Tuesday, May W, THE TAR IIEEL tssastssixmmmxtmm SPORT QUOTATIONS FROM HERE AND THERE : BILL COX ToThe University track team I our humble bow .and dedicate m 1 to the splendid showing tdet 2 team this season. Every HA of the squad deserves par , n,a ..?L Each - one has done rStto put the Umver on the track map. we could 'Sir ram-isfied that we did Strt: when you have done that 0 more can be expected. Coach Bob Fetzer" did it. His un- . Wo for the came firinff energy - i.o nut the thine lit" r - years All across. A lew mAer his skillful guidance will put the University well out tin front . . a. ,1- .vnloa . All he in Southern ir - wJ is time. Wait a few years and watch them do their stuff, The coming team should be even better than this year's. Most of the ,;n h hack. The freshman men , m,A will send up some real finds The Tin Can will.be used for indoor winter nractice. Uet reaay, arouim, to see a team Btep out next year that will make you sit up and take notice, There isn't time nor space to pick individual stars. Moore's work in piling up points and establishing a . i Jl I new State recora in tne nuraies is nmrthv of SDecial mention. He is a conscientious trainer he loves his sport and' in my opinion would make a good leader for the team of 1925 - Jack McDowell, a : Rockingham High School boy went to an invita tion meet at the University of Flor ida on April the 19th, and high jumped SIX feet. -It is rumored that this McDowell will enter the Ga tor University next fall. . ..What would- that boy mean to our track team? Somebody ought to offer him Saunders Hall or something else to come to his Mate university, Six feet going to Florida blossoms. It's enough to make one cry as they say in the Carolina Magazine ' ' The Tar Heel man who covered the Virginia games failed to make one or two notes of importance. Bon ner threw out three men trying to steal second in the first game. Pretty good work I think. Touchdown Jones got three hits in the second game and Bill Dodderer got the credit in all the box scores. Mule Shirley ran for somebody in last Saturday's game and scored his first run for the Washington Ameri cana. Judging from recent gates good baseball will draw a crowd to the Hill the same as a football game. The campus was filled with old grads the day we played Virginia here. The weather was just right and so was the game. The old boys were sat isfied. ' We youngun's can't appreci ate the thrill that comes to the old fegime when Carolina tags another defeat on to Virginia. Yea verily, be it so done from hence forth on ward. Don't reckon we will get to claim the State title. To win it we will have to be mighty lucky because there are better ball teams in North Caro lina this year than ours. I would ad vise all the other boys to wait awhile before staking their claims because they all have games with Carolina and you can't tell what will happen. The Trinity game here on the four teenth will be a hum dinger. It will be a wonderful chance for somebody to become famous. Ask the first man you see who it will be. ., . The Monogram Club has passed a drastic regulation. No manager will be allowed to wear a N. C. Mono gram as a reward for his services. The club passed this rule after care ful thought and painstaking consider, ation. They did what they thought was best, A manager will be given a suitable emblem for his services which dl in time become as highly praised 8a the monogramed sweater. The elub acted with .to its .rights. I hope ftat their decision will not cause any undue dissention, .' hile. the club was passing this 'o in an attempt to put the N. C. Monogram on a higher plane they should have said something to mem- lage Three REPORTER PICKS FUZZ SELECTION The Hayshaker Will Announce His Official Pick in the Next Tar Heel By Malcolm M. Young Picked men and possibly picked women will be rapped into the Order of the Gilded Fuzz within the near future. Interest in the annual Fuzz rapping is already pronounced among the student body. The reporter, desiring some inside information oh the approaching Fuzz wrapping, recently sought out a well known personage on the campus. known to the campus literati as "The Hayshaker." The news-seeking, timid Tar Heel hound deftly opened the door of the Hayshaker's room and to his horror found the room in the greatest possible disorder. Chairs were overturned; a study table was on the bed; and the palatial, import ed Chinese rugs were not in their usual smooth condition. A blue-eyed, light complexioned, light-haired young man, foaming at the mouth, was raging up and down the room. From his mouth flowed in a rapid stream of words incapable of repro duction. "Hayshaker," the reporter inquired, "why all the good humor?" "D n that d n Order of the Gol den Fleece," he hissed between his angry lips, "they have robbed me of almost all the material I was count ing upon for membership this year in that greatest of all honor organi zations, the Gilded Fuzz. Then another great possibility for membership, one W. C. Proctor, was suddenly taken with Councilitis and had to leave school. The Fuzz is up against it for members this year. Golden Fleece has taken everybody they wanted." - Upon being calmed down in due time, the Hayshaker proceeded to ex plain that the members of last year's Fuzz have been meeting twice daily of late, and that their situation has been somewhat complicated by the re fusal of certain Faculty members to assist in-passing on the merits and qualifications of potential members. bers of the club about their habit of wearing their monogramed sweaters wrong side out. It doesn't look good. They should not be worn in that fash ion when there is no reason for it. Ty Cobb says: That his main athletic regret is that he never had the chance to play foot ball. I would gamble that Cobb would have made a "crack field man. He is fast, agile and rugged. He has perfect coordination and he can move, Buddy, he can almost fly. Of course you will have to apply this to the Cobb of several years ago. One day Cobb was watching the Vanderbilt squad in Nashville, Tenn. The next day he showed up at prafr tice and asked Coach McGuin to let him play a little. They, gave him a uniform and Cobb took his place in the scrub backfield. The scrubs had the ball on their own fifteen yard line. The ball was snapped to Cobb. He was off as if going down the base paths, he side stepped, stiff armed, and dodged his way to a touch down through the whole Va.sity. Yes, Cobb could have played foot ball. The All-American kind moi-e than likely. . When the Georgia Peach was in his prime it was well nigh useless to try to throw him out at second. It was one of his old tricks to keep on going and to slide into tnira with pikes gleaming, dust flying and the third baseman watching him to avoid collision, Ray Schalk, veteran White Sox catcher out guessed the speed marvel' one day. Cobb" went down to second and on to third, but Schalk did not throw to second at all. He pegged third and they caught the Peach about ten feet from the bag. '., ' ' ' Cobb originated the famous hook slide.- He could snag a base with the tip of his toe as well as the aver age runner could fall all over it. Of course he did not pull this stunt every time he got on base. The thing that made him so dangerous was that you could never tell when he was going to make a break for the bag. He would be off like a shot, he always did the unexpected and generally got by with it. ; At a recent meeting of the Fuzz, it is rumored, a motion was passed in which the Golden Fleece was con demned for tapping nine men instead of seven. This would have left two additional men, it was stated, for the Gilded. Fuzz. Officers of the Fuzz announce that they have been bothered of late by delegations from friends seeking membership in this highest honor or ganization. They declare their dis gust at this "booting." One Fuzz man went so far as to declare that this will be the last year that the Fuzz will be selected. Candidates for the Gilded Key-,the smart little 14-karat gom key proudly exhibited by all members should instruct their friends not to "boot" the officers of the Order in their behalf, it has been stated. Booting the Officers will in no way aid any one seeking member ship. Who will be selected for the Fuzz rapping this year is problemetical. Ntlirfow o i i ouiaie as to potential membership, and none but the old members of the Fuzz know. It is the usual custom to select nine stu dents. This story ia not intended as a pre diction, but it is intended to throw some light on who possbily may be eligible for membership. It is a con sensus of opinion reached after a careful consideration of the Univer sity men and women who rank high, low, and mediocre in their respective fields, i It is even possible that some students not mentioned may be rap ped for the Fuzz, but this is consider ed hardly likely. There are in the list of eliffibles two men who have excellent chances c l.-: . . ux uemg rappea ana who are un doubtedly Fuzz material. They are Phil Cocke and Jim Hawkins. The basis , of selecting these two men has been reached merely by what has been done in the past; it is no criterion of what may be done in the future. Competition for membership among the remaining was declared to be at a' neck-and-neck pace when this story went to press. Three co-eds, all known for their good looks and high order of intelligence, have an excel lent chance, according to Dame Rum or. : They are Margaret Jones, Bes sie Davenport, and Sue Byrd Thomp son. . '.' ' . " '. '. ' '" iMere men compose the remaining eligibles. In the lists still showing fight are Bill Hannah, Bill Gwynn, J. C. Greenwood, Dan Burns, Charley Gold, Tom Chees'eborough, T. M. Dix on (of Playmaker fame), Dale Ran son, William Dabney White, Bob Fel ton, Fats Massey, Guy Cardwell, Jim Hawkins, Plato Aristotle Clement, Jr., Booloo Hardee, Spencer Murphey, Zach Fortesque, Burt S. Moye and J. F. Cooper. From last year's Fuzz, it is de clared that Fuzz "Bingo" White stands an excellent chance for re election. Those rapped into the Fuzz last year were: Steve Brody, "Bingo" wi,ito P. C. Frondeberger, Robert Sylvester Pickens, Bob George, Wil-j liam Jenkins ' Faucette, Miss Kitty Lee Frazier, Charley Norfleet and Johnny Foister. It has been rumored that Fuzz Brody's key was taken away from him. Honorary members were: Earl Peacock, Dr. Crane, Homer L. Hoyt, Otto Von Stuhlman and Harry Van Landingham. GRAIL DANCE A SUCCESS A. I. E.E. MEETS The ree-ular meeting of the A. I. E. E. was held in . Phillips Hall, Thursday evening, May 8. The fea ture of the meeting was Professor E. G. Hoef er's description of the mercury vapor boiler and turbine as tmnlied to cower nlant operation. He explained the history of this latest piece of central-station equipment, ; Pointing out its economy of operation and high efficiency. At the same time, however, as Frof essor Hoef er explained, the high cost of mercury and the difficulty of operation will very probably keep this piece of machinery a laboratory curiosity rather than a power plant prime mover. The Supreme Court Justices who have already spoken have had good audiences, and the meetings have been a success in every way. A very large percent of the Law School has at tended both addresses. Cornell University Summer Session in LAW First Term, June 23 to July 30 CONTRACT, Professor Ballan tine, of the Univ. of Minnesota Law Faculty. PROPERTY, Mr. Whiteside, of the Cornell Law Faculty. WILLS, Professor Vance, : of the Yale Law Faculty. INSURANCE, Professor Vance. PRACTICE, Professor McCas kill, of the Cornell Law Facul ty. PARTNERSHIP, Professor Ste vens, of the Cornell Law Facul ty. Second Term, July 31 to Sept. 5 CONTRACT, continued! AGENCY, Mr. Whiteside. PRIVATE CORPORATIONS, Professor Stevens. TRUSTS," Professor Scott, of . the Harvard Law Faculty. DAMAGES, Professor Dobie of the Univ. of Virginia Law Fa culty. TAXATION, Professor Dobie. Students may begin the study of law in the summer session For catalogue, address the College of Law, Ithaca, N. Y. The Grail Dance, held Saturday night in Bynum Gymnasium, was quite a success. There was a num ber of out-of-town guests who added much to the occasion. Many pronounced the dance better than the usual ones, but the prevail ing opinion was that there were too few girls in comparison to the num-' ber of boys present. The Carolina Club Orchestra furn ished the music, and their playing created much favorable comment. 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' : We specialize in student prescriptions f'V l ' A First Studio Production PRUNELLA Forest Theatre MAY 30th THE SEEMAN PRINTERY INC WksiJ) SHIPSHAPE PRINTING ENGRAVING - OFFICE SUPPLIES Established 1885 DURHAM - N. C. . EUBANKS DRUG CO. Agents for Nunally's Candy Reliable Druggists for 31 Years tttttrttnfflitti Historical Chapel Hill A Beautiful Place to hive in CHAPEL HILL INSURANCE AND REALTY COMPANY GUILFORDS of Philadelphia Will Show Complete line of Haberdashery and Clothing Sutton and Alderman Drug Store Thursday and Friday, May 15 and 16 Spring Line of Suits and Top Coats $33.50 and $35.00 Fine Worsted Suitings $45.00 Jack Cunningham, Rep. statu Fight the Heat with GOOCH'S Frozen Salads and Desserts COLLEGE-INN GOOCH'S CAFE Quality Service Since 1903 tuuitiiuiiisx - ' ' '- ' ,,, 'mmmmmmmm II II II 1 1 III' " ' -"ST """"""" .-- ;.;----

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