Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 15, 1930, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE DAILY TAR HCEL Tuesday, April 15, 1930 STATE OFFICIALS WILL VISIT LAW CLASSMJRSDAY Legislators Among Those In vited To Discuss Adminis tration of Justice. The Law School, according to an announcement by Dean C. T. McCormick, will be host on Thursday, April .17, at 2 o'clock, to a number oi; state officials, leaders of the North Carolina Legislature, and prof essors and students of legislation, when the April meeting of the Law School course in the Administration of Justice will be devoted to a study of the scientific drafting aspect of Statute Law making. Those who will contribute to the discussion out of their ex perience in legislative matters will be R. T. Fountain, of Rocky Mount, Lieutenant Governor and president of the Senate ; A. H. Graham of Hillsboro, Speak er of the House of Representa Uvea ; H. M. London, of Ral eigh, Legislative Reference Li brarian; S. C. Brawley of Dur ham, State Senator: Willis Smith of Raleigh, State Repre sentative ; Dan Boney of Raleigh, Insurance Commissioner and for mer Legislative leader ; H. G. Connor of Wilson and Walter Murphy of Salisbury. Profes sors R. D. W. Connor and E. J. Woodhouse, of the University's Department of Government, will take the point of view of the political scientist, and Profes sor Woodhouse's class in State Government will be presented. The problems will be present ed, through six papers of ten minutes duration each, prepared by students in the course in Ad ministration of Justice, under the direction of Professor M. T. Van Hecke of the law faculty. They are as follows : 1. The Parliamentary Counsel in England, by J. A. Williams. 2. The Legislative Counsel of the U. ; S. Congress, by J. A. Mullican. 3. State Legislative Reference and Drafting Bureaus, by W. L. Marshal. 4. Training for; Legislative- Ser vice, by E. P. Taylor. 5. The North Carolina Legisla tive Reference Library, by Fra zier Glenn. 6. The Need for Improvement in North Carolina Legislation, by B. T. Lord. ' COIffiR BEAUTIFIES CAMPUS GROUNDS Only Avenue of Gum Trees" Is Planted Along Route 54 from Pittsboro Road to Athletic Field. Spring work on the beautifi- cation of the campus under the direction of the Committee on Grounds and Buildings in charge of Dr. W. C. Coker, has been completed. Several walks through the campus and Route number 54 di rectly in the rear of South Cam pus have been lined, with hardy, fast growing, trees, intended to fill in the more sparse sections of the grounds. The inner side of the two walks leading from Old South building to the new Library have been planted with willow oaks. Because of the nearness of these paths to the buildings, the outer edges could not be planted. The "only avenue of Sweet Gum trees" ever seen by Dr. Coker has been planted along Route 54 from the Pittsboro road to the athletic field. This avenue has been lengthened to extend more than a mile from the athletic field by Dr. Coker himself, but the specie used were willow oaks. Cypress trees have been plac ed in the back of the library and around the chemistry building. Besides these trees, several clumps of black birch have been planted in the same locality. Shrubberies and trees planted around the campus have been furnished by the University pro pagating grounds in the rear of Peabody building. The black birches were transplanted from the surrounding creeks, and most of the other trees used were made available through the kindness of Dr. Coker, in donat ing them from his own Emerson Farm. of the church to spread the gospel," he continued, "but in this it is failing." After giving many vivid ex amples of some of the good work that he had seen done in some of the ."slums" of Pittsburgh and New York, Dr. Zanheiser concluded his talk by answering a few questions of the cabinet members. McCall Discusses Family Automobile "The Family Automobile" is the title of an article by Pro fessor Frederick B. McCall in the April issue of The North Carolina Law Review which is now being distributed. In this article are discussed the recent developments and changes in the laws fixing responsibility of the owner of an automobile while it is being operated by members i of his family. The article is general in its scope and includes cases and statutes from all of the states. It shows the con stantly changing state of the law in this unsettled field of lit igation. The leading article in the Ap ril issue is by Judge J. Craw ford Biggs and deals with "Fed eral Practice and Procedure." Judge Biggs, an authority on this subject, limits his observa tions to the civil side of the docket, and his remarks are an especially valuable source of in formation upon a field or prac tice constantly increasing in im portance. Suggestions for a Department of Justice for North Carolina are made in a series of papers presented in the Open Court section of the issue under the heading "A Ministry of Justice." In these papers law enforce ment methods in England, France, the United States and North Carolina are compared. These papers grew out of a Uni versity law school course on "The Administration of Justice." Seventeen students - contri bute articles on recent decisions of the North Carolina Supreme Court, United States Supreme Court, and other courts of final jurisdiction in the southeastern portion of the United States. This includes discussion of re cent decisions in the field of Air Law. L. P. McLendon of the Dur ham bar reviews Professor Mc intosh's "North Carolina Prac tice and Procedure in Civil Cases;" and Charles W. Tillett, Jr., of the Charlotte bar, re views Osborne's "Question Documents." DR. R. IL CLARH Dentist Over Bank of Chapel Hill Phone 6251 H H J vs. II lie Um versify o Hortla Carolina ON THE PROPOSITION THAT The Principle of the Chain Store System is Detri mental to The Best Interests of The American Public. HAILL Tonight, April 15 8:30 P. M. DEAD METAL LEAPS TO LIFE at the hands of Westinghouse engineers WHAT YOUNGER COLLEGE MEN ARE DOING WITH WESTINGHOUSE Mr. Leonard Seeks Accomodations For High School Week Grady Leonard, as chairman of the entertainment' committee for High School Week, wishes to ask that all students who can accommodate any of the visiting high school students in their rooms during High School Week will please call at the Y tomor row and leave their names, and addresses. . .... Many students . will be com ing up here . from the "home town," and it is Mr. Leonard's hope that if possible, . these stu dents be entertained by the members of the student body from the towns from which the visitors come. If necessary beds can be put . in the rooms ot tnose wisning to take m some of the high schoolers. Linen for the ,beds, however, must be furnished by the stu dents. Most of the newcomers will be coming to the University for the first time, and it is the wish of the committee that the student body make these visitors fee perfectly at home. High Schoo Week begins Wednesday, April 16, and continues throughout the week. At the commencement exer- ZANHEISER SAYS CHURCHES SHOULD COOPERATE MORE Protestantism must get a new technique, stated JJr. Charles Zanheiser in a talk to a joint meeting of the three Y cabinets last night at the Y af ter having been introduced by Parson Moss of the local Pres byterian church. Dr. Zanheiser, traveling sec retary of the Federal Council of Churches, . has been making a tour of the south, talking in the larger universities and colleges. For the past two or three days he has been at Duke, and from here he will go to Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. Continuing further on the subject of "The Progress of Co operation Between Religious Bodies," the speaker was of the opinion that Protestantism was in grave danger in that it was now becoming a cast institu tion. He stated that it was working in only a few areas and was leaving the other areas un touched. If we must measure up to this new industrializing age, we (the churches) must get togeth er," said Dr. Zanheiser. He stated that he was not here speaking of a union church, but rather a cooperation of all the different denominations for one common need. "This," contin ued the speaker, "is the only way that we are going to succeed.' He stated further that in the past most of the conversions had been made in revival meet ings, but now this method does not work. To get conversions now, Dr. Zanheiser believed that it was necessary to go out and have personal talks and person al contacts with the people. Another fault that the speak mentioned . was that the .-x&k :. ..y-..- :er cises of 1911, 122 degrees were .church was failing as a gospe! conferred. selling agency. "It is the duty :"- A-sr . .vTr-:.;.-. Wfi fcW" i-:' - ' ili! z W4i Ilt 4V:a if j .. -r- w :.:... ..;::::v W. F. BOYLE Pratt Institute, "27 Tarbins Sales . P R.H.HANNEY Tuft's, 26 Condenter Sales TT is engineering that breathes the spark of life into lifeless metal, that converts it into active machine ery, that makes of it an adaptable servant. One essential ingredient of that engineering 4s imagination. A second is rational i thinking, the object of your technical training. And the third is teamwork. In the development of the 55,000 kw. Duke Power Turbines, team' work extended back to the date when George Westinghouse brought the steam turbine to America. It included men who have made life studies of vibration, of blade design, of the effects of superheated steam on metals; men who know how to make huge cast ings, the packers who have mas tered the science of shipping giant J- w i K Th 55.ooo l$v. turbine generator units that Westing' house built for the River Bend station of Due Power Company are the largest in the South. machinery. And it took in also the business men who create a market for such machinery and who cement together the manyfold activities of the Westinghouse institution. i! n ri f n R. S. THATCHER Drcxel Institute. '27 Product ton Department 1 ' H.B.RASMUSSEN Turbint Engineering J. Q HARPER Lafayette College, '29 Turbine Slei
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 15, 1930, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75