j HAMLET - SHELBY BASEBALL HA31LET - SHELBY BASEBALL 3:00 TODAY i ! 3:00 TODAY IT' wLifi 7 i ! VOLUME XXXVIII FOUR DMCES TO MffiUPWEleS; SC Gl At SCHEDULE Juniors and Seniors To Stage Annual Affairs Tonight ; Sig ma Zeta and Grail Dances Tomorrow. RUSS BOLIN TO PLAY The first two dances of a full week-end of dances will be staged tonight by the juniors and seniors. A tea dance given by the juniors is to open the dance program at 6 o'clock in Bynum gymnasium. Russ Bolin and his Cotton Pickers, who will render the music for all the re mainder of the dances this week end, will also play for this dance. Henry House, Herb Nelson and Jack Lindley will lead this dance, while the committee in charge will be composed of Artie Marpet, chairman, Will Yarbor ough, Tom Craig, Mayne Al bright and Pat Patterson. It is the plan of the dance committee that all students oth er than juniors who bnhg dates to the dance "will " be admitted free of charge. Stags, however, from any of these other classes will not be admitted. - Immediately following the j uniors' dance, there will be a dance staged by the seniors from 9 to 1 in the gym. This dance, which is the first one given by this class this year, is to be a formal aff air. Leaders for the senior iiarice will be Red Greene, Julian Fenner and Bob Merritt. Other dances over the week end will be a tea dance given by the Sigma Zeta local fraternity at the Carolina Inn on Saturday afternoon from 6 to 9. Follow ing the fraternity dance, the last Order of the Grail dance is to be staged in Bynum gymnasium from 9 to 12. The regular adT mission fees are to be charged at this dance. Music is to be fur nished by Russ Bolin and his Cotton Pickers. Band To Give Second Benefit Show Sunday There will be a benefit shoW at the Carolina Theatre Sunday afternoon for the University band. The program will begin at 2:30 o'clock, when the band will play a forty-five minute program. This will be followed with a picture, the title of which will be announced later in the Daily Tar Heel. About a month ago the Caro lina Theatre consented to put on a benefit show for the band. This performance was necessi tated because the band needed financial support. About nine hundred people, mostly students were present at this show, and the offering amounted to about S65. As ihis amount has not covered ,the need of this organi zation, it has been found neces sary to ask the aid of the stu dents and townspeople. The band has given many concerts over the state ; during the year, and the expenses have been so great that additional help is needed from the outside. Attend Meeting Professors N. P. Bailey and a. G. Hoefer of the engineering school attended a meeting of the Raleigh section of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in Raleigh Tuesday night. ; This meeting was a business session of the Raleio-h branch of the LOCAL COUNTRY CLUB TO GIVE BARBECUE SUPPER A barbecue supper will be given at the Country Club to morrow evening at 6:30, imme diately following the non-handicap tournament that is to be staged. The winner, of the tour nament will be presented with a cup at this occasion. The Community Singers, pre sented by H. S. Dyer, will fea ture the program. Mrs. T. J. Wilson, Jr., is in charge of the supper. ALPHA PSI DELTA HOLDS INITIATION Meeting Held Wednesday New West; 28 Members Attend. In The annual spring initiation of the Gamma chapter of Alpha Psi Delta, national psychological fraternity, was held Wednesday evening, May 14, in New West. The meeting was well attended, 28 members being present. The following were initiated: Mrs. LrMrB tine, G. A. Metz and J. W Eaton. .". . j The present officers of the lo cal chapter are G. B. Dimmick, president; R. E. Hamill, vice president ; and H. N. DeWick, secretary-treasurer. On the program for the eve ning .was a 'talk by Dr. H. W. Crane, who has, Justf returned from : the meeting of : the inter national congress on mental hy giene held in Washington, D. C. Dr. Crana spoke on impressions which he received at the conven tion. .. After discussing the general nature of the congress, Dr. Crane .brought out the fact that the leaders of the mental hygiene movement are psychiatrists who pay little, if any, attention to the vast amount of psychological data which should be of great value to them in this . field. He noted that 123 . of the formal paperpresented at the Congress were delivered- by- medical men, while only 12 were presented by "psychologists. In a paper on "The Objective Character of Legal 'Intent' " Dr. J. F. Dashiell, the second speak er on the program, brought out that in court cases where the 'interition" of the accused must be established, the subjective as pect of the problem must be neg lected since only the accused can introspect. Following the initiation 1 and program a banquet was served by a committee composed of H. N. DeWick, R. E. Hamill, and . . . t H. W. Crane. The taoies ana room were decorated in purple and gray the fraternity colors Dinner At Inn Hugh Stafford, assistant cir culation director of the Pictorial Review Publishing Company, will entertain 30 gufests at din ner at the Carolina Inn tonight. Three Women's Northern Trip Mrs. R. D. Wv Connor, Miss Mar jorie . Terrell, and Miss Louise Venable went to Wash ington last week. All of them had their eyes examined by an oculist there. Miss Venable n rirth to visit her w- brother Charles in Wallingford Pa., and her sister, Mrs. . Wes roat. in Mobrestown, N. J. In TVYofrtwri' Miss Venable had lUUUlvoww" her first view of the hew Wes CHAPEL HILL, N. C GRAHALISPEMS ' k ' m TR I TIT! T 1 mf AT A Al MlllAllUiM UI PHIBmiAPPA Compares Past and Present At titudes Of Scholarship; 39 Candidates Received. The annual initiation of the Phi Beta Kappa, honorary schol astic . fraternity, was held last night in the Episcopal parish house. Preceding the private ceremony, Professor Frank Gra ham of the history department gave an inspiring address in Gerrard hall to the members elect and to the general public Gordon Gray, president of the organization, "spoke briefly on the founding and purposes of Phi Beta Kappa. He then in troduced Professor Graham, who opened his address by com paring the present attitude of scholarship with that of' the old. "What is the value of scholar ship?" asked Mr. Graham. President Lowell of Harvard answered this by saying that practically, all the people listed in Who's Who in America were noted for scholarship. The Presidents of the Bell Telephone Company; and the General Elec tric Company found scholarship and a successful business career had a close correlation. "The old tendency was to be ashamed to study, but that day has now passed. Scholarship goes hand in hand with other ac tivities. Former graduates of the University who have achieved great distinction in ater. life came to college with the earnest attempt to study, and carefully regulated their time so as to achieve this end. Consis tency in mastering one's studies usually reaps reward in our later careers. The'buildmgs on this campus are primarily here for the attainment of scholar ship. "The main purpose of schol arship is not for personal glory but to give one a chance to give back to the world what he has drawn from it. There is a chal lenge to the men of Phi Beta Kappa to be the leaders of schol arship in the south, and the de fenders of tolerance and inde pendence." Immediately following the address, Dr. T. J. Wilson, Jr., University registrar, read out a list of the new initiates in the order of their scholastic attain ments, the candidates coming forward. , After he private initiation at the parish house, refreshments were served for the old and new members. The following were initiated: Marion Romame Alexander, Asheville; Thomas Hays Bar ker; Jr., Leakesville; Sterling Archie Barrett,, Fayetteville ; Clay Covington Bell, Rocking ham; Robert Foster Dewey, Chi cago, 111.; Thomas Basil Doug las, High Point; William Dunn, Jr., New Bern; William Clyde Dunn, Kinston; Joseph Colin Eagles, Wilson ; : Sara Gilmore Faikineiv - Chapel Hill ; Cleo Wade Goldston, Goldston; John Cameron Grainger, Wilmington; June Uriah Gunter, Jr., San ford ; Charles Patton -Hayes, Asheville; Matthew George Hen ry, Chapel Hill; Frank Allen Jones, Cofield; Wallace Hamil ton Kuralt, : Springfield, Mass. ; John Van Lindley; Greensboro ; James;- Millard,, -Little,.; Jr., Winston-Salem ; Lawrence Fourshee London, Pittsboro; (Continued on page two) FRIDAY, MAY; 16; I93a. Library Notice ; The library conducting the annual check-up ? on faculty books. ; Letters have been sent to all faculty members who have secured books from the library within the past year. The li brarian wishes to call the at tention of the faculty' to the an nual check-up and requests that all books be' returned These books will be released upon their return if they are needed for continued use. . r HIGHS CLASH IN ? I DIAMOND FINALS Shelby Represents Western Di ; vision For Fourth Time While Hamlet Makes Initial Bid For ! State Title. : , Shelby and Hamlet high schools . clash on Emerson field here, this afternoon at S o'clock for the 1930 high school cham pionship of the state. . "-: Shelby won its fourth western championship and the right to play in the finals by defeating Mount Airy 5-3. j Hamlet' tri umphed over Morehead City 9-5 on Tuesday after Monday's game between the two teams had run 13 innings to a 1-1 tie. ; ( The western and - eastern champions to clash for the title this year are- regarded as two of the strongest teams ever to come through the field and to the finals, and prospects are for a great contest that will be wit nesseS by a xeeord crowd;- in cluding - large delegations from both Hamlet and Shelby. Shelby has won the title three times beforerin 1924, 1925 and 1929, and has never come to the finals without taking the cham pionship cup back to the west. Hamlet has been a strong con tender for several seasons but has never reached the finals be fore. ACTIVITIES MEN TO DECIDE FATE DAILYTAR HEEL Committee Will Meet Tuesday At Banquet; Invitations To Be Mailed Persons Expected. The. student activities com mittee is to hold its first meet ing in more than a year at a banquet to be served at the Caro lina Inn next Tuesday at 6:30 o'clock. The principal question to be discussed is the advisability and method .of continuing the Daily Tar Heel. Any other "propitious matters may be brought before the group. ( The student activities commit tee has not met since January 20, 1929. At that time the ques tion as to whether the student paper should become a daily was discussed. The committee drew up four plans to combine, the Tar Heel and the Magazine and submitted them to the student body which endorsed the plan by an overwhelming majority. - The meeting Tuesday will be the first over which "Red" Greene will preside. , The com mittee is of a flexible nature, its members : being determined by the president of the student body. The current editors of the various publications, the student government officials, deans of the various colleges in the Univer sity, and other prominent cam pus officials are eligible to serve on the committee. "Red'' Greene will send out invitations today. ILorado Taft On Art Here - Next Week Room Notice Rooms for the fall quarter are open for reservations for the students now occupying the rooms. If you expect to live in the same room this fall, it fe required that you make a f 5.G0 deposit by May 31. After that date all rooms on which no deposit has been made will be assigned to other applicants. All applications will be filed in the order in, which they ,are received, and will be as signed in the same manner on June 1. A $5.00 deposit must be made with each ap plication TWO MM REACH IN NET JOURNEY Hendlin , and Liskin Come , Through Second v Round . of ; Conference Tournament; Mer ritt And Graham Eliminated. . Twa Carolina tennis stars, holders of the N. C. intercollegi ate singles and ' doubles titles, came through the first and sec ond rounds of the-Southern Con ference tennis tourney Wednes day at New Orleans. ' Hinky Hendlin, statesingles champ, seeded number y6 in the tournament, had little trouble in disposing of Willard McGinness, Florida, 6-3, 6-2, and Robert Hare, Sewanee, 6-1, 6-1. Yes terday Hendlin met one v of the strongest contenders for the sin gles title,- Donald Cram of Van derbilt. Cram is seeded number 2 in the tourney, next to Clif ford Sutter, Tulane's defending champion. Phil Liskin, co-hoider with Hendlin of the North Carolina doubles title, won from William Schwartz of Vandy in default in the first round, and took in C. L. Williamson of Georgia Tech in three hard-fought sets, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1. He metBayon, Tulane, seeded number 3 in the quarter finals yesterday. Liskin and Hendlin were to meet Boykin and Brandon, Georgia, in the quarter finals of the doubles yesterday afternoon. Reports of the results of these matches had not been received when the Tar Heel went to press. Captain Bill Merritt was elim inated in the second round of play by Teddy Burwell, Sewanee, 6-3, 6-3. Burwell defeated Hend lin in a scheduled match on the indoor court at Sewanee last week. E. K. (Sonny) Graham was put out of the running in the second round - by Donald Cram of Vandy. v Piano Recital Local Music Pupils' to Give Program in School Building Tuesday Night , There will be a recital by the class piano students of Mrs. Anne Wear Smith in the Chapel Hill school . Tuesday evening, at 7:45, After a short demonstra tion lesson, the program will fol low, which is a series of musi cal selections by the pupils. Paul Green's Expanded House An addition has been made to the house of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Green. It was designed by Watts Carr. QUARTERFINALS NUMBER 171 To Spea THREE LECTURES Noted Character, To Discuss Ancient and Contemporary Art. HAS INTERESTING CAREER Known As An Entertaining And Educative Lecturer; Talks To Be Illustrated. Lorado Taft, noted sculptor, artist and author, will appear in the Methodist church three eve nings next week, delivering a series of lectures on ancient and contemporary art. On Monday, May 19, he will choose for his subject "Classic Art." Tuesday it will be "Sculpture of the Ren aissance." And as his-final topic oh Wednesday, he will talk on "Modern Cculpture." Mr. Taft holds a high position in American and European art circles. For 35 years he has been connected with the Art In stitute of Chicago.; At the Uni versity of Chicago he has at tained the honorary title of pro fessor lecturer on the history of art. Also, he is a non-resident professor at the University of Illinois. Prominent in all forms of ar tistic activity, he is a member of the National -Academy of de sign, of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and honor ary. member, of. the American -institute of Architects, and is one of the board of art advisors for the state of Illinois. Twice he has won national art awards, once at the Buffalo Exposition in 1901, and again at. .the, St. Louis Exposition in 1904. Born in the little midwestern town of Elmwood, 111., in 1860, he began to display his artistic tendency at an early age by writing short stories and illus-: trating them himself. ...His de-, sire to be a sculptor was first, born in him at the age of 13, when he was permitted to assist a Belgian sculptor repair a set of damaged casts at the Univer sity of Illinois, of which institu tion he was later a graduate. Fascinated by the process of fit ting the pieces together Jike a jig-saw puzzle, he determined to try his skill at modeling in clay. For this hobby he developed a great amount of enthusiasm and continued it throughout his col- lege career. After graduating from r the regular curriculum at the Uni versity, the young artist decided to continue his study at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, where he enrolled as an independent student for five years. Return ing to America, he opened up a studio in Chicago in 1886; there he has remained up to the pres ent time. . v Howell Honored By Pharmacists , Dr. E. V. Howell of the school of pharmacy was elected a mem ber of the revision committee of the United States Pharmacopeia at the convention in Washington Wednesday. ; About 350 pharmacists, phy sicians ;..and chemists ' from all over the United States attended the convention. The committee, on which Dr. Howell is to serve, has charge of changing the Pharmacopeia, which is the of ficial book of drug and medicinal prescriptions. The Pharmaco peia Convention meets once in every ten years. : J , society. coat baby. i