THE TAR HEEL
Official Oram of the Athletic Association of the
University of North Carolina
Published Weekly '
BOARD OF EDITORS
WILLIAM T. rOLK -JBditor-inChief
CXXAS. G. TENNENT- Managing Editor
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
J. Eari.ii Harris
H. G. IUitv
Frank Clabvoh .
C B. Holding
G. L. WlMBEBIT
M. B. FOWLER
C. S. HARRIS
Edwin S. Hartshorn
W. H. Stephenson
E. O. FIT2SIMM0NS
J. C. Eaton
Anna Forbes Liddell
Advertising Manager
.Circulation Manager
ASSISTANT? MANAGERS
W. G. Burgess It. E. Prick
Watt eaoi.k S. C. Hodoin
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THE TAR HEEL CONTEST
- Now is the time for all good
men to join in the Tar Heel con
test, not a contest for . automo
biles or five-dollar gold pieces or
anything of the kind, but a con
test for places on the Board.
, Freshmen, Sophomores, Jun
iors, anybody who is coming back
next year is eligible. Look up the
news hints and the requirements
posted in the Journalism Room of
the Library and in the Y. M. C.
A. Then get to work ! . And if
you think of any thing not listed
in the news hints that would make
interesting reading, write it up.
Originality pays.
We shall not give you a roseate
picture of the Tar Heel Board
reclining on the well known "flow
ery beds of ease" ; no newspaper
man is a lotus eater. Not even an
editor's conscience is so hardened
as to condone the' perpetration of
such a fabrication.
But it is an active, stimulating,
fascinating sort of work. It is
good training too. And in conclu
sion that invisible halo known as
college honor is supposed to accom
pany it.
No one should hang back for
fear of being disappointed. At
least ten associate editors must be
elected for next year. Twenty men
must be nominated . to fill these
places when the Athletic Associa
tion has its meeting in May. Those
nominated will be the ones who
have done the' best work in the
contest.
Congratulations, sympathy and
best wishes to the future editors!
THE LEFT FIELD FENCE
Another one of those unneces
sary evils is the left field fence of
Emerson Field.
, Unnecessary, ' because it could
be taken down or slipped back. An
evil, because it causes an epidemic
of slugging at the ball on the part
of the home team, because it is
unfair to the pitchers, and because
it is not good baseball, this fence
magic which transforms an easy
out or a simple single into a
homer.
Already at least eight home runs
have been gotten over or through
the fence in the six games on the
Hill. That is about one and one
third per game, which is probably
the State record. The fence may
be at the regulation distance, but it
is safe to say that no other respec
table ball park in the State has a
. left field fence as close to the home
plate as ours is.
There might be some sense in
having an oak tree at'second base;
it would give the players shade in
hot weather. But the sense in hav
ing a left field fence and a set of
ground rules that render a normal
game of baseball practically impos
sible, is hard to see.
JUNIOR WEEK DECLARED
A BRILLIANT SUCCESS
(Continued from Page One)
ed at the close of the evening. The
leaders of this dance were John
Cotten Tayloe with Miss Ernestine
Forbes, William Dewar with Miss
Agnes Cotten Timberlake, and
Marvin Bobbins with Miss Bessie
Lumsden.
Friday morning the Pi Kappa
Alpha's dance was much enjoyed.
In the afternoon, the Sophomore
Hop very ditto. The leaders
Buck Wimberley, Vaughn Haw
kins and Pock Norris. The Ger
man Club dance Friday night held
its own in spite of less favorable
weather conditions. Bobo Tan
ner with -Miss Julia Scott, Ham
Horton with Miss Serena Dalton,
and Beanie Kinlaw Avith Miss
Nancy Greene were the pilots.
Following is a more or less ac
curate list of the dancers:
W. McDuffie Ann Taliaferro.
W. B. Dalton May Coan, Lucy
Ilajues, Edith Lester, Winston,
Grace Overman, Salisbury
W. Grimes Luta Bell Spann,
Raleigh.
n. Bellamy Placid Clark,
Tarboro.
W. Fitzsimmons Eliz Miller,
Charlotte.
T. Norwood - Sarah Borden,
Goldsboro.
F. Shamburger-DeWitt Chat
ham, Margaret Fletcher, Winston.
H. Horton Serena Dalton,
Winston.
R. Foster, Margaret Best, War
saw. Bob Page Nell Horton, Win
ston. ' . . . ..
S. Telfair Liza Leach, Cotten
Timberlake, Raleigh.
J. Powell Julia Manning, Ra
leigh: L. Thorpe Jvatherine Crews,
Raleigh. ' '
George Sloan Sophie Hollis
ter, New Bern.
-J. Jones Shep Leak, Wades
boro. P. Edmundson Julia J erman,
Raleigh.
T. Strange Sue. Northrop,
Wilmington.
J. Tayloe Ernestine Forbes,
Greenville.
R. Young Rosa Kincaid, Frif
fin, Ga.
F.' Cohn Sue Sussman, Rich
mond, Va.
. G. Ramsay Louise Bolton,
Norfolk.
R. II. Wright Eliz Telfair,
F. Clarkson Alice 'Webster,
Norfolk.
Raleigh.
R. D. Stockton Virginia Wig
gins, Winston. .
E. F, Liles Lucy Foulks,
Rockingham.
II. II. ' Weeks, Joe WhiteRa
leigh. Harold Cooley Lucy Bessitte,
Nashville.
W. B. Kinlaw Nancy Green,
Durham.
F. . C. Jordan Stewart Alex
ander. Wm. Erwin Mr. and - Mrs.
Wm. Erwin, Durham.
G. F. Parker Sarali Erwin,
Durham.
E. K. Proctor Reynolds, Fay
etteville. W. Bailey Whitaker, Wilson.
G. Crowell Bowen, Raleigh.
Bobbins Tilghman, Wilson.
N. B. Bioughton Adele Mon
roe, Annapolis, : Md., Francis
Parks, Raleigh.
S. B. Tanner Julia Scott,
Charlotte.
II. Harper Kitty May Irwin,
Reidsville.
R. Pippin Marguerite Penn,
Reidsville. '
Some effects of cigarette
smoking upon University
boys as related by them:
Nervousness
Shortness of Breath
Dullness
K. Purdue Florence Rennek
er, Winston.
F. Hazelhurst Dickey Harris,
Wilmington.
D. McMillan Emma Pember
ton, Fayetteville, Amanda Pars
ley Wilmington.
J. M. McLeod Mae Wilson,
Florence, S. C. . V , -
II. Black Virginia Allen,
Greenville, S. C.
Hugh Smith Marg Lawton;
Hartsville, Nancy Ravenel, Spar
tanburg, Julia Henry, Durham. ,
R. C. DeRossett Kate Murch
ison, Wilmington.
SALOME CAPTIVATES
CHAPEL HILL AUDIENCE
(Continued from Page One)
by the way what would he have
said had he been here ?) "the
gum-chewing, fudge-eating, sissy
fied" danscnse. She "melted in
liquid lines" like the papers say
about real Salome's and danced,
again and again interpretative
dances of various emotions.
Capps as Herman Smokle,
Prof, of Eugenics, was entirely on
to his action, enunciation and fa
cial expression. He danced with
Salome in the Chapel Hill man
ner ! J , , 7
Hjarris, as Ormand Chateaubri
auld de Simonds, was very French
except in language. His make
up, due to Dougald McMillan's ar
tistry and various pencils of the
properties man plus a wig, was ex
cellent. V
. Jones, as .Jane, was absolutely
inimitable 1 She lisped softly and
boarding school girlishly. Her
dresses fitted well.
Smith made an ideal Mrs. Boss
everydamthing. : Hale, Ransom,
Norwood, O'Brien, Suddreth,
Crawford and many thcr gay and
dignified seniors showed their
dramatic ability and stage pres
ence for once; in their lives even
if the Washington Square players
haven't signed them all up.
The scenery , designed by the
committee and executed by Rand,
Mr. Temple and others was ex
cellent. The music gotten up and direct
i3
4,
.6
DC
JI7HEN you hear the front-door
V V knocker it means that somebody
that's out is tryin' t get in. An same
way with most other knockers. . A
No need to "knock" where your pro
duct's rifirht. Just tell the fact. Every
bit ol VELVET is naturally aired two
years to make it the smoothest smok
lag tobacco.
1UL
ed by Harris was excellent, but the
abrenoe of the orchestra was sen
ous draw back.
The committee considered it
success. A3 a proof of which, it
was noted that Jor the first time
in years, not a single person left
before the end of the play.
The following were the com
mittee : 0. Rand, ex officio, Capps,
chairman, Tflfair, Harm, Lin
dau, Polk.
CAROLINA IN FAST GAME
SHUTS OUT WOFFjORD 3 TO 0
(Continued from Page One)
Lawton yielded three aits whil
Kinlaw turned loose four.
Carolina ab r ii ro a e
Stewart; cf . 4 1 1 0 0 0
Herty, ss.. . 3 0 0 3 2 2
Barnes, rf . . 3 2 1 2 0 .0
Foteer, lb.. 3 0 0 12 1 1
Jennctte, 2b. 3 0 0 1 3 0
Feimster, 3b 3 0 1 0 2 1
Weeks, If... -3 0 0 1 0 0
Roberts, c . . 3 0 0 8 l' 0
Kinlaw, p : .2 0. 0 0 1 0
Total... 27 3 3 27 10 4
Wofford AB E II PO A E
Osborne, ss. 4 0 (h 0 2 2
Cauthen, 3b. 2 0 s 1 0 4 2
Wiggins, cf. 4 0 ; ' 0 1 0 0
Vaughan, lb. 4 0 2 13 2 1
Boseman, 2b 4 0 0 1 2 0
Wood, If ... 3 0 0 4 0 0
Ouzts, rf... 4 0 0 0 0 0
Bunson, c . . 3 0 0 4 0 0
Lawton, p . . 3 0 1 1 2 0
Total. . .31 0 4 24 12 5
Summary:
Wofford . . . . . . .000 000 0000
Carolina, ... . . . .600 111 OOx 3
Singles, Cauthen, Vaughan,
Lawton, Stewart, Feimster. Two
base hitj Vaughan. Home ru.i,
Barnes." Sacrifice, Cauthen, Her-
ty, Kinlaw. Double play, Folgf r
to Herty. Left on bases, Wofford
4, Carolina 2. First base on er
rors, .Carolina 3, Wofford 2. Base
on balls, off Lawton 1, off Kinlaw
1. Struck out, by Kinlaw 6, of
Lawton 3. Hit by pitcher! by
Kinlaw (Wood). Wild pitch,
Lawton. Earned runs, Carolina.
Time of game, 1 hour,t 40 imnute3.
is
2UL
11
. n
GORBON-aJi in.
"ARROW
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