ouuii i-sir win, Eo 1007 City I V ' ' (v h rf A BASEBALL Carolina-Duke GOLDEN FLEECE TAPPING Memorial Hall Monday Night 8:30 p. m. Emerson Field 4 p. m. VOLUME XXXVI CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY, 3IAY 5, 192S NUMBER 81 Uy '1 Ym LECTURER EXPLAINS REGENT rEAES OF UNREST Kilpatrick's Lecture Last night Was on "Consequent De mands of Citizenship" "Civilization is just now perform ing its greatest experiment of all time the experiment of a moving stability from the old assumption that religion and tradition are au thority, to the new assumption that the correct thing is to bring a social moral philosophy to bear on the work ings cf life." Such is Dr. William H. Kilpatrick's explanation of the recent years of un rest. He delivered the second in the annual series of three Weil Lectures at the University last night on the subject "The Consequent Demands on Citizenship," which was a sequel to his first lecture "How the South Is Changing." "Nowhere is this experiment more evident than in the South," he said. ''For long years past we have had a rule of the inferior because of a lack of education for the whole. Mill and rural isolation created an ideal ground for selfish and ignorant poli ticians to work. A partial result has been the deep unrest and the grop ing of later years.' "Our civilization is being tried at the bar. We have been gradually getting away from tradition and the authority of ' the elders. We have even changed our family life from the old patriarchal system to the present system that finds a place for birth control, companionate marriage and divorce. We find it easier to evade personal responsibilities. "And yet obligation and duty are words that are most certainly not out of date. We owe a duty to tradition. We merely have immediate problems of unrest to solve, problems that come out of the shift from static to dynamic civilization. "Examples of this present day un rest have been the Mencken vogue, the vogue of Sinclair Lewis' criticism of Babbitt, the vogue of new poetry, a resentment to 'uniformity and the 'machine 'age.' Such things are not new in history. "The whole country has a feeling of overmuch , organization, from cheering at a football game to church work. We are tired of expert think ing, being handed down to us from above. The individual objects to be ing overwhelmed, to living a chain store life with efficiency experts. Continued on page four) NEW NATIONAL ON CROWDED CAMPUS Phi Alpha, Jewish Fraternity Will be Installed Next Saturday Phi Alpha national fraternity wil soon be added to the already crowded camnus of Greek-letter lodges. This will make the 37th organization of this kind to take its place in the so cial life of the campus. Among the features that have al ready been planned for the coming week-end when the fraternity will hold its installation ceremonies arean in stallation banquet and dance. Ihe in stallation proper will be held at the Carolina Inn Friday afternoon and night. The dance at the Inn Satur day night -will be preceded by a ban auet. Invitations have already been mail ed to the other campus fraternities and a canable group of musicians has been secured for the dance. The large number of visitors that will be here for the Vireinia-Carolina game Fri day should swell the feminine attend- a. nee ait iuc uuuv.-,. Phi Alpha is a national Jewish fra ternity and has a number of chapters in the south. The installation team will come from Baltimore. There is a chanter at the University of .Vir ginia, William and Mary College, and an alumni chapter at the Virginia Medical Colleere. The charter members of the group are as follows: Leonard Lewis, Hen dersfmville: Sidney Brick, Dillon, S C Mori-is Erberfield, Newton: Hen ry Grossman, Mebane; Leon Polak- avetz. Trnv: Jacob Saltzman, New Haven, Conn.; Milson Cohen, Flush- in?. Lena- Island: and Murrel uonen Louisville, Ky. Sidney Brick .is the Work On Two New Buildings Is Progressing At Rapid Rate Contractors Estimate that New Library Will be Completed by Summer of 1929 New Dorm itory Ready for Occupancy Next Fall Work on the new library is being rushed forward at a rapid pace and, if no t unforseen obstacles arise, the magnificent building will be completed early in the summer of 1929, The pouring of cement is now going on and in a few days work will be begun in earnest on the wall3 and interior. - Largest tm Campus The building will be the largest on the campus when it is completed. It will be 208 feet long and the front will be of limestone. According to the x estimate of the architects it will require at least fifteen months to have the library ready for use. . - The interior of the building will be in keeping with the beauty of the ex terior. The floors will be made of marble and terrazzo while the walls will be decorated in colors harmoniz ing with them. The plans for the li brary were worked out by Dr. Wilson in conjunction with the architects and the" structure Will be built so that it may be enlarged if the need becomes great enough in the future. Reading Room for Blind The first, floor will be used chiefly for reserve readings assigned by the different departments. This floor will be devoted to freshman and sophomore work. The second. fl5or will have large reading rooms and one large room udgins Annouces Plans For Annual Senior Week; Dates are from Mav 14-19 Final plans for the annual senior week, May 14-19, when mem bers of the graduating class will hold nom inal sway over the campus, were announ ced yesterday by Ed Hudgins, president of the student body. " Among the many privileges that wTill be extended the seniors by -the University and community during this week, special free shows will be put on at the Carolina Theatre each day with a. good orchestra playing. At present arrangements are being made to secure a suitable group of musicians for the occasion. New Wall Is Rising To Rear Of South Where has been a blank, bleak," un impressive washed out bank of red clay left by the graders of the drive way round the lower side of Old South, the foundation is being dug for a retaining wall to improve the appearance of the place as well as prevent encroachment of the driving and parking space by erosion of the soil every time it rains. The wall will be of brick with limestone topping. It is being given a deep foundation, and will rise about two feet above the surface sof the drive. A sample of the same type of construction is found in 'the two short walls, already present at the steps at the southeast corner of the building, in the path running by Steele and- the Playmaker building. The new wall will be in the nature of a continuation of these, but will be hieher. It will run from the Y build ing almost to the walk on the other side of the administration building, leaving a little space for the conven ience of auto drivers who wish to go to a parking space down on the lower ground. The low ground from the place of construction to the railroad has been staked off, and will undergo grading and levelling off 'soon. Wigue an Masque Wants "Prop" Men Candidates for a position on the Technical Staff of the Wigue and Masque Productions should see Dave Avner at the Zeta Beta Tau house on Rosemary Street as soon as possible, Avner announc ed yesterday. Work on the cur rent production, "Whoops M'Dear," will begin at once, and several positions are open on the Technical Staff. which will seat four hundred students doing reference work and studying. The top floor will be devoted to grad uate students. Eight seminar rooms will be provided on this floor for re search in specific subjects. The base ment will house the extension division of the library and have rooms for typewriting. One unique feature of the new -building will be the reading room which will be provided for the use of blind students. - When completed the library will be one of the largest in the south and will cost $625,000. New Dorm The new dormitory, which was be gun last December, is fast nearing completion. The exterior is practical ly finished and at present the interior is being plastered. The construction was retarded somewhat by the ad verse weather conditions during the winter months. However, with the advent of spring and warm weather the work has been sped up and it will be only a short time before the struc ture is completed. ' This building will make a second quadrangle out of the triangle. Its floor- plan is identical with those of the dormitories of the present trian gle. Each room will accommodate two men and the whole building will care for one hundred and twenty boys. This 11 T 1 L 11 1 a ' win unaouDteaiy relieve xo some ex tent the congestion which will result from the influx of new students next fall. - ' The building will.be ready for oc cupancy the first of next year. Talks, relative to how seniors should enfer the affairs of the world and what they should expect will be made, by different members of the faculty to "the class every night dur ing the week under Davie Poplar at 7:15.. According to President Hudgins, plans have been made by officials of the class to stage a senior smoker one night during ,the week. Final announcement will be made in regard to this later. The chairman of the Executive Committee and his staff are working on further plans for the week, an nouncements of which will be released at an early date. S. A. E. Honors Bride And Groom at Dance The week-end got off to a success ful start yesterday afternoon when the Sigma Alpha Fraternity entertained at a twilight dance at the S. A. E house from five-thirty - till nine Music was furnished by Mickey Block's Buccaneers. The dance was given in honor of a well known couple of the state who areto be married next Saturday Miss Adelaide McAllister of Winston Salem, and Mr. Edgar Cheek of Dur ham. , Miss McAllister- is very wel known here, having attended the Uni versity dances for the past few years LMr. Cheek, an alumnus of the f rater nity, graduated last year, , and while here he held many social honors. The house was beautifully decorat ed with flowers and plants. Refresh ments were served during the course of the dance. Tonight the fraternity will give another dance at the house in honor -of the bridal party, and the Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity will also entertain their house-party by a ban quet and dance at the Carolina Inn. Cheerios To Go To ' Game at ' Greensboro Petty Waddell, cheerleader is sued a call yesterday for all Cheerios who expect to make the trip to Greensboro for the Virginia-Carolina game next Sat urday to meet in Gerrard Hall Monday evening at 7:00 o'clock. The entire cheering unit for the game will be composed of the Cheerios, the University Student Body, and the N. C. C. W. and G. C. students. A number of former Cheerios have left school thus leaving places open for new men. These are asked to report at Gerrard Hall at 7:00 Monday evening. PLAYMAIiERS ON EXTENDED TOUR Twelve Students and Three Offi cials Will Present Three , One-Act Plays. Yesterday morning the Playmakers began' their 20th state tour. They will return on May 16, in the mean time playing in the largest cities in Western North Carolina- Frederick H. Koch, founder and di rector; Hubert Heffner, " manager; amuel Selden, technical director; and twelve students are on the trip. The 'program consists of three one- act plays. These plays have already been produced in the Playmaker Theatre this year. The plays fol low: "Mountain Magic," by Edith Daseking; ' "Jobs Kinfolks," by Mrs. Lorretto Carrol Bailey; and "A Shot- Gun Splicin'," by Mrs. Gertrude Wil son Coffin. The towns to be visited and , the dates of presentation are Albemarle, May . 4; Hickory, May 8; Henderson- ville, May 9; Asheville, May 10; Johnson City, Tenn., May 11; Burns- ville, May 12; Winston-Salem, May 14; and Greensboro, May 15." The twelve students making the trip are: Shepherd Strudwick, Jr., of Hillsboro; Enita Nicks, of Graham; Helen Dortch, of Chapel Hill; How ard Bailey, of Bessemer, "Ala.; Lois Warden, of Louisville,. Ky.; Noel Walker of Charlotte; Mrs. Lorretto Carrol Bailey, of Chapel Hill; Moore Bryson, of Asheville; Mrs. Gertrude Wilson Coffin, of Chapel Hill; Edwin S. Day, of 51enmont, Ohio; Walter Spearman, of Charlotte; 'and Charles Lipscomb, of Greensboro. KILPATRICK FLAYS SOUTH'S "MILITANT daintausm" Weil Lecturer Delivers First of Annual Addresses to Large Gerrard Hall Audience. "The South today stands on the threshold of a new era, and it must face squarely the question as to whether it shall play a worthwhile part in leadership as of old or be swal lowed up," asserted Dr. William H. Kilpatrick, professor of the philoso phy of education in Teachers College, Columbia University, who delivered the first of the annual series of Weil lectures in Gerrard Hall Thursday night. . - Hall Well Filled Gerrard Hall was well filled for the lecture, and many out of town dele gations were present for the address. The speaker was introduced by Pres ident Harry W. Chase, who referred to him as one. well qualified to discuss the South from a national viewpoint since he had spent a 1 great many years in both the North and the South. Dr. Kilpatrick at the outset stated that he was going to be brutally frank, and that he thought he was en titled to do so since he had spent the last twenty years in New York and more than that in his native South. "The South," he said, "is entering into full fellowship with a civiliza tion that has become loosed in con siderable measure from its old moor-i ings in philosophy, religion, morals, and education.' The Civil War isolat ed the South, but it is now getting back into the main current, and the question is what Kind of education does the South need in order to act well its new part." . 'Certain Grevious Shortcomings" The speaker stated that many things of the old South should be carried over to the new regime, such as culture and devotion to religion, and some things ought to be discard ed, among them being "certain grevi ous shortcomings, institutional, and private." Dr. Kilpatrick then flayed some of these "shortcomings" and mentioned "militant fundamentalism and "ex cessive nationalism" in particular. A victory of the former might mean the suppression of thought and discus sion while the latter has lead to such organizations as the American Le gion, D. A. R., and R. O. T. C. to place too-much emphasis on suppression of thought and discussion, rather than to coine to understandings through dis cussion. He also spoke against the Ku Klux Klan. Revised version : to the victor be longs thesoil. Asheville Times. G olden "Fleece Tapping Monday Nisiht Arouses peculation Dr. Kilpatrick 4 Dr.1 villiam H. Kilpatrick, profes sor of the philosophy of education in Teachers, College, Columbia Univer sity,. New York, who delivers the last of the annual series of Weil lectures in Gerrard Hall tonight. A native Southerner who has lived in New York for 2ft years, Dr. Kilpatrick is one of -the country's most widely known educators. The Weil lectures were established through the gener osity of the" families of Sol and Henry Weil of Goldsboro. Close Application Necessary, Winston Tells Law Students "Close application in a present day law school will save a young lawyer ten yers of praetiee," Judge Robert W. Winston told students of the Uni versity Law School Wednesday night in an address given under the aus pices of the Law School Association. . "The old hot house method of forc ing youngsters past the state bar ex amination is indeed a thing of the past. More than ever it has come to be recognized that a lawyer must do more than make a livelihood as im portant as that is." Judge Winston, who has retired from the bench and is now engaged in writing, spoke on the subject "Re sults." He was introduced by C. W. Hall, of Newport, student president of" the Law School Association. This lecture marks the completion of a series of very successful addresses given by various legal authorities throughout the state, under the aus pices of the Association. NATURE'S ABORTION ARTS STUDENT An Engineer Answers or Merely Expresses an Opinion DESPICABLE RAT EDITOR'S NOTE This article is a reply to a clipped story from the Uni versity of Colorado SILVER AND GOLD, which teas published in Thursday's issue of the Tar Heel. In the article the engineering students were assailed by a writer who pro claimed himself- an Arts Student. Oh spawn of a barren society! Oh parasites upon the institutions of learning, whose sluggish minds cannot encompass but the insensate dribble from lecturers in vain phil osophies! Oh School so foul that harbors such worms in it! After four years of slipping by "crip" courses, four years of dreary exposure to subjects which by him are never understood, the Arts Stu dent is graduated into a world of pave ments and tall buildings to become, at best, a phthisic keeper of records an oily spoke in one of the small wheels of progress. Is this life? Oh meritorious fate of the Campus Snob! . , And is he a character truly marked on the campus? Yea. more truly than the yellow Chinaman, more conspic uously than the Ford f or he is the "collidge" man. What does he know? We can ex cuse it in him that heV thinks that gravity lurks in apples or that the science of mechanics must be attacked with a monkey-wrench; contact with On Campus Reviewer Picks Men Spearman and Gray Selected as Certainties Number of Possible Candidates (By Damon and Pythias) We consider onlyJ'''" two men, Walter! Spearman and Mac! Gray, as certainties "f nT tannine Vtt V10I Senior Order of Gold en Jfieece at the an nual ceremony in M morial Hall Mondaj night. Probably there is more mystery surrounding the se lections of the two masked and hood ed Fleecemen Monday night than has existed during the past several years, , and there is a decided dearth of pre dictable material, although' there are probably a score of possible selections. Dr. Francis P. Gaines, newly-installed president of Wake Forest College, will deliver the address, which will feature the twenty-sixth" annual tap ping ceremony of the order. The ex ercises are scheduled to begin at 8:30 Always highly impressive, the tap ping ceremony is attended by one of the largest throngs that assembles for any student gathering during the en tire year. Initiation into the Fleece is generally regarded as the highest honor that can be bestowed upon a . student in the ordinary annals of cam pus affairs. The two black-robed and hooded tappers enter in the midst of an im pressive silence. They slowly walk through the aisles, and suddenly pounce upon the selected men. A great deal of interest and speculation is always manifest in the few weeks preceding the tapping. .Interest has been especially pronounced this year.. Certainties Walter Spearman of Charlotte, recently-elected editor of the Tar Heel,, president of the North Carolina Col legiate Press Association, member of the Amphoterothen and Grail orders,, former president of the Sophomore Y Cabinet, Associate Editor of the Yack ety Yack, and assistant leader of the Junior Prom, is the most outstanding candidate for Golden Fleece in recent years. His tapping is practically as sured. Mac Gray of Statesville, next year's Y president, football and track letter man, assistant manager of basketball, member of the Sheiks and the Grail and executive committeeman of the German Club, ranks second to Spear man as a semi-certainty. Continued on page faUr) THE CAMPUS SNOB which would shatter his unstable brain (either mechanics or the wrench). Even in his line, if there be any such, we ask nothing about his apprecia tion and understanding of Shakes peare, Plato, Schopenhauer, Aeschy lus, et alii that would be bootless in quiry. But doe i he know who they are can he merely quote from them? Answer that, vermins! What do you know? He spends a goodly while in dress ing, so, to avoid the strain that might be caused in deciding 'twixt several combinations of apparel (and being quite unable to arouse in his inef fectual mind the exercise of his vaunt ed taste to act as arbiter) he has adopted a uniform, variation from which (from the just-so trousers to the right-spacing-of -buttoned vest) would mean nervous collapse. His greatest ambition ah, ask of the winds. . . ! But does he dance? That he does if by such name I am allowed to call the "couthless antics ,that are seen at his affairs. Nor is he bashful in the presence of ladies; no, he is never shy nor put .out he is shameless. His anaemic passions leave him bored with .a. wretched, worthless life. Hence, despicable ratbeware of being crushed by that "eternal" slap stick which you so greatly dread. Jerry Slade. president of the group.