c:
The Daily Courier
Established 1870
Phone 1 4 4
1891
William C. Hammer
19.10
Published Daily, except
Monday and Saturday
Harriette Hammer Walker
Editor and l*ublisher
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier a Week—10c
By Mail, $4.00 Per Year
Entered as second class matter
at the postoffice at Asheboro, N.
C., under the Act of March 8,
1879.
j Member Associated Press
The Associated Press is ex
clusively entitled to the use for
publication of all news dispatch- |
es credited to it nr not other- 1
wise credited to this paper and 1
also the local news published
herein.
All rights of publication of j
special dispatches herein are I
| also reserved.
Foreign Representatives: f
j Bryant-Oriffin & Brunson, Inc. j
| Member of North Carolina
Press Association
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1987
A CARNATION TO HIM
HAVING pardoned 540 men from
the state prison since he has
been governor of North Carolina,
he has had reason to study the sit
uation — speaking of Governor
Hoey. Of the 540 men who have
been pardoned, only 14 have failed
to ‘-keep the faith,” which imme
diately d~.es away with the criticism |
that has keen hurled at the gover- j
nor for his free-handed pardoning.
As the governor explained, a
close study of the case of each cri
minal is made. Then, when he
achieves a good record at the peer - j
tontiary--whether he has influen- j
tlal citizt ns “pulling” for him or
not—a oar non is considered. H's
record before going to the pen is j
studied, along with his home con- j
ditions, and his record made during
his stay in the pen—all of which j
go toward determining his eligibili- i
ty for a pardon. This plan has i
been criticized, but it must have its
merits since only fourteen have
broken faith and been returned—
and out of 540.
Now, there are more than 9,000
people making up the prison popu
lation of the state of North Caro
lina—9,000 regular citizens, for
criminals who only have a few
months to serve are not considered
as problems as are those who go
for long terms or life.
Few men are better fitted to as
sume thi-i responsibility of deciding
about pardons than is Governor
Hoey who has spent many years ir.
the court rooms of North Carolina.
Knowing the criminal’s viewpoint
and having appeared in courts for
and against criminals—he know:;
whereof he speaks. An excellent
judge of human nature and a stu
dent of human behavior, Governor
Hoey is or familiar ground and one
of the most praiseworthy acts of
his administration is the fact that
he is giving thought and consider
able to ti e prison population of
North Carolina.
INEVITABLE — JUST WATCH j
HEARING women talk—en masse j
and in small groups and in \
confident;:.; whispers is one of trie
most interesting things today—pos
sibly the most interesting, save
hearing groups of men do ditto.
Yesterday vhen hundreds of wom°n
from all over North Carolina gath
ered in the state capital and talked,
listened to, absorbed, and almost
ate Democracy, the speakers, one
and all, mentioned “the changing
trend” and that trend is changing
more than was observed from the
speakers’ table. The speakers re
ferred to the general trend, favor
ite sons, and the various political
policies. True these trends are
changing and it is useless to
“buck” them — might as well go
along with the trend, once it starts.
President Roosevelt was given as
an example of a politician riding
upon a crest, of public opinion. His
vote last tune when the nation fol
lowed the Rooseveltian trend al
most to a state.
That trend is interesting but not
half so interesting as the undercur
rent trend. The women have the
idear—and when women get an idea,
it won’t be long before it will be
obvious to the world. Men sit by
and nurse secret hopes—but not
women. There were many women
in Raleigh yesterday who went
with the definite idea of running for
pome office next election. Meeting
up with women who had seldom
attended the general Democratic
iriey year after year-—in fact as
as a state convention was
called since learning to want alone
•rfome few of the women have at
tended such gatherings at the state
capital—it was the newer face* who
are cherishing ambitions. Maeting
Mveral Old school mates an* fiwnds
of yeatarycar, imi ya» away and
| of those women had ’em. The num •
| her was perfectly amazing and it
j won’t be long before the state news
papers have plenty of news. Wo
‘men in North Carolina have only
,been voting—is it eighteen years,
now ? Hut the love of office has
j been caught from their husbands,
brothers, politicians and they are
not going to sit back and do noth
ing about it. The least little word
of encouragement and they will be
a whole flock of announcements,
.fust watch for' them, for they will
be forthcoming.
Senator Hailey, in his brief and
very excellent speech, made a
graceful gesture to Senator Rey
nolds who was not there, and his
opponent, Frank Hancock, who was
on hand—with a red necktie about
his neck. Said the Senator, he;
liked the idea of this race and it j
only lacked a lady opponent to j
make it p< rfect. The Senator sug- j
jgested that some lady should come j
lout and that it would be a graceful |
thing for both gentlemen to retire j
in her fa\or. Hut, he added, that |
this thought had occurred to him |
since last election when ho was up j
for re-elettion, and that he reserved
the right to change his mind before
his term of office expired. Tnc;
senior Senator displayed consider
able wit yesterday and he received
hearty applause, which was inter- j
esting, also. Which is another j
story—and wandering from the j
point of women whose noses are !
sniffing the trail of the sly fox- j
politic.
Washington
Day Book
By PRESTON GROVER
Washington—All this business
I of whether the Duke ami Dutchess
of Windsor wil lbe officially re
ceived in Washington or officially
unreceived is just so much splash
and piffle. *0\W
When that pair of royal wander- j
ers reaches this shore, they will be
“rushed” as if they were a couple1
of millionaire freshmen arriving1
on the campus of a fraternity
ridden midwestern college.
On his earlier visits to America
as a sort of embryo king, the Duke,
then Prince of Wales, cut a wide ;
swath socially with less than half !
the glamor that surrounds him
now. He wants to look over some
of American public housing proj- !
ects, but the chances are that the
must restful view of American
housing he will see will be the in
teriors of hotel suites in which he \
takes refuge from the great Amer
ican curiosity:
Already a Washington woman
columnist has written . "an open
letter to the Duke and Duchess of
Windsor” asking them please not,
to come to the United States be-I
cause it will be such a strain on |
the national good conduct.
She fears, and likely enough
with good cause, that what she de- j
scribed as our “native kindness”
would be smothered under our !
even more buoyant native curios- j
ity and the Duke and Duchess j
would have a very bad time of it. j
The Duke Sets A Style
A group of beauty operators in
New York explained in a letter to j
the New York Times that they had i
written to the Duchess asking her j
please to give up the smooth hair I
dress she prefers and take on a !
few curls.
They wrote:
"Inasmuch as you are a world j
figure and certain to influence the j
hair-dressing styles of this coun
try when you come here, it occurs
to those earning their livelihood
in the hair-dressing profession in
the United States that you would
confer a service of great value to
these -100,000 people of you would
adopt a style of hair dressing
which requires permanently
waved curls.”
Already that picture of the Duke
in the cocky Tyrolean hat with the
rope hat band has had its effect
over here. Style shops had rope
girt hats in the windows almost
overnight and advertisements
were telling you that in the brown
or dark green sades you would
look to end dashing. Our only
hope is that the Duke doesn’t only
popularize the sawed-off, em
broidered leather pants that ac
companied the hat.
Mr. Ickes Docks
But the enthusiasm with which
official Washington anticipates
the royal visit was not much stim
ulated when the British embassy
here indicated through a lesser
secretary that perhaps the Duke
would not be officially welcomed.
Mrs. Roosevelt was not troubled
much about it, saying simply that
the couple probably would drop in
at the White House.
But Secretary Ickes got all in a
dither. Usually bold enough in any
circumstance, lakes fought *hy of
diplomatic entanglements. He sup
plied an agent of the expected visi
tors with a list of his housing
projects they might visit but went
to great pains to assure newspa
per men that no special attention
would be paid the visitors.
“We gave them the list just as
we would give it to any other per
son asking it,” said the Ickes press
officer.
Chances are, the secretary is
missing a good bet If he set abput
it promptly, Ickes could hail the
Duke aa a hero of better housing
and make slum •clearance excic
BEHIND THE SCENES -
IN WASHINGTON
BY RODNEY DETCHER
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON.—Anyone who
’’ has an idea how to start a
building boom will kindly forward
same to the White House.
A secret call for suggestions re
cently went out to all spots in the
federal set-up which have been in
any way concerned with housing.
Numerous confidential reports
have been or are being prepared.
Experts in one agency were told
by a superior to submit all ideas
they had, whether the ideas
seemed sound or not.
Behind the President's sudden
active interest is a rather wide
spread belief among his advisers
that before long the country may
need a building boom or an ar
mament program in order to give
a fillip to business and employ
ment. Few prefer the armament
method.
A secondary factor is the high
cost of living. Rents are rising
and although this ordinarily would
cause a spurt in dwelling con
struction, no such effect is in sight
because building costs also have
risen sharply. Rents threaten to
add even greater burdens to the
H. C. L. because there’s a huge
national housing shortage
Secretary Ickes has cited figures
indicating that 5,500,000new
dwellings are "needed.” Other es
timates say 750,000 new homes a
vear arc needed for replacement.
Only 282,000 were built last year j
and the number for this year will J
be little if any higher.
Subdued mumbling over high, I
inflexible building material costs i
and High, inflexible building labor I
costs is audible again here in high j
places, with emphasis on the;
loriner. Raw material prices have!
. ii.r.
Hollywood
By BOBBIN COONS
• II II I I I » I I I • • I I I I -I ‘'|i'■;l|l»
Hollywood — Unwanted (and
howl): applicants lor the job of
junior writer in Mi*. John Gilli
shaw's training: school at Metro.
It's not news that everybody
wants to write, and that more than
half the world thinks it can. Not
quite everybody wrote to Gallishaw
at first inkling* of the new Metro
project. Only 800 people did. But
that was just the first day after
the first announcement that he had
been retained to guide the uncertain
fingers of literary neophytes in the
fashioning of movie scripts.
His studio job is unique. It al
most happened eight years ago,
when a group of movie producers
got together and decided some
thing ought to be done about the
training of movie writers. But the
plan fell through the depression
trapdoor, presumably. At any rate,
Gallishaw continued quietly at his
profession of play-doctoring.
Colorful Career
Apparently it’s just as difficult
to become a “junior screen writer”
as it is to crash a magazine—this
for the benefit of the 800 first-day
applicants. The juniors are se
lected through performance, not
through self - recommendation.
And Gallishaw isn’t “teaching”
them to write. He’s a literary con
sultant. He analyzes, guides, sug
gests. His system is based on
detailed analysis of story elements,
or “stimulus-response” units.
Gallishaw devised it after a
colorful career of adventure and
writing had left him a physica'
wreck. The adventure, I mean—01
could it have been the writing?
His experience includes the Gal
veston flood, stowing away to tht
seafishing grounds off his naiivi
Newfoundland, timber - scaling
bank clerking, editing, keeping a
trading post, ranching, farming,
gold-mining in South America
serving as secretary to a Canadiar
premier, and to a national political
committee (Progressive, in 191b j.
He has served in four armies, beer
wounded by all the infernal in
struments of war on land and sea
—and, just to round things out, he
has tnught English at Harvard and
the University of California. He
is a tall, spare, scholarly and
pleasant person.
It’s Not The Inclination
For one thing, he doesn’t agree
with the alluring ads that saj
“anyone can write.” He does think
I that writing can be taught—with
reservations.
“ w uting can be taught, he says
epigrammatically, “it's people who
can’t be.”
His mail is filled with letters
from would-be writers who arc
now maids, school teachers, state
prisoners (the O. Henry influence)
cooks, factory workers, stenog
raphers. Usually, after one from
these groups wins a literary prise
the mail from that portion of the
population jumps.
“So many people,” he says,
“mistake the desire to write for
the ability. There was the school
teacher who wrote me once. She
was giving up her post because her
duties gave her nervous indiges
tion. She said she wanted to take
up writing. Why? She either had
to write for a living or go to woi k
in a factory, she said.”
The moral of this little tale is
obvious. But I doubt—and Gclii
shaw, I’m sure, agrees—that it'))
do any good. It’ll probably send
you to your trunk to dig out that
stack of regrettably “unavilable'’
manuscripts and see what can be
done. In fact, that reminds me—
Cotton is the most important in
dustrial crop in China,
declined while building material
prices based thereon have gone up.
Suggestions as to what can be
done about building cost^ arc usu
ally vague.
j There are proposals to cut the
Federal Housing Administration’s
interest rate by one per cent and
to raise its mortgage limit from
80 to 90 per cent. Many author
j ities consider these to be doubtful
expedients.
Another proposal being care
fully considered is to exempt
from the capital gains tax persons
who would invest their otherwise
taxable gains in housing
An obviously desirable method
of stimulating a boom is to attract
capital into limited dividend hous
ing corporations and the most
realistic thinkers are trying to
figure how. Primary obstacle is
the fact that people with money
to invest appear to be speculative
minded rather than investment
minded.
The human animal shows a
marked preference for profits of
from 10 to 100 per cent when
offered a safe, low return, long
time investment in housing. Au
thorities here say that complete
safety in limited dividend housing
requires a dividend limit of about
4 per cent, since dwellings offer
ing rents based on that rate arc
always sure to be occupied
whereas a rate of, say six per cent
presents the risk of vacancies in
any time of depression.
So the problem appears to be
one of getting the investing
public and responsible promoters
interested in putting billions of
dollars into this four to six per
cent market and leaving them lie
M'opvriRht, t:‘«7, Xl.‘A ta-rvier, It’
How’s Your 1
HEALTH?
Edited for the New York Acade
Imy of Medicine
By lago Galdston, M. D.
"An Artist In America," by Thom
as Hart Benton (McBride: $3.
75).
The (at times) distressing hon
esty of Thomas Hart Benton’s
“An Artist in America” makes it
the most refreshing literary ven
ture of the week. We suspect, al
though we can’t prove it, that this
story of one painter’s life in terms
of his fellow man is the best book
of art in recent years—Hendrik
Willem van Loon’s magnificent
history of art not excepted.
Mr. Benton was born in Neoshon
Mo., site of a fish hatchery, a court
house and the representatives of
several fine old families. His
father was a lawyer-politician
and he was named for his great
uncle, the Jacksonian worthy who
fought a duel or so and made a
few memorable remarks.
Young Thomas Hart Benton
could not be forced into the law,
even by his father. Accidentally,
is a kind of defense of his budding
manhood, the hoy was tricked into
l newspaper art job in Joplin. He
felt the urge to consort with his
ike, and made a fool of himself
n Chicago for a time. He went to
Paris, and found the schools there
■juite as bad as in Chicago. lie
returned to New York, trailing
mistresses, debts and conversa
tional tags behind him. He lived
in New York, deviously, and al
though living was not as easy as
t might have been, some impor
ant lessons crept out of life into
he Bentonian skull.
In New York, also, Benton man
ned. There he did his first murals
—for the New School. There like
vise he did the Whitney Museum
nurals, and, you should certainly
■ead his version of that transac
ion in “An Artist in America.”
Then he was invited to Indiana,
ind there created that monster
‘History of Indiana,” 15 feet high
ind 250 feet long, which was the
:hief glory of the Indiana build
ng at the Chicago fair.
It was after this experience that
,wo things combined to return
3enton to Missouri—the eommis
lion for the Jefferson city murals,
ind a teaching berth in the Kansas
City Art Institute. It is evident
-,hat Benten feels that at last he
jelongs to his home state, and his
tome state to him. He has left the
sale and sterile chit-chat of “the
Village,” and the western air is
food.
For candor, charm and intelli- j
fence one must go far to beat this
lelf-revelation.
Fishy Turkeys
Are Ruled Out
Manhattan, Kas. t.P)—Xhanks
giving Day turkeys should tasti
like foul, not fish, says the Kansas
State college poultry husbandry
department. So the department has
advised turkey raisers not to feed
their flocks any fish products dur
ing the eight week before market
time. There were complaints last
year that fish food, upon which
turkeys thrive, made the turkey!
taste like halibut.
mates, would save
nually to teachers
alone.
Study-Or-Pay Plan
Proposed By Teacher
Pittsburgh UPV—Lazy Students
who fail to complete high school
within four years should be Charg
ed tuition for additional instruct
ion, in the opinion of Myrtle £.
Wylie, Allegheny high sfho#
Such an arrangement, she esti
(140,000
MANHATTAN
By GEORGE TUCKER
York—The nows columns
and the rotogravure sections of
the metropolitan newspapers dis
played a lively interest in the de
cision of Maude Adams to become
professor of drama in a mid
western college. It marked one of
the few times in at least two de
cades a season has opened without
rumors that Miss Adams would
make a comeback on Broadway.
The most amous of our ac
tresses emerges from her care
fully guarded seclusion to further
her ambitions in scenic lighting
and designing, which have in
trigued her for years, and she
will spend the next three months
giving classroom lectures to the
young ladies of Stephens college,
in Columbia, Mo.
As late as HIT! Miss Adams was
rumored to be making ready for
a return to the theater in a ro
mantic comedy, but Peter Mason,
who knew her better perhaps than
any living person, declared he
would believe it only when she ad
vanced before the footlights.
There are a number of rather
surprising facts connected with
the career of “Peter Pan.” Her real
name is Maude Kiskadden, and, al
though nearing t>5, she has never
been married nor has a “romance
ever been linked to her name.
Indeed, she was a veritable her
mil, even at the height of the
Maude Adams craze, withdraw
ing completely from the raucous
tumult of the theater and living
in a private world of quite and
legend.
She became a star at the age of
21 when she played Lady Babble
in “The Little Minister,” and
since then she has queened it in
the American theater. Her most
famous role, of course, was “Peter
Pan.” Others which strengthened
the aura of theatrical greatness
which has always surrounded her
were “A Kiss For Cinderella,”
“What Every Woman Knows,”
and “L’Aglon.” She appeared in
“Peter Pan” 1,151 times.
In the old days when stage
door gatherers made nightly
pilgrimages to the alleys back of
the theaters where she was play
ing, Miss Adams employed a now
famous ruse to escape their at- j
tentions. She hired a maid who j
closely resembled her, and while
the maid was accepting the cheers
from her street admirers, Miss
Adams, mantled in a green veil,
slipped quitely into a cab and was
driven away.
She has an amazing technical
knowledge of color photography
and plans someday to make a mo
tion picture of “Kim,” Kipling’s
greatest novel, for which she- owns
'tex'clusive motion picture rights.
Her first stage appearance was |
at the age of nine months in Salt |
Lake City. Her mother carried her
across the stage in a drama called j
“The Lost Child."
Literary
Guidepost
By JOHN SELBY
The Kiddle or Intelligence
As language is often a true im
pediment to understanding, many
scientists feel that no idea is ade
quately refined until it is ex
pressed mathematically.
Mathematical symbols have
fewer optional meanings than do
words. And yet, all symbols are
subject to one serious misuse.
They are very likely to be mis
understood as standing for a con
crete reality. They are frequently
accepted as the reality without
much critical thought being given
to the nature or composition of
that reality.
Ask any one using the term “in
telligence” to define it, to give a
detailed explanation of what he
means by intelligence. Chances are
he will soon be foundering in a
sea of words. But there is little to
wonder at in that. Those who have
devoted years of study to this sub
ject are little able to define intel
ligence more adequately.
But what of intelligence tests
and quotients? Here, indeed, we
have something expressed mathe
matically. Isn’t there a concrete,
well definde reality behind it all?
There no doubt is. But what it is,
we can only guess at and approxi
mate, but hardly define.
The average man has a good
working definition of intelligence,
however
“That’s what a man shows when
he knows enought to come in out
of the rain."
In this way he defines intelli
gence in terms of comptence to
appreciate what is required in a
given situation and to act accord
ingly. Many an individual with a
relatively low I.Q. is by that test
of experience shown to be more
intelligent than his brother with
a higher I.Q. However, this is
likely to be the case only as long
as the situations confronting him
are simple, or within his limited
capacity to appreciate and to act
accordingly.
There is still ^another point to
bear in mind:
ture of that which we term in
telligence and to discourage the
uncritical use of the word.
The lower I. Q. individual is
more likely to stay within his own
pasture and not wander off into
strange fields. The higher I. Q. in
dividual is likely to seek, if not ad
venture, at least satisfaction for
his more active curiosity,
f But all this still does not define
intelligence. It
to illustrate the
HIGH LITES OF WMFR
Monday
f,;30—Early Risers Club
7:15—Classified Column of the
Air
8:00—Morning Devotional
8:15—Morning Merry-Go-Round
8:30—Early News
8:45—Radio Spotlight
9:00—Hymns of AM Churches
9:16—Hope Alden’s Romance
9:30—The Mad Hatterfields
9:45—To Be Announced
10:00—Linda’s First Love
10:15—Duke Power Program
10:30—Betty and Bob
10:45—Swing Time
11:00—Morning Musical
11:15—Morning Varieties
11:30—Tune Time
11:45—Hook Advises on Planting
by the Moon
12:00—Luncheon Music
12:15—Clover Brand News
12:30—Luncheon Music
1:00—Jack Wardlaw and Orches
tra
1:30—Mr. J. A. Gawthrop, N. C.
Employment Office
1:45—News Commentary
2:00—American Family Robinson
2:15—Piano Ramblings
2:30—Modem Melodies
- 2:45—Crusaders
3:00—-Thomasville Studios
4:00—Classified Column of the Air
4:45—Parade of the Maestroes
5:00—Late News
5:15—Melody Parade
5:30—Sport Flashes
5:35—Melody Parade
Tuesday
0:30—Early Risers Club
7:16—Classified Column of the Air
8:00—Morning Devotional
8:15—Morning Merry-Go-Round
8:30—Morning News
8:45—Radio Spotlight
9:00—Hymns of All Churches
9:15—Hope Alden’s Romance
9:30—Hello Peggy
9:46—Philco Radio Program
10:00—Linda’s First Love
10:16—Hollywood on Parade
10:30—Betty and Bob
10:46—Birthday Greetings
11:00—Tune Time
11:15—Musical Varieties
11:45—Musical Grab Bag
12:00—Luncheon Music
12:15—Clover Brand News
12:30—Luncheon Music
1:00—Jack Wardlaw and Orches
tra
1:30—Variety Time
1:45—Commentary on the News
2:00—American Family Robinson
2:15—Matinee Melodies
2:45—American Scene
3:00—Thoma8ville Studios
4:00—Classified Column of the Air
4:46—Parade of the Maestroes
5:00—Latest News
5:16—Melody Parade
5:30—Sport Flashes
5:35—Melody Parade
Wednesday
6:30—Early Risers Club
7:15—Classified Column of the Air
8:00—Morning Devotional
8:16—Morning Merry-Go-Round
8:30—Early News
8:45—Radio Spotlight
9:00—Hymns of All Churches
9:16—Hope Alden’s Romance
9:30—The Mad Hatterfields
9:45—Philco Radio Program
10:00—Linda’s First Lovo
10:16—Duke Power Program
10:30—Betty and Bob
10:45—Swing Time
11:00—Tune Time
11:15—Petite Musical
11:30—Jose Ramos Orchestra
11:45—Musical Grab Bag
12:00—Luncheon Music
12:15—Clover Brand Nows
1:30—Variety Time
1:45—News Commentary
2;O0—American Family Robinson
2:16—Personal Problem Clinic
2:30—Modem Melodies
2:45—Musical Albifm
3:00—Thomasville Studios
4:00—Classified Column of the Air
4:46—Parade of the Maestroes
5:00—Late News
5:15—Melody Parade
5:30—Sport Flashes
5:35—Melody Parade
Thursday
0:30—Early Risers Club
7:15—Classified Column of the Air
8:00—Morning Devotional
8:15—Morning Merry-Go-Round
8:30—Early News
8:45—Radio Spotlight
0:00—Hymns of All Churches
9:15—Hope Allen’s Romance
9:30—Hello Peggy
9:45—“Phyl" Coe Mystery Pro
gram
10:00—.Linda’s First Love
10:15—Lolly wood on Parade
10:30—Betty and Bob
10:45—Piirthday Greetings
11:00—Benny Goodman (Recorded)
11:15—I’etitie Musical
11:30—Musical Grab Bag
12:00—Luncheon Music
12:15—Clover Brand News
12:30—Luncheon Music
1:00—Jack Wardlaw and Orches
tra
1:30—Variety Time
1:45—Commentary on the News
2:00—American Family Robinson
2:15—Matinee Melodies
2:45—Fanny Parker, Pianist
3:00—Thomasville Studios
4:00—Classified Column of the Air
4:45—Parade of the Maestroes
5:00—Late News
5:15—Melody Parade
5:30—Sport Flashes
5:35—Melody Parade
Friday
6:30—Early Risers Club
7:00—Burtner Program
7:15—Classified Column of the Air
8:00—Morning Devotional
8:15—Morning Merry-Go-Round
8:30—Early News
8;4G—Radio Spotlight
9:00—Hymns of A11 Churches
9:15—Hope Alden’s Romance
9:30—The Mad Hatterfields
9:46—Philco Radio Program
10:00—Linda’s First Love
10:16—Duke Power Program
10:30—Betty and Bob
10:45—Morning Melodies
11:00—Varieties
11:30—Tune Tima
12:00—Luncheon Music
12:15—Ciover Brand News
12:30—Luncheon Music
1:00—Jack Wardlaw and Orches
tra
1:30—Variety Time
1:45—News Commentary
2:00—American Family Robinson
2:15—Camera Club
2:20—Modern MelodieB ■
2:46—Jungle Jim -
3:00—Thomasville Studios
4:00—Classified Column of the Air
4:45—Parade of the Maestroes
5:00—Late News
6:15—Melody Parade
5:30—Sport Flashes
5:35—Melody Parade
Saturday
6:30—Early Risers Club
7:15—Classified Column of the Air
8:00—Morning Devotional
8:15—Morning Merry-Go-Round
8:30—Early Nows
11:30—Variety Time
11:45— Musical Grab Bap:
12:00—Luncheon Music
12:15—Clover Brand News
12:30—Luncheon Music
1:00—Man on the Street
1:15—Guest Artist Recital
1:30—Front Page Drama
1:45—Nows' Commentary
2:00—Dixie Jamboree
3:00—Thomasville Studios
4 ;00—Classified Column of the Air
4:45—Parade of the Maestroes
5:00—Late News
5:15—Melody Parade
5:30—Sport Flashes
5:35—Melody Parade
Sunday
8:00—Morning Reveries
8:15—People’s Bible School
8:30—Johnny Johnson, Vocalist
8:45—Music of the Masters
9:00—Gospel Hour
9:30—C. E. Society, Lebanon
9:45—News Period
10:00—Ave Maria Horn *
10:30—Interlude
10:35—Watch Tower Program
10:50—Musical Contrasts
11:00—Wesley Memorial Church
12:00—Luncheon Music
12:15—Better Vision
12:30—Luncheon Music
1:00—Zenith Singers
1:15—Maytag Jubilee Singers
1:30—l'hilco Radio l’rogram
1:46—Jcrrett Sisters
2:00—To Be Announced
2:16—Pentecostal Holiness Period
2:45—Easter and Pope Piano
Team
3:00—Trinity Baptist Church Pro
gram
3:30—Thomaaville Studios
4:30—Princess Pat
5:00—The Five Jinx
5:16—Melody Parade
5:30—Sport -Flashes
6 :S6—Melody Parade
Honor Bestowed
(hi State Dean
Raleigh, Oct, 29.—Dean Blake R
van Leer, head of the schol of en
gineering at NV C. State college,
woke up one morning to find him
self an officer of two committees of
the Society lor the Promotion of
Engineering 'Education, national
engineering .society.
He was appointed chairman of
the committee on two-year terminal
programs amt
:ommittee on
freshmen
nade a me
die Promol
:atlon.
The co
minal pro_
‘ration wall
in affiliate
member of the
orientation of
ition, he was
the Society for
Ingineering Edu
on two-year ter
_j working in coop
office of education,
„ , , _.^hft U. S. department
f the inferior. The result of the
irork will throat light on the metb
ds of handling the problem of two-,
■ear terminal programs in the v»
ious eng.neering schools through
ut the nation-, v
Chairmanship ef the committee is
. distinct honor for Dean van IMT,
a it is composed of seven of the
oremoat leaders in engineering ««•
ication in this country. On the
ommittoe with van Leer are: h
3. Doherty, jprgaiflent of Carnegm
nstituta of Technology; B. F. B»il
y, head of the department of elec
rical engineering at the Universe
y of Michigan; J. W. Barker,
if the engineering school at w
umhia university; C. M. J*n*f'
iredwwor of electrical engineering
it the Universityiof Wisconsin; **
J’Shaughnessy, professor of
died meehaniss, Virginia Poly
dc Institute; fill Jwlhe, Pr
f Drexel "