Y . M. C. A. ANNIVEESAB Y PROGRAM MEMORIAL HALL 10:30 7 Y.M.C. A. ANNIVERSARY PROGRAM MEMORIAL HALL 10:30 VOLUME XLI CHAPEL HILL, N. O, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1932 NUMBER 19 MM rfril NTERTAMiIENT SERIES WILL BE BEGIMTUESDAY Celebrated American Violinist . Will Appear in Concert in Memorial Hall. Ablert Spalding, celebrated violinist, will appear at Memorial ball, Tuesday, October 18, in the first of the series of entertain ments presented by the student entertainment committee. Spal ding will give an original con cert with Andre Benoist assist ing -at -the piano. The program will begin at 8:00 o'clock. The famous musician is brought to Chapel Hill by the committee through the auspices of the Wolfsohn Musical Bu reau of New York, Inc. Tickets on Sale Tickets for this concert may be purchased in 203 South build ing for one dollar. Entertain ment booklets have been al ready distributed to students of the schools of commerce, educa tion, and liberal arts. All other students and townspeople can purchase these booklets for three dollars from Dean A. W. Hobbs' omce in South building. These passbooks entitle admission to the entire series of programs sponsored during the year by the entertainment committee. Spalding is the American violinist whose career is said to present a notable refutation of the idea that American artists cannot cope with foreign rivals He has appeared in every famous music house in the world and has met with overwhelming sue cess. Studied in Europe Spalding was born in Chicago forty-four years ago. He moved to New York when only three (Continued on page two) Founding Of Y.M - Bitterness Against Moral Laxity George Williams, Worker in an Was Original Founder of 5,000 Branches and Over Religious resentment at the moral laxity in the conditions surrounding him led George Wil liams to the founding of the Y. M. C. A. over eighty years ago. The movement which be gan as an effort to give work men religious stimulation has since developed into an inter national good-will, philanthropic, and spiritual organization. In 1844, Williams, troubled by the low spiritual state of his co-workers in an English dra pery establishment, inaugurated weekly prayer meetings in his bedroom for their benefit. Ridi cule, opposition, and contempt confronted Williams and his eleven colleagues from employer and employee alike; from the former because he would resent an effort that might reform his tyrannical position over, his v.-orkers, and from the latter be cause they were under the spell cf gambling houses and casinos of ill-repute. Name Chosen p in their v . , w y J. KkTU I w purpose, the twelve young men organized and adopted the title the Young Men's Christian Asso- Clafirm TVToTvi'koY'eViin was lim- kea to Christian men and the cues were fixed at two shillings Per annum. Confident that in their hands ky the solution to the grave Problem of the day, the group continued to meet at fourteen Awards To Be Given At Court Of Honor At the Court of Honor meet ing of the Chapel Hill and Carr- boro Boy Scout troops, Dr. Frank Graham will present eagle badges to three scouts, in Ger- rard hall at 7:30 o'clock tonight. Reverend Eugene Olive, of the Chapel Hill Baptist church, will present the first class badges: F. M. Durham, of Carboro, the second class badges; Colonel J. H. Pratt, of Chanel Hill, the tenderfoot badges; and W. E. Caldwell, of the history depart ment, the merit badges. Badges will be presented to life and star scouts by dean M. T. Van Hecke, of the law school. UNION FORUM TO MEET WEDNESDAY FOR ORGANIZATION Fraternities Are Asked to Elect Rep resentatives to Organization By Wednesday. The Union orum will con vene for the purpose of electing j three members to serve on the board of directors of Graham Memorial, making recommenda tions to the board and the man ager, and to make plans for the organization, Wednesday night at 9 :30 o'clock in 214, Graham Mpmnrinl Thp Rpprptarv will be elected and dates will be set for the meetings, with E. C. Daniel, Jr., acting as ex-officio chairman. Fraternities are requested to elect their representatives at their regular meetings by Wed nesday night. Representatives from the various dormitories have already been elected. Students living in town will Memorial hall Walter B. Patter elect Forum officers at a smoker son will give an all-request pro- at Graham Memorial Monday night at 9 :30 o'clock. Co-ed of- ficers will be elected through the Woman's Association, Tuesday afternoon, at 4 :30 o'clock. C.A.Was Due To English Drapery Establishment, Association, Which .Now Has Half Million Members. -o different houses until the mem- bership totaled seventy. At this time an executive officer t j i i i j 1 J was seiecxea ana cumirai mu missionary work were intro- duced into the program of the The next program will be de society. Haling engaged per- voted to the more classic re manent quarters, the associa- tion made available to its mem bers a well selected library, classes for mental culture and for suitable companion- rooms shin. T.f pr Fnnnrfprf in America In 1851 the Y. M. C. A. took mnt. in North America, first in Mnntrpal. Cnnada. Boston is generally credited with having t.hP first. V.. M. C. A. in the United States, that chapter hav- ing been established in Decern her. 1851. While the London Association had developed a re ligious, educational, and social program, it was the New York group that initiated physical trainiTKy ss a feature of the work. George Williams was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1894, at the Golden Jubilee of the i. M. C. A. Well might the Associa tion celebrate with 5,000 branch es in nearly every country in the world and over half a mil lion members. Over 2,000 dele gates from all points of the world congregated for one of the largest and greatest religious conferences which London or the world had ever seen. WILL SPEAK TODAY V 1L Pictured above is Dr. Howard college, in Winston-Salem, who of the Y. M. C. A. anniversary celebration here this morning. Dr. Rondthaler was, at one time, Y. M. C. A. during his undergraduate days. ORGAN PROGRAM PLANNED TONIGHT Concert Will Feature Walter Patter son at Organ and Bill Alls brook Singing. Today at 7:30 o'clock in the gram. There have been several hundred numbers requested and the program will consist of those most frequently named. A variety of selections will be played, but the general trend will be towards popular pieces. As an addition to tne pro gram, siii AiisorooK: wno nas been with a dance band on the r-k ! 11 1 T 1 1 campus for three years has con sented to sing several popular numbers. He is well known to students here, many having heard him this summer at Vir ginia Beach. With Walter Pat- terson's music, and Allsbrook's I i sinerinff. an excellent crowd . is expected. quests. y. m. C. A. Meetings Cancelled The weekly meeting of the ol hcers ot tne tnree caDinets m the campus Y. M. C. A. has been cancelled. The meeting is usual 7 conducted Tiaay mornings during the assembly period, but due to the special program to be sponsureu.uy uie x. m. . a. ui assembly today it is necessary I that it be cancelled. HOOVER COMMENDS "Y" FOUNDER The following telegram was received last night by the local branch of the Y. M. C. A., from President Hoover: "The Young Men's Christian Association has been a tower of moral strength in every community since the earliest childhood recollection of most of the men and women now living, and thus, it is almost startling to be reminded that the founder of this great organization, if he were living today would be only eleven years older than a centenarian. The celebration of Founder's Day on October 14 will be the occasion for much historic and personal reminiscence of that great man, George Williams, and of the stupendous spiritual education and material blessings wrought by the association, born of his vision, and firmly rooted in his indefatigable labors and his optimistic spirit. . To the youth of our land, indeed of all the world, it will be a day reminding them of the possibilities of service to millions of others that lie in unselfish application of spiritual insight, developed industry, and warm good-will towards all one's fellowmen.', ' . HERBERT HOOVER. -' V : t ; ', - VA .'V vA NV Y- - A . - .? Rondthaler, president of Salem will deliver the principal address president of the University DAILY QUOTED BY LITERARY DIGEST 'Daily Tar Heel" Editorial Mentioned In Article Concerning Tatum Petition. The Daily Tar Heel is quot ed in the current issue of The Literary Digest, famed national weekly. In an article in which the circumstances of the Tatum petition are discussed, this paper is mentioned and quoted as say ing, of Langston Hughes, "His poetry as well as his speaking is the expression of a clear and sincere spirit." In its analysis of the petition, the Digest says that the publi cations of the University of North Carolina are "widely her alded as the center of liberalism among colleges and universi ties." Students of English All students majoring in Eng lish in the college of liberal arts are asked to meet in 201 Mur phey today during the chapel hour to discuss matters connect ed with the comprehensive ex- I animation and the major. The meeting will not last longer than half an hour. Union County Club An organization meeting of the Union county club will take place at 7:30 o'clock this eve ning in 215 Graham Memorial for the purpose of electing officers. Deputation Team Is Sent To Aberdeen A large audience of students in the Aberdeen high school at tended yesterday the program of the first deputation team to be sent out this year by the Uni versity Y. M. C. A. The University group present ed a program dealing with the ideals, principles, advantages, and activities of Hi-Y clubs. An entire school period was taken up by the group. All of the members of the group are sophomores at the University. They are: Jack Poole, Julien D. Winslow, Herb ert Suiter, and Locke Sloope. NEW SYSTEM FOR ACTIVITIES DAY IS BEING WORKED ON Series of Assembly Hours Will Be Devoted to Presenting Campus Activities to Students. Activities Day this year will not be conducted as a special chapel program set aside for the 1 I 9 purpose oi presenting various activities to students, but a series of assembly hours will be devoted to that purpose, Hay wood Weeks, president of the student body, announced yester day. This special occasion was in augurated last year for the pur pose of allowin the major or ganizations on the campus to present the leaders in those ac tivities to the campus as a whole. This year one or two assem bly periods of the week will be devoted to different activities. The Di Senate and Phi assem bly have already presented dis cussions of their work at as sembly. The change in the plan was made because it was thought that one assembly hour was too short to have each of the acti vities properly presented. Early "Y" Here Served Mainly As Social Center For Students 0 Local Association Was Third Snch College Association in America, Being Founded in April, 1860; Object of Association Was Improvement of Spiritual Conditions of Students. o The following excerpts from an article appearing in the Carolina Magazine for April, 1914, written by Philip Wool cott, now a banker in Richmond, tell about the early years of the Carolina Y. M. C. A.: "Before 1860 there had been no organized group of young men at the University who were pursuing the work and spirit of Christ. There had been, how ever, some thirteen years after the first Y. M. C. A. beginnings in London in 1844, a movement in a few of the American cities and colleges "to organize the earnest young Christians into an active, co-operative brotherhood. During the collegiate year 1857 58, Y. M. C. A.'s were founded independently at Michigan and Virginia, the latter having for one of its most ardent advocates and hardest worker Dr. Thomas Hume, who later was to take such an active interest in the Carolina Y. M. C. A. The Caro lina Association followed in a very few years, for in April of the year 1860, the religiously in clined churchmen of the Univer sity established the local organi zation, the third college associa tion in the United States. Constitution of Association "The constitution of the asso ciation was based on that of Virginia. The object was the 'improvement Of the spiritual condition of the students and the RONDTHALER TO MAKE PRINCIPAL YJLCADDRESS Reception Sponsored by "Y" Will Be Staged Tonight in Gra ham MemoriaL Two features will be offered today by the campus Y. M. C. A. in their annual celebration of the 111th anniversary of the birth of Sir George Williams, found er of the international Young Men's Christian Association. The main event on the day's program will be an address by Dr. Howard Rondthaler at the student assembly period. Dr, Rondthaler is president of Sa lem college in Winston-Salem, and he was a former president of the University Y. M. C. A. during his undergraduate days here. Graham Memorial Reception From 8:30 to 10:00 tonight an open house is scheduled for Gra ham Memorial. All students in the University are invited to at tend the function, which will be the first reception the "Y" has sponsored for students in many years. The affair will be strict ly informal. Music will be in cluded in the evening program and refreshments will be served by the wives of the members of the association board of direc tors, assisted by co-eds in the University. At the punch bowls will be: Mrs. Harry F. Comer, Mrs. Frank P. Graham, Mrs. E. C. Branson, Mrs. H. W. Odum, Mrs. R. B. House, Mrs. F. F. Bradshaw, Mrs. English Bagby, Mrs. J. Maryon Saunders, and Mrs. Harold D. Meyer. Girls who are to serve are: Misses Elizabeth Phillips, Betty Barnett, Mary. Byrd Perrow, (Continued on page two) extension of religious advant ages to destitute points in the neighborhood of the University.' "This following card was pub lished and sent abroad through out the state: We have the pleasure to announce that the students of the University of North Carolina have establish ed a Young Men's Christian As sociation. " 'If parents and others who send young men to the Univer sity will give them letters of in troduction to us, it will afford us great pleasure to introduce them to the pious students of the University, and also to the pas tors of the church to which they or their friends may belong. " 'The association hopes in this way to accomplish much good; for sad experience has taught us that many pious and moral young men are led astray by falling into the company of the dissipated and vicious when they enter college'." Organization of Association The following is an account of the foundation, taken from the North Carolina University Mag azine, May 1860 : "This body has been organized and gives promise of great bene fit to the students and to all others who may choose to con nect themselves with it. It is in stituted for the extension of christian sympathy and religious (Continued on last page)