Pase Feci
THE DAILY TAE HEEL
Sunday, November-17;, 1923
3
4, ' AJi.ii.SJ
3
Sale To Give Evading-
the colonial tradition had in
volved the migration of students
But Only for Moment: Horace Wil- Author of "Tree-Named John" at wno desired college educatio n to
the North or to Europe, and the
, TTnfarA Williamsnrofessnr of John B. Sale, author and in- field was tnereiore lor the most
y I ' . , .1 ..
Dhilosophy, went into a local terpreter of "The Tree Named part clear ior ine iormation of
food emporium Tuesday morn- John which has been acclaim- institutions representing; the
j i - ... .. I t-i a; . x .
ing in search of some steak for ed as a permanent contribution newer. puDiic beuumeni, in tne
lunch. He asked for a piece of to southern literature, will give middle west all was plastic, and
tenderloin second-cut. There a reading before the Community as settlement took place, public
wasn't any. club' at the Episcopal parish concern with education natural-
Mr. Williams signified that he house the evening of December My reflected itseit in tne develop-
inight accept canned tongue. The 2. The public is cordially invit- ment oi state universities.
clerk brought out a strip, of ed.
tongue thirteen or fourteen inch
es long, stating thai it had once
been canned but had recently
been taken out. '
& 'Then, I won't have to pay for
the can," observed Mr. Williams
Dlavfullv. "How much is the
tongue?"
"Eighty cents a pound."
"How much would half of it
be?" inquired the philosopher,
eyeing an imaginary spot in the
center of the strip of meat.
"Forty, cents, Sir," he was
told in the prompt, cheerful man
ner of food salesmen in this
center of culture.
Chuckling oyer the joke on
himself, Professor Williams left
With the Churches
Georgia, with a university
chartered in 1784, holds the old
est charter of any Original
state university serving through
put its whole history as a state
institution, Of, the state con
stitutions, adopted before 1800,
BAPTIST
Eugene Olive, Pastor
9:45 a. m. Sunday: school.
11 :00 a. m. Morning services rovpto! most. VirnrniriPTit nmmur
Sermon : "Making Love Real," whichjire those of Peimsylvania
Mr. Olive. and North Carolina, provided
7:00 p. m. -Young , peoples' HW iiriwprsit.iAa;
umon. As for the part played by the
8:00 p. m. Evening services: SniitriArn stj?W imiversitffis . iri
sermon: "What God Will Do," thp nWtpbpirnm Snntfe; DrHhasp.
Mr. Olive.
CHAPEL OF THE CROSS
A. S. Lawrence, Rector '
8:00 a. m. Holy Communion.
10:00 a. m. Bible class, Dr. U.l
T. Holmes.
J -mm1 TTTAtlIAIl niJ Til I . - M m
tuesre u vvcuucu j - n :oo a. m. Service ana ser
Viis classroom m the Alumni
building.:
High School Annual
mon.
7:15 p. m. Y. P. S. L.
8:00 n. m. -Service and oreran
program ; Mr. Kennedy will said in Part:
indicated that the striking pro
gress of higher education in the
South up to 1860 has never been
adequately portrayed. He. of
fered figures, statistics, and quo
tations from writers of the per
iod to illustrate his point, refer
ring often to the Universities of
South Carolina and; Virginia.
Of the Virginia School he
Staff
Completed With Rena Henry
As Editor-in-Chief
Pupils at the Chapel Hill high
school have already started
working on their 1929-30 annual.
If sufficient volume of advertis
ing can be secured, the edition
will be larger than, last year s,
covering the year's activities m
the school as a . whole, according
to Claude Council,
manager of the publication.
The annual staff is complete,
with advertising solicitors,, as
sistants, artists and others.
This year each class in the high
school has one pupil representa
tive on the staff,
seniors, who have two represen
tatives. Penelope Wilson and
Harold Ernst are the senior re
presentatives ; Elsie Lawrence
represents the juniors, Billy
Weaver the sophomores and Lu
cille Bennett the freshman
class.
x Rena Henry is editor-in-chief,
and Nathan Walker is assistant
editor. Miss Susan Rose is
faculty adviser for the staff of
workers. The high school
play; Prelude in A, by Hol
lins; Tramurei, by Shumann;
Sortie in G Major, by Rogers.
LUTHERAN (Gerrard Hall)
G. A. Metz, Pastor v
9:45 a. m.--Sunday school.
11:00 a. m. Morning service.
METHODIST
C. E. Rozzelle, Pastor
'Founded by Jefferson as the
capstone of a state system of
education it reflected Jboth his
conviction that the only salva
tion of democracy was the illum
ination , of the darkness of igno
rance, and. his faith in freedom,
with its independent schools, its
a student body reaching nearly
elective system, its faculty gov-
9 :45 a. m. Sunday school ; Bible , . , .
freshmen.
11:00 a. m. Morning services:
sermon: "Life's Extras," Mr.
Rozzelle.
7:00 p. m Epworth league.
except the 8:00 p. m. Evening services;
sermon: "Two Questions," Mr.
Rozzelle.
PRESBYTERIAN
W. D. Moss, Pastor
9:45 a. m.- Sunday school.
11:00 a. m. Morning services.
a
faculty and a student body
reaching nearly a thousand to
ward the end of its ante-bellum
career, it held a place of power
and influence in the South."
"The Civil War, of course,
brought . ruin to the Southern
universities. Their student bod
ies and faculties were dispersed,
their resources , disappeared,
their buildings were destroyed,
used for hospitals, or abandoned
during the conflict or during the
troubled years which followed.
per. But they are also univer
sities with a peculiar obligation
to the life of their common
wealths. Growing as they did
out of the public concern in high
er education, their " traditions
have inevitably been those of
democracy and liberalism. This
has been manifest in the point
of view from which they have
regarded their public duties." -"It
is hoped etaoin to arh m
"It is to be hoped that these
institutions will keep open per
manently the door of opportuni
ty." ..v::v
In conclusion Dr. Crase turned
to the future declaring that
"Again, in the tradition of the
modern state university is the
conception of the direct respon
sibility to the; state through ex
tension work, service of its fac
ulty on boardVand commissions,
the loan of its services f or f act
f indulge in other words, the con
ception of itself as not only a
bulwark for the future, but a
servant of the present.
"It seems fair to say that the
state university of today; still
holds by those impulses of a
democratic civilization that gave
it birth. Jlere is both a satis
faction and a warning for the
futureA For I do not; believe
that, in the long run, there is
anything that can replace in a
sjtate university that sense of
obligation to its commonwealth
as a whole on which it was
founded. If the state universi
ty should lose , that sense, then
we may indeed expect to see
once more repeated that strug
gle of a people to express its
ideas in institutional form and
the creation of other types of in
stitutions adapted to the spirit of
the age. The origin and devel
opment of state universities
shows, if it shows anything at
all, how any generation tends
to create in some fashion the
forms that it feels express its
own necessities."
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utton's JUtug
The Students Drttsr Store
Store
7 :45 p. m.- Evening services.
8:45 u. m. Young peoples' so- There was a long, slow process
cial hour.
UNITED CHURCH
B. J. Howard, Pastor
9:45 a. m. Sunday school.
pupils are planning to stage an m :u0 a. m. Morning services.
amateur circus soon to help
raise money for the annual. The
dramatic club will put on an
entertainment and students will
sell candy and otherwise attempt Master
to supplement aavertismg reve-
Foister to Washington
of rebuilding due both to the
poverty of their states and to
the necessity of readjusting
themselves to new conditions.
In these latter , years their de
velopment has again gone for
ward, in resources, in quality of
I work, in numbers, and in adjust-
nue.
Don't Worry
R. W. Foister of theFoister ment to the needs of the com-
Photo Co. -is attending the monwealths they serve."
finishers Con- After a final summary of the
vention .of America, at Wash- factors involved and the pro
ington, u. Kj. erress made in the develonment
Mr. Foister is president of the Lf the institutions the speaker
North Carolina Photo Finishers, turned to a discussion of the ob-
Cornell University has applied and has made this trip in the in- ligations of the forty 'nine uni-
for a patent for a new and in- terest of the business. versities as they have been.es-
expensive process of making : . tablished in the past century and
milk sugar, a process discovered oUrvey Ut JJevelOpment a nuartpr. He said in nart
by Dr. Paul Sharp, professor of Of State Universities that "there, is a very real sense
dairy chemistry at the Umver- Made Jt5V . W. Chase in which all universities, how-
sity. The process is said to yield - . . " ; ever founded or maintained, are
a milk sugar not formerly used '" j to page one, aiTnnlv nTlivprsiHpS "TW ,rp
on the market, which may be with the ' struggle : over the char- universities in spirit and tern-
substitute! for ordinary table tei Ui xvmga uuege in to
table suffar in ms review oi tms stage oi
About the only thing that transition, the speaker declared
. IllJ H JJ 1 i.
hasn't been invented in. the past inai a" attempts, irom , tne
few vears is a new wav of mak- struggle involving King's Col-
ing love. Many have tried to lee UP untli tne climax reached
improve on this, but about the m the Dartmouth College case,
only thing that they have been Ianea ana tneir uure ae
' able to do is to addmany appli- Iayed for lon Periods of time
ances; the method seems to re- or prevented altogether the
main the same. TTie Plains man. foundation of state universities
in the areas in which those old-
Wellesley College er institutions were located. Of
Prohibits Flying the colonial group .only one
iitutgersi is now a state uni-
Don't disappoint your friends this .year; Re
member them with your, own Christmas cards.
Personally Engraved Cards; Must
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Students
Supply
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4k
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STETSON
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Yo lire 'write A
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Penselpen is the last
word m writing effi
ciency. A pencil always,
. pea when you need
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with plenty o lead.
Very attractive and it's non
breakable. But why not drop
into a nearby dealer today
and give Penselpen "the once
over"? No obligation.
U. S. Patent Avoid Imitations
The popularity of flying has versity by the standards of this
added a new prohibition to the association. Of the New Eng-
list of "Thou shalt nots" in the land group, Vermont was the
Wellesley College Handbook. The only state to provide in its early
dean's office issued the edict constitution for a single state
that "No student while under university. In was, in short, by
the jurisditction of the college the creation of new institutions
may ride in an aeroplane unless that the movement was destined
permission has been granted to proceed . . . '
from the dean's office and the "In two sections of -the coun- feoW Exclusively in Chapel Hill
written consent .of her parents try the state university was to y
secured." The Critograph. ; find its origins. In the South. Patterson Brnthprn
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