Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 25, 1930, edition 1 / Page 4
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Pae Four THE DAILY TAR HEEL inaay, April 25, 1930 CONTACT MEN TO FtiEET HERE NEXT YEAftlN. SPRING Bob Madry Will Be Official Host To College Publicity Men. CO-EDS DISCUSS PLANS FOR YEAR The American 8ollege Pub licity Association, which com prises in its membership more than 150 college and university jpublicity directors representing leading institutions in all sec tions of the country, is to hold its next annual convention at the University of North Carolina. The University's invitation to the college publicists to come to Chapel Hill next year, was ex tended by R. W. Madry, director of the University news bureau, who has just returned from New York, where he attended this year's convention, held at New York University. By virtue of his' position as representative of the host in stitution, Mr. Madry was also elected to serve as convention secretary for the year. He will immediately begin laying plans for next year's meeting which will likely be held in April. , The American College Pub licity Association, which until this year was known as the American Association of College News Bureaus, was organized in 1917. This is the first meeting to be scheduled for the Univer sity of North Carolina. Two years ago the convention was held at Vanderbilt University. The new of f icers of the asso ciation are Earl Reed Silvers, of Rutgers University, president; Kenneth Hazlewood, of Hamline University, vice-president ; and secretary-treasurer. Recorder Hihshaw Sentences Drunks The meeting of the Woman's ; Association Wednesday ; after-1 noon at Spencer hall opened with Miss Reeme Moore's interesting report from the I. S. S. G. con ference, after which, the nomi nating committee submitted their candidates for the differ ent offices for the Association. The final 'outcome was as fol lows: President, Reeme Moore ; Vice President, Kate Graham; Secretary, Adelaide Mc Anally ; and Treasurer, Hariet Daniels. The house president, Sue Dent, submitted for considera tion an amendment to the rule of co-eds riding 7 as printed in the indespensible handbook. The members of the association were won over by Miss Dent's inspir ing wittisms and the petition went through. Ida Currie was elected Presi dent of the Athletic Associa tion. It was voted to appropri ate fifty dollars to be used for tennis and track this season. , Final plans for the Co-ed dance on May 9 were made. Beth Colley announced that tickets would be on sale until Tuesday and that the committee hoped to get "Jelly" Lef twich and his orchestra to play. Pleas of Bill Sharp, law stu dent, who defended Bynum Weaver, colored, in Monday's session of recorder's court, in an action charging public drunken ness, availed but little. Bynum admitted having been drunk, 'and . the young lawyer's argu ment that his client's offense was his first, that he was a hard worker and well liked did not prevent the levying of a fine of $5 and costs. Luther Alston, ''praying ne gro" who once prayed himself out of a road sentence, did not fare so well Monday at the hands of Judge C. P. Hinshaw, who sentenced him to 30 days on the roads for public drunkenness, and ordered enforced a previous ly suspended sentence of 30 days additional, Luther was, how ever, given the -privilege of be ing "hired out" by the. county commissioners. This means that anyone who will pay Orange county 50 cents per day and will feed Luther for 60 days, may have his services, and thus save him from the ignominy of work ing on the roads. Tip Craig, colored barber, was fined $10 and costs for drunkenness. Local officers al leged that nearly everyone found one day recently in Tip's fearber shop on Franklin street showed evidence of over-indul-! gence in liquor. CAROLINA RADIO DEBATE WILL BE GIVEN TONIGHT Making the second time in the annals of the University that the Carolina debating team has, broadcast over the air, the Tar Heel rhetorical representa tives will meet the University of Virginia contestants in Ral eigh tonight from 7:15 to 8:15. The debate will be broadcast over station WPTF at the Sir Walter hotel. The subject of the debate is a timely one, prominent in the League of Nations conference and with all the prominent busi ness firms in the country, name ly: "Resolved, that the thirteen month calendar should be uni versally adopted." W. W. Speight will lead the local argumentative artists for the second time over the electric waves. It will be remembered that he made his debut to radio in a debate with the University of Virginia at Charlottesville Va., last April. He will be as sisted by Allan Lowenstein, a freshman, with H. H. Hobgood serving as rebuttal speaker. TRAFFIC VIOLATORS FINED BY RECORDER Praying Negro Fails to Pray Himself Oat of Trouble. JUNIUS PARKER TO ADDRESS LAW SCHOOL MEMBERS f 1 1 ' Invitations are being mailed today by the law school to 2000 lawyers and judge's of the state to attend the public lectures to be given next week by Junius' Parker of New York, Mr. Parker's lectures deal with the great questions of government regulation of industry. Mr. Parker, who has been general! counsel for the American To bacco Company the dissolution of which under the anti-trust laws was termed an attempt to "unscramble scrambled eggs" has had a long and ' varied ex perience as a lawyer in guiding business through the dangerous channels formed by government regulations. Three lectures will be given by Mr, Parker under the general title "Business and the State." The first will be Monday night at 8:30 at the law building, and the others at the same hour on the two following nights. The Cercle Francais will hold its April meeting this evening at 7:30 in the Episcopal parish house. Dr. Fenley, who was in France last summer and last fall, will give a petit discours of interest to all students of French. There will be only one more meeting of the Cercle this spring. An invitation is extend ed to all who are interested in French, and especially spoken French, to attend these last two "reunions." group will remain on the' job. They are R. A. Parsley and J. S. Newsome, who are with the Caterpillar Tractor Co., Peoria, 111.; Page Choatei with the Southern Railway in Charlotte; and E. G. Hoefer, Jr., Illinois Bell Telephone Co., Chicago, 111. Two men of the second group will remain in school; they are R. C. Plummer and R. E. Hub bard, whose alternates are re maining on the job The men who will be on the job Monday will remain there seven weeks in accordance with the plan of cooperative work for the junior class under the direc tion of A. R. Hollett. They will report "June 9 back for summer school work. , Infirmary List The infirmary had five pat ients yesterday tnougn none were seriously ill,. Dave Nams, who has been a patient for quite a while, is suffering from an in fected toe which has kept him from participating in track, and T. H. Pomlinson, ! Jimmie Wil liams, L. Q. Plumblee, and Char lie Waddell are all kept in bed because of colds. I THIRTEEN TAKEN INTO HOLY GRAIL (Continued from page one) years, six fraternity men and seven non-fraternity men are awarded membership in the organization. Although the purpose of the order is to reward sophomores for outstanding ability shown in their two years on the campus, the members of the group' saw fit to include three juniors in the group this year. The announced purpose of the Order of the Holy Grail reads: "To destroy group and social barriers so that the interests of the campus as a whole may be advanced. To unify all sections of the University." In pursuance of the above ideals the Grail awards annually Grail athletic-scholarship cups to the members of each major sport excelling in scholarship, to the freshman athlete excelling in scholarship, and to the best-all-round intramural athlete. The Order of the Holy Grail also sponsors, nine Grail dances throughout the school year, three each quarter. The incoming members will be Honored at 6:30 o'clock Sat urday night with a banquet at the Carolina Inn preceding the regularly scheduled Grail dance in the Bynum gymnasium. The men honored by the or der were selected on the basis of the following activities: Wil liam Bridgers, Wilson: football squad, Kappa Sigma; Theron Brown, Greensboro: track team, football team, president elect junior class, Pi Kappa Phi; Os car Dressier, Nashville, Tenn. : Alpha Kappa Psi, Beta Theta Pi, Amphotercn ; Fred Fer guson, Dillwood: wrestling mon ogram ; Noah Goodridge, New York City: captain elect boxing team, S. A; E. ; Hamilton H. Hobgood, Bunn: varsity debater,-Phi Assembly; Steve Marsh, Marshville: secretary freshman class, Sigma Zeta ; John Clinard, Jr., High Point : Yackety Yack staff, Buccaneer staff, band, Alpha Kappa Psi, Phi Mu Alpha Phi Gamma Delta; K. C. Ram say, Salisbury : associate editor Tar Heel, Y cabinet, P. U. board, Phi - Beta Kappa, Sigma Nu ; Carlyle Sitterson, 'Kinston: so- 3, cial activities; Clarence Week Whi takers : assistant mana' I of boxing; Haywood Week I r-t 1 a , ' JSwansDoro: secretary-elect j. ior class, assistant manager boj ing; Burgess Whitehead, Woods, ville: baseball team, Phi Beta Kappa, Zeta Psi. The change in size and weight next year does not affect the qualities that' make some golf balls better than others. Glee Club At Murfreesboro Last night the University glee club gave the .second of its spring tour programs at Chow an College in Murfreesboro, the first having been at Norfolk, Va., the night before. ' Today the club will proceed to New Bern and will appear at the Griffin high school there to night. New Dorms, composed of the dormitories of Vance, Battle and Pettigrew, N were built 1912. Edwin Caldwell, colored, made a sharp x turn from Franklin street, but was driving so rap idly that he ran into the yard of the negro Methodist church, whereupon he was arrested by officers John D. Blake and U. R. Rackley. He was charged with reckless driving and assessed the costs. Mrs.-T. J. Wilson, Jr., wife of the registrar of the University, was assessed with costs of an action in recorder's court Mon day morning charging her with violation, of a local traffic ordi nance. Mrs. Wilson pleaded guilty to having parked her car in a forbidden area. J. , M. Abernethy, who gave his address as Hickory, N. C, was fined $15 and costs for reck less driving, lie was appre hended last week while driving through the business district of Chapel Hill at 40 miles per hour. Raymond Chatham, a student, secured a dismissal of a charge of parking his car at an angle of 90 degrees to the curb instead of 45 degrees required by ordi nance. Chatham established the fact that he had not been driv- in ing the car when it was so ! parked. . ENGINEERS WILL LEAVE TOMORROW FOR CO-OP WORK (Continued from first page) O. J. McCall, Tidewater Power and Light Company, Wilming ton; and G. F. Homey, Univer sity Consolidated Service Plants, Chapel Hill. At the same time the men' who have been on the job since the middle of March and have com pleted the required seven weeks of work of the third period will start their studies for the third period of school Monday. These men are A. M. Perez, M. R. Cow per, R. H. Moore, N. L. Bryan, G. J. Quinn, Jr., A. E. Reynolds, Jr., Paul Gilbert, E. G. Long, Jr., Herbert Nelson, C. P. Erick son, J. L. Ferebee, A. C. Robert son, P. G. Johnson, W. P. Mc- Phearson and W. S. Crawford. Four members of the first Carolina's Oldest Shoe Rebuilders Announces THE INSTALLATION of A Shoe Department L A COCK'S "Carolina's Oldest Shoe ' Rebuilders" "S H E COULDN'T SAY NO" With " WINNIE LIGHTNER CHESTER MORRIS JOHNNY ARTHUR If you saw Winnie Light ner in "Gold Diggers of Broadway," you've been wait ing for her next. Here it is with winsome Winnie putting over new song hits in her inimitable style. - ; Added Grantland Rice Sportlight "Sport a la Carte" Paramount News f NOW PLAYING 111 Make Your Next Round A Spaulding . KRO-FLITE Round JUST A TIP Improve your game! Yes . you can do this with Spaulding" matched irons and Kro-Flites. Students' Supply Store "Everything in Stationery" 2 Introduce yourself x& jmhion c 3 1 . . Q-up er- horts - ' ' $fT m THE ST. REGIS II THE EUCLID $1 . tff THFnRAirPf1 . f i 1 f'.Ta ratn. In Canary, with band- tf dctftr ' 1 Buf'tr 'mS: D , t S and ue ho,et j : WILSON 1 '-1 1 is ah farters.! 5 : "oinim motoring, NJOi &0UUNQ TO NIGHT 03 AM NIGHT Durham Bowling Center 1 "No Center Seam Diicomftrt" M eet Super-Shorts. Then try them out under any con ditions when ordinary under wear crawls up and binds . , playing tennis, sitting through a long exam Whatever test you put them to, you will know a new freedom in crotch and seat. A Wilson Brothers Style Committee orgina tion, a back panel, eliminates the harassing center seam. Super-Shorts always feel like Super-Seat pajamas. .WILSON BROTHERS they are part of you . . . and look the part, too, in their trim tailoring and new colorings. Of the smart patterns in Super-Shorts, offered now by men's wear merchants at school and back home, your attention is directed particularly to those here shown . . . the St. Regis, Euclid, Drake, Arlington, and the Canary Blend-Suit. Introduce yourself to their fashionable comfort todav. Ask also to see the new Wilson Brothers CHICAGO . NEW P ry PARIS YORK AT CO A XT !- rl Git n . rnniiviaLtl UARANTRF rrinvmM. hnrinjlllr- Wil.ni U i V ... T)rk r . V ' --T ; uiocrauner dnnnnl nin c r Vae-marlc is nnswisfactory for any reason . the nearest dl,mn .-:. ' . . P".- we shall gladly suddIv them to vou throueh a excnange it at any WUton Brother, dealer. 7Sc,l,i.Jo and l. Blend-S , . ' ' ,-W!"",8 orotners, $joSo. VVellsbtreet.Chicato
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 25, 1930, edition 1
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