Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 29, 1929, edition 1 / Page 4
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pe Four THE DAILY TAR HEEL Tuesday, October 29, 1929 Whatfs Happening ,: r today v4 10:30 a. n PatM. Neff, Ger ' . rard hall. . ; 7 :00 p. m. Meeting Tar Heel business staff in offices, base ment Alumni building. 7:15 p. m. Di Senate, Di hall, New West. ' 7:15 p. m. PbJ . Assembly, Phi hall, New East. , 7:15 p. m. Student vestry meet ing, Episcopal parish house. 8:00 p. m. PatM. Neff, Meth odist church. . WEDNESDAY 7:00 p. m. Venable hall. Mo . tion pictures, "White Magic," "Romance of Paints and Var nishes" and "Profits from Cull Oranges and Lemons." v THURSDAY 7:15 p. m. Mechanical engi neers meet, 214 Phillips. DI SENATE WILL DISCUSS 3 BILLS The following resolutions ap pear on the calendar of the Dia lectic senate : Resolved, That the Dialectic senate go on record as favoring the organization of southern tex tile workers into established, competent, and recognized un ions. ' , Resolved, That the Dialectic senate go on record as request ing . the officials of the Univer sity to repair the walks in front of Swain hall. Resolved, That the Dialectic senate go on 'record as stating that, since co-eds are permitted to enroll in the University, they should be admitted to all classes. These resolutions will come up for discussion tonight in the or der named, . .. . The dance committee appoint ed two weeks ago has made all plans fon the Di senate dance and will make a complete report tonight. The committee on the Mary D. Wright debate will also make a report. ' J All candidates for member ship who report at the meeting tonight at 7:15 in New West building will be granted regular privileges of membership and be initiated at the regular initia tion meeting, the date of which has not yet been set. All such men are urged to be present and join tonight in order to be eli gible for the Di senate dance of December 6. v Music Department Professors Return From Northern Trip Dyer and Kenedy Inspect . Many Or- j gans While Away1. Airplane For Use Of Engineers Will Arrive Here Soon; Professors Harold S. Dyer and Nelson O. Kennedy have re turned from a trip to inspect some of the larger organs of the country and to get bids on a new organ which is to be installed m the new home of the music de partment. The old library now being remodeled and will be the headquarters of the Univer sity music department. While on their .trip Prof essoTs Dyer and Kennedy visited Kor negy Hall, New York. This building is one of the most noted Duiiaings m the world. A new organ is being installed there, and it is to be dedicated on No vember 4. - The organists there will be Pietro Yon who was for merly organist at Saint Peter's Cathedral and Vatican in Rome. Yon's. present position is at Saint Patrick's Cathedral in New York city where a new or-r gan is also being installed. From New York the party went to Chicago and visited the Rockefeller Chapel at the .Uni versity of Chicago" where an other large organ has been in stalled, and then came back to Hagerstown, Md., to inspect the factory of the Moller organ works. More than one organ a day is delivered by this factory. The last stop before return ing home was Washington, D. C. The party while there visited the Calvary Baptist church, the church of the late 'President Harding. All of the leading organ fac tones seemed to have a great desire to install the organ in the University. This ' eagerness is due chiefly to the idea of the ad vertising in the south. INA CLAIRE STARS IN THE AWFUL TRUTH" AT CAROLINA1 THEATRE Phi Calendar Ina Claire, charming star in Pathe's all-talking production of "The Awful Truth," which comes to the Carolina theatre today, won her first recognition by David Belasco who later be came her mentor by burlesque- viie ux ins current piays in the Ziegfield Follies. She was singing a parody of Marie-Odile and her gift of satire made the number one of the biggest hits of that season's show Because Miss Claire's bur lesque of a Belasco star indi A letter acknowledging re ceipt of the order from -the University for an airplane has been received from the War Department' by E. G. Hoefer, head of the mechanical engi neering department of the University, v The letter states that the commanding officer of Fair field air depot at Fairfield, Ohio, has been instructed to ship the airplane. as soon as possibly Mr. Hoefer" stated that tho War Department is usually prompt in filling its orders, and the plane should arrive soon. - . " The plane, type VE-9, is be ing placed in the University by the War Department for the purpose of instruction with the understanding that it will not be used for actual flight. " : ' , Hobbs Will Sneak At Mathematics Seminar The first four meetings' in the mathematics seminar to be held this year have been given over to the presentation of a paper by L. E. Bush on "General Qua ternions." Mr. Bush's naner. A JL which was based on work that he took at the University of Chi cago during the past summer, followed the general trend of finding an integral basis for cer tain cases of the general quaternion. The mathematics seminar, which meets weekly, is a discus sion group formed of the grad uate students and the faculty of the mathematics department. At its meetings things of inter est in mathematics and develop ments of science are discussed. Papers are presented, and dis cussion and criticism of them is given. , At the next meeting of the seminar, which will be held Wednesday afternoon, Professor A. W. Hobbs will present a . pa per on "Geometric Interpreta tion of Vieta's Transformation of the Cubic." Grand Opera Appears In Greensboro Soon Mitchell and Green Have Contributions In American Garavan ; The American, Caravan, year book of American literature, carries in the: recently issued edition a short story,; "Cool Swampland Field Woman," by Joseph; Mitchell, alumnus of the University and last year as sistant editor of The Carolina Magazine. Mitchell will be .re membered by many: students here as the author of numerous stories and poems in the maga zine, and as Playmaker critic of the Tar Heel, The Caravan also carries Paul Green's play, "Tread the Green Grass." This play is also scheduled to be presented in the near future in New York City. . " Edited by Alfred Kreymborg, Lewis Mumford and Paul Rosen feld The American Caravan is published yearly v and contains stories, verse, essays and novels by the young writers furthering the new trend of literature." Paul Green, ; the University's famous playwright also contri buted to the first American Oldtime Hazing Now Has New Name; Called Orientation ner talent not inferior r,n uaroiia mak e to that of the artist she was bumming a. misdemeanor. That the Phi Assembly go on record as not approving of sub sidized athletics. lhat a School of Religion should be established at the Uni versity of North Carolina. That the entire freshman class should be made to sit in a special cheering section and wear the Cheerio uniform. State College Men Conf er With Walker Frank Capps, director of ex tension at State college, and E. W. Ruggles, assistant director, together with Professor E. W. Broshart, professor of vocation al education at State college, Were in conference yesterday with Dean Walker relative to the coalition of the ; credits of the two institutions. - bEAN McCORMICK BACK FROM MEMPHIS MEETING uean C. T. McCormick of the TT ! 1 -T ' r m ' . i university Law school bn in of " - JdOK returned from Memphis, Tenn., where he has been attending the sessions if the American Bar Association. Dean McCormick also at tended a meetner of the Eypch. uve uommittee ot-the Associa tion of American Law Schools, of which he is a member. mimicking, Belasco made her a flattering offer. The next year, under his management, she was a Broadway star in "Polly With a Past." There follows .a long string of successes which in elude "The Gold : Diggers," Grounds for Divorce" "Rln a beard's Eighth Wife," "The Aw ful Truth" and "The Last of Mrs. Cheyney." ' ' Jna Claire says she does not know just when she first con ceived the idea of going on the stage, but she made her debut m a song and dance act at the age of four. She was born in Philadelphia but lived most of her childhood in Washington, D. C. . wr . . ner reputation as the best dressed woman on the American stage preceded Miss Claire into Hollywood and, according to those who are authorities on the subject, she has lived ud to that reputation both on and off the screen. Even as women, are indebted to Ina Claire for original and daring style creations, so do men admire her as a modern sort, nf Mrs. Sir Walter Raleigh. For Jt was she who first smiled down irom the nation's billboards, announcing the fact that she loved to see a man smoke pipe:" - . . a The Pennsylvania Grand Op era Company will present three operas in Greensboro at N. C. C. W. auditorium on November 18 and 19. "II Trovatore" will open the series on Monday night .followed by "Martha" at matinee Tuesday: "Lucia" will end the run on Tuesday night. Many noted artists will ap pear with the Pennsylvania com pany; it is known as one of -the best traveling opera companies and cooperates with the Metro politan company in .the use of great stars This set of artists is making a tour of the south, starting in Philadelphia and go ing to New Orleans and then ending up in Philadelphia again. ncKets are on sale now and may be secured by mail from the Corley Company in Greensboro. Duke Official Will Interview Engineers While in Charlotte attending the meeting of the American In stitute of Electrical Engineers Wednesday and Thursday, Pro fessor G. F. Bason, head of the electrical enerineeriner denart- ... " x meht, had an interview with C. I. Burkholder of the Duke Power Company, and he reports Mr. Burkeholder as being very inter ested in graduates in electrical engineering from this . institu tion. Mr. Burkholder stated that he would like interviews with mem bers of the graduating class in electrical engineering who are interested in becoming connect 1 ed with the Duke company. Caravan published in 1928. Smith To Present Birthday Tickets No student whose birthday occurs during the school year need bemoan his fate, for in ac cordance with the custom estab lished last year, Manager E. Car- rington Smith of the Carolina theatre will present a compli mentary ticket to each of the students whose birthday is in the school calendar. ; A list of the birth dates of all students has been compiled, and invitations to attend the show are mailed in time to reach the student on the morning of his birthday. Freshmen this year have been surprised to find the tickets in their birthday mail, and many have called on Mr. Smith to thank him personally. In the course of the average day between 30 and 40 tickets are mailed out. The compli mentary passes may be used for any show during the day they are good. Birthday passes wilN be sent out throughout the school year. Folk Lore Society , - Meets In Raleigh The North Carolina Folk Lore society will hold its annual ses sion in Raleigh at 3 o'clock on Friday afternoon, November 1, in the ballroom of the Hote) Sir Walter. . Sessions of the state Literary and Historical associa tion- will be held, during both Thursday arid Friday, October 31 and November 1. Programs for all these ses sions will be interesting; that of the Folk Lore society will be as follows : . . ; Presidential address. Mrs. S. Westray Battle, , Asheville; lec ture, "Ballads and Other Songs ot tne Kentucky Mountains." Gilbert .Reynolds Combs. Char lotte ; paper, "Treasure-Huntintr in North Carolina," Frank C Brown, Durham; paper, "Folk Customs ; business session with reports and election of officers. Officers of the society are president, Mrs. S. ' Westray Bat tle, Asheville: Mrs. J osephus Daniels, Raleigh ; Mrs. Maude. Minish Sutton. Fnr est City ; Miss Lucy Maria Cobb, Raleigh ; secretary - treasurer Frank C. Brown, Durham. Graduate Club To ' Give Reception The Graduate club will give its third annual reception in Smith building Friday, November 1, from 8:30 to 10:30 p. m. The University faculty and residents of Chapel Hill are cordiallv in vited to be present Following the reception there will be an in formal dance from 10:30 to 1. Continued from page one) awhile to contemplate the mys terious and" fearsome tomb stones that shone white in the night. Dr; Henderson also re membered incidents that had a rouglier aspect. He told of two freshmen from the western part of the state who, backed in Mem orial hall, drawn knives in their hands, defied the raving, jeering sophomores to touch them. "One virtuous idea alone lay back of the philosophy of haz ing," said Dr. Henderson, "and that was the idea that a fresh man was an undeveloped species of the homo sapoens., and that he needed fiijst of all as a prim ary lesson Tn college life to hare inculcated in him a more whole some respect for the manly" vir tues which the upperctessmen necessarily imagined himv While the old-time Hazing; had its weak points ami serious de fects, Dr. Henderson did not find it wholly bad and expressed the desire that the present policy of orientation not develop intoa form of coddling. "It is, I am sure," he writes, "the purpose of the principle now in force at this; institution both to inspire the freshman with confidence in his environment and in the at- -miosphere of feeling which he is to breath ; and also to make him appear that he is a man under guidance and that his future destiny on the campus lies in his own hands. The purpose of orientation is not to coddle but to guide with judgement and kindliness." How different the experience of the modern freshman as told by North Carolina's boy Edison, D. Allen Harrell. "From the Dean of Students I received letters assuring me thatj would find the University a splendid place from every standpoint ; from the Y. M. C. A. I received the "Freshman Hand book," containing pictures and information about the Univer sity and its student activities; but most impressive of all was a letter from the president of the sophomore class, congratulating me upon my choice of schools, and giving me advice on the sub ject of my" college career. In two days I felt myself to be a full-fledged Carolina man." So there's the difference. Once it was hazing, but now orientation is the word. And be fore many years, if the nresent trend continues, people will grab their dictionaries whenever the word "hazing" is used. Per haps the dictionary itself will add an "obsolete" after the word. Best Is Original M Operator (Continued from page one) for one reason " or another, he buys the tickets nevertheless and leaves them at the box office, so that the children can use them at their first oppor tunity and they generally don't fail him. He has seen the rise and fall of many a picture star, but con fronted with the question of his favorite, he found it difficult to answer. At last he decided Billie Dove was about the cream of the lot in his opinion, though he quickly added that he likes 'em all. Mr. Best gets ar6und to all the football games and the ma jor events on the campus. He never has need of a ticket, since he is Well known to everybody His mind is keen and active, and it is one, of his boasts that he remembers the calendar as far back as two hundred years. Given the date of the day, the month and the year, he will tell you at once the name of the day, as far back as yon care to go. Hie spent 22 years in the tele graph service, doing pioneer work, and has been pensioned for the last twelve years. There is no one more proud than he is of the progress of the telegraph from the old slow hand key with its up-and-down motion, to the modern "bug," operated with a flick of the wrist at lightning- speed. He is the father of telegraphy in the community, the Edison of Chapel Hill, arid one of the last of the old-time, picturesque, and dependable "buzzer boys," the men who made the telegraph the useful instrument it is today. LOST Lost: Copy of Spinoza's Ethics belonging to Durham li brary. Reward for return to Tar Heel office. ; LOST Black bill fold bearing name Robert Drane, lost somewhere on campus yesterdav Reward if finder will return to Lost and Found Bnrpnn v tt C. A. ' ' IF ' Tobacco's at its best . . . in a pipe TODAY INA CLAIRE in "The Awful Truth" A great Broadway star in her greatest stage suc cess. Added Features HARRY LANGDON in "Hotter Than Hot" All . Talking Comedy . "SCREEN SONG" Wednesday - Thursday AL JOLSON 4Say It With Songs" TWTEN'S preference for a man's . . smoke the pipe is plenty fSVe But do yu ow why? We 11 tell you. y First, pipe tobacco's different for instance, Edgeworth. Second, tobacco smolders as it should in a pipe. And third, these mean you get more satisfaction - S. the good old savory burley, soothing fullness of rich" smoke. There's even a fnnH-h roortn iron nice good comnanv. TT mg brotherhood is that. Tobacco's at its best in a pipe. It gets a chance to be itself there-to loosen up as it comes to life, to ex pand and take in air and glow. Only the choicest leaves get that chance, moreover, for pipes tell the truth about tobaerrv rK; i vu: blends, and mighty careful han dling. Edgeworth comes up through eleven distinct processes before we're willing to pass it on to you. If,vou keep on missing all this, that s your fault for we're waiting .to send you your first pipefuls of Edgeworth. See the coupon? Fill it le a &d piPe and postman wiu bnng you a neat little glad-to-meet-you packet of good old Edge worth. S&f11 '"f careful bIend ot good 23ri2???,ecte1. Pally for pipe-h?- Quality and flavor never Rubbfri'. anywhere "Ready nt- , "Plug Slice" 15i pocket Package to pound humidor tin. EDGEWORTH r - ! LARUS St BRO. CO., I Richmond, Va. I P yQur Edceworth. AndlTl I it in a good pipe. I try I Name. Street- I Town and ! iVow let the Edgeworth cornel I V I J If
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1929, edition 1
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