Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 25, 1925, edition 1 / Page 1
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TRACK MEET State vs. Carolina 2 P.M. Today (Mr DEBATE Carolina vs. Tulane Gerrard Hall 8:30 Tonight CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1925 NUMBER 51 THROUGH EASTER WEEK PROGRAM WITH SEVEN STRAIGHT VICTORIES Unusual Feat for College Base ball Team. MARYLAND FIRST VICTIM Old Liners Defeated At Cone Park, Greensboro, In First Trip Game 2-0. D A V I D S 0 N OUTFIT SWAMPED Four Virginia Teams. Bite Dust- Maryland Secures Revenge At College Park for Defeat LOSE FIRST GAME At College Park, Md, April 20. Maryland 13; U. N. C. 2. Easter Trip. Coach Fetier's Tar Heels swept clean during the Easter holidays, winning nine Straight games . from their opponents, and stepping forward as one of the out standing teams In the South Atlantic. None of the contests were taken easily, but with great hitting powers backed by close pitching the Fetierites always man aged to shove across the winning runs. Maryland, Davidson, Guilford, V. P. I., Washington and Lee, V. M. I., and Vir ginia all fell before the attack of the Tar Heels. ' , Maryland proved to be a tough com bination, but Ferrabee was in great shape and shut , the Old Liners out while his teammates worked across two runs. Both Carolina runs came in the first inning and after' this initial frame neither team scored. The two scores came when Bonner, Hatley, Coffey and Jones all hit Box score and summary: Carolina ' AB R E PO A E Bonner, : . 4 0 2 10 0 1 Thomas, 2b. 4 0 0 2 0 0 Hatley, If. ; , , ', . 4 110 0 0 Gibson, rf. , '. 4 1 1 11 0 Coffee, cf. : S O 0 1 0 0 Jones, 3b. 3 0 2 2 1 0 0 Johnson, ss. S O 0 0 y6 1 Dodderer, lb. : S 0 0 jU 0 2 Ferebce, p 3 0 0 0 5 0 STATE TRACKMEN GUESTS OF U. N. C "North Carolina State varsity and Freshman track teams will be the guests of the University, this after noon on Emerson field. J. There will be two contests staged. One, a con test of track ability the other a con test of sportsmanship. Carolina stu-' dents will play the b'iggest part in the latter contest. This is a splendid opportunity for them fo show their appreciation of the" best track team in the history of the University ahd to prove themselves worthy hosts and true sportsmen.'' Coach Bob Fetzer. MIMS SPEAKS AT FLEECE TAPPING Head of English Department ' At Vanderbilt. TAPPING ON MAY 4TH Will Speak On Subject "Colleges Un der Fire." Totals 31 2 6 2ri2 4 Maryland Stevens, lb. Murray, 3b. Besley, ss. ; Troxell, 2b. : Snyder, rf. Re'sberg, If. Burgee, cf. Burroughs, cf. Coghill, c. Spinny, c. Shriner, p. ; Nlshiser . AB R H PO A E .5 0 0 6 0 0 . 3 .0 2 1 2 0 4 0 2 1 0 0 4 0 1 2 2 2 .4 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 9 0 0 10100 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals S3 0 ' 7 24 . 7 S - "Batted for Snyder in the ninth. Summary: Two base hit, Hatley. Struck out by Shriner 8, by Ferebee 9. Bases on balls, off Shriner 0, off Fere bee 6. Left on bases, Maryland 14, Car olina 5. Sacrifice hit, Coffee. First base on errors, Maryland 2, Carolina 2. Earn ed run, Carolina 1. Wild pitch, Shriner 1. Umpire, Brandon. Davidson Game. The Tar Heels had little trouble with the Davidson Wildcats in their annual Easter Monday affray.- 8 to 3 was. the final score of the game that was featured , by Stanton's circuit clout and triples by Coffee and Johnson Holshouser and Coletrane divided the time in the box. Box score and summary: s Carolina AB R II PO A E Bonner, c Sharpe, c Green, c. . Thomas, Sb. Stanton, lb. Hatley, If. Gibson, rf. Coffee, cf. Sides, 2b. Johnson,; ss. Holshouser, p. Coletrane, p. 23 0 0 Totals Davidson Glenn, ss. Davis S6 .8 11 27 9 3 AB RBPOAE Hampton, p. Black j Covington, 3b. Woodham, lb. Alford, ss., cf. Vance, rf. . " ' ' , Weiis, it Simpson, 2b. Wrenn, c 1 0 0 0 1. 10 0 4 0 6 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 00 2 0 Laird, p., cf. . Totals QQ s 7 27 10 4 Score by Innings: RUE Carolina ; 203 000 300 8 11 3 Davidson 000 000 201 3 7 4 Summary: Two base hits, Bonner, Hat ley Stanton, Sharpe. i Three base hits, ' (Continued on page" three) Dr. Edwin Mims, head of ,the depart ment of English at Vanderbilt univer sity, will deliver the address at the annu al tapping of the Golden Fleece, Senior honor society, which is to be held in Memorial hall Monday night, May 4. Dr. Mims is widely known in the South as an orator and the announcement that he will speak at the Fleece tapping will be enthusiastically received in Chapel Hill, especially in view of the fact that Dr. Mims was once professor of English here. He is well known and pleasantly remembered by old timers of the Univer sity community, and his oratorical abili- ties have been very highly praised by them. v "Colleges Under Fire" will be the sub ject of the address of Dr. Mims for the Fleece event He is well qualified to give an excellent address on this subject since he has been connected with many of the country's foremost educational institu tions and has also bad occasion to come into contact with outside opinion as well. Vanderbilt university conferred the de grees of A.B. and M.A. upon him in 1892 and 1893, respectively. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell university in 1900. From 1894 to 1909 he was professor of English at. Trinity college, now Duke university, coming from there to the Uni versity of North Carolina where he re mained until 1912, when he "accepted the position of head of the English depart ment at his alma mater. During several summers he has been connected with some of the more prom inent summer, schools throughout the countiy, as English professor. His par ticular field of study is in 19th century English literature. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and has written several books 'and scholarly papers. He has also edited a number of books now in use as text-books. ' ' DEFEAT CAROLINA FOR FIRST TIME ; f I - University Team Receives First 1925 Reverse. WAS TOO MUCH SCHRIDER Tar Heels Had Taken Nine Straight Gaines. s While Schrider, Maryland's pitching ace, was holding the ITar Heels to three hits on his home lot at College Park, his teammates garnered 17 hits off Finch and the Old Liners gave Carolina her first defeat of the season, the final score being 14 to 2. , The Terrapin twirler hurled shutout ball and errors on the part of the Mary land infield enabled the Tar Heels to score tlieir two runs. Thomas and Sharp were the only Hillians to touch Schrider, Thomas getting two tf the three hits obtained off the Marylander's port side delivery. , . The Tar Heels only committed two errors while their opponents made three mlsplays, Carolina also staged a double execution, Sharp to Jones being the route by which the twin killing came off. This was the first defeat of the season for Coach Fet-er's crew and came after they had taken nine straight games. Score by innings: iJ. II. E. Carolina -Oil 000 000 2 3 2 Maryland 030 023 15x 14 17 3 Batteries: Finch and Sharpe 5 Schrider and Coghfll, The Strowd plantation Was sold at auc tion Wednesday and brought a total sum of $139,000. , ' :., A, :w- y ' 1 1,. ' ' n 1 1 nn in mi i in n mi. . i .un. li mit ,i 1 1 1 , , ALLYN K. FOSTER FOSTER TO OPEN SERIES TUESDAY Will Lecture Here April 28 to April 30. AT BLUE RIDGE IN 1924 Y. M. C. A. Attempting to Bring Fos ter Here Permanently. s Dr. Allyn K. Foster, secretary of the Northern Baptist Education board, will deliver a series of addresses in Gerrard hall beginning April 28 and continuing through April 30. Dr. Foster is being brought to Chapel Hill under the auspi ces of the University Y. M. C. A. - Members of the Carolina delegation to the Blue Ridge conference last summer will remember the speaker as the out standing attraction .-on the conference' program He is a man of wide experi ence, scholarly training, a pulpit orator of rare distinction, and a man among men. In addition he has the pep and ginger that makes him a remarkably easy mixer among college men. One of the universities included in Dr. Foster's southern itinerary wrote him asking for a cut of himself and a write up to be used 'in its college paper. The following quotation is the complete ma terial which he sent them and clearly characterizes1 the tnau as " an ' all-around good scout": .- ; "The only Teeent cut of me' is owned by Rev. H. S. Chapman, Baptist student pastor at Ann Arbor. I have no cuts 'on hand.' My career: Born Baltimore, when nobocjy's business ! Undergradu ate work at Johns Hopkins. Caught on baseball team all through credits mostly in sports. Graduated Th.M. Southern Baptist Theological . Seminary,' ; Louis ville, Ky., Yale M.A. in English,: Brown University D.D., Headmaster of Foster School for Boys, Conn., seven years. Pas tor at -Worcester, Mass., 1st Church arid Washington Ave. Church, Brooklyn,- N. Entered war service Y. , M. C. A November 1917, continuing till late in 1919. Year and half overseas in France and Germany." ' Dr. Foster is.a great friend of William Louis Potent, president of Wake Forest college, and is described as being very much of the same type of man. In ad dition to such qualities, he has a great liking for the outdoors and is a golf and baseball enthusiast. He was a star player on his college baseball team some sev eral years ago. ; v , Dr. Foster is the man whom the Y, M. ,, A. has been, recommending to the University for more than two ears as the one best fitted to occupy a chair of Religious Education here, jf ever such a chair should be installed. The Y. M. C A. has even entertained hope that it might be possible to secure sufficient en dowment from private sources to bring Dr. Foster permanently to this campus as Religious Education Secretary of the Christian Association. The entire "student body and faculty is invited to attend the lectures and to meet the man personally. ', Pi Beta Phi ' ' Dance Saturday The North Carolina Pi Beta Phi Alum nae club will join with the University PI Beta Phi chapter at a banquet to be held at the Carolina Inn Saturday eve ning as the annual celebration of Found er's Day. Pi Beta Phi is the oldest woman's fraternity, having been founded on April. 28, at Monmouth College, Illi nois. , Following the; banquet the chapter will be hostessas at a formal dance from 9 to 12 in the Carolina Inn ball room. , Mr. Bernard to t ' Show Slides William S. Bernard, professor of Greek in the University, will show his lantern slides of famous paintings to the literature departments of the Community club in the Murphey hall auditorium next Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. He will accompany the slides with brief com ments and explanations. DATE OF GOLDEN FLEECE TAPPING SET FOR MAY 4 Tar Heel Reporter Will At- tempt to Pick Men That Will Be Tapped. FLEECE FORMED IN 1903 From Seven to Ten Men Selected An nuallyNumber Has Not In creased With Student Bdy. For the 21st time since Its beginning In 1903, the Senior Order of the Golden Fleece will have its annual tapping. The tapping will take place on May 4th In Memorial hall, where the affair has been staged for the ptost several years. , Guess-work has lately , come into re markable importance on the campus and speculations as to the prospects for vari ous prominent students are variable, and highly interesting. Next week a Tab Heee reporter will give a probable line up of prospects. The history of the growth of the Fleece from an organization which was at first greeted in an almost hostile manner to one which bestows upon a number of juniors and seniors the highest honor which a Carolina man can . receive is fraught with interest. v In 1903 the. Fleece had its beginning when two representative -tudents met with Dr. Eben Alexander and Professor Horace Williams to try to devise some idea by which the various elements on the campus could be brought into closer union and harmony. Dr. Alexander had been : a member of Yale's Senior Order of the Skull and Bones and It was from this order that the first plan of the Fleece was made, so as to bring together the leaders on the campus. But at first the Fleece was looked at with a little doubt as to its real purpose. Some looked at it as another fraternity instead pf an organization which aimed to bring to gether the fraternity and non-fratefnity elements. Now after 20 years the Fleece has be come such an integral part of Carolina life that it serves as a means of honoring the best men on the campus who have personality, ability and have made not able achievements In more than one line, Searching back through, the files of the Tab Heel one can find only short men tion of the various Fleece initiations for the first few years. There would be a mention of the event in the local column preceded by a notice, "Let L. D. Lloyd dress your head and smooth your face," and followed by, "You can't have too many of Giles' shirts." From 1915 through 1919, the Fleece members were announced merely by a list printed on the front page of the Tab Heel, enclosed in a box. The list came out just after the annual junior week, during which the Fleece tapping took place at a public celebration in Ger rard hall. 1 , A . ; Junior week1 was abandoned in 1920' and the tapping of that year took place when the whole student body was on the Hill. Dr. Chase was tapped on his oc casion. In 1922 Governor Morrison made the address. In 1923 Dr. John J. Parker spoke and after the address he was the first to be tapped by the black-rpbed ( Continued on page four) GLEE CLUB WILL SING WEDNESDAY The University Glee Club will conclude its present , season with a concert in Memorial hall next Wednesday night at 8:30. . Mr. Jerome Swinford, the popular New York baritone .who has appeared with the club in eight concerts during the year, will come to Cha pel Hill for this occasion by spe cial arrangements which have just been completed.- ., ' The program Wednesday night will be an exact duplicate of the big program recently sung by the club in Kansastiity, Mo. This con cert has been hailed all over the country as the, finest glee club work everyone by any American college organization, and has placed the University singers In a' position Of national prominence. The organization has had little op portunity ,to be heard by the local student body and faculty j they have given only one concert on the campus this year,' and that hapv pened to be on a night when only a few people succeeded in wading through the mud to Memorial hall. It is anticipated that a large audi ence will take advantage of ' the opportunity Wednesday night of hearing an organization that is better known throughout the coun try at large than It Is right here on the campus. ; " ' , HOLT MOORE . w- HURDLE STAR Mnnre is one of th(V createst hurdlers in the South, and reached high in the Olympic semi-finals last summer. He was high scorer of the 19il track team and is counted upon to capture both the high and low hurdle races this afternoon DEANS HERE IN ANNUAL CONFAB Conference of Deans Discuss ing Important Problems. LAST SESSION TODAY Endorse Fraternities and Extra-Cur ricular Activities Thursday. Thirty' delegates from leading: .InKti- tutions of the country are in attendance at the seventh annual national confer ence of deans and advisers, of men which Is being held here. . The conference was opened Thursday morning at 9 o'clock with an address of welcome by President Chase in which he stressed the , importance of creating a student atmosphere that makes charac ter building easy. Following the wel come address Dean S. H. Hibbard, of the University of Texas, lead a discus sion on "Fraternities," after which a discussion on "Sophomore Pledging" was lead by Dean E. E. Nicholson, of the University of Minnesota. A roll call showed that 20 of the SO delegates fa vored pledging students early during the freshman year while six were for deferred pledging. There was a priSvauV inj opinion that fraternities are a desir able asset in college life andf that the good In them far outweighs the bad. Thursday afternoon with Dean Robert Rienow, president of the conference again presiding, a discussion of "Extra curricular Activities" was lead by F. B. Wahr, of the University of Michigan. The conference decided that students who combine ftudies with extra-curricular activities with the possible excep tion of freshman in certain classes us ually make a higher scholastic standing than do students who stick strickly to their text books. The delegates were guests of the University at a banquet at the Carolina Inn. Thursday night. Yesterday morning Dean Stalcy Coul ter, of Purdue University, conducted a discussion "In What Ways May a Dean of Men be Instrumental .In Improving the Scholarship ' of His Institution' Va rious methods were brought up for dis-; cussion including the contact with the student, the home, the registrar and the professor. Yesterday afternoon the ses sion was1 moved up to 2 o'clock. Dean Carl Engberg, of the University of Ne braska, lead an interesting discussion on "Academic Mortality". Causes of mor tality and methods by which they may be remedied and prevented were dis cussed. ' At 4 o'clock the deans left In a big bus to make a visit to Duke University at Durham, State College and other points of interest in Raleigh. At 1 o'clock they were guests of State Col lege at. a supper-smoker, returning to Chapel Hill last night This morning there will be a round ta ble discussion. The conference adjourns today. Institutions represented Include: Mich igan, Purdue, Kentucky; Texas, Prince ton, Georgia Tech, Northwestern, Iowa, Worcester, Minnesota, Tennessee, Syra cuse, Missouri, Vanderbilt, Emory, Penn State,' N. C. State, Duke, Nebraska and North Carolina. WOLFPACK TRACK TEAM HERE FOR 1925 DUAL MEET Both Varsity and Fresh Teams In Action State Has Strong Crew of Trackmen, - MEET BEGINS AT 2:00 P. M. Jeff Ford ham Not Here for Meek Tech Team Threatens to Upset Dope With Weight Man Gone. ' The Tar Heels and Tar Babies will engage the N. C. State Wolfpack and Cubs in a double-header track meet on Emerson field this afternoon. The fresh man field events will begin at 2:00 o'clock, and the varsity at 2:30. Fresh man events will be interspersed with varsity events. The freshman-Oak Ridge baseball game will start after th conclusion of the track meet Jeff Fordham, who hus- been high scorer of the track team to date, was forced to attend the meeting of student body Presidents being held this year at the University of Florida. It is highly improbable that he will be able to re turn to the' Hill In time to participate In this afternoon's meet In addition to the loss of Fordham's service, Gus Mc pherson suffered a slight Injury to his ankle early In the week that has se riously hindered his work in practice. The fleet dash man will be' able "to run today but the injury will probably hurt liiin in racing against a star such as Captain Buck Byrum of State. ; The -West Raleigh aggregation has been improving steadily throughout the season and should be in first rate condi tion for this encounter. The general impression is that this will be the hard est meet of the year. Running Events. McPhcrson and league will be matched against Captain Byrum and . Tucker, of State, in the sprints. These should be two of the fastest dashes wit nessed by track followers In this sec tion. Byrum will probably oppose Ed wards In' the 440. In the hurdles, Clark and Currin will offer the opposition for Moore, Giersch, and Huggins. Wright is likely to offer the best competition in the mile which the Tar Heet lnflerS"havemet:- t ' Field Events Pridgen looms as a probable first place winner in the pole'vault and broad jump. In the former, Corbett and Smiley will seek to uphold their record. In the broad jump, Carolina Is depending on Ambrose and Woodard.:; Matthews and Morris will compel Ambrose to do his very best If he is to come through a winner In the high jump. Ripple, Lambe, and Cook make up a trio of weight men who are likely to be heavy scorers for the Techmen. On the whole, a, very close meet can be expected, due to the strength of N. C. State in the dashes and field events. The next engagement of the Tar Heel cinder men will be in the state champion ship meet which will be held here next Friday and Saturday. This meet will draw together representatives of all the Colleges in the State. The result of the meet this afternoon will 'have consid erable bearing on the outcome of the State meet THREE BIG GAMES FOR NEST WEEK Bonner's Team Play Wake For est and Duke. DUKE IS HERE TUESDAY Opponents Are Obstacles to State Championship. With their successful northern trip a matter of history the Tar Heels -settle, dow'n to a state schedule that promises . to offer them stiff opposition. Three games are played next week, the first coming with Duke on.Tuesduy, on Em erson field, followed by Wake Forest in - Wake Forest Thursday, and closed with a second meeting with Duke in Durham on Saturday. , Both Wake and Duke loom as strong obstacles to Carolina's championship hopes and will strive, hard to down the Fetzerites. Duke will probably depend largely upon the hurling of Captain John Dempster to carry them to victory. The Tar illeels seem a little' weak on left- handed pitching. Schrider of Maryland and Sniitl) of Guilford gave them trou ble ,and Dempster is also built on the wrong side. He will probably get the call for both games as the Methodists do not have another pitcher in Demp ster's class. Wake appears to have a well balanced . nine backed by several good hurlcrs head ed by Simmons and Sorrell. The Bap tists have been winning pretty regularly during the past few weeks and are back ed by many to win over the Tar Heels.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 25, 1925, edition 1
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