Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 4, 1926, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, November 4, 1926 THE TAR HEEL Page Three TAU EPSILON PHI DANCE IS SUCCESS Twenty-six Girls and Seventy-three Boys Enjoy the Affair The annual formal and house party of Tau Epsilon Phi is a thing of the past. The dance given at the Inn Friday night was enjoyed by a number of fraternity men, who heard Kike Kyser's orchestra get off its best music of the year.. The dance hall of the Caro lina Inn was beautifully deco rated for the occasion in , lav ender and .white, the colors of the Tau Epsilon Phi, and punch was served to the dancers. The success of the dance; is largely attributed to the fact that the crowd was not too large and the dancers were not pushed for space. Twenty-six girls and seventy-three boys made up the crowd that enjoyed the dance from nine to one. Some of the girls who jour neyed up to Chapel Hill for the dance and house party are : Miss Dorothy Abelovitz, Wilmington; Miss Dora Goldstein, Greens boro; Miss Reba Blacker, Rock ingham ; Miss Doris Harris, High Point; Miss Dora Kaplan, Mount Giliad ; Miss Micky Wein berg, Baltimore ; Miss , Irene Nachomson, Miss Naomi Nach omson, Miss Sarah Nachomson, Miss Grace Nachomson Dur ham; Miss Sarah Schwartz, Charlotte; Miss Fleda Marks, Roanoke .Rapids; Miss Betty Levy, Baltimore. The , chape rone for the house party was Mrs. Sol Silverman, Roanoke. , Favors, in the form of vani ty cases with the Tap Epsilon Phi seal raised, on the front, were' presented to the guests composing the house party. Pre-Season Training is , , Started by Basketball Men . ' GET YOUR HOBNAIL SHOES AT LACOCK'S Only a limited number. Coach Ashmore has definitely issued the call for fall basket ball practice to be held at the Tin Can every afternoon start ing at four o'clock. About for ty men reported for the first practice Monday afternoon, and engaged in a light workout. The practice consisted mainly of dribbling and pivoting and a bout twenty minutes was devot ed to the shooting of crip shots. Coach Ashmore regards fall training as very important to the success of a basketball team. He believes that the time .to learn form and skill is before the regular seaspn, opens, because once started the men have time only to condition themselves and learn a few plays before the first game is upon them. - Geo. F. Messner ' ' Wm.'H. Rowe Everything on campus in past four years heated by us Carolina Heating & Engineering Co. HEATING, VENTILATING AND POWER " PIPING Phone 1466 Durham, N. C. J5UDD-PIPER ROOFING COMPANY Durham, N.C. " Roofing and Sheet metal Work Red Cross , Drive Discussed By the Y Cabinets (Continued from page one) on the quota basis to 3000 stu dents from the entire nation. Carolina's quota is, placed at fourteen students,, with possi bly one member of the faculty. Special railroad rates "will be given the delegates, and enter tainment will be furnished in Milwaukee to the earliest regis tered delegates, it was explain ed to the cabinet. ; $1,000 Collected A The treasurer reported that $1,000 of the Y. M. C. A. pledg es has been collected; and that approximately the same amount i? now outstanding. The sophomore cabinet heard a report of the National Coun cil from Mr. Comer, who also explained the National Student Conference at Milwaukee. The meeting ad joarned early to aid the Religious Discussion Group Committee in distributing the questions for the week. vFrosh Check Parcels Repbrts-ef the committees of the freshman cabinet which handled the parcel checking room at the "Y" Saturday, and took charge of the traffic were given the. meeting of the first year members Monday night. Few took advantage' of the check room at the "Y", but the cab inet parked more than 500 cars on the Hill Saturday. . The same plan will be carried out for the coming Saturday. The fresh man cabinet will deliver the di rectories which will probably be issued within the next few days. BARR SAYS HULA ; GIRL IS EXTINCT University Graduate Writes Interest- ing Letter from Honolulu - Get Your , LUMBER JACKETS AND GOLF H6SE , AT S. BERMAN'S jll!lllllllll!llllllll!Illllll!!l!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll01llll Carolina Students- Patronize Our Advertisers V They are showing their good will for the University and the TAR HEEL. Show your appreciation by giving them your business. "Support Our Advertisers" ' Ernest S.'Barr, who graduat ed from the University .last spring, has written and asked that the Tar Heel be sent to him in Honolulu, T. H., where he is now teaching. Ba'rr tells of the passing of the hula "girl- and her fancy dresses. . Some of the extracts from the letter follow: "I hope that you can fix this up for me, because I have an un usually alumnish interest in what is going on at school this year and "I think that the best way I could find out things is through the Tar Heel. "Although I have been out here for only about two months two months the 26th I feel as though school and home were places I once knew about a long time ago. The trip through the Canal and the stops en route were very interesting, but I was more than glad to get on dry land again. After a while you get to the point where you think the ocean is all wet metaphor ically as well as literally. "The Territory of Hawaii, the island of Oahu in particular and the city of Honolulu in detail, are all quite modern. The days of the hula girl beneath a tropic moon are gone, with the excep tion of dances and the like put on for thes benefit of tourists. However, there still exists, a mong the natives here what are luaus. They are a sort of feast that they go in for. .They have all sorts of wild kinds of food and a drink called ; okolehao (something like gin with a ter rible kick) and then wind up with the hula as it is really done. It is rather difficult to get in on one of the luaus, but I hope I can manage it some time before I move from here. "The country is lovely. The sea is a beautiful blue and the city lies between it and the mountains that rise up sharply. Banana trees, all kinds of palm trees including the coconut, banyan trees, mango trees, gua va trees, papaya trees, and many others flourish here. And then there are the flowering trees and a profusion of flowers. The climate is ' fine and bathing is great. Well, fix' up the aper for me if you can, and best luck to you 'and it." v ERNEST S. BARR Prof. W. S. Bernard of the Greek department presented a paper to the Philological Club Tuesday night in which he gave a survey of the different periods through which the understand ing of the New Testament devel oped to its present achievement. The meeting lasted longer than usual, but the interest shown in the problems discussed gave cause for the extra time spent. PICKWICK THEATRE Latest Styles and Patterns in TOPCOATS and SUITS AT S. BERMAN'S aA THE NEW STUDENT An intercollegiate Weekly ' ' Of student news And intelligent Opinion - What is our college education really concerned with? What is it producing? Try THE NEW STUDENT for six months ($1.00) and see if you don't come nearer to the solution of these vital problems. THE NEW STUDENT ' 2929 Broadway, New York Here's a dollar for a six month trial subscription. . Name Address Key No. 9 "Almost a Part of Carolina ti SHOWS DAILY 3:00, 4:45 6:45,8(30 REGULAR ADMISSION 10 and 25c Candy, Popcorn, Cold Drinks, and Gum on Sale in Lobby. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH i Richard Barthlemess and Dorothy Maekaill in "RANSOM'S FOLLY" Comedy "Smith's Vacation" Friday, November 5TH Florence Vidor and Clive Brooks in "YOU NEVER KNOW WOMEN" Comedy "The, Last of His Face" Notice, to DeMolays V All' DeMolays are re-, quested to meet in the so cial rooms of the Y. M. C. . A. Thursday night at sev en o'clock. Plans for the formation of a DeMolay club here will be discussed. DON SEITZ TO SPEAK AT NEWS- " PAPER MEETING Don Seitz, formerly business manager of the New York World and now conncted with the Out look, has accepted the invitation to speak here before the News paper J Institute. His subject will probably be "Business Man agement". The Institute which is to be held here in January will be the third meeting of its kind. Prominent men in all phases of newspaper work have been in vited to deliver addresses. The Davidson County Club gave an entertainment "last Fri day night for the benefit of the visitors from Davidson comity who were in Chapel Hill for the State-Carolina game. The meet ing was held in the recreational rooms of the Y. M. C .A. The officers of the club are J. P. Motsinger, president; Ros coe Farabee, vice-president; Dick Walser, secretary-treasu rer. Gridiron Talent Galore In Dix's Latest Comedy When the opposing football teams line up for the modern game in Richard Dix's latest Paramount star ring effort, "The Quarterback," at the Pickwick on Saturday, the roster of players clashing 'on the gridiron will represent colleges from practi cally every state ' in the union. W. O. McGeehan and William Slav ens McNuttto story which Fred New meyer directed, concerns an old rival ry between two' neighboring schools, Stateanck Golton.r.; Casting Direc tor William' Coh'ill secured ' the ser vices of enough ex-collegiate stars to make up four elevens, two. for an 1899 encounter and two for. the present-day sequence. .," Dix, who played with St. Paul Central High, was out for the team at the University 'of Minnesota be fore having to leave college. Learn a Lesson of Love From the Learned Movies No man ' should assume a woman loves him until he has definitely ask ed about her regard. Neither should he take it for grant ed that she does not care without giving the lady 'a' chance to express the state of her heart. Clive Br&ok, who was very much smitten' . with JHorentJe Vidor, said nothing about his" affections, think ing she r had , been won , by Lowell Sherman.. . )'" r. J ",' And he would have lost her had it not been for' a certain bit of magic that always seems to set things right for lovers. In "You Never s Know Women," which comes to the Pickwick Theatre Friday, readers will find the danger of "speechless love," a lesson in frank ness, that shows how a miracle of the heart worked out at a moment when two lives might have been blasted. National Dry Cleaners QUALITY WORK SERVICE You can get it cleaned and pressed better at National Dry Cleaners, "THE CLE ANINGIST PLACE IN TOWN" ! '..1 V ! A If f On Display . ; . m - i Toeing the Mark .Sill. Qpjt Prict Toeing the mark with a Coast to Coast College Service. The Regailine especially styled for college men, includes every popular model for , sport, social and campus wear. , , "RESCO" Scientific Fitting Service . r. From CoMt to Coast . From Maker to Wearer REGAL Regal Factories, Whitman, Maaa. TV SHOES Stprap in All Principal Cities o. a. fat. on. SHOWING AT CAROLINA PRY CLEANERS Monday and Tuesday, November 8th and 9th '
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 4, 1926, edition 1
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