Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 18, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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10LD LOEEvG TAS TTnTTTi 2ESTEGS 3 lDD 4:0D GBAHAM MEMOBIAL 8:30 O'CLOCK ?TE7 TOTITAT, HALL Pi VOLUME ";XLn CHAPEL HHX, lw C, YtTDXESDAY, OCTOBER IS, 1933 NUMBER 23 i . ,.- j t tilt $50,00 0; To ; Program- Arranged f cr Study cf Structure -mid Workings cf State Government. EOOSEYELT PRAISES PLAN Necessity for Annual Contribu tions to Movement Stressed By the Guarantors. A guarantee of S50,000 - to scarry forward over a period of three years the unique and dis tinctive program of the Institute of Government for systematic, comparative study of the struc ture and workings of , govern ment in the cities, counties, and state of North Carolina, was an nounced by Albert Coates, direc tor of the institute. The state board of advisers, consisting of the official leaders of all groups of city, county, state, and federal officials and representative groups of private .citizens in North Carolina, unan imously accepted the terms of the gift, which was made by a igroup of North Carolina citizens venose names were withheld by Tequest, Coates said. The pro gram has already been launched along the three lines of tax ad iministration, accounting meth ods, and practices in governmen tal units, and administration of Justice in the courts. Other phases of the program will be Inaugurated from time to time. Program Already Begun Five full-time members of the rstaff of the-lnstitute .cf -Govem-uncnt have been secured, he an jiounced. Three of these are al ready at work. Two others will join the staff as soon as they can terminate their present connect tions. Formal announcement of the present members of the staff is expected at the meeting of the .state board of advisers to be -called in the near future to con sider questions of policy and program and to select a board of trustees to administer the fund. -Assistant Attorney General A. (Continued ox last page) MGET PAIRS LEFT 1BRM MATCH Quarter-Finals Beached in Tour nament Yesterday as Play Continues. Only three ; matches were played off yesterday in the Stet son "D" contract bridge tourna ment as four teams drew byes. There are four matches sched uled for today. A set of cards with their backs decorated by a picture of the Old "Well was donated to the team making the highest score on the first day by the Durham Book -and Stationary store. This was won by H. Farr and W. Logan, of Smith huilding, who defeated Page and Woerner , of - THE Daily Tab Heel, by a score of $,720 to 2,400 in a match that took almost four hours. The- quarter-finals - will - be played today.- Theywill be at duplicate bridge if the partici pants desire but otherwise may be played off in the regular way. The finals will be played cfl Fri day in the Stetson "D" store. Yesterday , J. Jones and J. Hunt. Sima Nu. defeated D. Uosier and H. Maffitt, Phi Delta "Theta: J. Hudson and Den Tracy, Chi Phi, met H. Farr and YT. Logan, Smith; Fid JMichr.els and Lindy Cate, Sigma Chi, cp- losedTF. SadleT and TTalter Car son, S.A.E. " jrovermnent .'viiven.'- V Use -Three- Years T. B. P. SOCIETY' TO TAP NEW -LIEN HDsorary Enijieeriag Groixp "Win Choose New Members Thursday. A joint meeting of all the en gineering societies will be held Thursday night at 7:30 in room 203 PhlHips halL At this time the- armnal fall tapping of Tau Beta Pi, national honorary en gineering society, will take place. Dr.vE G. Baity, state engi eer examiner of the National Recovery Administration, will speak on the work of the NBA in connection with the distribu tion of funds in non-federal con struction projects. The aim of Tau Beta Pi is to mark in a fitting manner those who have excelled in scholarship and character, and to foster a pirit of liberal culture in the engineering schools of A-rrrp-nra. The tapping , is the major event of the engineering school during the fall quarter and every engineering student is urged to attend. The general public is also cordially invited. ADVISORY GROUP TENDERS REPORT E FACULTY 1 No Definite ; Action:- Taken - at Meeting: Will Meet ...Later For More Discussicn. : Meeting to discuss the propo sition of making a sharper dis tinction between the first two years of undergraduate college work and the last two years, the University faculty gathered yes terday in the first of a series of discussion sessions on educational-policies. No definite ac tion was taken on the matter. This proposal of drawing a sharper line between the first two years of work and the last two years grew out of the pre- liminay work of committees ap pointed by the University offi cials to make studies of the best educational policies. The sug gestions of this committee, after being sifted out by a central committee, was considered by the advisory group and was dis cussed by the faculty yesterday. Other meetings of the faculty will be called during the year to study further plans and changes in the University educational srrsrf-aTr vrnY7 trht. TIT bv thfi COH1- rmttees. Definite action on the 1 proposals brought up before the University officials may or may not be taken, depending upon the views of the faculty and commit- tees. A standing committee to study educational- policies -has been functioning for a long time. This committee has, lor the past 12 months, stressed the need for several changes in the Univer sity educational program. -. Spe cial committees -have- been - ap pointed to study different prob lems. Suggestions proposed are passed on by a central commit tee and advisory group and are then referred to the faculty. 'I ANNOUNCEMENT Co rehensive examinations forth fall quarter will be giv en Saturday, " November 25, it was announced yesterday. The time and place of the tions will be announced by the various University departments. BX7SINESS OFFICE :NEEDS ABB OF ALL STUDENTS Buccaneers Cazmot Be Distribcled Unt3 Addresses Are Ascertained Bj CLrculaiioa 'lanaer. AH those students who are not receiving their copies of The Daily Tae Heel must turn in their complaints at the business office of the publication in Gra ham Memorial or to Ealto Far low, circulation manager. The Carolina Buccaneer is coming out Friday and all the students addresses must be correct in or der that they receive their copies. The following students ad dresses are not on The Tae Heft, records or in the student directory. They will turn - in their addresses as soon as possi ble. G. M. Yoder, Charles He lves, R. H. Elingman, W. T. Hall, D. J. Grantham, G. M. Galanas, E. O. Huffman, B. E. BuTIard, Carl Pigman, W. F. Stranpom, Harriet Taylor, C. P. Cameron, J. L. Carlton, H. P. Smith, I. D. Iickerman, S. Rosenthal, R. D. Buck, M. J. SM bik, Mary Frances Parker, R. M. Stewart, O'Henry Lyon, Jr., and Frances Bumev Shambur ger. JIURCHISON TO SPEAK Dr. C. T. Murchison will speak to the general economics semi nar tonight at 7 :30 in 113 Bing ham ha!L The topic will be the new measures of financial con trol relating to the National He covery program. tervie.ver.'Finds Favor ;G Sophomores To Meet At Assembly Today Assembly for the sophomores, featuring -a class meeting led by President Morty Ellisherg, will be held this morning at 10:30 o'clock in Gerrard hall, it was announced yesterday- by- the sophomore assembly committee. Elections of dance leaders for the sophomore hop will take place during the assembly. Five leaders will be chosen for this dance, . which is tentatively scheduled for Friday, October 27, the evening before the Geor gia Tech game. Seats have been assigned to sophomores and they will be re quired to attend assemblies each Wednesday. Only one cut will be allowed a quarter. Rows let tered R, S, and T will be found m balcov Pete Ivey Addresses FTeslunan Assembly Pete Ivey, editor of the Car olina Buccaneer, made a short talk to the freshmen at assem bly yesterday morning. , After briefly describing the kind of work done on the comic magazine, he asked all students with witty propensities to try out for the Buccaneer. He stated that there was already" a large staffs but that there was room :f or competent writers. The -first issue of the Bucca neer is to be a football number. In a brief, humorous descrip tion of the game, Ivey gave the students an idea ol the satirical type of wit that would make up the magazine. OLD EAST Old East dorm will have a smoker, tonight in 214 Graham Memorial at 9:00 o'clock. FIRST BUCCANEER OP FALL QUARTER , DUE THIS FRIDAY Initial -Copy of Enmorcns PcLIica tion Will Be Football Issae, States Pete Ivey. Owing to difficulties in getting advertisements placed tor an early issue and in having the magazine printed in Durham, the release date of the opening number of the Carolina Bucca neer has been postponed to Fri day, Editor Pete Ivey announced yesterday. The publication date had been previously set as last Sunday, a week ahead of the usual date, and copy was turned in to the printer on schedule, but other factors prevented the release of the magazine on time. "It was thought at one time that the football number would be out ahead of the pub lication date, said Ivey. "There fore an announcement appeared that it would he out October 15; but due to these difficulties, the date has been shifted to Oc tober 20." Ivey also announced that all students wishing to try out for positions on the Eneeaneer staff will be given an opportunity to do so tomorrow night at 7:15 o'clock at the office in Graham Memorial. YACKETT TACK STAFF The business staff of the Yackety Yack will meet thid af ternoon at 2:00 o'clock in 207 Graham iMaor24" AIl7Tnen3 bers of the staff must attend.1 W4.W Class Presidents - and Other Leaders Express Eagerness For Alteration of System, Interviews with campus lead ers and other students indicate an overwhelming sentiment in support of The Daily Tae Heel plan to relieve confusion and disaster at mid-term examina tions. Virtually every student whom the feature board repre sentative questioned expressed himself in favor of taking the mid-terms on specified days. AH revealed a deep resentment and dissatisfaction with the existing state of affairs and hoped for immediate solution to the vex ing problem. Statements of va rious students interviewed are as follows: Haywod Weeks, former presi dent of student body: T think that such a schedule for mid terms as has been suggested is the only fair means of determ ining a students jstanding-on .a course. If his work is crowded up into taking as many as -two or three mid-term examinations on the same day, he is not able to give a fair account of him self. I believe that a plan should be worked, if it is pos sible,' whereby: a student can take his exams somewhat in the same manner that he takes his finals. A fair estimate of the Knrfe-nt'R Imawledsre of. the course at mid-term cannot be gained if he is required to take two examinations in a day and in addition also attend his other classes. Alex Andrews, vice-president of Phi Beta Eappa: Tf the fac ulty -wishes to obtain a Teally accurate estimate of a persons standing at mid-term, it seems only fair that the student be given adequate warning and (CmiUws cnx Issf ft 2) Mid-1 enxr-Esamination -Plan - Being- Considered, Sots Dean TRABUE TALKS ON UNEMPLOYMENT Educator WSI Speak After MaVTrg iMensire Stcdj cf Factors. Dr. 2L B. Trahae of the Uni versity department of education will present a lecture on "The Contributions of Ignorance to Unemployment" tonight at 8 :00 o'clock in 201 Peabody building. As executive secretary of the Committee on Individual Diag nosis and Training, Dr. Trabue directed for two and a "Half years investigations of the human and personal factors that contribute to unemployment in the north west. These studies were a part of the program of the Employment Stabilization Besearch Institute of the University of Minnesota. The research involved compre hensive studies of a large samp ling of the unemployed popula tion. In the course of the study, a number conducted the retrain ing of jobless persons for other types of work than they had done before the depression. AUDIT BOARD TO HEAR PROPOSALS FORBOO Accounts of : Kmc Campus Or ganizations Expected to Be Presented at meeting. The Student Audit board will meet this afternoon at 3:00 o'clock in the student govern ment office in Graham Memo rial Bobret H. Sherrill, auditor for the organization, will appear before the board to make pro-i posals for the installation of a new system of bookkeeping and the matter of employing a book keeper. There will be a dicussion of suggestions concerning payment and office hours for the book keeper and the change in the lo cation of the office. It is expected that Sherrill will submit today financial reports for four campus organizations whose audits are reviewed by the board. Last spring Sherrill turned in reports for 14 campus groups whose fiscal years ended April 30, 1933. The reports to be sub mitted today will be those for organizations whose fiscal peri ods ended during the past sum mer. The four organizations whose audits must be reviewed by the board are: The Publications Union (com prising separate reports for Tee Daily Tab Heel, the Bueea- neer, the Magazine, ana Lne Yackety Yack), the Athletic as sociation, Graham Memorial, and the Student Entertainment Committee. Several other organizations have voluntarily come under the audit board,- and it is not , re quired that their audits be made public. Beports for the other groups will be published in THE Daily Tae Heel after they have been approved. C02LMEECE FROSH.MEET The commerce school fresh men, meeting with Dean D. D. Carroll, m Bingham haB is the only meeting of freshmen with their deans scheduled for today. i vimmii Eradshaw Believes That It Is Tc4 Late for Any Action Tins Quarter. SHOULD AYOH) CONFLICTS Thinks Best Method TTocH Be Schedule Running Over a Period cf One Week, "Although it is too late to take any action this Quarter, stated Dean F. F. Bradshaw in an an nouncement in the freshman as sembly yesterday Lthe plan sug gested in The Daily Tab TTrrr. for having, a .definite, schedule for mid-term examinations has been taken into consideration. The dean of students said that the suggestions from .the stu dents had been considered too late by the University officials to go into effect this quarter. Mid-Term Eeports Advisable ... "1 believe that continuing the issuing of mid-term reports at the end of -four weeks of school is advisable," Dean Bradshaw had previously stated. "But if there are conflicts among mid term quizzes, the conflicts should be avoided by announcing the tests sufficiently ahead of time and by giving the examinations one a day 8 :30's, 9 :ZVs, llrOO's, and 12:00's covering a period of about a week, with out interrupting the - regular program of classwork. In a talk previous to the as sembly program, the dean of stu aenis sxatea max the loea or set ting aside two special days for quizzes alone was not the best method of solving, the problem. Instead he advocated a plan of letting regular -class work -continue - while the examinations were being - taken. Freshmen having - conflicts to this plan could take their English or his tory on Saturdays, he said. LORING TO SPEAK ON INDIAN SONGS Pianist and Singer Will Give Account of History of In dian Lore Tonight. Harold Loring, famous pianist and lecturer, will present his mueisal lecture, "The Indian in Song and Story, tonight at 8 :30 o'clock in Memorial hah. The program is an interesting and vivid picture of the Indian as few people know him. An analysis of the part each song played in the tribal life cf the red race will feature the pro gram. No effort will be made to idealize the songs, but Loring will rather seek to present them in all their crudity, exactly as the TTirffafre felt and sang them. In adidtion to his own piano transcriptions, the musician will tell of the many ceremonial dan ces and their significance to the native Americans. Loring has spent many years on Indian reservations in the northwest recording these melo dies, stories, and legends of the race. He not only speaks the Sioux tongue but demonstrates the sign language of the tribe. He is a capable pianist, having appeared before many schools in fhU country and having broad cast over Jiational networks. This program is the second in the series of student entertain ments. All studEnts who do not hold pass hooks may obtain tickets at the box-cfilca.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1933, edition 1
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