GRAIL DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT BYNUM GYMNASIUM GRAIL DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT BYNUM GYMNASIUM' 7r . vr . M -iKir vffD i . t i I I I I f S t ' yo III II f;i ;0' VOLUBIE XXXVIII SOPH COMMITTEE PICKS JOHNSON FOR PRESIDENT Election of Vice-President To Be Held in Chapel Monday; Dungan on Committee. The executive committee of the sophomore class at a recent meeting elected Larry Johnson to the presidency of the class to succeed Ben Aycock who did not return to school. Johnson was chosen vice-president early in the year by vote of the class to fill the vacancy caused by the failure of the regularly elected officer to continue in school. The committee called an election to be held in chapel Monday to name a new vice-president. Aycock in a letter to Dean Bradshaw, stated that he would be unable to return to school. Johnson, acting in his capacity as vice-president, called a meet ing of the executive committee for the purpose of determining the manner of filling the va cancy. By vote of the commit tee, Johnson was elevated to the position of president. The committee decided to have a business meeting , of the class in chapel Monday. In addition to the election, reports ; will be presented by the class officers. J. Elwin Dungan was appointed by the president of the class to fill a vacancy on the committee. The first class smoker of the quarter will be held in Swain hall on the night of January 21, President l9n-n nPuBcel . The class officers are: presi dent, Larry Johnson ; vice-president, vacant; secretary, J. E. Miller; treasurer, Royall R. Brown ; executive committee, Maurice Eighme (chairman) , J. Elwin Dungan, Jack Farris, Harry Finch, Richard Burrell, F. M. James, J. Holmes Davis and Edward Yarborough. DAVID LAWRENCE ONE OF FOREMOST NEWSPAPER MEN Principal Speaker at Newspaper Institute Has Lead a Most Colorful Career. The story of the rise of David Lawrence from a cub reporter to one of the foremost journalists of the nation reveals a real ro mance of the newspaper world. The story is particularly in teresting to North Carolinians iust now. since Mr. Lawrence has accepted an invitation to ad dress Tar Heel editors and pub lishers at the annual Newspaper Institute. He is to speak at the opening session on the night of January 15. Mr. Lawrence is now editor and founder of The United States Daily, and writer of dailv fHsnatr.h on national af fairs. He was born on Decern ber 25, 1888, in Philadelphia. He becan newsnaner work on the 0 x j. - Buffalo Express in 1903, joined the Associated Press after his graduation from Princeton in 1910, became special correspond ent of the New York Evening Post in 1915. ; In 1919 he formed the organi zation which later became the Consolidated Press Association, which has distributed his dis patch ever since and in 1926 he founded The United States Daily, a newspaper devoted ex clusively to official news of the government of the United - States. (Continued on page two) YacketyYack Notice The Yackety Yack photog rapher is back in town to make junior and fraternity pictures. These must be in within two weeks. All juniors and fraternity men are re quested to have theirs made at once to avoid the rush. Ap pointments daily at Patter son's Drug Store, from 2-3, and 5:30-7:30 o'clock. B. M. PARKER, T Business Mgr. Grail Dance To Be Given Tomorrow at Bynum Gymnasium The Order of the Grail has an nounced that its first dance of the quarter will be held tomor row night in the Bynum gym nasium. The dance, as usual, will begin at nine .o'clock and tickets will go on sale at eight thirty preceding the dance. The Carolina Buccaneers have been engaged to render music for this affair. Due to the fact that tickets -are placed on sale immediately before the dance, boys who bring dates are allowed to purchase their tickets at the door. Only a limited number of stags are admitted due to the size of the gymnasium. " The ballroom will be attrac tively decorated and the orches tra placed in a stand on one side of the gym. y . The regular rules concerning attendance and conduct at dances held in Chapel Hill will be in effect. GRUMMAN NEW PRESIDENT CHAPEL HILL KIWANIANS R. M. Grumman, director of the extension division, has been elected to succeed Rev. Eugene Olive as president of the Chapel Hill Kiwanis club for 1930. Other officers . installed were Charles Saunders, district, vice president, J. Maryon Saunders, district trustee, and W. O. Spar row, treasurer. Eugene Andrews, T. S. How ard, S. E. Lloyd, I. M. Tull, E. G. Woodhouse, I. DeR. MacMil- lan and B. D. Sawyer were chos en as directors. . -; Knight Shows In South Is Lagging In Education In one of the principal articles in the current issue of the Out look and Independent, Professor Edgar W. Knight of the school of education produces evidence from official records to show that the states which formed the Confederacy are far behind in education, when measured by national standards, "although the educational progress of the south, measured by its own past record, has been almost phenom - enal in recent years." The deficiencies are conspicu ous, the article shows, in the amount of educational oppor tunity now provided by the southern states, in the prepara tion of teachers, in the salaries paid teachers, in the value of school property, in facilities' for secondary education, and in other matters. The southern states are very far behind in libraries. The average per capita circulation of . public library books is five times larger in the United States than in the southern states. In college libraries the south does only one-fourth as well as the country as a whole. Connecti cut has in its college and univer sities eight times more books than North Carolina and twenty CHAPEL HILL, N. C FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1930 COLTRANE TELLS OFSCHCOLWORR January Issue of High School Journal Contains Number of Features; Edited by Walker. The January issue of the High School Journal, which is pub lished monthly during the school year by the University's school of education, made its appear ance last Friday, January 3. The Journal is edited by Dean N. W. Walker, with the assis tance of the members of the staff of the school of education. The January issue of the Journal contains several articles of interest. : Supt. E. J. Coltrane of the Salisbury city schools, writing upon the subject, "In terpreting the Public Schools : What the High Schools Can Do," discusses the ways and means of bridging the gap between the school and the public. Supt. Coltrane's article is one of sev eral that have been published by the Journal on this topic. Supt. G. B. Phillips, of the Greensboro city schools, writes upon the organization and ex tension of girls' athletic activi ties in the high school. Dr. M. R. Trabue discusses the abilities of first-year high school pupils in North Carolina, presenting a comparison -with national eighth-grade standards. Dr. A. K; King writes upon the .place of history in improving interna tional relations, urging a re statement of the objectives of history and of history-teaching. Regular columns are edited by various members of the staff of the schools of education, in cluding a Latin column, by Mr. J. M. Gwynn ; the Science col umn, by Dr. C. E. Preston ; and the French column, by Dr. Hugo Giduz. Among . other depart ments is "School News and Comments," which contains news and notes on various high schools throughout the state. Several features and develop ments in North Carolina high schools are discussed in this de partment, including an account of the John Charles McNeill Li brary at the Wagram high school. Article That times more than Arkansas. The University of Illinois expended for books for its library in 1927-28 more money than the combined expenditures for the same purpose by the universities of-nine southern states: Ala bama, Arkansas, Florida, Geor gia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia; so did the University of Michigan; and Harvard Uni- ; versity alone expended for books for its library that year more than was spent for the same pur pose by the universities of all the eleven strictly " southern states. The libraries of the Uni versity of California and the University of Illinois contain 160,000 more volumes than the libraries of all the southern state universities. Harvard has twice as many books as all these eleven universities; and the library of that institution added to its huge collection last year more books than three southern state universities have collected in their libraries since their estab lishment. The article points out that the southern states are still "a very fertile field for a zealous but sometimes visionary missionary Continued on page two) MARYON SAUNDERS WILL SPEAK AT S. C. COUNCIL MEETING District Three of the American Alumni Council to Meet in Charleston Next Week. J. M. Saunders, alumni secre tary of 'the University, is to de liver papers on two subjects at the regional conference of dis trict three of the American Alumni Council which meets in Charleston, S. C., January 17 and 18. District three com prises Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama. . Saunders will deliver his pa person "What should be our at titude toward the Carnegie Re port on Intercollegiate Ath letics?" and "Methods , of Fi nancing the Alumni Program and Special Campaigns." A. J. Hanna, of Rollins Col lege is director of the Regional Council. The complete program is as follows: Friday, January 17 2:00 p m. Registration at conference; headquarters, the Francis Marion Hotel. 2 :30 p. m. -Boat ride through courtesy Charleston Chamber of Commerce. Transportation will be provided from hotel to docks. 7 7:30 p. m. Informal banquet at the Citadel of Charleston, Capt. D. S. McAlister, alumni secretary, presiding. Address by John McKee, President American Alumni CouncilTendencies in Alum- ni Work." Saturday, January 18 9:45 a. m Preliminary re marks by A. J. Hanna, director of District three, American Alumni Council. 10:00 a- m. "Organizing for (Continued on page three) ! HUMAN RELATIONS INSTITUTE TO BE HELD HERE IN 1931 Plans are underway for the quadrennial meeting of the human relations institute here in 1931. The institute was held here in 1927 under the auspices of the University and sponsored by a joint committee picked by the Y. M. C. A. from students and faculty. The committee se lects speakers and arranges the program for these institutes. Some of the students who were here three years ago will prob ably remember the human rela tions institute that was held then under the auspices of the Y. ; M. C. A. in. March, 1927. Since this institute is conduct ed quadrennially, plans are be ing made for a 1931 meeting. The institute consists of a program composed of speakers from all over the country who come here and make addresses on different phases of human relations. The program is di vided into three separate divi sions. The first part is that of in ternational relations, the second the industrial relations, and the third the interracial relations. The human relations institute in 1927 lasted for one week, be ginning on Sunday, March 20, and closing on Friday, March 25. Besides delivering addresses on their subject, many of the speakers are invited to conduct seminars during the class period on subjects pertaining to pro gram topics. In addition to the platform (Continued on page two) Debate Council Plans Seven Encounters With Universities And Colleges For This Year is Students in Law School to Take Bar Examination Out of 142 students in the state who have signified their in tention of taking the North Carolina state bar examinations on January 27, 21 are students in the University law school. The greater number of students taking the examinations will be certified to the supreme court by Dean McCormick of the law school. Certification entails at least two years of study in the law school, and completion of certain prescribed courses. The following are taking the examination : Hal Weaver Black stock, Henry Bane, Hubert Lyn wood Elmore, Alfred Waddell Gholson, Jr., John Frazier Glenn, Jr., Walter Hoyle, James Edwin Johnson, James Birney Linn, John Baker Lewis, Bal four Thorn Lord, Glenwood Crowder Meads, James Edward Magner,; Henry Thruman Pow ell, Jr., Francis Ogden Parker, Parker Roland, Harry Rockwell, Clay Carter Studdert, William David Pope Sharpe, Jr., Neil Sharpe Sowers, Thomas Carlisle Smith,-Jr., Young Merritt Smith, Lawrence Henry Wallace. Ten of these are on the North Carolina Law Review staff. They are : A. W. Gholson, Jr., J. F. Glenn, Jr., Walter Hoyle, J. B. Lewis, H. T. Powell, Jr., Harry Rockwell, N. S. Sowers, T. C. Smith, Jr., Y. M. Smith and L. H. Wallace. NEW MANAGER FOR THE CAROLINA INN Plans for modelling the Caro lina Inn after the well-known summer resorts of the west are under way following a change in the management of the local J hotel. Mrs. Aniie D. Martin and her daughter, Mrs. Anne M. Hunt, have leased the Inn and the cafeteria from, George Watts Hill and John Sprunt Hill, own- W Ti - 11 A. ers. l. lvi. uaxxman, present manager, is planning to leave about the middle of this month. Mrs. Hunt has had wide expe rience in management of hotels as she was manager of Kenil worth Inn and Victoria Inn in Ashevilie, and Highlands Lake Inn, Highland. At present she manages Woodfields, East Flat Rock. Plans of the new managers are to institute southern recipes in both the dining room and cafeteria. Mrs; Martin is said to have established an enviable reputation in resort hotel work in western North Carolina. LEWIS DORMITORY ELECTS OFFICERS The members of Lewis ("J") dormitory met in the social room Tuesday night to reorgan ize the, governmental system of the dormitory. The matter of living conditions and conditions for studying were; discussed by the group. It was decided to cooperate with the dormitory officers in every way to insure an improvement in the condi tions of the dormitory. r The following officers were elected for the remainder of the school year : David W. Bell, Jr., president; C. M. Rives, athletic manager, and F. R. Toms, J. C. Eagles, J. L. Harris, J. W. Kerr, H. Q. L. Little and R. E. Lore, dormitory councilmen. NIDIBER 76 First Debate Is To Be With Emory University This Month. TO MEET GE0RGL4 TECH Radio Debate Over WPTF To Be Held With Virginia Early In ApriL The present plans of the de bate council for the winter and spring quarters call for inter collegiate debates with approxi mately seven colleges and uni versities. Since the same query will be used for several debates, the council plans to use only the following three questions: "Re solved, that the nations of the world should adopt a plan of complete disarmament of all forces, except those which are needed for police purposes," "Resolved, that modern science, tends to destroy theistic faith," and "Resolved, that the chain store is detrimental." The first encounters of the present quarter will occur when the Tar Heel debaters meet Emory and Georgia Tech at Atlanta late in February. The question of modern science and its relation to theistic faith will be debated on these occasions. The forensic rivalry between Carolina and Emory has long been a keen one. Each institu tion had won the same number, of the annual encounters until Parker and Williams won a unanimous decision in the Carolina-Emory debate in 1928. Last year the contest was cancelled by Emory. Early in April (about April 6) the annual Carolina-Virginia radio debate will ' be broadcast from Raleigh. The question of the chain store and its relation to modern interests will be used. Last year this radio debate, which was the first in. the his- tories of both institutions, was held in Richmond. The present agreement between the Univer sity of North Carolina and the University of 'Virginia' is; to the effect that a radio debate be tween them be held annually Richmond and some North Caro lina town (probably Raleigh) being the scene of the encounter on alternate years. Later in the month of April, there will probably be a dual de bate with Boston College: that is, one debate at Chapel Hill and the other at Boston. .Tentative arrangements have been made in this connection which give prom ise of maturing. In the case of these encounters the question of disarmament will be used. ... . Negotiations are being made for a debate at Chapel Hill with an all-California team, the Uni versity of California, the Uni versity of Southern California, and Leland Stanford University being represented on the team. Arrangements for this encounter are as yet tentative and do not show great promise of maturing. In the case that this debate is held the question of modern science and its relation to theis tic faith will be the topie of con troversy. Northwestern University has agreed to debate Carolina at Chapel Hill in the latter part of April. This encounter seems to be fairly certain at present. Debates with the following in stitutions are probable: Univer- ; sity of the South, at Chapel Hill ; University of Maryland, at Col lege Park; and Harvard Uni versity, at Cambridge.