Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 8, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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"TO CREATE A CAMPUS PERSONALITY A JOUIINAL OF TUB ACTIVITIES OF CAROLINIANS VOLUME XLIV EDITORIAL PHOXK 4351 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1935 rosnress nana uss NUMBER 63 TiD 1 J j I I ! f V 3 ! II AVINTER QUARTER ENROLLING OPEN DURINGS WEEK Permits to Register Are Avail able at 8 South Building from 9 to 5 O'clock XATE PAYMENT PENALIZED pre-holiday registration will begin tomorrow morning for those students among the 2788 now enrolled who plan to return for work next quarter. Permits for registration can be secured in room 8 at South building from 9 to 5 o'clock each day until Friday, , December 20. Students must clear all financial deficiencies before attempting to secure a permit. , . Registration after the appofx- ed period will be limited to stu-i dents not here during the fall quarter and payment of a late fee will be required for registra tions after the specified date. Freshmen Instructed Professor C. P. Spruill an nounced that all freshmen should follow the instructions given them when registering for the first quarter. After securing a permit, card, the first year stu dents meet with their advisers to secure a program of study for the winter quarter. Anyone who registers during this period and learns during the holidays that he cannot re .turn for resumption of class work should notify immediately the dean of the division of the University in which Jie has reg istered. CABINET TO HEAR TALKBYSTEWART Presbyterian Minister Will Dis cuss "Christian Socialism" Tomorrow Night With the Reverend Donald Stewart of the Presbyterian church addressing the group on "Christian Socialism," the soph omore cabinet tomorrow night will conclude its month's study of the economic situation and its relation to the Christian ideal. The 7:15 meeting will be open to members of the junior senior "cabinet also, declared President of the "Y" Billy Yan dell yesterday. So far this quarter Bob Ma gill's cabinet has considered the international crisis in one series earlier in the year and, more re cently, the current economic sit uation and its religious involve ments. N Speakers'on the quarter's pro .gram have included Peace Dele ate Phil Russell, Foreign Pol icy Leaguers Bull Hudson, Stu art Rabb and Mac Smith, Econ omist H. D. Wolfe, and Psychol ogist J. F. Dashiell. No Technical Lecture Rather than attempting i technical lecture tomorrow night on any special platform of gov eminent, Stewart will lead a dis vu&aum to discover if sincere Christianity can sanction pres ent day methods, of running af fairs and the result of conditions that do exist. ine program planning com mittee for the sophomore cabi net has not definitely outlined the program for the winter quarter, but a definite study of vocational guidance will prob ably be made. Several other topics will also be given consid eration in the winter series of meetings. GROUP ANNOUNCES PLANS TO ATTEND VOLUNTEER MEET Students and Ministers May Go to Indianapolis A group of students along with most of the Chapel Hill ministers plan to attend the Twelfth Quadrennial Conven tion of the Student Volunteer Movement which will meet in Indianapolis during the Christ mas holidays. The local group will gather with 2500 delegates from 200 colleges to learn how to face world conflicts and social changes in the light of Christian precepts. This convention is the golden anniversary of the Student Vol unteer Movement. It meets only once in each college'genera- tion. The University's quota of del egates is not yet filled. All in terested in making the trip rr Mr. Harry Comer in the Y. II . C. A. 89r . The convention, like its prede- cessors at uetroit m . yzi ana Buffalo in 1931, will be world embracing in its thought wih special emphasis on missionary work. Green's College Drama Appears ainTomorrow Playmakers to Present Repeat . Performance of "Enchant- ed TVIaze" ly RequesTT" " "The Enchanted Maze," the newest play of Carolina alumnus Paul Green, which has been pre sented for the last two nights in Memorial hall by the Carolina Playmakers, will be produced again tomorrow night at 8 :30. Professor Koch stated that a third production was necessita ted by the numerous requests of out-of-town people. After the initial performance Friday night, Koch sent this telegram o the author, who is now m Hollywood : "Play great success. Reverberations and explosions still roaring. Third performance Monday necessary." A great deal of discussion has been arpuseq on me ciuupuo about the play which is a force ful criticism of the university systems prevalent over the coun- ry. The office at the Playmakers theatre said that the reserve seat tickets were practically all sold out, and a full house is expected for tomorrow night's presenta tion. A capacity crowd was nresent last night. Several Eng- lish professors from nearby col leges have announced their in tention of seeing the play. (Continued on last page) Herndon Released Angelo Herndon, Negro radical convicted in Georgia for insurrection under an old but resurrected statute, was released on $8,000 bail last night, according to a late news flash. The action came as a re sult of the Georgia Supreme Court's decision that the law under which Herndon was convicted is unconstitu tional. Unless a retrial is held within 20 days, accord ing to the report, Herndon will walk the streets a free man. . . . Ag Reader '-',; - S sf & I Professor Frederick who will read Dickens H. Koch "Christ- mas Carol" ,here tonight MARLEY'S GHOST 3 WALRT0NIGHT UJ inorc Kxr W?irrv Flsivic Will "Ro Featured at Dickens' "Christ mas Carol" Presentation Professor Frederick H. Koch will read Charles Dickens' "A Christmas rGarol" tonight in Memorial hall at 8 :30. Koch will sit in front of fireplace in an old English room to read the story of Christmas. Numerous Christmas trees, de corated with lights will occupy the foreground of the stage. The stage setting was designed by Harry Davis. The reading, which is an an- nuaUoccurrence at Chapel Hill, has been given by the University professor of drama nearly 125 times since he first read it pub licly at the University of North Dakota in 1905. From 8 o'clock to 8:30, Bern ard Williamson will play the fol lowing program of Christmas organ music : "Christmas in Sicily" by Petro Yon; "Es 1st Ein Ros' Entsprungen" by Brahms; "Christmas Night" by Goller; "In Dulci Jubilo" by Bach, and " Jesu. Joy of Man's (Continued on last page) v-&7 ! i J CAMPUS KEYBOARD WHAT the college graduate If will do after his cammis visit is still one of the main problems of educators. And, of course, the graduate-to-be is not any too ignorant of the difficulties of his future, either. Despite college personnel bu reaus, placement departments, vocational guidance boards and other similar agencies which have grown up as a part of the newer educational methods, the college graduates of today still face an uncertain future. For instance, what might be regard ed as a thoroughly reliable sur vey has found that only 55 per cent of the men and 58 per cent of the women secure full-time employment after graduation. Another 10 per cent of both find part-time employment. Some 18 per cent of the men and 12 per cent of the women continue graduate study. But the really significant figure is that 14 per cent of the men and 18 per cent of the women find no employ ment whatever after fceing pre sented with the sheepskin and trvine for six months to get located at a position. The South has been more for tunate or else its educative pro cesses have been more effective for after-college work, for more southern college graduates find SWAIN PETITIONS ARE DISTRIBUTED Fraternity Houses, Dormitories Receive Signature Blanks to Be Collected Wednesday Students leading the petition- drive for a University adminis tered dining center redoubled their efforts yesterday while the County Health Office bogged down in an attempt to judge eat ing . places here by modern standards of sanitation. Petitions have been distribut ed to all fraternity houses and dormitories, and copies will be placed in the Y. M. C. A. lobby and Graham Memorial. The pe titions will be collected Wednes day. Administratives' Statements Statements from administra tive officials connected with physical education at the Uni versity have been received and more are expected, according to J the Phi assembly Swain Hall committee. Several of these statements will be printed in Tuesday's is sue of the Daily Tar Heel. (Continued on last page) Air Photography Subject of Talk Mr. Dan Lipschutz will give an illustrated lecture on aerial photostatic mapping at the regu lar meeting of the student chap ter of the A. S. C. E. to be held tomorrow night at 7:30 in 319 Phillips hall. , .... The lecture will be a report on the results of experimentation and investigation into aerial photography. Lipschutz has pre pared slides to illustrate his lec ture. All mechanical, electrical, ji i . ana cnemicai engineers are in vited to attend this meeting. At the last meetinsr. M. A. Lyons was elected secretary and treasurer of the North Carolina student chapters; Donald C. (Red) Douglas was elected as a representative of the Carolina chapter. i employment than ex-collegians in the other, geographical sec tions of the United States. On the other hand, the southerners do less graduate work than the other sheepskin-holders. Despite the fact that we grant the necessity of personnel study and guidance, that we recognize xne neea ior specialization m certain instances, that some co ordinating agency must aid col lege graduates in getting locat eddespite these things we see no justincation ior assuming that schools without these agencies have utterly failed in direct placements. They have failed to some extent in train ing intelligent citizens and those capable of acting intelligently when the occasion demands. But they have not failed because they have refused to train men specifically to be bookkeepers or first-class mechanics. Let your vocational guidance bureaus fit a man to his inter ests while in school, but never let them become so stuck on the subject of placement as to fit a man only for one thing after graduation.' We still need more of that "liberal education" and less of this twiddle-twaddle about "specific training in the art of working an adding ma chine." P.G.H. AVIATION COURSES WILL BE AWARDED IN ESSAY CONTEST Four Scholarships Are Beinc C3 Offered by Boeing Four scholarships to the Boe- ing kcnooi oi Aeronautics, to taling 59,500, are being offered by. W. E. Boeing to college stu dents until March 1936, and are available to any male under graduate of this University. Winner of the first award will receive a complete pilot and op erations course, coverins: 250 hours of flight instruction and 3765 hours of ground school. Winners of second, third, and fourth awards may choose one oi several tecnnicai and semi- technical courses, in addition to 25 hours of flight instruction. The scholarships will be awarded on the basis of a thesis competition, essential require ments follow: the student must be a physically fit male under graduate m good standing m t ' m m some university of the United States or Canada which offers two or more years of work lead ing to Bachelor's degree in arts or sciences. Student must sub mit a technical or non-technical treatise of not over 3500 words on any aeronautical subject of his own "choice. The scholarship competition ends March 15, 1936. Mask Will Address N. C. Club Tomorrow . Talk Will Concern Rural Reset tlement Program Rural "conditions 'existing In North Carolina prior to the in auguration of the rural resettle ment program will be outlined in an address by Homer H. B. Mask before the North Carolina Club tomorrow night at 7 :30 in the library. The subject of the address will be "The Rural Resettlement Program for North Carolina." Mr. Mask will devote major em phasis to a comprehensive out line of the organization of the Rural Resettlement Administra tion m this region. He will also explain the program which has been arranged for the North Carolina area. As a result of a recent reor ganization of the administra tion, Mr. Mask now has direct control over all resettlement work in a large rural area in the bouth, including the state of North Carolina. ine meeting win oe neid in the library room of the depart ment of rural social-economics m the library building. Meet ings of the club are always open to the public and all those in J A 1 11 1-1 lerestea in tne aaaress are in vited to attend. Editorial Contest T"l ! AP rtkfr Aj-sv rnzes oi $ou, $3U, $zu ana access to the Daily Tar Heel's "Now You're Talking" column for publication of his editoria are open to any undergraduate who writes an 800 to 1200-word article on: Why Congress Should Pass the NyeKvaie Amendment. The offer is made by the Com mittee on Militarism in.Educa tion, national sponsor, and the Daily Tar Heel, local sponsor of the contest discussing the pending amendment to the Na tional Defense Act. The contest ends January 3 1936. Students on the campus interested in entering; may se cure complete information at the Daily Tar Heel office. RULING HAMPERS SANITARY RATING OF RESTAURANTS Legal Entanglement Precludes Enforcement of Modern Health Regulations PROSECUTION IS STOPPED Efforts of Dr. M. H. Rourk's Tri-county Health Office to regu late the sanitation of Chanel Hill eating establishments were ensnared in a mass of legal en tanglements yesterday pending- the decision of the Superior Court in Hillsboro tomorrow. Acting after State Health In spector Melvin rated a local res taurant at 39 per cent, the State arraigned the establishment under the statute which requires restaurants to maintain a rating of at least 70 per cent. In the justice-of -peace court here, the defendant was found guilty. An immediate appeal was filed, however, by Defense At- orney Whitfield. In Recorder's court, Judge L. J. Phipps ruled hat the defendant had complied with the 1921 regulations upon which the ratings are supposed- y based. It was found that the state inspector had based his rating upon modern health re quirements instead of the 1921 regulations. Ruled Unconstitutional Therefore, Judge Phipps ruled hat prosecution for a low rat ing not based on acts of the leg islature was unconstitutional, (Continued on last page . CAMPUS MAY GET CHAPTEROF A.S.U. Local Committee Plans to Send Delegate to National Conven tion of Student Union A concentrated movement is under way on the campus to bring to the University a chap ter of the American Student Union, a national, non-political, group now in the process of formation. - A committee including Phil Hammer, Bill Leayitt, Irving Suss, Don Wetherbee and , Joe Barnett are at present seeking to arrange for sending a dele gate to the national convention meeting in Columbus, 0., during the Christmas vacation. NSFA Attitude Efforts are also being made to ascertain the attitude of the National Student Federation of America toward the new group. Should their opinion be favor able, the committee will attempt to form the new group here on the campus under the auspices of the Student Council since stu dent government at the Univer sity has a close connection with the NSFA. The American Student Union is being formed with the pur pose of giving college students an opportunity to take active steps toward correcting existing maladjustments. . The organiza tion here will attempt to com bine activities of various campus groups . interested in . local and national student problems so that concerted action will be se cured for their correction, ac cording to the committee. The actual setup of the orga nization has as yet riot, been de termined. In all probability, campus discussion groups will be asked to send representatives and all other interested students will be asked to affiliate.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 8, 1935, edition 1
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