The Library, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, N. C. BUY ATTRACTIONS SEASON TICKETS TODAY ORGAN RECITAL SUNDAY AFTERNOON CHAPEL OF CROSS 4:30 VOLUME XXXV CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1927 Summer School Edition, No. 3 Emma Pohl Dancers to Appear As First of Summer Attractions It Will Be a Variety, Program- Miss -Pohl,' Sixteen College- Trained Girls and Accompan ist Make up Company. The Emma Pohl Dancers, com pany of 16 college trained girls under the leadership of Emma Ody Pohl, head of Physical edu cation at the' Mississippi State College for women, will appear jn Memorial Hall Friday night at 8:30. The program includes dances and sketches, largely . classical in type, and a vocal in terpretation of the "Garden of Used to Be." In the vocal num ber Miss Carolyn Loeb of the company will sing with Joe H. Johnson, a local singer of merit who is a member of the Univer sity of North Carolina Glee Club. The Emma Pohl dancers- are giving the concert in Chapel Hill while on a tour that vvll carry them to the University of Virginia, where they won dis tinction last year in the Virginia Centenial pageant. The troup was recommended to Dean J Walker by Virginia summer school officials who called the dancers back -for another ap pearance. Besides the classical dances there will be character dances, and a poetic recitation skit, ''The Happy Prince" by Oscar Wilde, read and acted out in panto mime. The program will be giv en in four parts; the first part will be the dances of Chalif and Denishawn and a short panto mimic character dance. The second part will be the "Garden of Used to Be" ; the third part, classical dances; and. fourth the presentation of "The Happy Prince." '.' The holders of season tickets for summer attractions, now on sale at $2.00, will be admitted to this performance and 1 five others to be held the first ses sion. Admission to a single per formance i3 one dollar. Season Tickets For Summer Attractions May Be Bought Yet Those who have not purchased season tickets for the summer attraction still have an oppor tunity to do so. The tickets are on sale at Peabody No. 5 and may be had from the chaperons of all the women's buildings. It was pointed out yesterday by Dean Walker that every stu dent who expects to attend at least two of the attractions on the program will save money by purchasing a season ticket. The price of general admission tick ets to the six performances to tals $5.25. The price of a sea son ticket is two dollars. For the convenience of those who live out in town or have failed to get a ticket, a desk will be placed in front of the post office at chapel period, noon and from 6 to 7 o'clock Thursday afternoon where tickets may be had. Tickets for the six attractions may also be purchased at the box tomorrow night at Memo rial Hall. After the first per formance there will be no reduc tion in the price of season tick ets. It is obvious that waiting until after the first performance for a reduction in the price of season tickets will be of no avail. U. N. C. CONDUCTS GERMAN TRAVEL TOUR THIS YEAR Extension Division Offering Six Weeks Courses Abroad Dm . ing Summer Party Sails July 5. - STEINER RESIGNS; GOES TO TULANE Professor of Sociology Leaves University After Six - Years of Service. The resignation of Dr. Jesse F. Steiner, Professor of Social Technology in the University of North Carolina, was announced yesterday by Dr. H. W. Odum, Director of the University Srhnnl nf PnhliV Welfnrp. Tiv. Steiner is leaving the Univer sity to accept a professorship of sociology at Tulane University in New Orleans. Dr. Steiner, who has been pro fessor of sociology at the Uni versity for the past six years, will assume his , new duties in September. He is at present teaching in the University of Chicago. During the last three years Dr. Steiner has had many calls to other universities including the University of Illinois, New York University, and Washing ton University. Among the fac tors entering into the Tulane change are the availability of the Carnegie pension for, pro fessors, the heading up of spec- research and graduate worn in which he is interested, and a thirty-three percent increase in salary. PUBLIC WELFARE INSTITUTE MEETS HERE JULY 18-22 Tentative Program Arranged With Two Out-of-State Speak ers Meetings at the Carolina Inn. Mrs. Long of Miami, Florida, is the guest of her daughter Miss Katherine Long, this week. .'. Announcement has been made of the tentative program of the annual Public Welfare Institute, to be held here July 18-22, un der the auspices of the State Board of Charities and Public Welfare and the School of Pub lic Welfare of the University. A strong program is being ar ranged, including a number of prominent out-of-state speakers, among them Dr. George Pres ton, director of the Child Guid ance Clinic, Richmond, Va., and Mrs. Katherine Gibson, State Supervisor, of juvenile work in Arkansas. Monday, July 18, the opening day of the Institute, is to be de voted to the general field of so cial work. Tuesday is to be de voted largely to juvenile courts, Wednesday to child welfare, Thursday to Child psychology, and Friday to organization and administration. Thursday evening the annual business meeting of the North Carolina Association of County Superintendents of Public Wel fare will take place, with K. T. Futrell presiding. Friday evening at six o'clock the Institute will close with the annual burlesque dinner at the Carolina Inn. The Inn will be headquarters for the Institute, and reserva tions should be made as soon as possible. . ; "Vandals are among us," warns the library by placard in the periodical room. We re spectfully hope that there won't be any scandals. Buy season tickets to the sum mer attractions today. Falling in line with other uni versities throughout the country, the University of North Caro lina, through its Extension Di vision, is offering this summer a toreiem residential travol study tour. 'As the initial offer ing, a German tour has been planned, with six weeks' resi dence in Munish where the lang uage and literature of the coun try will be studied. Members composing the Ger man party will sail from New York July 5 on the S. S. Es tonia, proceeding at once to Munich where residence will be taken up at the Pension Dreier. Following the travel-study plan, courses in both elementary and advanced German and in Ger man litertaure will be offered by Professor John T. Krumpelmann of the University faculty. Col lege credit will be granted by the University for the courses pur sued and there will- be opportu nity also for study at the Uni versity of Munich. Included in 'the itinerary of the German tour are visits to Oberammergau, to the pictur esque Bavarian mountains, the medieval town of Augsburg and the Rhine river trip from May ence to Cologne. Dresden1 and Berlin will be visited and a few days will be spent in Paris on the return trip. During the stay of the party in the famous old university city of Munich a number of attractions are sched uled, among them being: a Wag ner and Mozart festival, giving opportunity for study and en joyment of German opera; the German Rifle League matches ; a Handicraft Exhibition, at which seventy workshops will be displayed in action ; and a series of dramatic productions at the Kunstler Theatre. In addition to Professor Krumpelmann, the instructor, and Miss Kathleen Wright of the University of North Carolina, who will serve as counsellor of women, the following compose the membership of the party: Mrs. J. Upton Myers, Misses Jeanette Barres, Anna Feldman, Georgine Feldman, Marion Rad- ley and Messrs. Herster Barres and Richmond E. Myers, all of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania ; Mrs. (Continued on page four) NOW MEMBERS OF UNIVERSITY FACULTY r vJf " I ' , t- Bi;:.. I Two native Tar Heels who have made wide reputations in the teaching profession in other states are to be the first women on the University of North Carolina faculty. , They are Miss C. H. Bason (left) of Burlington and Miss S. B. Marks (right) of Albemarle. Two Women Members of U.N. C. Faculty Are Native Tar Heels WOODS RETAINS N. C. CHESS TITLE Summer School Student Defeats His Challenger, Rev. E. A. Hoi ton of Winston. Henry Woods, of Asheville, a student in the University of North Carolina Summer School and holder of the North Caro lina chess championship, suc cessfully defended his title here yesterday by defeating Rev. E. A. Holton, of Winston-Salem, by the score of three and one-half to one-half. Woods won the North Caro lina championship at Raleigh last December, since which time he has defended it successfully against several challengers. Be sides being the chess title-holder of North Carolina, Woods al so holds the championship of South Carolina and Florida. Woods is principal of the New ton City School of Asheville. The champion played master ful chess and was never in trou ble. He won the first game, drew the second, and won the third and fourth to clinch the title. The match was played at the Carolina Inn and lasted un til a late hour last night. Reverend Holton, the "challen ger, won third place in the state tournament held in December. Miss Sallie B. Marks of Albe marle and Miss Cecilia Bason of Burlington Both Have Gained Reputations Elsewhere Jones Marries Miss Zaban in New York News has reached here of the marriage in New York last week of Miss Bessie Judith Zaban of Atlanta to Prof. Howard Mum ford Jones of the University fac ulty. ' WEEKLY BULLETIN THURSDAY, JUNE 23 SATURDAY, JULY 2 THURSDAY, JUNE 23rd Demonstration, Kinscella Method Piano Instruction, Grad- ed School Auditorium, 4:00 P. M. FRIDAY, JUNE 24th The Emma Pohl Dancers in a Dance Pageant, Memorial . Hall, 8:30 P. M. Holders of season tickets admitted with out further charge. Single admission, $1,00. Dance at Gymnasium, 9:30 to 11:30 o'clock. SATURDAY, JUNE 25th Dance at Gymnasium, 9:00 to 11:00 o clock. No classes will be held today. TUESDAY, JUNE 28th , Coffer-Miller Players, a noted dramatic company of Chic ago, will present Goldsmith's Immortal Comedy "She Stoops to Conquer." Memorial Hall, 8:30 P. M. Holders of season tickets will be admitted without further charge. Single admission, $1.00. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29th Coffer-Miller Players will present "The Black Pearl" Memorial Hall, 8 :30 P.M. Holders of season tickets ad mitted without further charge. Single admission, $1.00. SATURDAY, JULY 2nd Regular classes in all departments of the Summer School. The first two women to be ad mitted to the faculty of the Uni versity are native Tar Heels. When the board of trustees of the University decided that the time had come for them to add women to its faculty who were specialists in elementary educa tion, and thereby " greatly strengthen its School of Educa tion, it semms but natural that they should have brought back to the State two natives who have made reputations else where. When the selection was made it was in favor of Miss Sallie B. Marks, of Albemarle, and Miss Cecilia H. Bason, of Burlington. At the time of their election to the University faculty both were out of the state, however. Miss Marks was in Wisconsin where she was supervisor of the grades in the public schools of La- Crosse. Miss Bason was head of the Department of Primary Methods in the East Tennessee State Teachers College. Miss Marks Widely Konwn Miss Marks, who will be su pervising principal of the ele mentary grades of the Training School here, is regarded by Teachers College, Columbia Uni versity, as being among the three or four outstanding elementary supervisors now in the United States. . She received her preparatory training in the Albemarle High School, and her undergraduate training in the Woman's College, of Meredian, Miss., and in the Southwestern Teachers College, of Weatherford, Okla. She was graduated with the degree of A. B. from Southwestern Teachers College in 1923, and received the degree of M. A. from Teachers College, Columbia University, in 1924. She has also studied in the University of Chicago. Her teaching experience in cludes positions in the public schools of Oklahoma'; Fort Smith, Ark. ; LaCrosse, Wis. ; and several years as instructor in the summer sessions of the University of Arkansas. Miss Marks is at the present time a member of the summer faculty at the University of Ar kansas. When she was being considered for one of the posi tions opened here, a wire was sent to the director of the Sum mer School there asking if she might be released from her sum mer contract in case her election was contingent on her services for the summer. A wire came back saying that KLonimuca on page jour j KENAN STADIUM BE COMPLETED BY OCTOBER 1 500 Seats Are Being Poured Daily Will Be Off icially Ded icated at Carolina-Virginia Game. Work on the Kenan Memorial stadium on the south end of the campus is progressing so rapid ly that the builders now expect to have it complete by October 1, a good while before the date of the Carolina-Virginia foot ball game, when it will probably be formally dedicated. Some seven sections, each seating 500 people, have already been pour ed to date. The contractors are pouring 500 seats a day, or one section. Each of the two stands is to con tain 24 sections. That is, .the entire stadium will contain 48 sections, or 24,000 seats. The recent rainy weather' brought no halt in the construc tion operations. The concrete, mixers were kept going, and the mixture, running down the slope in a metal trough, was placed in the forms as rapidly as the job is done when the sun shines. All the excavation is finished, and the steam shovel, which was brought to the site while snow lay on the ground last winter, has taken its departure. The blasting that is heard now is for the purpose of blowing up stumps outside of the enclosure. Thus far all the concrete work has been on the east stand. First the parapet wall in front was completed, and then the par apet wall at the north end. The pouring of the seats themselves began at the north and is pro ceeding southward. Five sec tions had been poured yesterday ; if the schedule is maintained, the remaining 19 will have ', been completed by July 12. . Meanwhile, the forms for the west stand will have been put in place, and the middle of July will see the front parapet wall, on that side underway. The en tire east stand should be done before the first of September. There are eight approaches to the stadium, all for pedestrians. Most of these are pathways. The roadways over which vehicles may pass for service purposes will be used only for foot traf fic on days when games are played. Knowlton Lectures Yale Professor Gives Two Demonstra tions Lectures on Amer ican History. Prof. Daniel C. Knowlton, of Yale University, appeared be fore the University of North Carolina Summer School here Thursday and Friday nights with a demonstration lecture on American history. He showed several of the Yale historical films used in the Chronicles of America. They were entitles The Eve of the American Rev olution," and dealt with the elev en years in American history from 1765 to 1776. Professor Knowlton is assist ant professor of Visual Instruc tion in the Graduate School of Yale University, and is one of the best known educators in America. For years he has made a study of modern educational methods. Prior to joining the Yale faculty he was for six years with Columbia University. Professor Knowlton gave a second lecture Friday night deal ing with the Declaration of In dependence.