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The Daily Tar Heel from Chapel Hill, North Carolina • Page 4

Location:
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Thursday, August 25, 1927 THE TAR HEEL Page Four Miss Vivian Walters of Kari- it will seat 24,000 people seems READY TOR EX AMS? ty Car tytzl FREE TUITION IS AVAILABLE IN THE napolis has been spending a. few days with Mrs. Louis Winecoff Earnhardt, who is here in sum Get Your Quiz Books at Sutton and Alderman Leading Southern College Newspaper EDUCATION SCHOOL tnKtniimmmmtmmmmmmma people of the state. The two concrete stands on the present Emerson Field hold only 4,000 people, and yet one section of the new stands will seat three times that many. The Stadium is to be dedicated at-the Carolina-Virginia game mer school.

Miss Mae Culpepper has returned' to Chapel Hill after spending her vacation at her home in Georgia. Member of North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Teachers and Those Planning To Teach Can Benefit By State Published every Thursday during Eat at MRS. MERRITT'S Exemption Walker Explains, both terms of the summer scnooi, ana fa tViek nfftninl nMrmonpr nf t.Vlfi Pllb- Thanksgiving. Students Here May Choose from Wide Activities ment of the institution at Chapel Hill. Your teachers are probably products of the school of education here.

Any citizen may take a university course by correspondence or by extention instruction if he desires and meets the requirements. These are but a few citations to show how closely linked the university is with the people of North Carolina. With a background of 139 years, rich in humor and traditional triumphs, the University of North Carolina now stands out as one of the leading universities of the country the leader long recognized in the south. chooses, Carolina for his institution of higher learning will choose well. lications Union of the University of In addition to the hundred or North Carolina, unapei am, jn.

Annual Coaching School Opened more scholarships which are an nually awarded, giving free tui Offices in the basement of Alumni Continued from page one) Building. Telephone 403. bership are: the American In tion in the University to the reci Good Food Reasonable Rates Come and Try It stitute of Electrical Engineers, pients, exemption from.the pay J. F. ASHBY Editor and Manager the American Society of Civil Engineers Amphoterothen ment pf tuition may be realized by those who have taught school (studies campus problems and in the state for a certain period (Continued from page one) C.

Belding, P. H. Quinlan, E. H. Ellinwood, of the University coaching staff, and E.

C. Jerni-gan, former captain of the University tennis team. The school, which is being held in conjunction with the annual Summer Institute, will close September3. Staff Andy Anderson Johnny Harden W. N.

Cox Elise Roberts Malcomb B. Seawell F. D. Uzzell On Main Street, around the 2 of time and by those who are fosters good government) i Commerce Club, Engineering Schol going to teach. Dean N.

W. corner from the Baptist Church arship Fraternity, Epsilori Phi Walker, of the School of Educa Henry C. Circulation Mgr. tion, sets forth the conditions MOST SUCCESSFUL SUMMER Delta Cosmopolitan Club, Golden Monogram Club, Pan-Hellenic Council, Wigue and under which a student may avail SESSION NEARS CLOSE himself, or herself, of free tui tmmtm Masque, Woman's Association, Next Tuesday the most suc You can purchase any article advertised in the Tab Heel with perfect safety because everything it advertises is guaranteed to be as represented. The Tab Heel solicits advertising from reputable concerns only.

cessful summer school in the his and the William Pharmaceutical Society. Students may try KEEP TRIM AND NEAT LOOKING out for publication work which For the best barber work in town with courteous includes the following student Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. tory of the institution will come to a close. Dean TST.

W. Walker, Director of Summer School, and other administrative officials voice the opinion that this has been the best summer session student publications: Tar Heel service, you are invited to call at linn nuinnr 11111 ninnrn nnn tion when registered in that school. The statement of Dean Walker follows: "The State of Korth Carolina offers free tuition to students in the University who have taught in the schools of North Carolina for as long as two It offers free tuition also to students who are preparing to teach in North Carolina. Undergraduates in the University who avail (newspaper), Yackety Yack August 25, 1927 i (year book), Carolina Magazine inr. LnAm, mu.

hAKhh.K mi (monthly magazine), and Buc IS IT WORTH IT? caneer (college comic) ITJ Ol.l liml di There are also several social from the standpoint of quality of students, general scholarship, strength of faculty and the lack of necessity of disciplinary action. Dean Walker states: 1 iiim and professional fraternities to which students may be elected. "The Summer School session themselves of the tuition exemption under this provision are required, under a resolution of the Kenan Memorial Stadium Nears of 1927, now coming to a close, has established several records worthy of notice. Completion; Will Seat 24,000 trustees, to register, in the "In the first place the quality (Continued from page one) School of Education. The School of Education is that division of the University whose major pur The Orange Frintshop pose is to prepare young men and fast into the concrete.

The wooden seats are half the width of the concrete steps, so "that every spectator will have ample room for his feet behind the person in front of him. Rosemary Street, back of the Bank of Chapel Hill It is hard for one, unused to TELEPHONE 220 young women for teaching and for other forms of educational service. Undergraduates registered in the School of Education pursue the same academic courses in the various departments of the University that the students in the other schools pursue, but their programs of work are administered by the School of Education officials, the huge football stadia that fill the northern and western sec tions-bf the country, to visual ize the actual size of the new Kenan Stadium. The fact that of the student body is better than ever before. As evidence of this fact, the records show that 32.8 per cent, hold college degrees; last year only 25.6 per cent, held degrees.

Further, the summer school students this year have been very studious, according to reports from instructors. The library records add proof to this statement; parallel reading books have been very much in In the number enrolled, this session has also set a record. During the two terms 2,544 students were enrolled, the enrollment last year "being 2,323. The number of students in the graduate school session was 485 compared with 344 last year. The Administrative Board reports fewer cases of discipline than "The curricula of the School At this time the question of going to college is confronting every graduate of the high schools and others who are prepared to enter an institution of higher learning.

The question of whether it is worth while, the money and time that will be spent in college now looms in the prospective college student's mind. There are those who will tell one that college is a waste of time a four-year loaf and the breeding place for all the devilment under the sun. However, we believe that the high school graduate had best listen to what those who know have to say about it. J. B.

Duke, en-dower of the Duke University, describing an education as "a personal satisfaction," said that if he had his days to live over again he "would attend college for four years and hope to get as much as the average present-day graduate receives from his four years experience." Making a man broader in vision' and outlook, creating 'a greater field for future service, and making one more powerful by supplying knowledge, which is power itself these and more are the results of a college The United States board of education estimates that, in the matter of financial earning capacity alone, a college education is worth $150,000 to the average man. This means that college prepares him to earn, according' to the average, $150,000 more than the average man can without college training. When you are considering what to do, ask the man who has been to college or can appreciate one, for sound advice. have been reported in any pre vious session. of Education are designed to give students a sound general academic training such as may be secured in any good college of arts and sciences and in addition thereto it gives the professional courses in education and related subjects that are required teachers for certification to teach in the better schools of the State.

Students in this school are given an opportunity to begin their specialization, while undergraduates, in any of the academic departments in which they show; ability and have an interest. The baccalaureate degree to which the curricula in the School of Education leads is that of A.B. in "In every particular the af fairs of the Summer School have been administered with but little friction. We feel safe in stating that this has been the most successful session in spite Until you see what the boys are wearing at the before making your fall purchases. of the enviable records made in past years." The time has now come, to Education.

Graduates of the School of Education, then, have paraphrase President Harry W. Chase's opening exercise address, when the University should choose men of outstanding merit with national reputation for the various departments of instruction for the summer school. In short, the University a good general academic training plus the professional training required for teaching in the best schools of this State. Those who wish to pursue graduate work are, on graduation, pre pare to enter any of the leading of North Carolina summer school should not only be the best in the south, but should rank at the top of the summer sessions of the various leading Universities in the United States. YOUR UNIVERSITY You can get the following merchandise at this store: Dobbs Hats Florsheim shoes Manhattan shirts Bradley sweaters Interwoven socks Charter House clothes Fashion Park clothes And other well advertised brands of merchandise.

graduate schools to begin their graduate studies in any one of three fields of learning. As your own high school or streets is, or are, the property of "High school graduates entering the University this fall who Playmakers Produce expect to avail themselves of the free tuition privilege extended to Two One-Act Pieces With Great Success The Carolina Playmakers, those intending to teach must make all arrangements for this exemption before registering in September. Full particulars overcoming handicaps arising may be had on application to the Dean of the School of due to the absence of Hubert director, and the inexperience of the casts, played up to the high standard set by the In Dixon's Kitchen by Wilbur you and yours, so is the University of North Carolina. Created, operated and financed by the people of the state, the University is doing all it can with its resources and equipment to serve those to whom it belongs. Carolina is not endowed by the monies of a single or small group of.

Nor is it controlled by a sectarian organization. The University of North Carolina is endowed by over two and a half million people and by their wealth which far exceds a billion dollars. Could an institution be richer. As a public servant to the people of the state, the work of the University can daily be seen. The mental examinations which are given to high school students are prepared by a depart Stout, an authentic comedy of Pritchard Patterson, Inc.

Carolina country folk, presented a marked contrast to the first. University Outfitters Playmakers in the past, when they presented Outlaws and In Dixon's Kitchen before the University Summer School here last week. The lion's share of honor for the success of the performance goes to William Norment Cox, of Rowland, author, star, and director of The Scuffletown Outlaws. The second play on the bill, GET YOUR QUIZ BOOKS SUTTON ALDERMAN" iliUIII Bill lliiill SulilllWIiilii.

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About The Daily Tar Heel Archive

Pages Available:
73,248
Years Available:
1893-1992