Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 7, 1930, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page Four THE DAILY TAR HEEL Wednesday, May 7, 19 PRESS DELEGATES GUESTS OF HIGH POINT COLLEGE Leaders In . CoUege Publications Hold Nineteenth Annual : Convention. . WALKER INVITED (Mayhew Has Throat Meeting in ; its nineteenth an nual convention, the N. C. C. P. A. was the guest of High Point College, High Point, from April 24 to 26. Delegates were pres ent from many of the leading university and college publica tions in the state. A dinner given at the High Point Country Club opened the program for the convention. C. M. Wayrick, editor of the High Point Enterprise, was the chief speaker of the occasion. Favors were given to the delegates by numerous business houses in the city. I A business meeting held Fri day morning was the next fea ture on the program. Brief 're ports were then made by many of the delegates on their respec ive publications. These reports -were followed by meetings of the newspaper group led by Holt McPherson, the annual group by C. M. Beck, and the magazine group by Miss E. Vera Idol. For dinner the delegates were entertained at a luncheon given at Edgefield Manor, at which time other favors were, present ed to the visitors. Throughout the afternoon trips were made to various points of interest in the city. Then at 8 o'clock the Greensboro Daily News was host to a dinner given at the ban quet room of the; Sheraton hotel. On Saturday morning at 11 :30, the final business session was held. The officers for 1930 31 were elected . at this meet ing. They are : Everett Couch of State College, president; Bet ty Brown of N. C. C. W., first vice-president ; Clyde Pugh of High Point College, second vice president; Evelyn Wright of E. C. T. C, secretary, and Bob King of Davidson, treasurer. .; TO BE ADVISER , The Right Reverend Edwin A. Penick of Charlotte, president of the Board of Trustees of St. Mary's School and Junior Col lege at Raleigh, has invited Dean N. W. Walker of the school of education of the University to serve on a committee of three to decide whether or not St. Mary's should run as a four year "A" college Or continue as it is. The other two members of the committee are Dr. Finney, of the University of the South at Sewanee, and Dr. Frazer Hood, of Davidson College. This com mittee will meet with the board of trustees for the first time Thursday morning at 10:30 at St. Mary's school. The commit tee will have its last meeting oh Friday, May 9. TROTT WILL SPEAK AT MATHEMATICS SEMINAR Richard Trott, instructor of mathematics and a candidate for a master's degree, will speak at the mathematics seminar this afternoon. The subject of his address, which is a report on his thesis, is to be "Certain Prop erties of Functional Determ inants." Mr. Trott is the third candi date to report this term. J. J. Slade, who has given three re ports,' was the first, and J. L. Garrett was the second: At the meeting of the sem inar last week, Dr. A. M. Jor dan of the school of education was the speaker. One of the important points stressed at that meeting was the interest and cooperation the other depart ments of the University are showing in the mathematics seminar. Circle Will Give Benefit Luncheon The Bertha , Williams circle of the Episcopal, church will give a benefit bridge luncheon, today. The luncheon will be served at 1 o'clock at the parish house. Bridge will be played both be fore and after the luncheon at the home of Mrs. G. K. G. Hen ry. Bridge playing in the morn ing will begin at 11 o'clock. The price for the luncheon will be 75 cents, for bridge 50 cents, and for bridge and luncheon, $1. WOMEN'S ASSpCllATiON INSTALLS NEW OFFICERS New; officers of the Women's association . of the University were formally installed at a meeting held last Friday night in Spencer;. Hall, The following girls assumed duties : President, Reeme Moore, Dallas, Texas ; . Vice-president, Kate Graham, Durham ; Secre tary, Adelaide McAnally, High Point; Treasurer, Harriet Daniels, Clearwater, Florida. f Miss Moore has appointed Mary Norcross as House Presi dent of Spencer hail. ; Salley Is To Head Spanish Department Wittenberg College It has just been announced that Mr. W. C. Salley, instructor in Spanish, has received the ap pointment as associate professor of romance languages at Witten berg College in Ohio. Witten berg is a Lutheran college. Mr. Salley will be the head of the Spanish department at Witten berg and will leave this univer sity next fall. Slashed By Negro Donald C. Mayhew, operator of a filling station near the local firehouse, was slashed about the throat and body in a scuffle with j James Hargraves, a negro em ployee, late Sunday afternoon. Mayhew was rushed to Watts hospital in Durham, where 36 stitches were requires to close the wounds. - Hargraves fled immediately after the altercation and though various rumors have been re ceived in regard to his where abouts, he has not yet been ap prehended. The Martindale Air Service of Chapel Hill used two planes, piloted by Hicklin and Reynolds, in the search for the negro, while 25 local citizens scoured the surrounding country without any results. . Hargraves was reported as having spent Monday night at another negro's home in Dur ham, but when officers reached the place he had been gone about 15 minutes. According to latest reports, Mayhew is resting well, and hos pital authorities believe the wounds will not prove fatal un less complications set in. tion contractor. The picture, "Ladies Love Brutes," is based on the original play, 'Tardon My Glove" by Zoe Atkins. It was adapted for the screen by Waldeman Young and Herman J. Mankiewicz. According to the fascinating plot, Bancroft, having attained a moderate amount of wealth, decides that he now needs social position. He makes a play for Mary Astor, young society ma tron. But now comes the vil lainy, purveyed by Stanley Fields, a racketeering labor agi tator, and the critical mome finds Bancroft with a big cision to make. He must choo death for his own little boy c for the child of the woman he loves. "Ladies Love Brutes" comes to the Carolina Theatre Todav c FARRAND VISITS U. N. C. AND DUKE (Continued from first page) Mount Wilson Observatory cov er that phase of life better than we should ever be able to do. We do, however, consider the history of science as one of the subjects we may well undertake, probably in cooperation with the two institutions I have named." ' Mr. Farrand, who will make his headquarters at the Caro lina Inn, will address a general meeting in Bingham auditorium today at 4 o'clock of all inter ested in the advanced research planned and in the collections of the Huntington Library in the field covered. Later he will con fer with a few especially inter ested in doing and in promoting that kind of research. IN PRAISE OF "THORNS AND ORANGE BLOSSOMS" GLEE CLtf B WILL SING TOMORROW : i . .. ' -. Continued from: first page ) of 5 Music Week; but the club's financial state of affairs as a re sult of prticipating in both the southern and national glee club contests will not permit this. It is hoped that Chapel Hill will assist in making up .the deficit by giving its entire sup- port tomorrow. Tickets will be sold at the door of the Playmak er theatre the evening of the performance. ' (Continued from page two they are doing, I believe, as good work as the students here, I admit that the intellectual life of our students at home is not as keen and vigorous as that of the students here; but that is largely the jf ault of our universi ty. We are not vitalizing col lege work as much as we ought to and as we could. We are not consolidating and directing po tential student tastes and latent talents as we should. While our coaches are organizing and di recting athletic abilities, while our socially minded faculty mem bers and their wives are actively interesting themselves in the fraternities and in other super ficial social enterprizes, while At a' a -it xnose interested in music are helping the students with their giee ciuD, orcnestra, and so forth, and while professors of polemical inclinations are doing something with the debaters, the rest 1 of us are letting the rest of the students, with. their multifarious tastes and apti tudesv go to the picture show. We really need something like the Playmakers at home. Play- making as it is conceived and practiced here has demonstrated that it can make an enormous and permanent popular appeal, both in the University communi ty and m the state at large. It is a species of art that can be quickly appreciated by average people. Carolina has demon strated that, unquestionably. SUMMER SCHOOL PLANS ARE MADE (Continued from first page) dents. The Y will have a cabi net of about thirty men and wo men to direct student activities connected with the Y. The dor mitories will be used by women with the exception of New Dorms and the Graduate Club House. Carr buildinff will be held for married couples. Mr. Walker, director of the summer school, says that, appli cations . for admission are , com ing in fast and that a large at tendance is expected. There will probably be about 1806 students for thev first session of the sum mer school, and 900 for the sec ond. About 1,500 of the stu dents in the first session will be teachers or coming teachers in the schools of North Carolina. c BROGDEN SPEAKS TO SENIOR CLASS (Continued from first page) the senior regalia would consist of a blue, blazer with a white and blue insignia representative of the University. .The date of the annual senior dance was set for Friday evening, May 16. Russ Bolin's orchestra will fur nish the music. MAN AMONG MEN SMASHES THROUGH IN MIGHTY STYLE . . George Bancroft, the mighty thrill-man, is coming to the Car olina Theatre again. This, time the burly Bancroft, who has be come a man among men in screendom, will be seen and heard as Joe Forziati, the, steel worker who fights his way to success as a building construe- ZZ Friendly G Y Oil YIWE'RE glad to be with you. The way you V . have received us is more than just a com pliment. We are proud to say your reception assures us of your friendship as well as your patronage. ETpHE greeting-we bring you is one of service. " And we dedicate ourselves to serving the best of foods with the best of service at the best rates' possible. MAY WE SERVE YOU? Frien dlyC aiete na Every Meal a Pleasant Memory" ;." . !;;" - y .-:. -. . . 'IISx Blow " f lP' -11111 WWMjMiMhi yJi W V I. II ft r ' 1 m Delicious and RefresKin if "STEN IN Cvallaad Rice Fame Sport Qiampiea Coca-Cola Orchestra Wednesday I0i30 to 11 p. en. E. S. T. Ceat to Ceaat NEC Network for ",e IPmuzacs thai refreshes W$en you.suffer.'firom Ivgejaixui' Jpyoj ieUo ;7hen'the milk of h' kindness seems to somf Blow.tne vrhisUe for a minutes wtime out" on your Tn aCC0Unt' to Pause an1 re&esh ydiirielf. go into a'huddlfj f With r'a glass or bottle of refresning; delicious Coca-Cola. It will make you captain of your soul again, ready to live or die for the dear old alma mater. 9 Million a Day-' it had The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta. G. awr IT IS TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 7, 1930, edition 1
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