UBRARY
[.
MACDOWELL
SATURDAY
CLUB
^ —
iJir ^ail^III lir
NIGHT
WINSTON-SALEM, X, SATURDAY, NO\ EMBEK 5, 1
N. C. C. P. A. Entertained By Folsom Delivers Hat-Burning Ceremony Is
State and Meredith Colleges Interesting Lecture Enacted By Senior Class
Interestmg Addresses and Delightfid Social Events
Feature Meeting in Raleigh.
North Carolina State College and
Itsrand hostess to the North Caro-
its fourteenth senii-anniial inretniii'
held in Raleigh October ?7, '-?S, ai.d
29. .Alernbers of the publicat:on-i’
?,tafl's f t bo-li colleges had planned
with re))orts from the college pub
lications and plans for more effec
tive work, made up the business
tlicatrc partv,' and a tour of
h.igh were^planned especially
tion to their being 'Invited to
pledge dances at State, and to
bv H. L. Hester, president of the
association and editor of the Ch
icle of Duke University. He st
that the purijose of the associ;
the people who are most in
in it. In his discourse on ‘
])resent trend makes instituti(
ism the fundamental thing in all ac-
r further stated that the
Mr. C
d Afternoon Newspapers-, whose
• was “What a College Publica-
Is and Should 'Be.-' Mr. Bask-
ir!;,
of tl.e,
i, the faculty, the p
•2, was Dr. Joseph K. Folsom, pro
of Sociology at Sweet Briar
Dr. I'oLsom, who lived in
■. difference
ilization and that of Central Eu-
Symbolic Pageant Given by Sophomores; Donning
of Caps and Gowns; Address by Dr. Rondthaler.
that he could give lasting youth
and happiness, but that she must
go with him to Never Never Land.
Mother Nature^ appeared just ^ in
go away, by telling her that youth
' happiness are not all in life,
divisions, is really a great family,,
all the members of which speak lan
guages that are very much alike.
Though lie would have liked to dwell
at length upon ^the interesting hi.s-
som realized that it is ii
ing how' they live, so he innnediately
began by pointing out to his audi
ence tlie cliief contras ’ '
the lost emphasis of news value
the writing of news., was liis tin
“A nose for news,” he said, “is not
,]k on “Newsp.-iper
Making as Prof.-s.^i.m." This
work, he said, offers the S
opportunity for tlit study of human
nature, for the staff member of a
paper comes into contact with all
types of people. Mr. Horne^rel^ated
eiauLi'*dwidt"d to e!tabli.sh a College
Press in North Carolina, which will
gh the College Press, any
1 l.aving news of interest to
tate at large, will send it
the colleges of the St
ers of the N. C. C. P.
lows: II. L. He.ster
Duke, president; David Carroll of
na, first vice-president; Miss
Jolinston of Queen’s College,
■ice-prcsident;; Miss I',
of N. C. C. W., seer
and A. L. Avdlettc of State,
influence of the old !
the American problem of “rural iso
lation” lies in the Central European
Academy Enjoys Week
End Camping Trip
day afternoon they set forth fn
trucks for White Walls Mountain,
near Mt. Airy to enjoy a week-end
of camping and living in the
From Saturday until
noon they led an ideal life.
J"i.s'^and‘^wWle‘^one°pup‘^of gi^rb
orcrnodn^^on ^tlie beautiful
lake. Most of the girls lived
L 7:30, the lights of the nat-
age were dimmed for a few
1, and as they were brightened
white, was seen talking to Mather
lid that she was going in search
ad it. The Earthsprite called in
as opposed to the scatte,
of the rural sections in t
country. The cities there are un
like the cities here. Dr. Folsom said,
in that tliey are small and compact
of'the “singh‘ family” houses and
whiih are prevalent here.
tic ‘v,‘tern cf
mud.' more fully developed in
country than in Central^ ^ ‘
m!"rke"rupon the gradual but in
evitable disappearance of tlie small
a means of livelihood to'many Czechs’
The tl.ird contrast which Dr. Fol-
son. placed in his outline is the or-
whicirln amazing Iier cent of Cen-
Prof. Thompson Heard iwitrmoirAmeri"an"”‘^ts\ prf-
In Organ Recital
-I'l... system of
Delightful Program of Selmtin-n. fmrai r.uropeans does not in
Given in Music Hour
said that she did not know the se-
senior and the Earthsprite to the
D.-iifodils. They in turn fai'e
!ng about eternal youth and happi
ness, for they too die quickly. The
impose the dignity of true
d, which is the greatest
t life can give. Mother
n for inexperienced freshmen,
Iver sword for the bold, bad
sophomores, a heart to be broken,
and mended, for the juniors, and
a cap of frivolous gaiety for the
youth is undying. ^ ^
and followed bv tL pages. The
carried the caps and gowns for the
bonfire. As they danced about the
fire and sang their songs to the
“green young freshman,” the “bold,
bad sophomore,” the “loye sick jun
ior, and the “stately senior,” they
that h-f i'fe too, was very si
The Moonbeams were at last
pealed to, but they knew not),ing.
The Earthsprite then told the seTiior
promised to summon tlie it
Peter Pan, the spirit of
fa ry. Tinker Bell, told the
r''delightfur*'"little
3ell, told the senior
This camping trip was sponsored
by tlie Young Women’s Christian
under the leadership of ElVira Hud
son, Mrs. Herndon, Miss Zachary
and Mr. and Mrs. T.ong accompan
ied the girls on the trip. On Sun
day afternoon several of the Acad
emy teachers paid a visit to the
On
organ recital by Mr. George M.
tl^mpson, head of the organ de
partment of N. C. C. W., Greens
boro. He studied during the past
smnmer in Paris with Joseph Bon
net, the great French organist. Mr.
ing alid vaL:d program', ranging
from the pre-Bach period to the
The first number on the program
was Canzona, by Andrea Gabrieli.
This c6mpOsiti6n is' representative
of the Italian scliool. The theme
Thompson played it with great .clear
ness and expression. He played,
perin family which ph
ant part in tlie mu
life of France. This piece
played with very pretty registra
It was, also, phrased with the ut-
by Che
th(^ great ^ surplus of cheap^labo
s and leave for the
is also, of the French school ar
typical of the lightness and d»
ness of French music of this period-.
Mr. Thompson played this beauti-
Juniors Hostesses at
Hallowe’en Party
Highly Original Program of En-
ed the senior with her cap ’
with the
ST’^niJ’"
Cast of Play
Is Announced
On
lorror and terror, and of all varie-
ies of witches, ghosts and phantoms,
rhe occasion for all this weird mer-
•y-making was the junio
;’en party, for which the
sns is the important part' which
“politics” plays in even the social
life^jif the peasants.^ Dr.
Jack O’Lanterns. Among
startling features of the e
dared, is transacted through gov-
tect the 'interests of the i>easants.
Though the costumes which the
hi;,'the dres.s of peasants and of
as do the bourgeoisie of this
0 (Continued on Page Three)
Pla,/ To Be Given November \Qth.
rst Pierrette play, “The Ad-
of Lady Ursula,” will be
1 the evening of November
19. This is the dramatization of the
novel of that name by Anthony
The setting is an eighteenth
r one and tlic plot is full of
action and highlv dr,
a love story dealing v
This pla
the best of
presented by f
d trip
t and up to the attic
s of the
. Fritz Firey