Pcrro Fcur THE DAILY TAR HEEL Friday, November l; . 1$29 High Grid Men Meet . Roxboro Team Today The Chapel Hill high school eleven has shown a great amount of pepper in its drills this week in preparation for the annual tilt with Roxboro high school. Increased strength is to be had in Neville, Stone and Williams who have been laid off on ac count of injuries. These men are all patched up and rearing to go Friday. Captain Odell King, the most consistent ground gainer of the Hillians, will lead them into the fray Friday from the fullback position. Tom' Lawrence, stellar end and receiver of passes, will cavort at left end. Dick Dashiell, diminutive halfback and broken field runner of Chuck Erickson's class, will be seen at left half back. Upchurch is making good at guard, after beginning the sear son at end, but his lack of ex perience caused him to be placed at guard instead. Bob Ray, for mer guard, made good on end in the Alexander-Wilson game, ancl has been . shifted . to the flank position. Jesse Sparrow has improved much since the first of ftie sea son," and has just about cinched a place on the varsity. , Roxboro isn't to be ignored be cause all their losses " were by close scores and uoach Jones is taking no chances with dark- horses. The team journeys to Roxboro. this morning. A Real Coach as Football Director For Film Romance Jeff Cravath, all-American center pf the University of Southern California two years ago, now football coach at Den ver University, Denver, Golo., played an important part in the filming of "Salute," the West Point-Annapolis all-talking - pic ture how at the Carolina Thea tre, although he did not appear once before the cameras; Cravath prepared the plays used by the "West Point" and "Annapolis" teams in the foot ball game which provides the cli max. The formations used by both teams in the thrill screen game are similar to those used in real gridiron battles by the rival government academies. George O'Brien is shown as an all-American West Point halfback in this Fox Movietone production, while William Jan ney, who appears as his brother, functions as a substitute An napolis end. Helen Chandler and Joyce Campton are the girls in the case. Stepin Fetchit, Frank Albertson and other favorites also are in the cast. A Correction The notice in yesterday's Tar Heel referring to students inter ested in taking Education 71 was incorrect. The announcement was intended for Education 72. AH students in the school of edu cation, who are majoring or minoring in French "are asked to meet Hugo Giduz in Peabody 23 at chapel period today. , Bridge Party The Lucy Payne Circle of, the Episcopal church will give a bridge party Wednesday after noon and night, November 6, at three o'clock and at eight o'clock at the home of Mrs. C. T. Wool len. Make reservations by call ing 3411. The charges will be 50 cents per person. Bullits Entertain Dr. and Mrs. James B. Bullitt will entertain tonight from 9 until 1 at the Gorgon's Head lodge in honor of Miss Margaret and Miss Cynthia Beatty. This- .will be the only dance this week-end. Basketball Managers All sophomores who wish to try out for sub-assistant basketball managers are asked to report to L. D. Thompson, Jr., at Emerson field this afternoon at 2:30. Musical Revue To Give Performance "Padlocks Of 1929" Shows At Dur ham Next Tuesday. ' "Padlocks of 1929," the un usual musical revue which comes fronvthe Shubert Thea tre, ,New York, to the Carolina Theatre, Durham, N. C, Tues day, November 5th, goes later into the Studebaker, Chicago, for an extended run.. Some of the unique features consist of a very large stage band under the direction of Harry Shan non, an original troupe of Till er girls, direct from the Palace Theatre, London, and the origin al "Shadowgraph." originally seen in Ziegfeld Follies.; The large cast includes Norma Gallo, Richard Ryan, Davie Burns, Al lene Pring, Dorothy Randolph, Danny Beck, Carl Byal, Patsie Dane, Sally Scott, "Miss Billie" Ferris, Pearle McKinney, and a numerous beauty chorus: Lor- etta Campeau, the young French comedienne, who but lately ap-1 peared in pictures, has been added to the cast, as the entre preneuse, or, in short Miss Cam peau tells the audience what they may expect in this and that scene, all said in a delightful broken French-English dialect. The settings are by Josef Ur ban, and the costumes from Max Weldy, Paris, and Maurice Ma hieu, New York. Slusser Speedy Boy "Rip" Slusser, ten -second sophomore trackman, is putting his great speed to good use in tHe Tar Heel backfield. Fans count on Slusser to get loose at least once a game anyway. He reeled off a number o flashy runs against Tech. He took a long pass off a Bulldog's hands and made a beautiful sprint for a 42-yard gain and touchdown in the Georgia game. He made an other beautiful catch and run for a 20-yard.gain, leading a couple of plays later to a score, in the V.P.I, game. Fans will be watching his stellar work when the Tar Heels meet N. C. State here Saturday in a game that will make and break state titular hopes for two teams undefeated in the Big Five. . ' - . Grumman at Meeting Russell Grumman, director of the University extension depart ment, is representing Chapel Hill at a district meeting' of the Kiwanis club in Greenville, S. C.; tnis week. STATE COLLEGE PROF GETS DOCTOR'S DEGREE After four months of travel and study in Europe, Professor L. E. Hinkle, head of the depart ment of modern languages at N. C. State college, has returned to resume his work at the institution. It x is now Dr. Hinkle, the degree D.S, es L. having been conferred upon him by the: University of Dijon. The American bald eagle is in danger of extinction. In Alaska, 70,000 of them have been killed, following a bounty law. The double eagle is also a rare bird today.- Minneapolis Journal. It is necessary to stimulate business in order to pay the cost of junkefing and conventioneer ing that is done in order to stimulate business. San Diego Union. 1 ; The surest way to keep a thing out of the newspapers is not to do it.. San Diego Union. Teacher-Trainers - Doing: Heavy Duty Members of the teacher-train ing division of the school of edu cation are doing heavy duty these days at the district teach ers' meetings. J. M. Gwynn, as sistant professor of Latin, has already addressed the Latin teachers at the Asheville and Greensboro meetings. As presi dent of the Latin section of the North Carolina Teachers asso ciation, he will also attend the district meetings at Charlotte, Raleigh, Elizabeth City and Wil mington. H. F. Munch, associate pro fessor of mathematics, addressed the mathematics teachers last week at Greensboro. A. K. King, assistant profes sor of history, liafc spoken to the history teachers at Asheville and Greensboro, and will also attend the meeting at, Wilming ton. Dr. C. E. Preston, associate professor of natural science,- is scheduled to address the science teachers at the Raleigh meeting. Hugo Giduz, assistant profes sor of French, will attend the Raleigh meeting to assist in the organization of a French section of the North Carolina Teachers association. Reserve Ends Shine . An injury to Julian Fenner left a big gap at right end in the Tar Heel forward wall, but "Red" Parsley, Wilmington boy; stepped in and filled the post in great style in the V.P.I. game. V.IP.T.'s fast moving backs gained exactly minus three yards around the Tar Heel ends, guarded by Parsley and the vet eran Holt. The Wilmington boy, a reserve from last season, also shined on several pass catches and at covering on punts. Fenner is due to be back in shape for the N. C. State game here Saturday, but it is a sure thing that Tar Heel sup porters will see more of this son of the seaside in future games. Green is a, -soothing color ex cept when you have to take four puts on one of 'em. Arkansas Gazette. Progress Is Shown v In Campaign Drive (Continued from first page) are to be turned in at the paper's booth in the Carolina theatre. . The unusual offer of 80 cents worth of passes with every new subscription was made possible through a cooperative arrange ment with the Carolina theatre through Manager E. C. Smith. The Daily Tar Heel, with its advent into the field of daily journalism, is covering Chapel Hill and University news alike. Chapel Hill has had a long felt need for a daily, devoted to local interests, in the minds of many citizens. The object of this campaign is to put the Daily Tar Heel in every home, to fill "that need. Carolina Student Stages Production (Continued from first page) engages Faust in conversation and makes his proposition of youth to him. The puppet is brought into physical action by the strings in Rulfs' hands. Before the first act is ended one forgets that he is in a dor mitory room and knows that he is in the auditorium theatre at Chicago or the Shrine Opera House in Los Angeles. It takes Rulfs about five min utes to change the scenery for the second act, during which time more music from "Faust" is played on the phonograph. Then comes a pleasing surprise as the curtain lifts on the cathe dral scene. The puppet figure ol Marguerite is ' seen kneeling begore the altar but you do not see her . first. Your eyes are riveted on the French Gothic windows stained in various col ors and shadings so that they are a fine replica of the real ones. The gothic pillars look ! real, and guarding the altar is the figure of a madonna, also se cured from the mail order house by Rulf s. Faust and Satan en ter the -cathedral, only tbie pup pet of Faust is now changed to represent his new youth. The conversation, which we all know, passes between the two men: af ter Marguerite goes but. The curtain is rung down on the Ca thedral scene too early for one does not tire of looking at 'the craftsmanship which Rulfs Has put into it. 1 ' Next comes the garden scene with Marguerite's home in the background. Figures of Mar guerite, her sister, Faust and the red one, appear in the yard and stroll off in pairs into the adjoining garden. The fourth, act is the dungeon scene with the pile of straw and Rulfs has used skillful lighting to create the atmosphere. It is difficult to work the puppets in this scene, however. . The climax comes in the fifth act when . Satan takes Faust down into Hell. Moving moun tains along the Way, flashes of brillianj; real-looking lightning, and the hellish red glow over all in this scene attest to Rulfs' craftsmanship. 1 Some lines have been cut by Rulfs but the sequence is not de stroyed. On the whole, it is a remarkable piece of work and is of absorbing interest. A glimpse "back stage" to find out how it is all done, bewilders the lawman. There is an end less array of wires, multi-colored bulbs, strings, wires; a piece of blue cloth about the size of a handkerchief which Rulfs says is his sky; the moving moun tains in the last act are on an Love Me SVEETHEART Bigger and Better SIKIIE'S -v4 TP wmte 8 scandals ) BOTTOMS Up (from"George White's Scandals") Piccolo Pete I Gollegute Sam ) W'M" Vivartonal endless chain and turned by a crank; the lightning is produced by flashes of light on a panel which has been cut so that the outlines of the jagged beams of lightning shine through. Each puppet has front four to. seven wires on iL The investigator wonders how one person, Rulf s,. can- read the lines, move the puppets, shut off the phonograph, operate the lights, and a dozen other things all at the same time. But it is a one-man show if there ever was one, and designed and built by one person also. Asked how long it took him to make it and what materials he used, Rulfs modestly admits that the cathedral scene re quired a month for construction and that almost all of the scen ery is made of cardboard. The French gothic windows of the cathedral were stained with intricate care and balance of colors. The madonna and the curtain were the only things which Rulfs purchased, all the other materials in the five sets having been picked up here and there around his home in Wlt mington. The bowl f or the al tar fire, for instance, is the cap of a coca cola bottle. Rulfs has previously found vent for his interesting hobby by making sets for "The Student Prince," a light opera and. oth ers. In "Faust," however, is the first time that he has made use of puppets. "I am mainly inter SATURDAY 3 Ships on Field Short Trips, $1.50 FREE BUS FROM SMOKE SHOP TO FIELD North State Aircraft Company fMartindale FieldV . : : : : : - i 4 Mir WAm LEE MORSE has a tricky way of stepping right off the face of a record andbeingperfectlycharmingtoyou-it'ssomethiDgmore than singing. You'll find all the familiar Morse magnetism charging both the song hits on her newest Columbia record. One is a lively number in dance tempo the other a crooning intimate ballad crammed with lots of "come-along." - Before your dealer wraps this one up for you, havehim play these steppers," too . . . 0 Record No. 1972-D, 10-incA, 75c ) rr rs Holiday j a , ' ' ,Jjee Morse and Record No. 1970-D, 10-inch, 75c Than Ever (from "George Fox Trots and His Record No. 1973-D, 10-inch, 75c FoxTrots . Harry (iltlllllMjHV' "NE5.PSRSS" "BECOIllttS. Recording-- ested," he said, "in lighting ef fects and stage sets, , as you see. The puppets aren't much, but they put life on my stage." Following entreaties, Rulfs saKf that he would consider pro ducing his "Faust" before class es in the dramatic; department of the University sometime in the future.. ROOMS FOR. RENT Rooms for rent : Heated. Suitable for either individual rooms or light housekeeping. Phone 4556'.. ROOM FOR1 RENT Very desirable room with all modern- conveniences. Good lo cation at . 308T Pittsboro St Phone 4081. Lady, preferred. Mrs. Jjbhn: Foister;. Pritchard-Patterson Incorporated and SUNDAY Long Trips, $3.00 Durham Trips, $5.00 Het B1e Grass Boys . . Ted Wallace Campus Boys Reser's Syncopators ;f. g. -.: evj ' " Vou a t i t y r. cg . rff ft VnriE ctGTHEs r