Tftfe Library, Cj.ty, ON v- ' TO GREENSBORO . : - .. . I:'. A yc . r j " - ' ON ' . - TO j GREENSBORO VOLUME XXXVII CHAPEL HILL, N. C., SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1929 NUMBER 83 0IMiH Mot. Carolina Wins Second v; vGame. ;of ;! Series : from : : i finia by 6-4 Score Tar Heels and Cavaliers Play Third Game of Annual Series In Memorial Stadium" at Greensboro This Afternoon. Carolina pulled a : hard fought game out of the fire with a thrilling eighth inning rally here yesterday, and the Virginia Cavaliers took their second straight defeat of the season, 6-0, at the hands of the Tar Heels, terfield and Barnhart told the story in the 8th frame, while Jim Ball, the Tar Heels' fourth pitcher of the day, held the Cavaliers in the check in the final frame. . : " s . ' I The game gave Carolina a chance for a clean sweeps in the annual se ries, which has been played now since 1891. ' The 'final game will be staged in Greensboro's'" Memorial Stadium this afternoon at 3 o'clock, and a record and colorful crowd is expected to be on hand. City Editor Box score and summary: Virginia TAB Holland, 2b 2 T. Bowen, If Lewy, rf xWeaverv April, c Sloan, cf Byrd, lb : Randolph, 3b .. Dent, ss .i.......... Ellis, p .:.........-:... xxLewis - TOTALS Carolina Coxe . r Satterfield, 3b Whitehead, ss ..... House, If Barnhart,! If Jessup, rf ........ ........ Maus, c . Lufty, lb, (C) . Jackson, 2b Fleming, p Wright, p J- xxxSher, ........ ...... - Brown, lb Ball, p TOTALS 4 3 ...... 1 2 5 4 : ..A ........ 4 3 ..... ... 0 ..32 AB a ...... .5 z : l 3 5 4 ........ 2 ..... .. 3 ....... 1 2 1 o ... o ... 33 R HE 11 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 1- 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 -0 0 0 0 0 1 1 t) d o 3 R 2- 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 HE 0 0 4 . 0 (f 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 xBatted for Lewy in ninth. xxBatted for Ellis in ninth. xxxBatted for Wright in eighth. ANDERSON TARES CITY EDITOR JOB One-Time Campus Comic Editor and News Writer to Assume New Duties Thursday. . v'i .mm; SCENERY FOR RIP YERY ELABORATE SAYS SAM SELDEN Will Be ' Presented in Forest Theatre May 24 and 25; Prof. v Koch is Directing Play. W. W. Anderson, University alum? nus, has accepted a position with the Albemarle Press as city editor. He will assume his new duties next week. Yackety Yacks Monday . Guy Hill, business manager of ; the Yackety Yack, announces that copies of it will be distri buted Monday afternoon at three ': o'clock from the Yackety jYack offices in the basement, of Alumni. All students whose names begin with a" letter ffomlS." through IT" will form a line at the window to the office, others will receive their copies at the door. With rehearsals - pn Rip Van Win kle going steadily forward the Play-, makers are making elaborate plans for the presentation of the play in the Forest Theatre May 24 and 25. Sam' Selden is at work on stage, sets and lighting effects while Hubert Heff ner is polishing up his part in the title role. The first two acts are com pleted; next week will see . the last two acts-finished,, and the following week will be taken up with the polish ing touches on the play. Faced, with the. problem of shift ing a large amount . of scenery quickly before the eyes of the audience as there is no curtain oh the Forest thea tre, Sam Selden is working steadily dn the sets. "Just how the changes can be made quickly without the audience seeing the stage hands has not been worked out completely; some are suggesting that the Chinese con vention of the property man dressed in black be followed. - Two exterior scenes, one showing a Dutch colonial village with the Jnn and Rip's home, the other a mountain scene, are being designed. The sets wilr be in minature, suggestive rather than - realistic. The two interior scenes are the homes of Rip, a dilapi dated cabin, and of Deerick von Beek banonn, the wealthy Shylock of the village. ' ' Professor Koch is directing the play. The part of Meenie, a little girl, will be taken in the first act FyEleanor Jones, in the second by Anne Bagby, and in the last two acts by either Miss Faulkner or .Miss Ed wards, who are both rehearsing. Men Are Taken- from Every. Phase of ' : College Life; -GardnerTapped First GIVES INTERESTING TALK North Carolina Governor La ments Mass Production Situa tion; Hopes to Remedy It. Fleece Speaker Noted Speakers on Proram Of National Adult Education M 20 Special Train To Leave at 9 O'clock Andy Anderson whose 'initials are W. W. has resigned his position with the Durham . Sun, one of the . Page chain, as proofreader and feature writer to take the city editorship of the Albemarle Press. . Before going to the Sun he was head proofreader at the Seeman Printery of Durham but tiring of reading book proof and wanting to get his'fingers again on a typewriter he went to the Durham paper to be gin his chosen 'profession. . While on the campus b.e majored in journalism and was the most repre sentative man in his class of '28 and that same year saw him issue as edi tor the best volume of the Bu6caneer since its beginning. He . was two times feature editor of the Yackety Yack. a constant contributor to the Magazine for two years and while in Durham he has contributed to the Magazine and the Duke Archive. He was on the staff of the ill-fated Faun and has served on the Tar Heel as reporter, feature writer, columnist and literary critic and frequently as sisted in desk work when necessary. In his senior year he was proof reader at the Orange Print Shop. r The Albemarle Press has the repu tation of being the best typographi cally appearing weekly in North Carolina and it is probably ? the largest. It will be enlarged in the next two months when the plant is moved into new and larger quarters The special train chartered to carry the North Carolina student body to Greensboro for the an nual diamond classic with Vir ginia leaves Chapel Hill at nine o'clock this morning, Saturday, and is scheduled to arrive at its destination before, noon. The train will leave Greensboro at 11:55 o'clock tonight. 'Excursion rates will make it possible for practically all University stu dents to follow the team and cheer it on in this annual' classic with the Cavaliers. Upon the ar rival of the pilgrimage, in Greens- boro, a parade will be. formed up Elm Street led by the cheer lead ers and the forty-piece Univer- sity band. Playmakers Install New Plans for Next Year for Customers Will Be First Time Association Has Met in the South; Every Phase of Adult Education Will Be Discussed: " Due to the growth of the interest in Playmaker work plans- are being laid for the presentation of , all Play maker offerings three times next year instead of two. Season tickets will be sold in coupon books, like the athletic; membership, so that the holders of sea son tickets will be assured of a re serve seat. At present Hubert Jieli ner, business manager of the organi zation, reports that he has enough re quests for tickets next year to fill the house-two nights. Two outside attractions will be of fered instead of one, if present plans materialize. Negotiations are under way for an appearance of the Dallas little theatre here. This is the most famous little theatre in' the country being noted for its art work. There is a strong possibility of the Morning Height players of New York giving a production of John Erskine's "Private Life of Helen of Troy." Mr, inf? to Albemarle. He starts worK in his new. position the 16th of this month. . A.ij vQ 5imTnis tnis weeK- end taking a rest he says before goHErskine has jut finished the dra- matic version of his play; this group is bidding strongly for the dramatic rights. Many of the. leading authorities in the field of education are scheduled for addresses at the fourth annual meeting of the American Association for Adult Education to which the University of North Carolina will be host at the Association's first South ern gathering on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, May 20 23 inclusive,' according to the com plete program announced here today. , The program includes a- list of 50 speakers, among whom are Dean James E. Russell, president of the As sociation; Frederick P. Keppel, President of the Carnegie Corpora tion of New York; Everett Dean Mar tin, Director of the People's Institute of New York;' Arthur Cartwright, Executive Director of the Associa tion; William John Cooper, United States Commissioner of Education; Robert I. Rees, Vice-President in charge of personnel work for the American Telephone, and Telegraph Co.; Dean Chester D. Snell, of the University of Wisconsin; and Presi dent Harry W. Chase, of, the Univer sity of North Carolina. " ' The Association will be in session for four days and virtually ' every important phased of ' adult education will i be included, in the discussions. More than 150 delegates are expected. Eighteen Section Meetings There will be 18 section meetings. There will be public sessions Monday and Tuesday nights for addresses by Dr. Harry W. Chase,' Everett Dean Martin, Dean James E. Russell, and William John Cooper. There will be a meetiiig of the North Carolina Con ference on Adult Education Tuesday .afternoon, business sessions Monday and Thursday mornings, and the gath ering will be brought to a close Thurs day morning with meetings of the Council and Executive Board.v The annual banquet will be held on Wednesday nigh.t Arthur E. Bes Continued on page four)-. "If I were called upon to charac terize in a single sentence the supreme need of this State today, I should unhesitatingly ' say that the ; thing most needed, in all our departments of life, is a fundamental change in emphasis," declared Governor O. Max Gardner, Thursday night to a crowd that filled Memorial Hall for the im pressive "tap day? ceremony of the Golden Fleece, University honor so ciety. ' 'iV' . ' "In our restless 'and almost re lentless pursuit of the shadow of ma terial gain, we have lost sight of the substance of all human happiness and well , being, which is equality of opportunity' he continued. , x "The evil of industry '. in North Carolina is that industry in the State has gone in for quanity production rather than for quality. , . ' , "If I had the power, I would not permit the building of a single new spindle or new loom during my term of office as Governor. The rapid growth of North Carolina 'industry has; brought with it the by-products, of congestion, fermentation and dis content. You can never pay wages above the bare necessities of life as long as everything is based on mass production without regard for qual ity production which requires .'skilled labor. .. 'The biggest problem in North Carolina today is the human prob lem and the thing that "disturbs vme more as" Governor tban anything'dse is my duty to aid in the solution of that great question." .; After discussing, the educational phases of the State's life, the Gov ernor said: "In agriculture -and industry the challenge to our leadership is no less unmistakable or impelling. I have preferred to concentrate my adminis tration on agriculture, but the rapid change of North Carolina from an agricultural to an industrial commun ity brings with it what I have already alluded to as the great problem of all government the human problem. It is my belief that human and social implications of mass production must become increasing public concern. For the life of the average man is an exact barometer of the life of the State and if North Carolina is to be and remain a fit place for you and me to live in, .it must be and remain a fit place for all of us to live in. No progress that does not lift all can ever-permanently lift any." Declaring that the ceremony of picking honor men from the body of the University was of something more than campus significance, the Gover nor told the students before him that they had come upon the scene when North Carolina r stands spiritually at the cross-roads, f V j -State-at Cross-roads Asserting that days are ahead when the State will need leaders as never before, he said: "The great leader is one who can use power without abusing it. A man's loyalties are a sure index of , Continued on page four") pm.... ,..l.w,,,.....,..m.H..u,,,.,..KW, ' I i ' ' -' - ---s ." ' j . - - Governor O. Max Gardner was the chief speaker at the annual tapping, Thursday night, of the Golden Fleece, University honor organization. PROUTY TALKS t TO ROTARIANS Speaks on the Rocks of North Carolina and Where They Are Found. . HOODED FIGURES RAMBLE Ray Farris Automatically Be comes President of the Or ganization as He Was the First Man Taken; Gray Next. As a feature on the program of the Chapel Hill Rotary Club at' its regular meeting and banquet last Wednesday evening in the ball room of the Caro Iina Inn, Dr. ' W. V. Prouty, of the University Geology department, gave a lecture on "The Kocks of North Carolina and Where they are found." "North Carolina is physiographical ly divided into three parts. . We have the coastal plain, the piedmont sec tion, and the mountain area. Be neath all of the state however there is a certain fundamental base of rock that is the same in all parts. If one would bore about two thousand feet down in the earth at Wilmington one would find crystalline rock, the same that one would find if he bored down far enough right here in ChapelHill. Below this strata of crystalline rock, one finds "granite. This granite Is en closed by veryold rocks which con tain mica. The' old rock sections in the western part of the state always have a very high mineralization. Near Virginia, for instance, there was at one time quite an extensive mining district. The marble belt up near Marion and Mercury in this state, which contains nothing more , - than highly, treated linmestone is now be ing rapidly developed." In conclusion, Dr., Prouty told some things regarding the pre-Cambrian period in which the ocean came up as far as the place in which Raleigh is now located. Proof of this is offer ed by the recent1 uncovering of whale bones -in Tarboro recently, to which Dr. Prouty carried several of his stu dents to demonstrate his statements. Dr. Prouty was introduced by T. Smith McCorkle, of : the University Music department, and member of the program committee of the local Ro tary organization. " ' ' RAY SIMPSON FARRIS, Char lotte. President Students Body, Presi dent Junior Class, Captain-elect Var sity Football, Vice-President Mono gram Club, Varsity Baseball, Di Sen- - ate, Grail; Daviens, Sigma Phi Sigma. GORDON GRAY, . Winston-Salem. . President Phi Beta" Kappa, Business Manager Carolina Magazine: Assis tant Manager Baseball, Yackety Yack, Commencement; Marshal, Minotaurs, Gimghouls, Inter-fraternity Council, Amphoterothen, Daviens, Epsilon Phi Delta, Delta Kappa Epsilon. , HARRY JOSEPH GALLAND, New York City. Columnist, Assistant Editor and Associate Editor Tar Heel, J-Yackety Yack, Buccaneer, Manager Fencing Team, Rifle Club and Team, Mary D. Wright Debate, Publicity Manager "Mum's the Word," Di ' Senate, Amphoterothen, Grail, Epsilon Phi Delta, Zeta Beta Tau. JOHN MIDDLETON HENDER- . SON, Asheville. Captain Track Team,; Captain Cross-Country . Team, Vice president Senior Class,- Monogram Club, Tar Heel Staff, Y Cabinet, Class - Executive Committee, Grail, Daviens, Phi Delta Theta. GLENN PARRAN HOLDER, Greensboro. Editor-in-chief Tar Hee,l Secretary Publications Union Board, Carolina Magazine Staff, Sigma Up- -silon, Junior Class Executive Com mittee, Amphoterothen, Daviens, Ep silon Phi Delta, Sigma Delta. TRAVIS TAYLOR BRO WN Char lotte. Editor-elect Yackety Yack, Vice-president Soph Y. Cabinet, Phi. Assembly Track Squad, Publications Union Board, Grail, Amphoterothen, Epsilon Phi Delta, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Gamma Delta. RALPH CORDELL GREENE, Marshville. President-elect Senior Class, Student Council, Assistant Manager Basketball, Treasurer Grail, Treasurer Y. M. C. A., Di Senate, Yackety Yack Business Staff, Dance Leader, German Club, Daviens, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Zeta. ' ' JUNIUS GREENE ADAMS, JR., - Biltmore Forest. Vice-president Ger man Club, Shieks, Gorgon's , Head, Commencement Marshall, Dance Leader, German Club Executive Com mittee, Editor-in-chief Yackety Yack, Manager and Alternate Captain Golf Team, Vice-president S. I. C. Golf Association, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. JIMMY MAUS, Greensboro, Varsity Baseball, Varsity Football, Monogram Club, Freshman Football, basketball, and baseball. JAMES WILLIAM WILLIAMS, Greensboro.' President Y. M. C. A., President North Carolina Club, Presi dent Epsilon Phi Delta, Football -Squad, Track Squad, Grail, Daviens, Pi Kappa Phi. Ten men'were selected at the 27th annual tapping of the Golden Fleece " Thursday night in Memorial hall. 0. Max Gardner, alumnus of the Uni versity, delivered the address -of the evening, while Mr. R. B. House, Exe cutive Secretary of the Uniyersity . and a member of the Golden Fleece, . dvidsbn Took the Lead n Gduhty Manager lan By DR. PAUL W. WAGER Editorial Note: This is the second of a series of Sunday .articles on coun ty government in North Carolina that are being prepared by Dr. Paul W. Wager of the University Depart ment of Rural-Social Economics who has idevoted considerable time to the subject and is regarded as an author ity . These articles will deal with defin ite improvements which have been made in organization of county gov ernment, and with the excellent work of certain county officials. They will show how successfully the county government law of 1927 has been ap plied in certain communities. In the election of November, 1928, the other party .came into power in Davidson county, and the new board felt that thev managership should be changed accordingly. In fact, it is doubtful if the former manager would have consented to continue in office under the new board. This' attitude on the part of the board and the re tiring manager reveals a mistaken conception of the county ,v manager plan. Its fundamental principle is to lift purely administrative func tions out of party politics. . It is not surprising, however, that the new concept should be slow in taking root. The city manager has not yet been entirely divorced from party politics, and it will probably take ' longer to overcome the tradi tional .attitudes .toward public office Continued on page four) read the legend of the Fleece, v In the selection of those to be honored the Fleece selected a repre sentative group, choosing men from almost every phase of student life. Upon the conclusion of Mr. House's reading two hooded figures entered the. hall through side- entrances. Stalking through aisles of the hall they conferred with Frazier Glenn at the rear of the hall before beginning the tapping. Walking together down - the center aisle the two ligures ap- proached the platform. The crowd , remembering the tapping last spring wondered who was to receive the tele gram announcing their tapping. Sud-" denly one of the men pounced upon Governor Gardner. Somewhat be-' wilder ed by the demonstration he stood while the audience applauded. : Following the tapping of the Gover nor -the figures again retired to the rear of the building. .. After another conference they began to circle the; hall again." Suddenly , one of them pounced upon Ray Farris. Gordon Continued oh page four) '

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