CAROLINA VS. STATE ' : f ; f r K ... Vi - ' A f j r -.. , . j f yC X U i DRAMATIC RECITAL 2:30 TODAY (Uj f I j ft'r j V. ' 'l A)-. i 1 ' '- ' 1 "I 1 : 1 1 UjiMxIU !. 8:30 TONIGHT " I KENAN STADIUM '. ZS :-' -S --V :-' j METHODIST CHURCH j vOlu 3 CHAPEI HnxTiTc Saturday, NDVEroEiTiri numbers DRAMATIC RECITAL. 8:30 TONIGHT METHODIST CHURCH tk m- . . ? 1 "Fir 11 Oi y -fx - iviemonai iaii Mosea; Fending tate ill HENDERSON SAYS ammers Inspection BERNARD SHAW IS tK TSSL HS;ut GREAT DRAMATIST Closed Until Repairs Are . Made At JbJigmeer Meeting Article In Forum Entitled "Is -r ' . Bernard Shaw a Dramatist?' 525,000 FOR REPAIRS Written By University Pro fessor. 1 In the November number of F. P. Harland, professor of archeology, spoke to the Univer Three state engineers, under student branch of the Amer i,VApHnTi nf Shprwnnfl TSrnpV. ican Institute of Electrical En- - " " 1 , I well, state building inspector, Sheers; at its regular meeting Forum there appears an article are making an extensive exam- neld Thursday evening. by Dr. Archibald Henderson. , It ?ntf nn of Memorial hall The The subject of Prof essor Har- is a novel form of debate and examination will be more than land's talk was "Problems in the question is, "Is George Ber- of no Greek architecture " and it was nard Shaw a dramatist?" The end of which time a detailed re- Ululated by lantern slides, debate is in form of two letters, port on the findings of the en- During the course of his talk the first f r6m Dr. Henderson to gineers will " be released. The Garland explained the meth- Shaw, and the second f roni Shaw rtrT 4-. i oas oi construction used m to Henderson. This article is V6 1 suite lcidiaiUic appiupxi- j , i ; . Greek architecture and showed one of the main features of this aieu p60,JJj lui regains aim improvements on the building, how the principles of mechanics number, being placed first in a-thfi investigation is bein and physics were used in their order. v x held in order to determine what desAlgn . In his letter to Shaw, Dr. Hen7 An interesting part of the derson reminds Shaw that for building is closed while the ex- talk was that showing how the , last twenty-five years schol amination is under way. v;.' structure sted, thought .to be a ars have said that he (Shaw) m TTT-.li.- modem detail Qf construction, was nr dramatist and that one unanes jl. vvooiien, ousiness , . , . , : maT1!lffprftf 1-A TTnivprciv J was usedm making the ancient William Archer, .who bore the sued the following statement sterpiepes. . responsibility of producing him ri..i,. The accuracy of i the Grecian as a dramatist, asserted that "Snn-P rlsvs iro it. was dppid- architects and the caution with Shaw had no specific tal , , , which the structures now con- PTit. for rilavwritirur. Archer. ea to unoertaxe certain repairs ... , , . j- ------- to the roof structure of Memo- sidered masterpieces of archi- back in the eightaes, supplied -:.iv,ii . wwh tecture were built were ex- shaw with -an elaborate plot forward it was1 decided, that it p a ' -0 .... , , After the talk Professor was a convenient time to under- , , -, , . , . George F. Bason, head of the de take a thorough examination, of 1 znn ,. , i partment of "electrical engineer- the entire structure, which has f , . .. w been standing for 50 years, and practicing engineers early in their work. He also urged the students to learn to become en gineers by becoming affiliated with the engineering societies and taking part in the meetings. LAYERS PRESENT RECITAL TONIGHT : Henry Lawrence Southwick, Noted Dramatic Interpreter, Will Appear At Methodist Church. German Club Selects Leaders For 1929-30 University Dances Lynch Explains Use Compressed Air In East River Tunnel At the meeting of the William Henry Lawrence Southwick, Ampriran Societv of Civil En- notecl dramatic interpreter, will Sneers held Thursday evening, give a dramatic recital of Tnll71 T.vnch. a graduate of the Shakespeare's King Richard, University now connected with The Third, at the auditorium of the tunnel construction work in the Methodist church at 8:30 to- New York city, spoke on "Com- Twenty-eight Dance Officials Elected In Less Than Ten Minutes. pressed Air Tunneling. Mr- "Lvneh's talk was based night. Mr. Southwick is brought to the University by , the Caro- una riaymaKers, appearing, as . , . pr:PTirp duri the Dast the second program m their . TOxwo. regular season bifl. , ih(X Fst river J TV VUaXaaWa aVW. vaw Mr. Southwick is a prominent nf -ktw Ynrk ir t ti j '" . -Lt t 1 and oniiiant ngure on me lyce- um platform, being known par ticularly for his interprets tions of Shakespeare: Of his appearance in Atlanta, where he gave King Lear, the Atlanta re viewer said : "So distinct and so realistic was Mr. Southwick's presentation that every one was promptly under the spell 01 a story doubly profound in its sig nificance. All this Mr. South- . 1 n -1 1 - - . T I J J wick developed singie-iiauueu , v,Qf wT,OT. with a perfection surpassed only . f wtimnev met the construction of which is of heavy timbers throughout with no steel reinforcements. This examination and the necessary checks and observations will re quire some weeks. In the mean time, there can naturally be no use of the structure, and it has therefore been closed for all purposes while the examination is going on." What's Happening REV. ROZZELLE ATTENDS EXERCISES AT KINSTON TODAY ( 2 :30 p. m. -Kenan stadium, Carolina vs. State. 8:30 p. m. Dramatic recital by v Henry Lawerence in Method ist church. 2:30 p. m. Kenan stadium, Carolina vs. State cross-coun-try meet. SUNDAY " 4:30 to 6 :00r--Afternoon tea at parish house of the Episcopal church. The Reverend C. E. Rozzelle, pastor of the local Methodist church, is at present attending the North Carolina annual Meth odist conference which is meet ing at Kinston f rom October 29 in November 3. This Confer ence, which comprises the east ern half of the state is presided over by Bishop Edwin D. Mou- zon. Other delegates to the con ference from Chapel Hill are J. a. Philips, student pastor of the local church, and Dr. L. R. Wilr son, chairman of the board of stewards. Mr. Rozzelle will re turn to take charge of the regu lar services Sunday. In his -talk Mr. Lynch de scribed the methods used in dig- rf nor a tunnel in which com pressed air is used. The East river tunnel was of this type. During his talk Mr. Lynch stated that the .precision neces sary in this work is very great. Angles are checked six times, and all measurements are checked and rechecked :The re sults of this degree of accuracy rinnriderice Instruction Shows Increased Popularity That correspondence instruc tion is no longer an experiment but an assured success is shown by some of the facts revealed by the University of North .Caro lina Extension Division, and by new correspondence instruction catalog of that Division which has iust come from the press. Tf is nnw possible to study any of 150 different University courses by correspondence. Prac tically all of these courses lead either to the A. B. or B. S. de gree or to the advancement of teacher certification credit. , There were 1695 individuals reenstered for University corre- ca ,ttv last. vear. This number represented a total en rol Impti t. nf annroximately 2500 due tn thp fact that many of the students "were registered for mnw mr nnp. course. The en rollment for last year showed a irain over that of previous years. N Up rprnrds show a high per Tiao-D nf rnnvnletions for the courses begun. More than 75 nleted them. To give some idea , f nf the prodigious amount -oi work handled-by the Bureau of Tnstr nction' Of UUlICi3PU"u"v , the Extension Division, it was reported that 42,000 lesson as signments were examined dur in? the school year 1928-29. A distinct advantage of cor respondence instruction is that it is especially adaptable to adult education. Special arrange ments are made to meet tne , re- iUV , quirements of adult students who, for various reasons, desire to continue study witnout se curing academic or professional credit. Any mature person, re gardless of previous" education may register as a indent for any ot tne suujo llv for sucn ver- ThP Extension division 4- o a in st. the" adult education courses to tne mux !,oi'H needs and interests. VlUuui dence instruction manv unusual advantages especially to students who are and dared him to do his worst. The play was to be called "Rheingold." Some weeks later he heard from Shaw who wrote, "I've used up all your plot and have written only one-half the first act. Please send me some more by return mail." -Archer says that he saw then that Shaw was hopeless. He had merely written a lot of clever dialogue about everything and nothing in particular, as he writes all of his plays. Dr. Henderson says that Shaw employs his diabolical ingenuity in ) throwing the reader off the track by iabeling his fantastic concoctions not plays, but con versations, arguments, discus sions and the like. Of hislcriti- cism of Shaw Dr. : Henderson writes, "In spite of my friend ship for Shaw I have always kept my critical faculty intact His witty blandishments have never lulled to slumber my un erring sense of dramatic values and my fidelity to classic prin ciples. , Aristotle, my master, wmild never have sanctionea Shaw, who has consistently flout ed classics standard and jeered at traditions, especially the glo rious traditions of the French stage. Sucli levity is unforgiv able." v ' ' Dr. 1 Henderson pictures Shaw's plays and criticises them and at the end of his letter says that he does not hesitate to pro nounce Shaw to be the greatest living" dramatist. by the lamented Mantel with the aid of stage paraphernalia and expert actors and actresses liv ing the story opposite him." r ; As a young actor Mr. South wick went to London as a mem ber of the famous stock company of Austin Daly. At the present time he is president of Emerson college of oratory -in Boston. The auditorium of the Meth odist church was offered to meet hf "pmerffenev caused bv the closing of Memorial hall. Seats will be reserved until 8 :15 for the 900 holders of season tickets to the Playmaker performances. The remaining seats of the large auditorium will be open to the public free of charge. the two ends of the tunnel met in the middle of the river, there was a difference of only 3-16 of ah inch in line and 3-100 of a foot in elevation of the two parts. Hold Picnic The members of the depart ment staff in the school of eco nomics and commerce had a pic nic yesterday afternoon at Spar-: row's pool. A' social meeting, of this sort is held every quarter by the members of the staff . Dr. Gf.-T. Schwenning and Profes sor H. D. Wolf, members of the social committee, were in charge of the affair. Pay For Rides With Knowledge Suggests Delta Tau Delta announces the pledging of Lawrence Pickett of High, Point. NO OPPOSITION With less shouting and in con siderably less time than was consumed in the nomination of Calvin Coolidge by the Repub lican National Convention in 1924, the German Club yester day in Gerrard . hall elected leaders, ball managers, and mar- shalls for the 1929- 1930 dances. George Race, president of the club presided over the meeting and Will Yarborough, assistant secretary, acted as secretary in the absence of Robert Zealy, secretary. The meeting called for one- thirty began promptly on time. Ten minutes later 28 men had been elected by those present and Gerrard hall was empty. Most of the ten minutes was consumed in reading the groups of men to be elected. President Race opened the meeting by calling for nomina tions for a leader and two assis tants of the Thanksgiving Dances Bert Haywood was nominated and elected leader; Julian Palmore and Craig Shel ton were elected first and sec ond assistants, respectively. Steve Millender, Art Sickles, and Barron Grier .'were elected lead er and assistants of the Mid winter dances, respectively. Following the election of the leaders of the two dances, ball managers and commencement marshalls were elected. The following were elected: Charles Woodard, chief marshall, George Thompson, Charles Skinner, Chauncey Royster, Bill Lindsey, Ike Manning, Paul Gilbert, and Claude Farrell; chief ball mana ger, Leonard Hole, Jack Calhoun, Archie Allen, Tom Hunter, Phil Continued on last page) f!hace And Foerster Write For Magazine enga lA in a full-time position b ,rV, wicsh additiona Featuring, the third issue of fW rnmlinn Maaazine which vxvw ww-. s will nrinear tomorrow is an ar 1 - 1 tide, "Mencken ana onermau, hv Professor Norman Foerster of the department of English of this University. Richard A. Chace has written a1 critical ap preciation of poetry entitled "In Defence of Poetry". There are short stories by Jay Curtis and Philip DeValbiss, and , poems by Dorothy Mumford, Richard A. Chace, and Philip DeVilpiss. J. J. Slade, Jr. has contributed the third of the series of our ar ticles v which h6 is writing for the Magazine, "Universal jjhu- tude." The Carolina Magazine appears two Sundays each month and is contributed to by the students Editor Joe Daniels un;versitv Debate Squad Plan "There is nothing wrong with Stimulates Forensic Interest college boys asking for rides , 0 about the country," said Hon. (By J. C. Williams) paper per quarter in addition. Josephus Daniels to his Statue since its organization in 1927 Each of these papers relates to college Sunday school class at the University debate squad sys- some query which has been de- ;, Edenton street Methodist church has doubled the interest of bated during the particular o j, if Viqtt ol-irTQira tip v fnr . . . , , . miayter that it is written. J.ne ouxiuet, ix WW "'""j" the student body m iorensics -1 r-r... . . their rides." - especially intercollegiate debat- debate squad as an organization, no therefore, has a double purpose . his statement sink in, and then Uv increasing competition that of training debaters and continued: "I do not meairthat for places on the varsity debate conducting a course tor creoi a boy should offer to pay for his teJs. afrtiie same time. Ts em- - ife in money as he would ataxi The- sqUad system is some- v-"- an I driver. The- average college thimr 0f an innovation in this uvxx ia - student knows a great many section its strongest point is asset- " , things tne average iiiuwuot organization. In the case oi tne does not know, so why can't he local squad, meetings are -held which is the forensie governing teach the driver- something as each week from the time that body, was also organized. Inis they travel along? v the query for any intercollegiate 'body is composed of two repre- "Several days ago, as I was debate is announCed until the sentatives irom tne burner returning from a trip to Rich- tryout for the team. Each meet- body at large, one representative mond, I picked up a couple of . tnevform of a general from each of the two literary discussion which is led by some societies, ""r faculty member who is a special- oers. virtue . , . 4.i -fiQi h fied eroups represented on the which the query is concerned, councd, the forensic effoftsof The squad is composed enureiy " , of students who are interested aem.. vy iTwkW in debating. Such a system has concentrated mto one working been found vetf effective here organizahon-the squai Ttos in training, speakers not only ostein , repret,em j;'J7 1 in the fundamentals of delivery deveiopeo concnvr.v . , . .v. t.ii rcni. fort toward tne cause ui ucuov- DUt in tile j.unwuaiiiJ-"' ment as well. A companion clas of the de bate- squad is the debate class, which is a part of the squad. This meets every week through out the entire three quarters By virtue of a special arrange ment with the department of English, one-half course credit is riven to those who attend the lectures and who write one term boys at Wake Forest and brought them over to Raleigh. On the way over I said to one of them: T never had a chance to go to college. I always Want ed to study psychology. Sup pose you tell me about psychol ogy between here and Raleigh.' And" here Mr; Daniels smiled benignly "when we got to Ral eigh I knew about psychology. "Several months ago several articles came out in the News and Observer condemning the practice, so common among col lege students, of 'hitch-hilang. In mv opinion, asking for rides is all right, but only as long as they're paid' for." the Siffma Nu announces pledging of Edward B. Davisof ing. - 1 , One of the big criticisms which is being leveled against intercollegiate debating today is that the debaters themselves are untrained. This is also cited as a cause of poor attendance. The aim of the debate squad is to eliminate this condition by faculty instruction and general discussion in an organized wayf ; i cli those Degmi""& Or teacnera yvnw of the University. I Byronsville, Ga. professional traimn courses in the past have com

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