CAROLINA-TECH GAME - - 2:30 TODAY KENAN STADIUM FOLK-PLAYS TONIGHT 8:30 O'CLOCK PLAYMAKERS THEATRE r - (Mr Xs jp- ! j j j j j V VOLUME XXXIX LEGAL SYSTEMS ARE DISCUSSED BY LAW SCHOOL Seminar in Administration -Justice Meets for First Time This Year. of In France a lawyer who lies for his client is expelled from the bar; in England if he doesn't collect his fee before trial he can not sue a delinquent client; andi a French married woman may not enter the profession with out the consent of her husband-C these and other equally foreign customs of foreign countries -x came to light, last Thursday at 10 :30 a.m., when the class in ad ministration of justice in the law school held, its first meeting to discuss "Classes in the Legal Profession." v This class is conducted as a seminar, the raculty members participating With the students in the discussion. This is the second year the course has been held for the discussion of present day problems in judicial admini stration. Types of specialization in England were discussed by L. J. Giles, Jr. and Allen L. Augs . ton who explained the respective spheres of the barristers . who have no contact with the client and may not solicit business even from a solicitor, but who may frequently charge "refresh- ers to stimulate their lagging interest in a case, and the solici tors uwbo correspond Xo our of fice lawyers and who itemize their bills, listing even letters written, every stamp used and keach conference had. How far the English system of classes has been transplanted throughout the empire was dis cussed by x J. M. Wright, who ; said that in Canada the distinc tion between barristers and soli citors was merely nominal and in the process of obliteration. In Australia, according to Wright, the bar is very thoroughly or ganized and exceptor the fact that barristers, after an em ployment by a solicitor, may talk with the client is similiar to that Continued on page two NEW DIRECTORY IS DISTRIBUTED Book Published by Y. M. C. A. Is Not "Who's Who" But "Who's Where." The student directory of the university for 1930-31 came off the press yesterday. The book is-not a "Who's Who," but simply - a "Who's Where," an abbreviated direc tory and not a catalogue. The directory was being dis tributed last night, free .of charge, a copy to every dormi tory room, every fraternity house, every office on the cam pus, every home in town, and to every place of business. On request a copy will also be fur nished any- individual who may need one for continued use. Yes terday it was distributed over the campus. The University, Y. M. C. A. publishes the directory annually and a master directory is main tained at the "Y" off ice, correct ed throughout the year. If any errors or omissions are discover ed they should be reported to ' the Y. M. C. A. office 'and the correction supplied. When one is unable to get the desired inf or mation from the. new booklet, the master directory may be consulted at the "Y"' office. Three Hundred Enjoy Phi Beta Phi Dance The Gorgon's Head lodge was the scene last night of one of the most enjoyable dances of the season when the Pi Beta Phi sorority entertained at their first dance of the year. The large ballroom was artistically decorated with xorn stalks and pumpkins which lent much at mosphere to the occasion and carried out the spirit of fall and Hallowe'en. The Carolina Buc caneers directed by Ty Sawyer furnished music for the event which was enjoyed "by nearly three hundred invited guests in addition to a large number of returning alumnae and out-of-town visitors present. The chaperones for the occa sion were: Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Caldwell, Mrs. M. H. Stacy, Mrs. Irene F. Lee, Mrs. Ike Manning, Mrs. Charles Woollen, Mrs. Maryon Saunders, Mrs. Abbie Harding, and Mrs. Gene Rose. DEAN GIVES SAGE ADVICETO FROSH Student's Chief Concern Is To " Be Crusader for Right, Dr. Hobbs Asserts. Dean A. W. Hobbs of the lib eral arts school spoke to the j freshmen at chapel in regard to the advantages that should be derived from college. The chief concern of a stu dent, he stated, is in nature and in preparing himself, to be a stu dent crusader for the right. Maturity of thought and a man like behavior is especially desir able for perfection. he dean said that he thought the only remedy for the depres sion of today , is the growth of the desire for proper training and preparation now on the part of the statesmen and business men of tomorrow. Regardless of the dogmas that each may hold nTa religious way, he stat ed that the basic principle back of all religion is the welfare and betterment of the human race, a factor which never has been carried v over to any extent into the conduct of government. The principle that has been worked on is a continual tearing down for the benefit of the present age. The future must be taken into consideration before an eco nomic perfectness can be estab lished. His final advice to the first year men was to caution them against vanity and the slip into mediocrity. He told them to work and make their education really count for something in af ter life. - CHI PHIS TO GIVE DANCE IN DURHAM The alumni of the Chi Phi social fraternity will give a j dance to their pledges at the Forest Hills tea room -tonight from 6 to 8 :30 o'clock. Jelly Leftwich and his orchestra, will furnish the music for the 6c casion. All of the members of the Georgia Tech who will be pre sent for the game have been in vited to attend the dance, and quite a large crowd is expected. For the ,past several years, Chi Phi pledges have been given an annual dance. Chaperons for the dance will be Mr. and Mrs. Lee Richard son, Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Hay wood, Jrl, Mrs. Victor Hum phreys, Mr. and ' Mrs. Victor Young, and Mr. and Mrs. Mary on Saunders. CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1930 Various Aspects Of Southern : Life Cited Before Conference Various aspects of social and economic-changes in the South were cited here yesterday in papers presented before the third "annual Southern Confer ence on Education now in ses sion at the University. Based on several years of re search, the papers were present ed by members of the staff of the University Institute for re search in social science. Their reports occupied the major por tion of the second day's program. The Conference, which opened Thursday night, witHan address by President Robert M. Hutchins of the University of Chicago, is being attended by leading educa tors from all sections of the South.- " . . " Dr. E. C. Branson, of the Uni versity of North Carolina, pre sided over the opening session yesterday. A report of "Human Aspects of the Georgraphy of the Ameri can South" was made by Dr. Lee M. Brooks of the University, who read a paper prepared by Dr. Rupert' Vance, of the Uni versity, who was unable to be present on account of illness. Dividing the South into six distinct regions Dr. Vance's paper referred to them as "var iously emerging from different stages of frontier, and decad ent 'economy, facing various phases of advancing industrial ism." V ' " " It was pointed out that "the Cotton "Belt, strong hold of the South, and the Piney Woods with turpentine and timber stands transformed into unwanted cut over lands remain the South's two problematic zones. Indus trial superstructures in the Southwest based on gas and oil and in the Piedmont Crescent based on coal, iron, tobacco, furniture, textiles and bound to gether by power lines furnish the South's most coherent ap proaches tomodern industrial culture. Conquest, and near con quest of hookworm and malaria with readjustment in the ill chosen diet of the southern com- mon man (oi wnicn pellagra is an index) will do much to re move handicaps once regarded as inherent in the southern cli mate." 4 : "Georgraphy," he concluded, j "however, offers one factor of superlative importance that may be regarded as not subject to change by man. Let us talk of the weather. At least one indus trious student has assigned the South a low rank in civilization and accounted for the status on the basis of sub-tropic climate. Changes are. possible, however, in adjustment to climate and it Program Of Education Conference SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1 v Nine-thirty a. mj Gerrard Hall V Presiding: President F. P. Gaines, Washington and Lee University. " . Symposium orf "Education in a Changing Economic Order." Address: Dr. John W. Abercrombie, vice-president of the National Education Association, and assistant state superin tendent of Alabama. ..... - . 'Address: President N. R. Crosier, department of superin tendence, National Education Association, and1 superinten dent of schools, Dallas, Texas. ' Address : Professor Edward H. Reisner, Teachers College. Columbia University. v Two-thirty p. m. The Kenan Memorial Stadium v Carolina-Georgia Tech football, game. Eight-thirty p. m. The Playmaker Theatre Carolina Folk-Plays, the Carolina Playmakerg, Professor Frederick H. Koch, director. - J" SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2 Eleven a. m. Chapel Hill Methodist Church Sermon: "Social Intelligence and Spiritual Dynamic." Dr Reinhold Neibuhr, the Union Theological Seminary, New York City. - - is notable that many southern deficiencies and inadequacies find climate a secondary rather than a primary factor. The handicaps of the South are not inherent in the geographic or biological scheme of things. They are incidental and may be overcome." 4 "The South's industrial prob lems which now agitate the en tire country cannot be 'success fully served on the basis of the small snapshot views of detached segments of the contemporary scene," Dr. Clarence Heer of the institute said in duscussing "In comes and Wages in the South." The ratio of agricultural wage earners to all others was three to one in the South as compared to a ratio of one to two in the rest of the country, he pointed out. "That the situation in south ern agriculture is a basic factor in causing the income and wage disparities between the South and the "rest of the country be- come increasingly clear wnen wage rates in specific non-agri cultural employments are com pared. It is in tie unskilled oc cupations capable of being filled by raw recruits from the farm that wage differential between the South and the rest of the country reaches its maximum, "Specifically, the wages paid common laborers in the South range from 50 to 65 per cent of the average for similar classes Of workers in other parts of the country. In semi-skilled employ ments, the range of southern wages seems to run from 65 to 85 per cent of the wages in com parable employments elsewhere. In the case, of skilled mechanics, the disparity between the South and the rest of the country ap pears to reach its minimum, southern wage -rates represent ing from 75 to 100 per , cent of the corresponding wage rates obtaining outside of . the South." "In semi-skilled occupations, which are less immediately af fected by the competition of the problems of southern agriculture and Jf they are to be solved they must necessarily be solved to gether." Dx. T. J. Woofter, Jr., of the institute, ascribed the difficul ties of cooperative marketing in the South to tenancy the high proportion of negro farmers, de pendence upon merchant credit and its resulting dumping, over production, and the lack of tech nical knowledge of market pecu liarities of southern crops. "All these problems have con fronted southern cooperatives and they now have ten years' (Continued on page two) Art Portraits To Be Exhibited Today Mrs. Mary Graves Rees, known in the art field by her maiden name, Mary deB. Graves, is giving an exhibition of child ren's portraits this week-end in her studio at 611 Park Lane. Everyone is welcome, and visit ors to the football game today are particularly invited to visit 9 :30 to 12 :30. Her home will also be open to the public between three and five Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Rees, who is a member of the Southern States Art League, uses herjnaiden name in her art work, and is thus listed in that organization and in Who is Who in American Art. The portraits of Dorothy Dashiell, Georgia Logan, Thorn dike Saville, Betsy Ann Bow man, and Thomas Odum of Chapel Hill; Ben Guion of Grenwich, Connecticut ; and Billy, Jeanne, and Kiki Davison of Hope Valley, will be among the group to be shown. DEPRESSION CAN BE REMEDIED BY MOREEDUCATION Obligations, Opportunities, Ne cessities of Education Are Great, Hutchins Asserts. President Robert M. Hutchins of the University of Chicago, spoke in Gerrard hall Thursday evening before, the educational conference and the students on the situation education confronts today. He related his section of the country to this by remark ing, the business depression, and then related the depression to education. Why has education not prevented it, the speaker queried? But incompetence has caused it, an incompetence that has half the world starving to obtain what the other half , is starving to dispose of. . He found 'the answer to be more education, and found the "obligations, opportunities, and necessities" of education greater than ever before. A study of contemporary life is a new solu tion. And then Dr. Hutchins spoke for more embracing study and for the overcoming of the .in tense specialization that sepa rates t a -teacher from a , teacher and a student from an educa tion. Scholarship will be less a matter of sitting in an armchair and of writing scholarly, jour nels. It will no longer be a thing apart,unrelated to the world. People have more leisure than they have ever had' before. Eng land will probably emerge with a more civilized working class than she has ever had before, but adult education has never been popular in this country. Exten sion work must be made a re gular part of the university ser vices, "not an after thought by the professor who must live, ac cording to Hutchins. ' College work must cease to be a matter hours of work done and number of credits received. An adding machine has no place in deciding .whether : a student is graduated or not. A would-be research student must not be obliged to spend his enthusiasm on routine work which bores him. Dr. Hutchins "University of Utopia" would have entrance in to the college and promotion from it depend on the individual student and not on an adding machine. But more money and more academic freedom are es sential, he declares. NUMBER 3S UNIVERSITY NOT FULLY AWARE OF ITS OBIJGATION Declares Dodd in Four-Division Address, Gerrard Hall, Friday Evening Dr. William E. Dodd of the University of Chicago spoke Fri day evening in Gerrard hall on "The University and the Public" in a four division address. In the beginning, he stated that the university as a part of the demo cratic and social system of the United States is not entirely safe ground. It is not fully aware of its social obligation to the public. The whole world will soon be ranged against the United States because of her policy of abandoning all cooperation with the world. The university is the only na tional hope that can change the tone of the country's foreign policy. After the Franco-Prussian war Germany adopted much the same policy toward outsiders without, however, totally isolat ing herself. The professors were unable to rise above the national error. "Vital blunders in social policy of foreign relations lead to catastropne. ; tsuz proiessors and universities are valuable on ly when the people profit by them. And the common man is not interested in the "support of , prigs." In the second division of his speech, Dr. Dodd considered the make-up of the universities. There are-more than, a million students in the country, oh whom a billion dollars is snent yearly. The buildings are masterpieces of architecture, but what are the students in the " buildings like? The majority cannot study deep ly, and the "majority sets the tone." Many of the students, lin flhlA.tn fftand alone, enter clubs. In these clubs, anybody who studies is ' a grind;; anybody who thinks, a Bolshevik. The club group is a third. Another third is too aware of the dis crimination to concentrate. The other third, self-help students, are -; too over-worked to study. The billion dollars, a year goes to- a small minority : the tenth (Continued on page two) 'BULL CITY' FIRE LOSSJS$300,000 Million Pounds of Tobacco, Prop erty of American Tobacco Company, Is Burned. The large storage warehouse of the American Tobacco Com pany on Morehead Avenue in Durham, was totally destroyed by a fire of undetermined origin, early yesterday afternoon. This is the most disastrous fire in recent years to occur in this section of the state. More than 1,100,000 pounds of tobacco and a large quantity of "packing supplies were lost in the blaze. Eight negro houses adjoining the property, .were destroyed in the fire. -Two negro children who were locked in one of the houses while their parents went to work were reported to have lost their lives in the conflagration. A search is being conducted to re cover their bodies. On account of high j voltage wires near , fhe scene . of the burning structure, power lines had to"be cut off for two hours, leaving the entire city without power. The loss was estimated to be well in excess of $300,000.