Pae Four THE TAR HE E L m While in Durham eat at--- E DURHAM CAFE Cleanliness-Courtesy Service Pure Food 'at Popular Prices Last Cal Bunch o dances and social, events on for tonight, and of course you'll want to look your best. v-' You can do so only if your clothes are properly cleaned and pressed. Carolina Dry Cleaners One day service on all work CLEANING PRESSING ALTERING Venable Hall Supply Rooms Remodelled The supply room of Venable Hall which was destroyed by fire last Spring has recently been remodeled and re-equipped. The large store room has been di vided int& -three smaller ones and each compartment is fireproof within itself. Each room is connected to the other by small fireproof doors. The doors, when opened,-are held by chains that will melt under a low temperature and in case' of fire, they will automati cally close. This prevents" the fire from entering the next room. . Each room - is equipped with stee shelving and all supplies are unpacked on the outside of the rooms and are carried in and stored. Excelsior is eliminated by x this process and the danger of fire is lessened. Chemi cals are stored in one room, acids in another, and various " apparatus are kept in the third. The Chemistry department has ful ly recovered from the. loss of last year's fire and. wishes to announce that fires of a large scale are impos sible, in the future. Send the TAR HEEL home WHEN IN DURHAM j meet me at the Silver Moon Cafe Opposite Bus Station DURHAM, N. C. BERMAN'S DEPARTMENT STORE Always Quality at the Lowest Price 1 Next to the Carolina Theatre CAROLINA CAN'T BE BEATEN! Neither Can Our Expert Barber Work S P E CIA L Haircut Shave .............. ...................3 5 c 20c CHAPEL HDLL BARBER SHOP Look1 for our stand at the corner of the y parking space by the Tin Can. We have all kinds of drinks and sandwiches. .. - ., ; , . ' Carolina Grill "Home of Real .Delicatessen" t (Next to the Pick) College Meiii know what they want in Style , and Fabrics They also realize the importance of ex pert tailoring, for it is this factor alone that can take the cloth and build it into the real style that is demanded by the Uni versity Man of today. BROOK Clothes Blade for You Washington Duke Hotel ' DURHAM Saturday, October 27,. 1928 Playmaker Building and Staff no-- -re -s ; .' i::W-t J.,.-:';V '-1 v y 4 - , ma s V, w s y v Above is pictured the Carolina Playmakers theatre and below to the right is Frederick H. Koch, founder of the Organization at the University; on his left is Hubert Heffner and im mediately below is Samuel Selden, both of the latter men are also ac tively engaged, in Playmakers work here. ' , ..v.y. y ::. .v.vc- X m 1 -2 SB V5 Playmakers Progress Rapidly Under Direction of Dr. Koch Founded Ten Years Ago ; Now A Nationally Known Organization. It is now ten years. In that time we have had a part in a remarkable renascence in the drama here in North Carolina. Ten years ago Barrett Clark tells us North Carolina was stricken from the mailing list of Samuel French,' Inc, publishers . of plays, as a dead state. It was so dead in fact in its dramatic interests as not to warrant the postage neces-. sary for the mailing of their cata logues ! j Ten years ago The Carolina Play makers was formed and our Bureau of Community Drama was organized. Five years ago our Carolina Dramatic Association was formed and our dra matic festival and state tournament organized. In this decade The Carolina Play makers have produced 59 of their original Folk-Plays by 42 different authors. Eight of these are early plays by Paul Green, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1927, for his epic tragedy of the negro, "In Abraham's Bosom." The highest recognition hat can come to a playwright in America has come to one of our own Play makers. And today, since the simple beginnings of The Carolina Play makers, three other native North Carolinians Lula Volmer, Hatcher Hughes, and Anne Bridgers have made an important contribution to American folk drama on Broadway. , Our Playmakers have -made 21 tours, playing in every nook and cor ner of North Carolina, and into Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Maryland, The District of Columbia, Pennsylvania, - and New York. We have played in 63 differ ent to wns in North Carolina and in 27 of the leading cities in other states. We have played to7 347 different audiences, numbering in all more than" 150,000 people. Two volumes of our Carolina Folk Plays have been published by Henry Holt and Company, and a third volume now in the press. These plays have been widely read and produced in towns and cities all over the United States. ' . . We how have our own well equiped bunding , on the campus The Play makers Theatre, the first state- owned theatre in America to be devot ed to the making of its own native drama. Far from being dead today in North Carolina, we are very much alive to the drama in this year of grace, 1928. We have acting everywhere and our state-wide Carolina Dramatic Associa tion! .' . v ; J Johnnie Henderson, captain of both the track and cross-country teams at the University opened his campaign for Southern Conference honors last week by leading the pack home in the annual Carolina-V. P. I. dual cross-country meet. Henderson's time for the five mile" course was 28 minutes 21 seconds, a time that com pares favorably with -Galen Eliott's Conference record for that distance over the hill and dales. Now is the time to subscribe to the TAR HEEL. " eporter converts News Editor to this Pipe Tobacco London, England. Larus&Bro. Co. Feb. 7, 1928 Richmond, Va. Dear Sirs: ' About two years ago I bought a tin of Edgeworth tobacco. I was so pleased with its slow-emoking qualities and wonderful aroma that I became an Edgeworth enthusiast and have smoked no other tobacco since, al though up to that time I think I can truthfully say I had tried every well-., known British mixture and flake. Moreover, I introduced one of the other reporters to it. He in turn in troduced another and he another until finally it reached the News Editor. There are now five of us all smoking Edgeworth and enjoying it so much that I thought you might like to have this t little appreciation of what, to Britishers, is a comparatively un known tobacco. I wish you every success, v " , Yours faithfully, v (signed) David Moore ewor Ed Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco The Osage maiden who spent $33 in one' month for scalp treatments had a gxeat-graDddaddy who gave them to the white visitors for nothing.- he Smnnm& Xlheel SIiop Fresh Home Made Candies Cakes and Pastries We Do Catering Two Doors below the Post Office Telephone 4091 "Meet Me .at Miss Gates" That's the, alumni slogan:, "Meet me at -Miss Cates, the University Cafeteria down ' on Main Street. "All the old boys will be there sorta an : alumni reunion headquarters. They can't stay away. , ' . "Nope, food's too good, and besides the place has the old home atmosphere of real hospitality that makes you wish you were f a student again and eating there all the time. J "Sure does, well see you there after the game." The Same Good Food he Same Service The Same Southern Hospitality plus a CordiaMnvitation To All Old Grads " . "' j To Come Back - " And Live Again the Old Days They Knew as Students 1 i ...(-' . ' ! at The U Diversity .Cafeteria Seven Years in Chapel Hill" 1 1 M n ' m r Jf m m t mW v iLTS strenuous business for the athlete to keep up with his work and at the same time get Ithe sleep the coaches demand. Many have discovered a way to do it They use a Remington Portable for all their writing. It helps them get better marks because of the neatness end legibility of the type- Easy Payments s . written reports ; and the great saving of time as compared with the drudg ery of writing by hand is a welcome relief Remington Portable is the smallest,xlightest, most compact and most depend able portable with standard keyboard. Weighs only 8 pounds, net. Carrying case only , 4 . Inches high. THE BOOK EXCHANGE Y.SI.CJ1. Building, Chapel Hill, N. C. Eemington Rand Business Service, Inc. '209 W. Market St. Greensboro, N. C.