Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 20, 1930, edition 1 / Page 1
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" ' V ' ' " TAR HEEL MEETING ' 7 TONIGHT OLD AND NEW REPORTERS i l 1 in TAR HEEL MEETING 7 TONIGHT r i i OLD AND NEW REPORTERS i 7 VOLUME XXXVIH NOTED ALIMMJS HERE TO OFFER LECTURE SERIES Junius Parker, Outstanding New York Lawyer, Here April 28, 29, and 30 Under Auspices Of Law School. Junius Parker, an alumnus of the University and prominent New York lawyer, has been se cured to deliver a series of lec tures under the auspices of the law school here, April 28, 29 and 30, on the general subject of the relation of business and the state, i was announced yes terday by Dean C. T. McCor mick of the University law school.. The subjeet of the lectures will be "Business and the State' The first lecture will deal gen erally with national government activities in aid or regulation of business, including the protec tive tariff, the Federal Reserve System, and the regulation of interstate carriers. The second lecture will touch upon the par ticular field of national control of business through the Clayton Law, the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, and the Federal Trade Commission Act. The last lec ture will deal with the use of the "due process of law" clauses in the national constitution to limit the states in the exercise of their police power and to lim it the nation and the states in the fixing of rates for railroads and other public- utilities - - - Mr. Par(ker is peculiarly quali fied by experience to deal with the relations between law and business, since he was counsel for the American Tobacco Com pany at the time of their anti trust litigation and since he has (Continued on, page three) NEW CAFETERIA TO OPEN MAY 1 Friendly Corporation Will Oper ate Eating House Formerly Owned By Miss Cates. The Friendly Cafeteria will be opened in Chapel Hill, May 1. The new cafeteria will occupy the space which was formerly the home of the University Cafeteria, located on Franklin street. The building is now be ing remodeled and will be ready for use, with many Improve ments, at that date. This Friendly Cafeteria will be similar to the Friendly Cafe terias which are now operating in Greensboro, High Point, Dur ham and Charlotte. Meal tick ets sold by the Chapel Hill branch will be honored in all of these cities. Tickets amounting to six dol lars in value will be sold for five dollars. Another feature of the cafeteria will be the sale of special tickets, amounting to forty dollars in trade, for thir ty dollars. 'These special tick ets will also be honored in Greensboro, Durham, High Point and Charlotte. In addition to the cafeteria system proper, there will be a regular boarding system, where by students may eat for a regu lar monthly amount. Good looking waitresses are to be em played for this branch of the establishment. ' The manager of the new cafe teria earnestly requests the students and townspeople to in vestigate his establishment after it is opened, May 1. Lutheran Communion Service At the Lutheran Student Association services this morning the Holy Communion will be administered as a part of the Easter service. The service will be held in Ger rard hall at eleven o'clock. EDITOR - ELECT OF MAGAZINE NAMES NEW SWF MEN Staff Meeting Thursday; First Issue May 11; Dungan To Be Managing - Editor Magazine Also. , With the next issue of the Carolina Magazine, which will appear May 11, the tentative or ganization of the new staff be comes operative. Jack Dungan, the choice of the Publications Union" Board, will assume his dutise as managing editor of the magazine with the issue of May 11. The associate and assistant editors will be selected by the editor at a later date, these se lections being made largely UDon the basis of material submitted for the issue of May 11 and' the last issue of the year, which will appear May 25. The circulation manager will also be selected later. There will absolutely be no radical changes in the magazine except, that there "will be a large staff whichhy and all will have an opportunity to make, and that the student body will be urged to make the mag azine what it wants it to be through the medium of this large and flexible staff. The format and quality of the paper will remain essentially the same There will be an organization meeting in the Tar Heel-Maga zine offices in the basement of Alumni building Thursday even ing, April 24, at 7 o'clock. At this meeting the new editor and managing editor will outline their policies for the remainder of the present collegiate year, and the seven months of next, during which the magazine will be published bi-monthly. Be ginning with the organization meeting Thursday night, the magazine staff will meet once each month. For the time being the fol lowing members of the present magazine staff are listed as members of the new editor s staff, subject to change both addition and subtraction: Rich ard A. Chace, Jay Curtis, Robert Hodges, J. J. Slade, Jr., James Dawson, Dorothy Mumf ord, Philipp Klemens Kaufmann, Mary Marshall Dunlap, Louis V. Brooks, and Sherman Shore. In a word, the policy of the new editor is to organize a large staff to wnich every person who proves his worthiness by contri butions to the magazine, may become a member, and to urge the student body to make the Carolina Magazine what it wants it to be. Infirmary List The University infirmary at tendants reported the following sick list yesterday :' M. Q. Tlumb lee, D. A. Nims, Hugh Over street and Johnny Branch. During the commencement week in 1909, a baseball game was held between the class of 1903 and the. graduating class. CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1930 New Duke 0 Jh it u :v::v:::::x:- fv Above are shown two recent f - ' V. , " ' i ;-, 5 - I i ii ' - ' ' ' v v ; , 1 -i ? a; J f T - i lit S V 0 .v 4 - : - n m it H h l "i Mr ''' -T ' ilk I U " ; ism:.? ?.? u,r! vv''s erected on the new Duke campus. With more than $80,000,000 for buildings and administration it is expected that the new Duke will be one of the foremost universities in the entire south. Officials of the university have announced that the new cam pus will be .occupied early next fall. - NINETY THREE TO WlffiSEESl EDUCATION DEPT. Twenty-Two Girls and Seventy One Men Compose Largest Class To Be Graduated From School. The largest number of seniors in the history of the Univer sity's school of education will be graduated this year, either at the regular commencement in June or at the end of the sum mer school in August, accord ing to announcement by C. E. Mcintosh, executive secretary of the school of education. Of these seniors, 93 in all, who ex pect to receive the degree A. B. in education, 22, or approxi mately one-fourth of the total, are girls, and 71 are men. Several of the candidates for graduation have been absent from the University for some in the past, but have either re turned to the University in time to finish their work or have ob tained the required number of credits through correspondence 'courses. A number of members of the senior class in education, a list of which was published recently, are not candidates for the degree this year. Local Firm Improves Cleaning Equipment Extensive improvements have been completed by the Carolina Dry Cleaners in their office and plant equipment. The front of fice has been enlarged and dec orated, and a sightly awning in stalled. New equipment in the cleaning department, including facilities for cleaning linens, has been added. y The Carolina Dry Cleaners, purchased a few months ago by Royall Brown and Bill Carbine, Carolina students, from the Har desty brothers, have also inaug urated five-hour dry cleaning service. Buildings : t i -S::.i..;:5- photographs of buildings being; UNIVERSITY TEAM TOlEET MiilNIA IN RADI0DEBATE To Discuss Question of Thirteen Months Calendar Over WPTF In Raleigh April 9; Will Also Debate Boston. The last five weeks have wit nessed Carolina's participation in five intercollegiate, debates, two of them being held in Atlan ta and two taking place in Chap el Hill. At present there are only two encounters left on the Carolina debate schedule the Carolina-Virginia radio debate which will be broadcast from radio station WPTF in Raleigh on the night of April 25, and the Carolina-Boston encounter which will be held in Boston, May 9. The subject of the radio de bate is the much-talked-of thir teen months calendar, which is a matter of considerable concern among scientists at the present time. H. H. Hobgood, A. V. Lowenstein, and W. W. Speight will represent the University in this contest. This will be the second annual radio debate be tween the University of North Carolina and the University of Virginia, J. C. Williams and W. W. Speight having represented Carolina last year in the first Carolina-Virginia radio debate. The present agreement between the two universities calls for an annual radio debate between tljem, to be held in Richmond and some North Carolina town on alternate years. In the last intercollegiate forensic encounter of the pres ent year J. C. Williams, J. M. Baley and G. P. Carr will meet the debaters from Boston Uni versity, at Boston, May 9. The Tar Heel team will uphold the negative side of "Resolved, That the nations of the world should adopt some plan of complete dis armament of all forces, except (Continued on page two) . -v.-.-:.- -n; -. --tiVSSv'--,".v v I Q) L J Cantata Tonight Tonight at 8 o'clock, at the Chapel of the Cross, the can tata, Easter Dawn," by G. Herbert Knight, will be sung. Director and organist, Mr. N. O. Kennedy. Soloists, Mrs. Murchison and Dr. Holmes. INAUGURATION OF NEW OFFICERS TO BE HEEMONDAY Induction of Student Body Offi cers Will Take Place In Ger . rard Hall Tomorrow. "Red" Greene, and other newly elected officers of the student council, will be official ly inducted into office tomorrow morning, in Gerrard hall dur ing chapel period. Although at a joint meeting of the old and the new council last Monday, "Red" Greene assumed virtual leadership of the student body, the official induction will take place tomorrow. ' " For many years, the official inauguration of student body of ficers has been marked by an inaugural address by the incoming-president. And in the days when Memorial hall was the largest building on the campus, it was customary for large crowds of students to turn out to hear the address. However, with Memorial hall gone, the scene of tomorrow's ceremonies will, be Gerrard hall, .which, al though primarily given over to freshman for their chapel exer cises, will have plenty of room in the balcony and in the back for those upper clasSmen who may wish to hear the speeches. The occasion of tomorrow will be the 24th inaugural. In was in 1906 that first the students were given the privilege and freedom to conduct student af fairs upon their sole responsi bility. It was at that time, too, that the students first filed in to Memorial hall to hear one of their own number who would henceforth be the head of the formal student government. It will be regretted by many that no larger auditorium is availa ble, for it is well known that the speeches rendered on these occasions are of great interest to all the student body. DENTAL STUDENTS TO HEAR 'MAYES ON INLAY TECHNIQUE The fourth lecture and clinic of the 1930 postgraduate exten sion course for dentists, being conducted by the University ex tension division in cooperation with the state Dental Society, will be held at six class centers this week, it was announced here yesterday by R. M. Grumman, director of the University exten sion division. Dr. T. W. Maves.of Cleveland, Ohio, experienced clinician and authority on gold inlay tech nique, will be the instructor. Glasses will be held at Green ville, Raleigh, Greensboro, Winston-Salem, Charlotte and Ashe ville. Other instructors who will conduct classes at a later date include Dr. Albert L. Midgley of Providence, R. I., whose sub ject will be "Dental Economics" ; and Dr. Horace M. Davis of Baltimore, Md., who will present the subject of "Radiodentia." ' In 1908 there were 58 seniors to graduate. NUMBER 149 GREENSBORO BOY HAS DISAPPEARED FROM UNIVERSITY Bill Pemberton Has Been Miss ing Since February; Parents Thought -He Was In School. Another .disappearance of a University student was brought to light late this week by the ar rival of Mr. T. Pemberton, of Greensboro, in search of his son, Bill, whose whereabouts has been a mystery since late in Feb ruary this year. It is a much stranger , case than that of M. P. Moorer. Bill Pemberton was, as far as his parents knew, registered and in school for his third year, ever since the beginning of the Fall quarter. Yet, when Pemberton, Sr., went to make enquiries at the registrar's office and at the dean of students', no official rec ord was on file for his son. The investigation of his father resulted in the knowledge that Bill Pemberton, although occu pying a room on the third floor of Aycock dormitory, and hav ing paid for that room, was nev er a student at the University, although he spent almost two quarters at Chapel Hill. His letters home led the readers of them to believe he wasa regu lar student. The last communication that the family in Greensboro re ceived from the boy was late in February and although attempts had'-beenadto. get in touch with him during the interven ing time it was not until a week or so ago that his absence was noted. The roommate of Pemberton has also disappeared but there are no fears for either of their lives or minds, as in the Moorer case. The entire affair is being viewed by the fathers as a youthful gesture at freedom. When questioned last week, he appeared to be rather anxious over the matter," but taking it all in a kindly manner. CALL ISSUED FOR NEW REPORTERS Old and New Men Will Attend Re-Organizajion Meeting To night At Seven. The new managing-editor an nounced yesterday a reorganiza tion of the Daily Tar Heel repor- torial stafl: to be made tonight at 7 o'clock. A call is being made for all persons who desire to become members of the staff. It is planned to carry a staff of 60 reporters during the year. A course credit toward gradua tion, in addition to attractive charms, is awarded faithful reporters. An unusual back ground in college news report ing can be secured from Tar Heel experience. Editor yarborough has an nounced that contrary to pre cedent, members of the editorial board will aid the editor in "breaking-in" new reporters and serve as super-reporters on spe cial stories. -At the meeting tonight beats will be re-assigned, and impor tant announcements made. Early Morning Service The United Church conducted a sunrise service this morning at 6 :30 o'clock. A male quar- i tette and vocal music by a choir and Mrs. Conner and Miss Wil liams furnished music.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 20, 1930, edition 1
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