Thursday March 28, 1929
THE TAR HEEL
Page Hires
HEELS HAVE TWO
DOZEN GAMES ON
SEASON SCHEDULE
Will Meet Strong Pennsylvania
Team Here Tomorrow and
Saturday.
The University of North Carolina
will play 24 baseball games this
season, according- to the schedule an
nounced tonight by Graduate Manager
Charles T. Woollen.
It is regarded as a tough schedule.
Many of the games come close to
gether, and, with only one veteran
pitcher on hand, Coach Jini Ashmore
faces a hard assignment.
Coach Ashmore faces, this schedule
with a squad that includes only six
lettermen, bolstered by youngsters
from last year's reserves and fresh
men, but the big problem will be to
find capable pitchers. , Jim Ball,
southpaw, is the only veteran mounds
man back in togs.
Fifteen of the contests are with
Southern Conference teams, all mem
bers of the Tri-State League of the
northern section of the Conference.
Fourteen of the 24 games are to be
played at home. -
The season opened with Springfield
"Y" College coming., to Emerson
Field on March 25 and 26. The strong
Pennsylvania nine follows Springfield,
playing here tomorrow and Saturday,
March 29 and 30. , Easter Sunday
brings a day of rest, but then comes
four days of play, with games carded
with Davidson, Penn State, Cornell
and Washington and Lee.
The complete schedule follows:
March 25 Springfield "Y" College
here.
March 26 Springfield "Y" College
here.
March 29 Peimsylvania, here.
March 30 -Pennsylvania, here.
April 1 Davidson, Salisbury.
April 2 Penn State, here.
April 3 Cornell, here.'
April 4 Washington & Lee, here.
April 9 Maryland, here.
April 12 Maryland, College Park.
April 13 Virginia, Charlottesville.
April 15 W. & L., Lexington.
April 16 V. M. I., Lexington.
April 17 V. P. L, Blacksburg.
April 20 V. M. L, here.
April 22 N. C. State, here.
April 26 V. P. I., here.
April 27 Duke, Durham.
May 7 Wake Forest, Wake Foresti
May 10 Virginia, here.
May 11 Virginia, Greensboro.
May 17 Duke, here.
May 20 N. C. State, Raleigh.
May 225 Wake Forest, here.
Drop Ins
And Hear
The New
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We also invite your inspec
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1928 Isaac
Walton Goes
Poetic How
' Bingham, Maine
Jan. 31, 1928
When you've planned a trip for
- fishing,
And you've spent a lot of kale,
Bet the whole of your vacation
On some advertiser's tale
And you fish a lake of beauty
Hidden in a land of dreams,
Where the air is clean as sunshine
Haunted by songs of crystal streams.
Comes the moment when you're
casting
And a smasher hits your line,
Then you play him like a gamester
With the battle going fine,
Till a snag, a yank, and silence
And the line i3 hanging slack,
While you grit your teeth and whistle
And reel the fishline back. .
Take the pipe and fill with Edgeworth,
Light her up and learn to grin
Then by gum you are elected
To the Club of Try Agin!
A. R. M., Jr.
Edgeworth
Extra High Grade
Smoking Tobacco.
The Campus
By Joe Jones
Our walking-on-t he-grass sin is so
obvious and of such long standing
that one almost feels constrained to
apologize for bringing it up "afresh.
On the other hand, the older and
more outstanding it becomes the
stronger and louder should be the
hue and cry against it. Much has
been said and done- recently about the
making of horrid footpaths across the
otherwise well-kept sod of our cam
pus, and it actually appears that this
spring quarter may mark a favor
able turning point in the pitched bat
tle which the campus beautifiers, led
by Mac Gray and Dr. W. C. Coker,
are waging against the campus
uglifiers, who have neither leaders nor
ethics, but who are veritable snakes
in the grass and thieves by night,
and as such accomplish their slow,
dastardly work. - -
We have here a campus renowned
for its beauty; a host of caretakers
is continuously employed to 'preserve
this beauty, one of their main duties
being to keep in good walking condi
tion the well-planted paths which have
been laid off in almost every con
ceivable direction. But a t certain
type of student has persistently dem
onstrated that these paths do not
quite run in every conceivable direc
tion, and as a result the entire love
liness of the . campus is marred by
this comparatively small number of
men who evidently have never known
what it is to take pride in their sur
roundings. The great majority of
us do take pride in our campus, and
of course there are quick and effective-methods
we could employ to keep
those who do : not from walking on
the grass; however, everyone hates
coercive regulations, and we still be
lieve and hope that another way may
yet prove sound. We have for some
time tried this other way and found
it wanting; will this spring witness
its last trial?'
HEELS
.WIN TWO
jJlltfUUUi 1
LiJu
New Mound Talent Is Uncovered
In First Games of Season;
Pennsylvania Friday.
Old men tell tales of a better day
at Carolina when thenstudent body
didn't tread trails across the grass;
but now for some years this mark of
dishonor has grown upon us!. We have
fallen upon eviL days. Each spring
the same old paths have to be reculti-
vated and resown to grass. This
spring's operation ' has just been
completed. Will it be the last ?
We're the fellows to decide; the regu-
ar walksare-there, and the newly
planted grass is there which are we
going to use ? The question is' vital
and clean cut.
You fellows who insist on taking
short cuts across the grass can't you
see the issue clearly? Can't you see
what you are doing when you ignore
the signs, ignore the public senti
ment and opinion of the campus, ig
nore the honor code just because a
straight line is the shortest distance
between two points and all the side
walks on the campus don't lead
everywhere in one straight line.
Don't you feel rather guilty "when
you take one of those short cuts;
don't you feel that your fellow stu
dents are looking-askance at you;
don't you feel like slinking?
The Tar Heels showed their super
iority over the Springfield College
team by defeating them in two suc
cessive games, 12 to 9, and 5 to 1. The
first of these games, played Monday
afternoon, was a slugging match
from the first, with the Tar Heel
batters rallying -successfully -in the
latter part" of the game to overcome a
four run lead gained early in the
game by the Springfield sluggers.
The second -game lasted only , four
and a half innings, the players being
hampered throughout this time by a
heavy drizzle.
Two pitchers were : uncovered in
these games, Wright and Fleming.
Wright relieved Ball in the game
played Monday, and held Springfield
while his teammates piled up the win
ning runs. Fleming started the second
game and pitched masterful ball all
the way. Six hits were made against
him, but these were' well scattered and
resulted in a single run. Satterf ield
and Whitehead starred in the infield
consistently. The former finished the
first day with a clean slate, having
made two three base hits, a sacrifice,
and a walk. ; Captain Luf ty also show
ed his ability as clean-up man when
he knocked a home-run in right center.
Coach Ashmore's men again take
the field tomorrow afternoon when
they play the first of the two games
with the University of Pennsylvania
team on Emerson field. Little is
known about this team, but it is ex
pected that the game will be one of
hardest of the season.
Jnm Ball, veteran southpaw, will
probably start the game, while the
new discoveries, Wright and Fleming,
will probably be used in the .game
Saturday Lufty, Satterf ield, White
head,' and Rand, it is expected will
make up the infield, and Jackson,
Harden, and Magner the outfield.
Intramural Baseball
To Open Season Soon
The Intramural baseball season
will open annual spring activities
about . Wednesday, April 10. As
usual the schedule will operate on the
dormitory-fraternity plan. That is,
there will be 'two distinct, leagues,
the dormitory and f rat leagues. The
winners in the two leagues meet at
the end of the season for the campus
Coaching Course
Gets Underway
basketball Is Now Being Studied;
"tudents Still Allowed to Register.
The course in athletic coaching
which is being given this quarter by
the University Coaching staff began
yesterday afternoon with twenty-one
men enrolled. The class is held at
two o'clock in 112 Saunders five times
each week. ,
The course is being given by ( the
Coaching staff of the University and
is under the auspices of the school of
Education, and is planned primarily
for men who are preparing to teach
and coach. This course is similar to
the work offered ,in the Summer
Coaching school, and consists of class
room and field or court work five
hours per week. No credit toward
graduation will be given for the
course. , . .
Basketball is now being taken up
and will continue for the first half of
the quarter. The second half will be
devoted to either baseball or football.
Any student who wishes to take this
course is requested to enroll at the
class in Saunders Hall as early as
possible. No registration is neces
sary. The course is -open to any stu
dent who will be sufficiently inter
ested in the work and who plans to
attend the classes regularly.
championship. All fraternities are
advised to decide by the end of this
week whether they will enter a team
or not. A member of the Intramural
department will visit each fraternity
by the end of this week or the first of
next to receive the entries. As many
f rats as can do so are urged to enter
-teams. All thirteen dormitories are
supposed to have teams, so it wouldn't
be at all amiss to start practising for
the approaching seasonJ
NEW VICTOR RECORDS
RELEASED EVERY FRIDAY
UNIVERSITY BOOK AND
STATIONERY CO.
(Sutton Bldg.)
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practical work under supervision of
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Write for details and admission re
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Harvard University Dental School
Longwood Ave., Boston, Mass.
The Pines is the favorite rendezvous for Club Gatherings,
Bridge Luncheons and Fraternity get-togethers. . We solicit this
kind of patronage, feeling certain that everyone will be highly
pleased. Mrs. Vickers has the happy faculty for assisting in the
preparation for such functions and will cheerfully render her as
sistance to make such gatherings a huge success. For those as
sociations and organizations which like to have dancing as a
feature of their program we offer our dance floor. For a simple
luncheon or a banquet, The Pines solves the problem.
THE PINES TEA ROOM
Chapel Bill Boulevard 4 Miles from Chapel Hill
The .state legislature recently ap
propriated $30,000 for the beautifica
tion of pur campus; are we going to
have to use this to cover up the same
shameful marks of our thoughtf ul
ness and laziness time, after time?
The grounds committee has done its
part; Mac Gray, chairman, has made
several appeals in his speeches at
class smokers and - chapel, and Dr.
Coker has recently had every ugly
trail done over. Now it's up to us.
We point an accusing finger at the
University alumni for not finishing
Graham Memorial; can we show to
them a better faith to Carolina?
Where is our excuse?
The inscription upon the tablet be
side Senior Walk says that the walk
is dedicated by the class of '28 as a
sign of love to be cherished with af
fection and loyalty by the senior
classes of the future. Running into
Senior Walk from the direction of the
Pharmacy Building are two unsightly
paths across the grass. . They are a
mockery do they too signify love to
be cherished with- affection and loyal
ty by the senior classes of the future ?
What are student sentiment and stu
dent opinion worth on this campus?
The path-grass situation is giving a
dark answer.
Crucification Will Be
Sung Tomorrow Night
Tomorrow night at 8:00 o'clock the
'Crucifixion' will be sung at the Epis
copal church by a chorus under the
direction of George H. Lawrence.
The soloists are Spencer Schorr,
tenor, and Wesley Griswold, base, and
the organist for the presentation will
be Mrs. A. S.- Wheeler. The public
is invited.
The altitude record for parachute
jumping is held by Captain Stevens,
Beautiful Easter Boxes
' of ' . . , ; . .
WHITMAN'S
and
MERRICK'S
' Candies
Send or Take Her One
PATTEMSOM IBM
mi -tmZSrJL
Dtretoh the Check
from homo. Spend less for food
... . - have more for fun. Shredded
Wheat for breakfast and for
midnight supper. Delicious and
economical. Helps you work and
lets you sleep.
J
Mnie
ive;e ; p;:s " y jo u " a W r ejartd - a I e r t
Send the TAR HEEL home. $3.00 per college year.
Start the New Term Right
. With a Haircut and Shave at Smithy's
Mac, the shine boy, says they look twice as good after he
finishes with your shoes.
"It Must Be Good," if it is done at
The University Barber Shop
(Under the Book Store) '
Miss Mary Jane Britt, formerly with The
Corley Co., Durham, N. C, is now in
charge of our music department
Victor Columbia Brunswick
Phonographs and Records
University Book & Stationery Co.
(SUTTON BIJILDING)
r - Next to Sutton's Drug Store
twt Ain llV fm
Remember Mother and Sweetheart
ORDER TODAY
University Book and Stationery Co.
Agents for
i -
TODAY
' "V - W T . .
ad IOUIS V.CIIIU
MURDER! The law ac
cused her of crime, yet she
was innocent. An unusually
thrilling story of underworld
life in Havana.
Added
Comedy
Novelty
WHO KILLED THE - -
"CANARY"?
" ' - - FRIDAY - -
6 i
THE CANARY MURDER
CASE"
-with-
LOUISE BROOKS . WILLIAM POWELL
JAMES HALL
MYSTERY on the screen! The keen, fascinating, silk-hat
detective, Philo Vance, who has lived in a million copies
of the S. S. Van Dine stories, now lives on the screen!
A murderer abroad! Excitement and thrills on the trail!
3
Added
Billy Dooley Comedy
nave"" aeady
NOTICE
come m.
The tour will be a cooperative en
terprise of the Extension divisions of
the University of North Carolina and
Rutgers University.
Two college credit courses will be
offered. . Prof. G. T. Schwenning, of
the University, will give the course in
Labor Management and Prof. G. W.
Kelsey, of Rutgers, will teach Indus
trial Administration.
An attractive itinerary has been
planned, be'tenliTgrtly-- rrgg. in, J?gig it-
lo prevent ourl
and "Tchudo Tchudiessa," Wonders of
the Steppes.
This was Mr. 'Walevitch's second
appearance in Chapel Hill. He sang
under the auspices of Phi Mu Alpha
Sinfonia. He was accompanied by
his wife.
The noted artist was among the
first of the Russians, to introduce to
America, the old Russian folk songs
and Gypsy ballads. With him it is
a work of devotion, -in order to pre
serve this primitive art which, with
a. X i m x .
ine gTowxn 01 western culture, is
ine Augusv 23. Students will visit
industrial . Renters in England, Hol-
France, with a visit to the Interna
tional Lvr. Organization and the
League oliatloiia st Geneva as a
j specialfjvture. ...
- 1
While heTAjir;Siiir5,-7Rieirixc
were ne guests of Prof, and Mrs.
Thorndike Saville, , v ': ; . '
ji2j?pELea ,15Q0Q0, vears, agjQ.c,i TV
fi
1 t J