoch. It will help him to understand Sumter and Appomattox ; Cal houn and Sumner ; Bishop Leonidas Polk and Bishop James Cannon, Jr. ; Fayette County, Kentucky, and Gaston County, North Carolina ; Henry Watter- son's Louisville Courier-Journal and William Randolph Hearst's Atlanta Georgian: Woodrow Wilson and Thomas J. Heflin. Here he will find the actual dis tinction between 'the poor white trash and the middle Southern class, which owned few slaves and had little education, but yet was powerful and respected in the community. "The religious fervor which animates a wide portion of the region and its antecedents ; generous quotations from the Continued on page two) S COPIER AND HAMER TO ATTEND STATE Y CABINET TODAY H. F. Comer and Ed Hamer left this morning to attend the first meeting of year of the State Student Y. M. C. A. Cab inet, which begins this morning at 10 :30, at the Greensboro Y. Ed Hamer, president of the lo cal Y, is also president of the state cabinet. The program for. the meet ing includes devotional exercises to be led by Leroy Clarke of State College, discussions of the exchange of deputations, and consideration of common pro blems. The state cabinet will endeavor to found Y associations at collges and Hi-Y groups in schools that do not now have them. Each college will be made responsible for the Hi-Y's in its section of the state. The State Student Cabinet meets as the guests of different associations once every two months. . - EHRINGHAUS WILL LEAD DEMOCRATIC RALLY NEXT WEEK J. C. B. Ehringhaus of .Eliza beth City, one of the. most elo quent of the Democrats of North Carolina, will speak in Chapel Hill on Saturday even ing of next week, November 1. Whether in the Tin Can or the public school auditorium will be announced later. The occasion is a Democratic rally arranged by Ray Farris. Members of the Orange county executive committee and other prominent men and women in the party are co-operating with him to make the affair a success. John W. Umstead and Samuel M. Gattis, Jr., respectively, can didates for state senator and assemblyman, will be on the platform arid will probably speak. It may be that the Uni versity band will lead a march down the main street of the vil lage and across the campus just before the rally opens. Mr. Ehringhaus, who is one of the aspirants to the governor ship in 1932, was in the Univer sity here thirty years ago, has come back many times since on visits, and is remembered with affection by members of the fa culty and other citizens. Since leaving the University he has achieved prominence as a law yer and in the political life of the state. TOWN ENDORSES DRIVE FOR FUNDS The Town of Chapel Hill is backing the King's Daughters, woman's organiation, in its drive for charity funds, according to a letter from City Manager J. M. Foushee to the organiza tion's president, Mrs. F. P. Brooks. Mr. Foushee's letter follows : "I understand that the King's Daughters are making their an nual canvass of Chapel Hill to obtain funds for carrying on the work of this organization. This association has been a great help to the town. Numerous cases of charity come to the town office each week, and these are refer red to a committee of the King's Daughters. Your committee has carefully investigated these cases sent to them, and aid has been rendered where necessary. 'T know that the work of the King's Daughters is necessarily limited on-account of the lack of funds, and I trust that the peo ple of this community will re spond generously to this worthy cause." NUMBER 32 PHILOSOPHER TO ADDRESS SELECT CALIPUSGR0UP3 New York Professor Will Bo Brought Here By School Of Education. Professor Reinhold Neinhold, of the Union Theological Semin ary in New York City, will speak to an especially invited group of students and faculty in the Sunday school room of the Me thodist church on Sunday after noon, November 2. y Written invitation are being sent to members of the Y. M. C. A. cabinets, certain graduate students and faculty members, a select group from the Duke faculty, the International Re lations club, and the Ampho theron club. All others, how ever, who desire to attend the address are asked to call at the Y office and leave, their names. This is done so that a sufficient number of seats will be available for the audience. The speaker was born of Ger man parents, and can speak both English and German fluentlv ' At present Professor Neinhold is Editor of the World Tomor row and is also a member of the Editorial staff of the Christian Century. He has a reputation of, being the most popular of. the modern day philosophic speak ers. For the past several years Mr. Neinhold has been professor of ethics at the Union Theologi cal Seminary. During the summer of 1930 Mr. Neinhold made a tour of Europe, and his address will be a discussion of the economic, political, and social situation and problems which he observed in Germany arid Russia. , Fol lowing his lecture, thex speaker will discuss any question along the line of his subject. The education school is bring ing Professor Neinhold here for a convention which is to be here on October 31 and November 1. He is being held over for his speech Sunday afternoon by the local Yi M. C. A. The Y liopes to be able to se cure Mr. Neinhold for another speech on Saturday night, but at present no plans have been made in this regard. REVIEW TO HAVE EXTRA EDITIONS Following the policy inaug urated this fall, the Alumni As sociation is issuing a weekly football edition which is a sup plement to the regular monthly review. The plan was first carried out this year and seems to be meet ing with the approval of the readers of the Alumni Review. The supplement appears every Wednesday except on weeks when the regular Review is pub lished. There are ten issues of the Alumni Review and seven issues of the football . supplement, which contains football . news only. The football news includes a detailed acount of the latest football game of . the preceding week and a discussion, of the prospects for coming games. . ; There will probably be no supplement, for sports . other than football. The extra editions are sent to members of the gen eral Alumni Association and to the subscribers of the Alumni Review. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Kutz and Miss Abilene Kutz of Fayette ville are visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Kutz.

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