Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 17, 1930, edition 1 / Page 4
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ETUEN ' -,U 1 f " fn9 LI NATiOI STUDMIEEMG (Continued from first page) factors in campus morale; honor systems, their relations with, and effects on, campus activity ; publications, including all phases of newspaper, yearbook, maza "zine, and even scandal sheet ed iting; student government, its composition, scope, control, and machinery. In addition to the many delegates from various men's colleges and universities, there were - approximately the same number of women dele gates. Meredith N.C.G.W., and G.C. had delegates present. Many social Junctions were held in honor of the delegates. There was a reception, two dances, a basketball, game, and a banquet in the way of enter tainment. In . addition, trips were taken to San Francisco, Golden Gate, China Town, and around the Stanford campus. A high light on the program was the speech of Secretary of In- - terior Wilbur, made over the ra dio from Washington, D. C. According to Farris, the trip was an" entire success from all standpoints. "Stanford Univer sity is quite a beautif ul but busy place. The greatest courtesy was shown us on every hand. Many 01 the aiscussions were very enlightening andneducation al. I was interviewed repeated ly in regard to our honor system, student government, athletics and publications. . It was found by a vote that in the majority of schools having an honor system the advantages were believed to outweigh the disadvantages. Ray had many , amusing, and some rather embarassing, exper iences. Once when dancing with a California girl he inadvertent ly left here in the middle of the floor when she attempted to put into, practice one of the unfamil iar steps of a new western dance. On the journey out, he stopped long enough to see something of Hollywood, meet ing Jack Oakie, and seeing Lupe Velez and Wallace Beery. He saw also some of the homes of the stars located in Venice, a popular beach resort. The re turn trip was made via Chicago. One of the most interesting sights of the trip - was the Grand Canyon. On the train, near St. Louis he met a real gangster in the smoker. He was also invited to join in a card, game, but po litely declined. Another :.: less judicious individual was subse quently fleeced of ; fifty dollars by the same men. ' .... The meeting next year, is to be held at Atlanta, with. Agnes Scott and Georgia Tech acting as hosts. Murrow, of Washing ton State, is the president-elect. At the convention next year the schools are to be divided accord ing to size and whether; or not they are denominational, thus enabling the discussion of com mon problems of each group,; Chain Stores Have Little Effect On r Chapel Hill Business (Continued from first page) for. a mail order service. The opening of the local store had a -beneficial effect in keeping cloth ing: prices down to a reasonable level.- "v'-v'5;""' The Morris and Robinson Tail oring Company of Baltimore which owns Stetson D also op erate Campus" Bootery, the5 only chain shoe store in the village. This has been in existence, for two years and seems to be do ing a good business. In the realm of entertainment, picture shows and theatres, the chain store idea has been enor mously successful. When the Carolina theatre was opened here in 1927 by the Publix Saenger Company it offered new- Assembly Notice The group picture of the Philanthropic Assembly will be taken this , morning" at 10:30 in front of South build ing. This will be the only pic ture of the Assembly taken. All members are requested to be present. JOHN LANG, Speaker. er ana oetter attractions ana mm t 1 1 " m soon drew the trade to such an extent that the old Pickwick, owned by local interests, had, to be closed out. For the past year and a half the Carolina has been the only picture show in the village. Of the various filling stations in the vicinity of Chapel Hill only one is operatedjby a nation al company; the Standard Oil runs the one at the MacMillan Motor Company. The practice of the company owning and op era ting the filling station is be coming popular among- the , oil companies. Already the Stand ard people have purchased a lot in front of the high school where they intend to build another company-operated station. One grocery store, one "cloth ing store, one shoe store, one theatre, and one filling station completes the list of chain store businesses in the village. L. S. Kelly Provides Brickbats of Institute (Continued from first page) to be used for rekindling the Smith-Hoover fires of bigotry and intolerance?" In concluding he wanted to know where Santford Martin's forty immor tals were, and this drew a big laugh. Mr. Graves, editor of the Chapel Hill Weekly, was also scheduled for an address. Instead, he. distributed copies of his paper, printed, as he said, "like the front pages of our pa pers would look were we to heed the criticism that the newspa pers place too much emphasis on the abnormal and sensa tional." Across the front page of the Weekly a bold two-line streamer heralded the fact that "Conven tion Half Over and Carey Dowd Is Still Sober." Another headline read: "Methodist Church Plate-Passers Ended the Year Without Stealing a Cent ; Congregation is Jubilant." And still another playfully announced that there are "No Wife-beaters in Faculty." Concluding the program for the morning, JVC. Latimer, secretary of the Virginia Press Association, told of the success of his association in a recent audit of the weekly newspapers in that state. He commented on the increase in the strength and national advertising for the weeklies, as he had seen it. That national advertising should receive the same consid eration and. pay the same rates as local advertising was the con tention of N. D. Ivey of George A. McDevitt Co., formerly sou thern manager of N. W. Ayer & Son, speaking from the ad vertisers point of view. Mr. Ivey was the principal speaker at the afternoon session of the Institute. Following some discussion from the floor on the question of auditing the circulation- fig ures of weeklies for the use of advertising agencies a3 an aid for securing, national accounts, L. S. Kelly, the firebrand of the convention, explained more ful ly what the agencies require of tthe newspapers. Directly after adjournment yesterday, the .newspaper folk were the guests of the Carolina Inn and the Extension Division at an oyster roast, given at the country club. Last night enter tainment was provided by the University Athletic Association THE DAILY at the basketball contest be tween the Washington and Lee and the Carolina teams. Man ager E. Carrington Smith of the Carolina theatre was also host to a number of the visitors. The Institute is to De con-4 eluded today with a session be ginning at 10 o'clock. .Round table discussions of newspaper accounting and business will be featured by the talks of T. D. Meri weather, manager of the Richmond and Winston Salem offices of Ernst & Ernst, ac counting specialists, and of W. Clement Moore, a business analyst of the firm of Wolf & Co., specializing in newspaper fi nance and accounting. - The following is a list of the delegates - attending the Insti tute and the papers they repre sent: A. J. Connor, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Connor, and Miss Audrey Martin of the. Rich Square Times ; Miss Beatrice Cobb of the Morganton News-Herald; Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Dowd, Jr., A. M. Gray, and I. W. Williams of the Charlotte News; B. Arp Lawrence of the Charlotte Times. , W. M. Sherrill, the Concord Tribune; Lyles Harris, the Franklin Press ; Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Parham, the Charlotte Ob server; W. Keith. Saunders, the Independent, Elizabeth City; Miss Christine Lincke, the Nash ville Graphic; A. L. Stockton, the Greensboro Daily News ; Gale Braxton, Kinston Free Press. Talbot Patrick, News-Angus of Goldsboro; E. D. Atkins, Gas- tonia Gazette; Herbert Peele, Elizabeth City 'Advance ; John B. Harris, Stanly News and Press of Albemarle; M. A. Thompson, the Scottish Chief of Maxton; O. J. Peterson, Chat ham" Record of Pittsboro. W. C. Dula, the Durham Mes senger; A. C. Huneycutt, the Mocksyille Enterprise of Albe marle ; Lee B. Weathers, Shelby Star; R. E. Price, Rutherford County News of Rutherf ordton ; J. W. Noell, Roxboro Courier. H. A. Cecil, High Point Enter prise ; .Miss McKinnon, Red Springs Citizen; J. T. Perkins,' Lincolnton News ; J. A. Sharpe, the Robersonnian, Lumberton. George Myers Stephens, Ashe ville Citizen ; B. Gordon Lewis, News-Reporter of White ville; Chester F. Vogler, the Gold Leaf Farmer of Wendell; James F. Barrett,' Brevard News; George Kendall, Evening Telegram of Rocky Mount ; D. J. Whichard, t)aily Reflector of Greenville; Daniel Hill, Lexington Dispatch. Mrs. W. CHammer and Mrs. H'W. Walker of the Asheboro Courier; Mr. and Mrs. Roy G. Cadieu of the Hamlet News-Messenger; Mr. and Mrs. John A. Park, W. A. Kindell, Carles H. Herring, and P. D. McLean of the Raleigh Times ; Sanford Martin, R. R. Richmond, and W. K. Hoyt of the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel ; Eric W. Rodgers and W. Harold Essex of the Greensboro Record; Henry A. Dennis and M. L. Finch of the Henderson Daily Dispatch. S. W. Mann, Newton; W. C. Manning, Williamston; Mrs. T. J. Lassiter, Smithfield; J. F. Hurley, Jr., Salisbury; Hender son Hull, Liliington ; Joseph Hyde Pratt, Chapef Hill. J. C. Baskerviell of the Ra leigh Bureau of Afternoon Newspapers ; F. H. Jeter, agri cultural editor from State Col lege; Lawrence S. Kelly of the H. K. McCann Company in New York; E. G. Branson of the Uni versity News Letter; Elizabeth Heiser, staff writer for the Helm News Service in Washington, D. C; James C. Latimer, secretary of the Virginia Press Associa tion, Farm ville, Va. I. W. Williams of the Char lotte News,; O. Thompson and R. M. Fon ville of the Burlington Times; Mr. and Mrs. H. AVFrick of the Durham Herald ; C. R. Wilson, George Myrover, and Van Lawrence of the Fayette- ynieObserver; Mrs. H. W. Ken dall of the Rocky Mount Eve ning Telegram; H. R. Dwire, di rector of public relations at Duke University ; J. Ray Parker of the Ahoskie Herald, and Mike Dunn- agan, correspondent from Ra leigh. , Editor Of The Nation Speaks On Present Conditions of Kussia (Continued from page one) healthy, physically perfect men and women. Instances were cit ed of the hardiness and bodily perfection of" the new youth of the U. S. S. R., especially in the Ukraine. Relations between men and women, boys and girls, are slow ly being brought to a sound basis. The reputed laxity of morals is nothing compared to the debauchery that was com mon under the hated Romanovs. Both marriage and divorce are simple ceremonies. Alimony is unknown. - In leases of divorce, the children are always given to their mother, while the father must contribute half his wages to their support. $112.50 Highest Salary An interesting feature of Mr. Villard's address was his de scription of the working people. The ultimate wage to which they can aspire is $112.50 per month. The president of the executive committee of all Russia, Joseph Stalin, draws no more than that amount for his responsible posi tion. The head of a large steel mill, which in time will employ 25,000 men, also draws a mere $112.50. There were one or two aspects of Russia that seemed false to Mr. Villard. The ruthlessness with which the Communists at tack enemies of the government is unpleasant. In one day alone, 50 of the counter-revolutionaries i 1 ' ' " ' ' ' ' ' " ' -...-..... .,tt7. . ! V ' v ''Li . "''''':v:r::f:Jl -fZzz: . )'' ' i . u , , , Z - - . d. ...... " - ....-" ""N. ........ j f. - ......... ,' UP FROM THE OXCART JOI CI II TRi m. IetECTWC HO0R, BROADCAST TET 8ATU&DAT AT 9 PJ E.t.T. OW A KATTnw.wtna W.B.C. NETWORK. S GENEBA3L GENERAL U B C T R I were shot. Many are sent to Siberia. Others are sent to prison. on trumped up charges, and with the same determina tion that marks their campaign for the eradication of opponents, the Communists are educating the children in a manner that will teach them to hate capital ism and. to despise capitalistic forms of government. This is, to Mr. Villard, one of the para doxes. They are freeing the serf, only to restrict his educa tion along "lines which breed hate and misunderstanding of their fellowman. . There has been much talk in America of Russia endeavoring to break down the family and church. This rumor, Mr. Vil lard explained, is wrong. There are many clinics, nurseries, playgrounds and the like in which working mothers may leave theirchildren under the best ' of care while they are in the mills. As for the churches, it was definitely explained that the U. S. S. R. does not attack the" Greek. Orthodox church, merely insisting that the state will aid in no wit to their-support. Protestant sects, however, have come under the ill-will of the present government and Mr. Villard obtained from authori tative sources the information that 100 Protestant missionaries have been -sent to Siberia on minor or false charges. Copy American Industry Industrially, Russia is trying in every possible 'way to' pattern herself after America. They hope to achieve the same ends, i. e., mechanical perfection; dex terity, mass production, etc., without letting the control of the machines fall into the hands of a few capitalists. Although originally violently opposed to private capital,1 and the reason why there is no mid dle class in Russia today, the "Acceleration, rather than structural changes, is the key to an understanding of our recent economic develop ments." From the report of President HooYerV Committee on Recent Economic Changes ESTTERDAX the rumble, creak, andplod of cart and oxen. To-day and to-morrow the zoom of airplanes. Faster production. Faster consumption. Faster communication. Significant of electricity's part in the modern speeding-up process is the fact that during the last seven years, con sumption of electric power increased three and one-half times as fast as population. General Electric and its subsidiaries iave developed and built much of the larger apparatus that generates this power as well as the apparatus which utihzes-it in industry and in the home. , The coUege-trained men who come every"year to General Ulecmc take a responsible part in the planning, production, and distribution of electric products, and at the same time receive further technical or business training. C COMPANY Friday, January H, 1935 Bolsheviki , were forced in IS23 to adopt the New Economie Policy, now termed the NEP, i7 which private capital would b allowed to enter the country un der various regulations. Thus we find Henry Ford and other American industrialists enteriug Russia. - The present government ha entered upon contracts for con struction of factories and roads during the ensuing year that amount to more than $1,600,000. This industrializing of Russia according to yesterday's speak er, is a wonderful thing. Mr. Villard believes that if certain of the bad qualities of the existing government art done away with, Russia will be come a powerful influence in the world, causing other nations to modify their attitude to the laboring classes. FIRESIDE M SEASON To Enliven the Cold Days by the Fireside Victor and Columbia Records Bridge Tables Playing Cards and many Other Specialties New Records Out Today University Book and Stationery Co. Next to Sutton's Drug Store (SUTTON BUILDING) - ".7Sf -, -1 95-734DH SCHEN1CT Arv m v v 1C
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 17, 1930, edition 1
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