Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 26, 1930, edition 1 / Page 1
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I CAROLINA-VIRGINIA GAME TOMORROW CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. THANKSGIVING DANCES ; GERMAN CLUB FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ! y r v v v. s. : VOLUME XXXIX PROGRAMS HELD- '. UP BY DELAY IN IMTOEIUE f ff Plans for . Presidental Inaugura tion and Entertainment Pro grams Delayed. No definite arrangement has yet been decided upon in regard to the inauguration of President-elect Frank Porter Gra ham, it; was reported -yesterday. As soon as the new auditorium i3 finally completed, plans will be announced. The announcement of the final program of the Entertainment Committee is at present also awaiting the opening of the new building."; The committee has at present many prospec tive companies in view, but at present no contracts can be made. It has been reported that the general character of . the per formances will probably be higher this year than any prev-! ious season. - This fact is pos sible due to the present eco nomic condition which has re duced the prices of some of the best entertainments in the coun try, to the minimum. The new auditorium, which will have a seating capacity of around two thousand, will probably open to the campus use sometime during the first part of the winter quarter. Because of the possibility that certain " materials for the building may be delayed no exact date has yet been set for the opening. Plans are now being discussed to have some of the noted men in ; the state present' at the opening ceremonies. During the week following the opening, the en tertainment committee has an nounced that it will try to have one of its performances booked for that time. This, however, has not been definitely arrang ed. ' f Local Cafe Placed In Receiver's Hands Tom Gooch's cafeteria, the oldest in Chapel Hill closed its doors Monday night. Gooch has faithfully served the students of the University and the towns people of Chapel Hill for twenty seven years as the satisfier of the inner man. The first cafe teria owned by Gooch was open ed in the store where Eubanks drug store now , stands. He traveled around town, opening stores here and there, finally starting his sixth venture as a cafe proprietor at his present situation. Gooch acted as telephone operator for Chapel Hill when the telephone building was in ; the house where the Carolina U- Drive-It garage now is. He lived . in the same building and while residing there raised a family, of ten children. With the closing of his latest venture the sages of , the town are busily speculating as to whether Gooch will attmept to start in the cafeteria business" again. With his passing from the business world Chapel Hill loses one of its most colorful personalities. most colorful McCarthy Better X Dr. G. R. McCarthy, of the intones, axm uu - unique theatre and her capabili geology department, who under- fr0.En5land' AZ! ties as an actress this unusual went an appendectomy last week in Watt's Hospital, is reported to be improved. Mr. McCarthy, developed a case of bronchitis Sundav niirht whi6h, it was feared, might develop into pneu- Library Schedule The schedule of the library during the holidays is as fol lows: Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday. The reserve 8:15-5:00" 9:00-1:00 9:00-5:00 9:00-5:00 2:00-5:00 reading room will be closed from two o'clock Wednesday until eight-fifteen o'clock Monday morning. Re serve books may be checked out for the week-end between twelve and two o'clock Wed nesday, and are due back Mon day morning at ten-thirty o'clock. SYMBOLISM AND PESSIMISM FILL j RUSSIAN DRAMA Student of Soviet Stage Describes Russian Drama to Playmakers. Mrs. E. R. Murray spoke last night at eighth-thirty in the Play makers Theatre on "The Thea tre in Soviet Russia." Mrs. I Murray said that in order to un- i derstand the theatre under Soviet Russia one must under- t-stand that the Russian people have insisted on having drama and the fine arts throughout their history. To them things of mind are far more important than material comforts. This point is found in Oliver Saylor's book The Russian Theatre. Mr. Saylor, who was in Russia during the revolution of ,1917, says that they attended the thea tre in the midst of the firing. There are two outstanding features in the Russian theatre, Mrs. Murray tells us. The first of these is the finest art of sym bolism; the second, a Japanese influence which, though adapted to the Russian temperament, is quite obvious especially in the Meyerbold Theatre. In the old days only nobles went to the theatres so the lower classes were forced to stage their own drama. -The originality of this has come from the fact that the people were scattered and were very poor. Mrs. Murray says that drama is often born of lone liness and that the downtrodden try to fabricate a dream life. In this way, she says, the South may also develop an art in drama. After the talk an open forum was held, : in which Mrs. Mur ray, drawing from her personal i i experience, answered diverse auestions about. Soviet Russia. . she has been to Russia twice in the ast three ' years, spending three months there, , and . has i traveled to Vladivostok through , Siberia a trio which few tour jss make. ' " ViHiaiTiS Chosen . T() jjeet Cambridge In the tryout last night to select the second Carolina rep- resentative for the debate with Cambridge University, J. , C. Williams was chosen. Williams, with one of the Cambridge de- baters, will uphold the affirma- tive side of the question, Resolv- ed: That tne emergence oi wo- man from the home is a regret - i table feature of modem life, man from the home is a regret- The negative side of the query, will be supporxea oy .juld. .... ' i .1 TTT TT'1 ' -r J n-F Viq vrtatn ,.1J ; nnA uii nPmW nem 111 .wa., y No Mass - There will be no Mass in Ger gard hall 'Sunday, November 30 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, ARTISTS CHOSEN FOR PRODUCTION OF HE MESSIAH' The tenor, soprano, and con tralto for the Christmas orator io, The Messiah, to be presented in December have been chosen, December fifteenth in the music auditorium have been chosen, according to Dr. H. S. Dyer, of the music department. -The tenor will; be ung by Mr. Ed ward Molitore. Molitore has just finished a ten-weeks sea son with the Cincinnati Opera Company. He is considered one of the finest lyric tenors ever heard with the company. He is a graduate of Northwestern University. His most recent ap pearances with the Boston Grand Opera Company, and with the Detroit and Cincinnati com panies. The soprano will be sung by Mrs. Camilla Tentera Molhbre, AT ?J ' 'j 11 a nr ine wiie oi tne tenor. Mrs. - . -litore has sung as soloist ,h the St. Louis Symphony. r. and Mrs. Molitore are at pres ent singing at the First Presby terian Church in Greensboro. Dr. Dyer has heard them both sing in Greensbororand has said that their work is of the highest type. 1 Mme, Emily Berger Cullum, prominent Chicago singer, will be the contralto. Comment on her singing has been very com plimentary. At present, she is located at Davidson. Her hus- , The Thanksgiving dances will band, Ernest James Cullum is di-. begin with a tea dance Friday rector of the music department afternoon in Bynum gymnasium, at Davidson College. The artist The set continues with the soph to sing the bass in the play hasomore dance Friday night, a not been selected as yet, butwill ;m0rning and a tea dance Satmv probably be selected belore long. liirector oi riayers . Is Versatile Artist The members of , the Jitney Players who are appearing in the Playmakers Theatre Decem ber 1 and 2 are well-known ac tors to Broadway and leading' theatrical circles throughout the East. This company will present on December 1 at eight thirty o'clock The Murder in the Red Barn, a melodrama of 1840, and on December 2 Sheridan's comic opera The Duenna. -. Alice Keating Cheney, who is the active head of the organiza- tion since the death of her hus-'with Miss Convere McAden of band, Bushnell Cheney, with Charlotte. ' whom she had been co-founder Clyde Dunn of Kinston with and director, appears in the title Miss clair Hanes of Winston role in The Duenna and as Maria galem 11 lead the Thanksgiving Marten, the innocent heroine of ball on Saturday night. Edward The' Murder in the Red Bam. Wood of Wilmington with Miss Miss Keating, before her mar- Elizabeth Nunn of New Bern and riage and the founding of the ( Hemy Anderson with Miss Mar Jitney Players, had been playing j garet Powell of Asheville will as on Broadway under the man-: agement , of 'Arthur Hopkins and j " formuIated by the GerJ tl " . . . . man Club will govern the con- Barrymore during part of the &u the dances. Three run of Hamlet Miss Keatmg ; be- memberg organization tore her professional debut m . , , xt v j i ' . A j ! mg the dance are chosen to keep New York had been interested: . , M1 , llAA v- 4.1. 4. i - t, , x. 1 order and will meet with the ex m theatricals m Buffalo, wrhere . ... A , j . ' . . ecutive committee and report. she was active in the social :m, , -n a ... . , . j The chaperons will be approved world. After extensive travels j,- . . f ii, .u,, abroad she studied dancing un der the late Isadora Duncan. Of her work on the stage one critic has said : "Alice Keating wh0 has played many types hereabouts has ever the sure and gt lized touch certain indivi. jdual technique ghe gives satis. j fsLct in vp ' nnr hnth to the jdual technique ghe gives satis. ye and tQ mind, Besidesjthey must be at their lodgings , . abilit. HirpA.r nf this u" ""ltM .woman finds time to design the : costumes for the Jitney produc- - tions, as well as to assist and ad- vise in all departments. In both - plays the costumes are made from costume plates drawn by her. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER THREE STUDENTS HURT AS RESULT OF MOTOR CRASH While returning on a " week end trip to Fredericksburg, Virginia, three University stu dents were severely injured in an automobile accident near Richmond, Virginia. The three students are Sidney Rosen, Nat Chafetz, and Charles Lasko. The most seriously injured of the trio is Rosen, who is in a Richmond hospital suffering from internal injuries. An X-ray will be taken today to ascertain the extent of his hurts. Chafetz, the driver of the car, sustained severe laceration of the head and face, having two stitches taken in his forehead. Lasko suffered a ruptured blood vessel and contusions of his right leg. According to the students, they were driving along when an approaching car suddenly swerved into them, overturning the automobile, three times, and wrecking it entirely. The un known driver of the other car said that the wind blew his hat over his face and he was unable to see Chafetz's car in time to avoid a collision. The extent of the damage to the Virginian's car was a broken wheel and fender. Dance Series Is To Begin Friday day a Gimghoul dinner dance ti,p ThsTiWivw sptnrv night. Weede Meyer's orchestra, which has had engagements at f the University in the past, last i appearing, here in 1928, will play for all these dances. The sophomore dance Friday night will be led by Robert Car michael of New York City with Miss Rosemary Ward, also of New York City. They will be as sisted by Arlindo Cate of Greensboro with Miss Electra Waggoner of Greensboro, and Elliott Newcombe of Charlotte oy tne cnairxnan me xacuii-j committee onances. . Students, visitors, or alumni , may be suspended from the !dances for . misconduct on the 00r- '.o smoking or drinking is allowed. Girlsare not anowea to leave the floor without being accompanied by a chaperon and within thirty minutes alter tne close of the dance. Mrs. Knight Honored . - Mrs. F. G. Patterson, 229 j Franklin street, will entertain a number of friends at a luncheon J Friday in honor of Mrs. E. W. Knight who is leaving Saturday for China. 26, 1S2D Reappointed Rev. C. ExceU Rozzelle, who has served as minister of the lo cal Methodist Episcopal church in Chapel Hill for three years, was reappointed Monday to fill his old post here. LITERARY BODIES SELECT MEN FOR " ANNUAL DEBATE Mary D. Wright Debatei, Between Di and Phi, Set for December 2. Comnetition for nW 'mi t -- -- - - . i Dialectic and Philanthropic Chapel Hill. The bishop decided teams fpr the Mary D. Wright !to let Mr. Rozzelle remain here debate was ended Monday night j instead of sending hini to the by the selection of C. A.- Shreve 1 University Church in Atlanta, and McB. Fleming-Jones fromj01 which move had been the Senate, and H. H. Hobgood .Planned. and William Egbert Uzzell from' Mr. Rozzelle is an alumnus of thp A?spmblv i Duke, Emory, and Vanderbilf The meet will take place at seven-fifteen next Tuesday, De- cember 2; in Gerrard hall. The query is, Resolved r That the State or North Carolina Should Adopt a Luxury Tax For the Support of Institutions of High er Learning. The Di will uphold the negative and the Phi, the af- , , t . 4-i chosen by a committee from the Senate because it has been sug gested that the decreasing ap- nrftTin'oinna -frif TTni viTsifv might be increased by tMs!11 many such titles, means. This way of financing colleges has been tried in the West and Mid-West where some adoption while otherscondemp 0 dear Southland where a it. , ' The Mary D. Wright Debate was won last year by the team from the Senate, and the medal awarded to J. C. Williams. All iriAf nrp P-xDPripnced debaters. I having represented the Univer sity in at least two inter, colleg iate forensic contests. No Tar Heel Staff Meeting Sunday There will be no meeting of the Daily Tar Heel staff, Sunday night, it was announced by the managing editor of the publica tion yesterday. This regular weeklv meeting: has been post poned until three-fifteen p. m. onk Monday afternoon" All report ers, city editors, and members of the editorial board will be ex pected to attend this meeting un less previously excused by the managing editor. Infirmary List The following were confined to the infirmary yesterday: James B. Fair, W. R. McLaugh lin, W. A. Miller, N. R. Chafetz, and H. H. Hendlin, Hendlin who is ranked number four on the University tennis team, which left, for Virginia yesterday will most likely have recovered suf ficiently to accompany his team mates. 1 NUMB EV.ROZ 1ETURN it ml FOR FOURTH YEiR Reappointed as Paster cf Chapel Hill Methodist Church at v Request cf Friends. . The news was received in Chapel Hill yesterday that Bish op Edwin D. Mouzon had reap pointed the Rev. C. Excelle Roz zelle as pastor of the Chapel Hill Methodist church for his fourth consecutive year. The North Carolina Conference has just closed its annual session at Hen derson, North Carolina, and the appointments of the three hun dred Methodist ministers for Eastern North Carolina were read on Monday morning. Mr. Rozzelle has served as pastor of the local church for .the past three years, having come to Chapel Hill from Myers Park Methodist church in Charlotte. His many friends here are pleased that the conference saw I fit to send him back to this ' charSe- Manv requests went to the bishop and his cabinet from students, professors, and busi ness men in town asking that n r -T-k 11 1 j Jl l ' Mr. nozzene De reappomied xo Universities. He has held pro- ' minent pastorates in Texas, " Tv V T v -T T 1 but he considers tte pastorate in . , them all. Mr. Rozzelle is rated one of the most liberal of all Methodist ministers in the South, unhesitatingly speaking his mind on all the modern is- sues of theology, science, sociol- , , , -u-, , ogy, psychology, and philosophy. ! He has been called by his fellow 'ministers heretic, modernist,' i"1". " y T- a smile and the most generous spirit imaginable. "Chapel Hill is the one spot man can speaK ireeiy nis thoughts and not be burned at the stake," said Mr. Rozzelle in an interview yesterday with a (Continued on page two) OPPORTUNITY FOR JUNIOR CHEMIST The United States Civil Ser vice Commission has opened a position as junior chemist' to competitive examination. The entrance salary of this position is listed at $2,000 a year. Appli cations for the position must be on file , at the Civil Service Com mission office at Washington, D. C, not later than January 27, 1931. . Competitors must show that they have received a bachelor's degree ironr a college or uni versity of recognized standing. They must show "118 credit hours, 30 hours of which must have been in chemistry. Appli cants will be graded on general " chemistry- and elementary phy sics, and one or more of the fol lowing subjects; (1) advanced inorganic chemistry ; (2) analy tical chemistry; (3) organic chemistry; and (4) physical chemistry. Full information concerning this position may be received from the United States . Civil Service pommission or the Sec retary of the United States Civil Service Board at Washington, D, C, or from the local post-office. LIIJUIALLLJ A J TO raonia.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 26, 1930, edition 1
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