Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 18, 1930, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE DAILY TAR HEEL Sunday, May Ig. T Page Four BAPTIST I it I1'' Eugene Olivfe, Pastor H'r " 9 :45 a. m. Sunday'' school: 11 :00 a. ra. Sermon and-Worship. Topic : "The rWinsome Christ." :'.. H : :oo p. m. B;vm: 8:00 p; m. SernitJit - and Wor ship. Topic: ; 0WharWe Live CHAPEL OF, THjEl A. S. LawrenceffRectori. , 8 :00 a. m. Holy Comrnunion. 10 :00 a. m.5ibl class. 11 :00 a. m. Service and ser- .. mon. :c -i-hXf iu 'v;- ,;'., 7:00 p. m. Y. iP,S.:L.r, 8:00 p. m. Organ recital fry N. O. Kennedy. ; -.- Afternoon tea wjjljibe .served in the parish house from 4:30 to 6:00 p. m. : .m , ;. , .. PRESBYTERIAN '; W. D.MbSsPastbr; 9 :45 a. m. Sunday ' School. . ) ; 11 :00 a. .mT 7:45 p. m. Evehihgiservic4s; 8:45 p. m. Young peopled so cial hour. X METHODIST : C. E. Rozzelle, Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Sermon by Mr. - Rozzelle. Topic : "An Old Word and a" New. Definition." Special music. 7:00 p. m. Junior League. 7:30 p. m. Special Music by N. G. C. W. Girls. CATHOLIC Father O'Brian . 8:30 .a.Tm.- Mass in Gerrard hall. LUTHERAN G. A. Metz, Pastor ' 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Morning services. Sermon by Mr. Metz. UNITED CHURCH B. J. Howard, Pastor 9 :45 a. m.- Sunday school, Gra dy Leonard, superintendent ; Paul McConnell, teacher men's , Bible class. 11 :00 a. m. Morning services. , Sermon by Mr. Howard. 7:00 a. m. Young People's service. POUR FROM' SOUTH WIN FELLOWSHIPS Two From University Of Texas Win ; - Yale Awards. .f 3 - Out of 179 fellowships and scholarships given by the grad uate school of Tale .University for the year, 1930t31, .four were received by southern men, . Two men receiving fellow ships for graduate study, in gov ernment and political science were Charles E. Davis, a grad uate of the University of Texas, I and Cecil H. Tolhert, also a grad uate of the University of Texas. These fellowships are made pos sible through the gift of the Cowles Foundation for the study of government, made to Yale University by memjers of the family of Alfred Cowles of the Chicago Tribune. . Another southerner receiving a fellowship was Charles D. Matthews, a graduate of Bir mingham-Southern .College. Mr. Matthews was gjiysn his, fellow ship for research in Semitic lan guages. .,.;rtv: The fourth Jel!p;whipi:.v-(;hat was awarded to southern man went to William C. rmble for research in organic k chemistry. This award was onat to Yale by the Texas Oil Company,. Last Episcopal Tea The last Episcopal tea of the spring quarter will be held this afternoon from 4:30 to 6 in the Parish house. Spe cial music will be featured. Students of all religious de nominations are cordially invited. COMMENCEMENT BEGINS ON JUNE 7 (Continued from first page) Battle, Rocky Mount: 1895 President, Fred L Carr, Wilson; Secreta'ry, Harry Howell, Fayetteville. 1896 President George Ste phens, Asheville ; Secretary, Drl R. E. Coker, Chapel Hill. 1897 President, W. D. Car michael, 212 Fifth Avenue, New York City; Secretary, J. . A. Long, Haw River. 1898 Secretary, R. H. Lewis, Oxford. i 1905 President, Judge N. A. Townsend, Dunn; Secretary, "W. T. Shore, Charlotte. . 1914 President, J. A. Hol mes, Edenton ; Secretary, Oscar Leach, Raleigh. 1915 President, R. G. Fitz gerald, Greenville; Secretary, D. L. Bell, Pittsboro. 1916 President, F. F. Brad- shaw, Chapel Hill ; Secretary, F. H. Deaton, Statesville. 1917-r-resident, S. J. Ervin, Morganton ; Secretary; H. G. Baity, Chapel Hill. '. i 1929 President, Bowman Gray, Jr., Winston-Salem ; Sec retary, Walter Spearman, Uni versity of Lyon, Lyon, France. M. M. D. group of people pay the fore said six bits, sit on the ground (damp), and "listen with quiet, deep enjoyment to such a show.? If there is anyone else and no doubt there is, though your cor respondent doesn't know such an institution as the Carolina Playmakers, then that institu tion has made all those places queried. WRIGHT RECEIVES NEW FELLOWSHIP THE THEATRE To Continue, Studies In June. In England Dr. Louis B. Wright of the English department of. the Uni versity will return to England in J une to complete the collec tion of material for a book which he is preparing on the culture and literature of the English middle class during the Renais sance. He has just received a contin uation of the Guggenheim fel lowship which he held in 1928 29 and plans to spend most of the time from June to the open ing of the University in Sep tember at research work in the British Museum in London and in the Bodleian Library at Ox ford. Bill Mclfade Bill McDade was, 76 years old yesterday. ": ; ; He started in as a janitor for the University at'1 the reopening in 1875 and served the' institu tion for 33 years without a break. For his first . quarter of a century there was no central heating or water-works, arid he had to make a fire ; d ;Kciarry water for every room in the Old East, and in several recitation rooms as well. Vi 1 7 ; George Stephens of Asheville, alumnus of the. University and an old friend of Bill's happened to.be at my house when Bill called the other, day, And the three of us exchanged reminis cences about past days in Chapel Hill. - "I used to get up at 4 o'clock in the morning' said . Bill, "'cause I had to start early to get the work done. We janitors took turn about ringing the bell, each one ringing it a week at a time. The janitors these days don't know what work is com pared with what we did." "I never will forget," said Mr. Stephens, "how quickly Bill could make a fire. .; He would come in when I was asleep, pile a lot of wood in the fireplace, throw a little oil on it, and be gone, leaving a big blaze, before I could open "my eyes " V After Bill quit the Univer sity's service he began working Principals Who Actually Teach In a recent study made by M. C. S. Noble, Jr, of the state de partment of public instruction, it is disclosed that more than fifty per cent of the white principals of North Carolina schools teach from three to five periods each day. Only 130 of the 901 principals do not have actual classroom duties. The largest groups teach four periods a day. The class periods range from 40 to 60 minutes each. "This should dispel any fear that these school officials as a whole do not take part in teach ing activities," states a bulletin issued by the department of public instruction. New Service Station Work is being pushed along rapidly on the new Standard Oil filling station which will be lo cated on the lot between the Methodist parsonage and J. T. Harris residence on West Franklin street. The ground is being leveled, foundations laid and the tanks put underground for fraternities, and now he is the janitor for the Beta Theta Pi's. He is still hale and hearty and enjoys nothing so much as greeting old-timers whom he used to know when they were boys here. He is serving today the grandsons of many of the men whom he served in the 70s and 80's. (Continued from .page two) tie brunette whom he had seen that afternoon, dressed at re hearsal in a boy's blue overalls and a none-too-immaculate . un dershirt (she did have on shoes too, perhaps). The wood magic had done its metamorphological stuff ; she danced like a sylph, and she gave your correspondent a pretty interlude. When your correspondent, be tween Acts II and III, strolled around a bit, he discovered a satyr or faun clinging to a great whiteToak tree. When he ad dressed the faun, the faun an swered in, a rich Louisiana, Cre ole drawl and unhooked a tele 1 -WT- pnone receiver. ue was a switchman in communication with Elmer Hall and Bob Dawes on the hill one of half a dozen who manipulated lights on or ders from the hilltop. This incident and the overalls girl merely suggest the hard work and the marvelous organi zation tfiat kept the scenes mov ing.from Capulet's house on the extreme left to Friar Laurence's Cell and the Apothecary's Shop on the extreme right, from the street in front of the stage to the churchyard at the back. The writer does not know the tech nical slanguage, but he was told that the stage was organized on the multiple-set or unit-scene plan, the lights denning par ticular scenes and "blackouts" cutting off the rest of the stage Whatever the terms, the things themselves were right. Mr. Hall made perfect adjustment be tween his sets and the natura background, giving the one that degree of definition that merged it into the latter, without par ting. And now for 'the audience and the tradition in which this su perb performance was rooted. i our correspondent never stretched out under the Davie i i Poplar or warmed an ' assigned seat in the late lamented Me morial hall; he therefore did some thinking, perhaps, about things that the Carolinese took for granted. Where else, in all these United States, he asked himself, could such another ex perience be had for six bits ? Where else could a-band of col legiate youngsters, stiffened a bit by two or three wise older heads, put oh Romeo and Juliet in such surroundings and get away with it-get away with bal cony scenes, duels, deaths, and graveyards? Where else is there such a woodland vtheater, select ed, improved, and otherwise let alone? Where else would such a Chapel Hill Burglar Loses To Chicago Pair Up until just the other day it was thought that someone either in or near Chapel Hill had com-! mitted the most unusual theft when he removed, without the owner's consent, the radiator from an automobile parked near the Tin Can last winter. Now, however, a pair of men from- Chicago, that city famous for its crime even if it is of the ordinary garden variety, have gone the local thief one better and Chapel Hill thereby loses its distinction. And we must con cede that the 'story from Chicago has it all over the local tale. "Do you know what those things are?" inquired a police man of William Stacey and Al bert Brusillo, when he saw them rolling a cart of merchandise from the plant of a printing firm.' "No, we don't," replied the pair who were beginning their careers of crime in this most un usual fashion. "What are they?" . "Burglar Alarms." And so Chapel Hill loses its distinction. . RUTH CHATTERTON 7 1 THE HEROINE OF "MADAifE J- IN ANOTHER f SMASHING HIT JvvAAAAAAAA THE SOUTH'S PREMIERE SHOWING At a trustees meeting in the spring of-1896 it was decided that University students could join fraternities in'. October of the sophomore year instead of in January of the same year as had been the case before. Hear Ruth Chatterton Sing "'Say It With a Smile" Tuesday BERT WHEELER in "Cuckoos" Wednesday MARY BRIAN RICHARD ARLEN in "Light of The Western Stars" I'N ACTRESS in the home of a r British peer and aristocracy goes "Whoopee." - RUTH CHATTERTON m O 2 Scandal" with BASIL RATHBONE - RALPH FORBES Other Features Mac Sennett Comedy "Scotch' PARAMOUNT SOUND NEWS MONDAY ONLY M 1 Thursday S "PARAMOUNT ON PARADE" - with 6ary Cooper Clara Bow Richard Arlen Helen Kane Evelyn Brent Harry Green Maurice Chevalier and ; Many More. IIIllllillllllllllllE Friday CHARLES RUGGLES in !!!HfH!nn!!Mff!?fnmnMiHn!FTmn!!!!mfHrmn!itinf! liiuiiiUiHuuiiiiaQiiiiiiiiiUiiiiiniuryiniiiiiiiiuiii Saturday EDMUND LOWE Young Man From Manhattan" in Born Reckless" A1 COMING J0LS0N IN "MAMM I1I!I1I!111I!I1!III1II!1I!IB Tar Heer A dvertisers Make This Paper .L ossible Patronize These Firms Whenever Pdssible s Daily TL ax i .ee 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1930, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75