Read The Ads
TM IEE1
Read The Ads
Vol. No. XXX.
Chapel Hill, N. C, Tuesday, May 16, 1299.
No. 54
Emerson Field Scene of Three Closing Triumphs
y
SIX NEW SATYRS PICKED
Thompson, McCee, Mobley, Winston,
Haronian and Sidney Blackmer
Spotted by Dramatic Order.
COSTUMES-FUN-FRIVOLITY
(By G. W. L.)
In a brilliant masquerade success
the Dramatic Order of Satyrs
"spotted" three new regular and three
honorary members into their ranks
at Swain Hall Friday evening during
perhaps the most sparkling carnival
of its kind ever seen in the state.
The big program for the night of
fun and frolic carried eignt numbers
and everyone of them was a sensa
tion with Miss Ada;e Brown's
"Vision of Salome" and the dancing
numbers of Wood Williams and Miss
Mike Tucker drawing most applause.
The Croziers also made distinct hits
in their two appearances in "Espano"
and "The Skaters."
Although not the most sensational,
the most interesting feature of the
program was "In the Court of Bac
chus" in which the Satyrs appeared
on the floor costumes as inhabitants
of the infernal regions and selected
their new members and brought them
out for their distinguished service in
the drama.
R. L. Thompson, Allan McGee,
Warren Mobley, little George Win
ston, F. J. Haronian, and Sidney
Blackmer were spotted, the last three
named as honorary members of the
Order.
The whole program with its regu
lar . numbers and its intervening
dances in the large hall transformed
into a dazzling cabaret was a success.
Clown bumped his pretty little ballet
dancer partner into bell hop or the
guy as "Saturday Night - Bath,"
knight swung fair lady of long ago
'round and 'round midst other as at
tractively costumed couples. The
floor was a seething mass of sparkling
costumes, rubes, French maids, of
ficers in uniform representing prac
tically every nation on the globe,
flirting vamps behind masks, tramps,
convicts, girlish clowns, clownish
girls, girlish men, and menish girls.
They were all there, some in masks,
some not, some in costumes, some in
Tuxedos, some in full dress, and
some bird came almost but that
had better be left out.
And they danced, those masquer
aders, while outsiders came inside
by window and back door and stood
on tables and chairs and climbed this
ANNOUNCEMENT.
The public i invited to at
tend the annual tap day cere
monies of the Senior Order of
the Golden Fleece, tonight, at
8:30 o'clock in Memorial Hall.
Governor Cameron Morrison
will deliver the address. Inas
much as no invitation for
membership are given out,
juniors or seniors who are will
ing to accept membership will
be present the juniors occu
pying their regular chapel
eats.
The Golden Fleece.
STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
BY CAROLINA
AFTER TIGHT BATTLE
Llewellyn in Last Mound Appearance
! Bests Curtis in Pitching Duel.
! Fielding the Feature.
STATE HELD TO FIVE HITS
E
OF
University Treasurer's Approaching
Marriage in September Is Made
Known at Village Social.
(Continued on Page Three)
BRYSON PITCHES A 9 T0 1
VICTORY OVER CENERALS
Revenges His Severe Drubbing From
the Virginians in Early
Part of Season.
Carolina made it two out of three
with Washington and Lee on Emerson
Field, Thursday afternoon, by over
whelmingly defeating them with a
9 to 1 score.
Bryson who was on the mound for
Carolina pitched superb ball through
out the contest. All told he gave
up three widely scattered hits to the
Generals, getting sweet revenge for
the defeat they handed him at Lex
ington. Linberg, the General's twirler, af
ter making a bad start in the first
and second innings, settled down and
worked out a good game until the
Tar Heels opened up their big guns
in the eighth, and drove him from
the box after two men were down,
and six runs were put across the plat
ter. McCallum, the relief pitcher,
then forced McDonald to hit a weak
grounder to short for the third out.
Shirley and Red Johnson had on
their batting clothes. Shirley rap
ped out two singles and a double out
of four times up, and Red secured
two singles out of four appearances
at the plate.
Carolina started the scoring in the
first inning, when McDonald tripled,
and scored when Fred Morris' next
up, thrown out at first.
The Tar Heels pushed over two
additional ,. tallies , in the, second in
ning on three singles ana a fielder's
The announcement of the aproach
ing wedding of J. A. Warren, treas
urer and bursar of the University,
to Miss Pattie Spurgeon, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Spurgeon of
Hillsboro, was made at a lawn party
held at the home of Mrs. J. P. Has
sell of that village, last Saturday
afternoon. The wedding is to come
off in September.
Early last fall there was a wild
rumor floating over the campus that
Mr. Warren was to be married the
following Christmas. This report
came to the Tar Hell office and the
managing editor assigned about six
men to use all sorts of diplomacy in
getting the facts of the case from
him, but every time the question
was broached by some ambitious
news-gatherer," he held his tongue
and his silence was ithought to be
conclusive proof Of hifrguilt. How
ever the rumor was traced back to
its origin and its source lay in some
boys teasing Mr. Warren about the
surmised courtship between him and
Mrs. Ledbettef at whose home he was
then taking his meals.
Miss Spurgeon is an alumna of
North Carolina College for Women
and is now a teacher in the public
schools of Durham. It is said that
their marriage will be the culmina
tion of an extended courtship and
engagement.
Paulson Gets Sore When New
Laundry Locker Is Broken Up
Laundry lockers are being built in
the four dormitories Old East, Old
West, Carr and Smith buildings
which have not already laundry clos
ets. Although these lockers are being
built only for the safeguarding of the
students' clothes, and although the
cost of construction comes from the
laundry fees of the students, certain
valiant souls thought it necessary
Friday night to celebrate the victory
of the afternoon by overturning and
breaking up the partly completed
locker in Smith building.
Mr. Paulson delivered his ulti
matum Saturday, saying that the
next locker to be broken, would
mean the end of all laundry service
in the building. The broken locker
would be removed, and each student
in the building would be obliged to
carry his laundry to and from the
laundry plant.
The manager of the laundry added
that he did not mean this as hot air.
(Continued on Page Three)
Horse-Shoe Pitching Again
Comes Into Popular Favor
Horse-ahoe pitching has again
come into its own as a Carolina sport.
Since the Olympic games held last
week in Durham in which this an
cient sport was such an added at
traction it has been gaining popu
larity on the campus. Even before
this time members of the Zeta Psi
Fraternity found that ringing the
stob gave pleasure and passed many
happy hours handling the lucky
horse-shoe. The Tar Heel Tavern
team is rapidly improving their form
and soon will be able to challenge
Old West building's aggregation with
a fair chance at winning.
E. C. Hunt is the champion and
will meet all comers. He shows
evidence of -having considerable prac
tice at stable golf before.
Hartsell's State College warriors
(went down In defeat before Bill Fet
j jer's aggregation on Emerson Feld
I Friday afternoon by a score of 4 to
i 1. By this victory Carolina com
pletely removed the doubts as to who
will be state champions in baseball.
The game developed into a splen
did pitching duel between Llewellyn
and Curtis. Each pitcher allowed
I five hits, and both were a trifle wild
at times. Brilliant fielding held down
the score. It was Llewellyn's last
appearance on the mound for Caro
lina, and it was a fitting climax for
his wonderful record of 11 straight
wins this season.
Carolina drew first blood in the
first on two walks and F. Morris'
single. Three singles, a base on
balls and a sacrifice fly accounted
for two more in the sixth. Caro
lina's final marker was annexed in
the eighth on an infield hit, an error
and a sacrifice.
State threatened a number of
times; their only run was a score in
the ninth on two hits and an error.
Both outfields furnished the field
ing features of the afternoon. Nor
wood and Johnston, of State, rob
bed the Carolina batters of a num
ber of hits. For the Tar Heels,
Lefty Wilson raced back and pulled
one down close to the hedge, and
Bonner threw out two men at the
plate who attempted to store from
second on singles.
Lassiter, of State, was the batting
hero, securing three of State's five
hits. F. Morris, of Carolina hit two
singles out of his four appearances
at the plate.
Box score and summary:
N. C. State. AB. R. H. PO. A. E.
Ruth, If 3 0 1 0 0 0
Norwood, cf . . 3 0 0 4 0 0
Johnson, rf . . . 4 0 1 0 0 0
Redfern, ss . . . 4 0 0 0 3 0
Holland, 3b ... 4 0 0 1 0 0
Lassiter, lb ... 4 1 3 9 0 1
Curtis, p 3 0 0 1 2 0
Blue, 2b 4 0 0 2 3 0
Parsons, c 2 0 0 6 0 0
Floyd x 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 1 5 24 8 2
T
COMES AS SEQUEL TO
ATHLETIC CONTROVERSY
Chairman - of Faculty Committee
Takes Step Because , He Feels
Unable to Secure Support.
A. W. HOBBS TAKES PLACE
(Continued on Page Three)
TENNIS T
VICTORS IN CLOSE MATCH
Defeats Davidson in Doubles and
Singles Leave Next Week
on Northern Trip.
The resignation of Dr. Charles S
Mangum as chairman of the faculty
committee on athletics was an
nounced last week. Dr. Mangum
submitted his resignation to Presi
dent Chase a few days after the ac
tion ;of the committee in rescinding
the rule concerning summer baseball.
Allen W. Hobbs, associate professor
of applied mathematics, has been
chosen to succeed Dr. Mangum.
It is generally understood that Dr.
Mangum's resignation was hastened
by the outcome of the recent con
troversy, although he has been con
sidering such action for some time
past.
"I don't want the boys to think
that I got mad and quit," said Dr.
Mangum Saturday when asked for a
statement concerning his action. "I
simply found myself in the minority
and unable to secure the support of
a majority of the students, alumni or
faculty. I was perfectly consci
entious in my stand on the recent
ruling, but since I could not get the
support necessary to put it across
I decided it would be best for me to
withdraw and let someone take
charge who could get that support. I
still think that I'm right about it."
President Chase's report on Dr.
Mangum's resignation is as follows:
"It is with deep regret that I an
nounce the resignation of Dr. Chas.
S, Mangum as chairman of the Fac
ulty , Committee on Athletics. Dr.
Mangum has felt for some time that
the time was at hand when he might
well lay down the burden of the
work, and now that the Southern
Intercollegiate Conference has been
formed, and the faculty's attitude
toward the conference has been
made clear, it seemed to him that
the time had come when he might
properly carry out his plan by re
signing the chairmanship.
"I have asked Allan W. Hobbs,
Associate Professor of Applied Math
ematics, to take over the chairman
ship, and he has accepted. Dr. Hobbs
is himself an ' athlete of reputation,
and has been for some time a mem
ber of the Athletic Committee. He
knows college athletics thoroughly,
and his standards are high and sound.
CAROLINA'S BASEBALL SEASON IS
ENDED WITH SENSATIONAL VICTORY
OVER HARD HITTING TRINITY TEAM
CO-OP SYSTEM ADOPTED
FOR TRAINING ENGINEERS
Adoption of Popular Scheme Due to
Determined Efforts of Professors
Braune and Daggett.
(Continued on Page Four.)
. , The co-operative system of edu
cation has finally been put across in
the engineering school by professors
G. M. Braune and P. H. Daggett, af
ter nine months of strenuous effort in
its behalf, and will go into effect
with the beginning of the coming
summer school. Braune and Daggett
were assisted by associate professor
of highway engineering, H. F. Jan-da.
Co-operative education was first
employed at the University of Cin
cinnati, and was instituted in 1906,
due to the efforts of Professor Her
man Schneider. This professor had
to beg 28 students there to try the
system for the first year. Last year
there were over a thousand students
at that institution taking the co-operative
course, and many were
turned away. There are several
colleges in the country today that
have this system as a result of the
success of the course at the Univer
sity of Cincinnati. Among them are
Georgia Tech, Boston Tech, Univer
sity of Pittsburg, Harvard, and Mar
guette University; the Only academic
college trying the system is Antioch
College.
In the co-operative system a stu
dent not only gets the theoretical
side of engineering, but also the
practical side, ajid by actual expe'ri
eifpe. Instead - of staying in the
class room all the time the student
spends alternate periods there and
in work shops, building highways
doing construction work, and the
like. In this way the student learns
by experience how to apply the theory
that he gets in the class room by
actual practice. He meets the dif
ficulties that will confront him later,
and learns while in school how to
solve them.
Ninth Inning Rally and Wild
Throw by Neal Saves
the Day.
HEAVY HITTING FEATURES
"Lefty" Wilson Pitches Last College
Game Trinity Batters Take Re
venge For Former Defeats.
Carolina wound up her 1922 base
ball season in a blaze of glory Sat
urday afternoon by winning the most
exciting game ever staged on Emer
son field from Trinity in a sensa
tional ninth inning rally by a score
of 8 to 7. "Monk" McDonald trot
ted across the plate with the winning
run when Neal's throw to catch F.
Morris stealing second went to cen
ter field.
By winning this game Carolina
ended the most successful season in
her history and now has the un
disputed championship of the state,
only two games having been dropped
out of the 21 played.
Never was a game more replete'
with thrills. Carolina's rally in the
seventh that gave her a three-run
lead apparently sewed up the game.
But Trinity came back strong in the
eighth and scored four runs, which
game them a one-run lead. And in
the ninth inning this margin had in
creased to three. But Bill Fetzer's.
warriors were not to be beaten. They
went to the bat in their half of the
ninth arid secured the four runs
necessary to win'.
"Lefty" Wilson, who had previous
ly taken Trinity's measure six time
in succession, was on the hillock for
Carolina, But this time the Trinity
sluggers took a liking for his1 offer
ings and pounded out no less than
11 hits. He was able to keep their
hits well scattered until the eighth
when four runs were scored, and in
the ninth after two runs were made
and nobody down he gave way to
Bryson.
Deal, Trinity's moundsman, show
ed great form at times, but was un
able to keep Carolina's' hits' scatter-
The modified, or Harvard plan, will I ed. Every Carolina hit figured in
The Carolina racqueteers wound
up their southern trip, which was
probably the most successful ever
undertaken by a Tar Heel tennis
team, with a 6 to 0 victory over the
Presbyterians at Davidson Thursday.
The most interesting feature of
the tournament was the singles
match between Tench Coxe (Caro
lina) and Bradley (Davidson).. Al
though his opponent won the first
set rather easily, Coxe made a bril
liant come-back and set such a rapid
pace that Bradley was completely
baffled by his terrific offense, Coxe
winning 1-6, 6-4, 10-8.
In the other singles events Bardin
(Carolina) defeated Wilkerson (Dav
idson) 6-2, 6-1; F. Coxe (Carolina)
won from Cunningham (Davidson)
6-2, 7-5; Johnston (Carolina) de
feated Ormond (Davidson) 6-3, 6-3;
and Bruton (Carolina) defeated
Morris (Davidson) 3-6, 7-5, 6-2. In
the doubles matches, Bradley and
Ormond (Davidson) defeated Tench
Coxe and F. Coxe (Carolina) 6-4,
6-3; Bardin and Bruton (Carolina)'
won from Cunningham and Wilker
son (Davidson) 4-6, 6-3, 6-2.
By winning from Davidson, the
Tar Heel racquet wielders left the
tennis sheet of the season unsmear
ed by defeat, haying previously tri-
umphed over Georgia Tech, 5 to 1;
Oglethorpe U., 6 to 0, and Wofford
IS
T
Playmakers Give "The Lord's Will,"
"Dogwood Bushes" and "Triesta"
Before Fair-Sized Audience.
Returning from their western tour
the Carolina Playmakers presented
three of the four plays used on the
trip at the Play-House Friday even
ing before a fair-sized audience. The
plays given were "The Lord's Will,"
"Dogwood Bushes," and "Trista."
Sidney Blackmer, an old Carolina
student who has just finished a suc
cessful run playing the leading role
in "The Mountain Man" on Broad
way, appeared for a short talk be
tween the second and third plays.
He gave a brief account of his ex
periences in getting before the foot
lights. Several original songs by Mr.
Hamilton were sung between acts by
a quartet under the direction of the
Musjc department.
All three plays showed marked im
provement over the original produc-
(Continued on Page Four.)
be employed here. During his junior
year the student in engineering will
spend alternate periods here and do
ing work elsewhere. The peridds of
alternation will be sixteen weeks in
length, and the entire junior year
will require 44 weeks of the students
time, a part of the junior year work
being taken up during the summer
school of the sophomore vear. Each
student will spend one-half of his
time here and the other half doing
work, for which he will receive pay
like any laborer, in the industrial
plants, machine shops, and the like.
Each man who registers for this
course will have to get an endorse
ment from two leading citizens of his
home town as to his character and
steadiness. This will be done in or
der that only the best men may take
the course.
One man in each department of
engineering will serve as co-ordinat-or.
It will be the duty of this man
to visit the men at work and to se
cure the positions for the students.
He will have conferences with the
superintendents and employers of the
the scoring except Llewellyn's triple
in the sixth.
Carolina scored the first run of the
game in the third ,when "Casey" Mor
ris opened the inning with a clean
single to center, was sacrificed to
(Continued on Page Four)' .
LLEWELLYN LEAVES HILL
TO BECOME BIG LEAGUER
After Remarkable College Record
Big Lew Joins N. Y. Yankees
Monday Good Outlook.
C.
tain
(Continued on Page Four.)
Med Men Take Advantage
Of Grats and Elect Officers
(Continued on Page Three)
SOPH SMOKER THURSDAY
NIGHT.
The Sophomore Smoker will
be held next Thursday night at
9 o'clock in Swain Hall, accord
ing to announcement made by
President John Ambler. All
members of the class of '24 are
invited to attend.
Wednesday, during the absence of
Dr. Lawson, the first-year medical
class utilized the period thus left
vacant by electing their officers for
next year. After the usual and un
usual "politicking," only increased
and intensified by the small size of
the class, the votes were cast and
counted, with the following results:
President, H. A. Patterson; Vice-
M. Llewellyn, the present cap
of Carolina's invincible nine,
left the Hill Sunday morning at 8
o'clock td report to the New York
Yankees in New York City, Monday.
"Big Lew," as he is commonly
known, leaves a record5 behind him
that no Carolina' pitcher has ever
equalled, and one that is to be en
vied by those that may follow him.
Llewellyn hails from Dobson, N
C, and he entered the University iro
the1 fall of 1915, coming from Oak
Ridge institute, where' he also leaves
a remarkable record in prep school
baseball. Although he entered as a
I freshman, "Big Lew" has the dis
l tinction of having played in several
varsity games during his first year
here.
At the end of the spring quarter
of 1916, "Lew" found it impossible
to return to the University for the
next two years, but ever since his re
turn in 1918 he has been Carolina's
most trusted pitcher. His ability
to hit the "pill" has caused him to be
President, J. H. Weaver; Secretary i
and Treasurer, V. B. Hennessee; i put in as a pinch hitter on many oc
Representative on Campus Cabinet,,! c'asions, and has won for him a place
E. V. Benbow; Student Councilman, in the outfield when not pitching. It
C. E. Howard. is unusual for a man to possess the
On Saturday, May 6, the Medical ' combination of hitting and pitching
Society also elected their officers for ability. Lew's batting- average for
next year. Those elected were:' the season of-1921 was .387 and he
President, W. E. Overcash; .Vice- has1 two home- runr this' season". -
President, Jake Woodward; Secret
ary, Kitty Cross; Treasurer, E. V.
Benbow.
As a pitcher Llewellyn has won
(Continued on Page Three)