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FRATERNITY BIDS
GERRARD HALL
TWO O'CLOCK TODAY
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FRATERNITY BIDS
GERRARD HALL
TWO O'CLOCK TODAY
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VOLUME XXXIX
CHAPEL HILL, N. C FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1930
NUMBER 23
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2- - - 1
ENT.
11. JL ,iJ
BODY-MW
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..TENNESSEE GAME
Good Will Evident in Reciprocity
Of Southern Conference and
State Schools.
A telegram was received yes
terday by the editor of the Daily
Tar Heel from the president of
the student body of the Univer
sity of "Tennessee inviting the
students of this university to be
guests of the Tennessee institu
tion while in Knoxville for the
Carolina-Tennessee game on
October 25.
This general feeling of friend
liness among the schools in" the
southern conference has been
steadily Uncreasing in the past
few,..years. The system of re
ciprocity, admitting students of
visiting universities and colleges
to all athletic contests for only
a smaH'fee, or no fee at all, is
one of the steps which has re
sulted from this good feeling
among the' Southern Conference
members.'
For the purpose of continuing
this good will among the schools
in the state as well as in the
Southern Conference, the North
Carolina State Student Federa
tion, of which John Lang is the
president, was organized last
year. Judging from the general
feeling of good will in evidence
this year between the University
student body, and the. represen
tatives of visiting colleges, this
organization is fulfilling its aim.
The telegram which was re
ceived from Tennessee reads,
"The student body of the Uni
versity of Tennessee extends a
cordial invitation to the student
body of the University of North
Carolina to be their guests while
in Knoxville for the Carolina
Tennessee game on October 25.
Down-town headquarters will be
at the Farragut Hotel." Buddy
Hackman, one of the "Touch
down Twins," sent this good
will letter as president of the
University of Tennessee student
body. Buddy will probably hold
one of the positions in the Vols
backfield when they meet the
Tar Heels.
This game between the Uni
versity of Tennessee and the
University of North Carolina
will be the ninth football con
test to be played between the
two institutions since 1893.
For the first five times that the
two teams met, the North Caro
lina' eleven came out victorious.
In 1919-20, however, the Tar
Heels did not find the Vols so
easy to beat. This year the fight
ended in a 0-0 tie. Since that
time" the Tennessee team has
won consistently from the Tar
Heel eleven.
. ' .
Th scores for the contests
played are: 1893-94, U. N. C. 60,
Tennessee, 0; 1897-98, U. N. a
16, Tennessee 0; 1900-01, U. N.
C. 23, Tennessee, 5 ; 1908-09, U.
N. C., 12, Tennessee, 0; 1909-10,
U. N. C., 3, Tennessee, Q; 1919
20, U. N. C 0, Tennessee, 0;
1927-28, U. N. C 0, Tennessee,
33; and 1930-31, U. N. C, ?,
Tennessee, ?
Plans are being made for a
large crowd to attend the game,
and a special train will probably
be dispatched to Knoxville.
Infirmary List
Those confined in the infirm
ary are: Woodrow H. Peterson,
R. B. Sinclair, R. E. Hughes and
The Chapel Hill post of the
American Legion will meet at 8
o'clock this (Friday) evening in
the Episcopal parish house.
CHAPEL NEXT WEEK
Bob Fetzer, director of
athletics at the University, will
address the freshman class at
chapel Monday morning at
10:30. He will discuss the sub
ject of "Participation and
Campus Tradition."
. Chapel programs for Tuesday
and Wednesday will be in charge
of President Murrow, of the Na
tional Student Confederation of
America, who will visit John
Lang, North Carolina state pre
sident of Student Federation.
SERVICE GROUPS
PLAN TO STUDY
MM PROBLEMS
N. C. Club and Social Service
Conference Join in W ork and
Arrange Joint Programs.
The joint program committee
of the North Carolina. Club, at
the University, and the North
Carolina Conference for Social
Service met in Raleigh in the
Hotel Sir Walter oh October 15,
and worked out a tentative pro
gram for the year's work. The
Club and the Social Service
Conference have both adopted
the study of agricultural condi
tions in North Carolina for the
year's program and have joined
forces . They are asking State
College, The Farmers Federa
tion at Asheville, the various far-
mers mutual excnanges, ana
other interested groups to join
with them in the work.
As the program is planned
now, the speakers will first ap
pear before the North Carolina
Club at the University at its re
gular meetings held every two
weeks. The papers may be re
vised according to suggestions
made at these meetings, and
will be presented again at the an
nual Social Serivce Conference
to be held in eastern North Caro
lina next spring. These papers
will be published in a volume,
which will Jbe the joint product
of all the state agencies inter
ested in the improvement of
agricultural conditions.
The following is the tentative
program as submitted by Profes
sor S. H. Hobbs, Jr., who is m
charge of aranging it: Land Re
sources of "North Carolina, Col
onel J. W. Harrelson, Raleigh;
An Analysis of North Carolina
as an Agricultural State, Profes
sor S. H. Hobbs, 'Jr., Chapel
Hill; Shifting Agriculture in
North Carolina, Hugh MacRae,
Wilmington ; A Safely Balanced
Agriculture : Retention of Farm
Wealth, S. O. Schaub, State Col
lege ; Farm Tenancy in North
Carolina, Dr. E. C. Branson,
Chapel Hill; Standards of Liv
ing of North Carolina Farmers,
ir r r. Tnvl or. State College
,
imperative xy- ---o--
Industries in'North Carolina, A.
J. Maxwell, Raleigh; Marketing
Farm Products, George R. Ross,
Raleigh; Taxation and Agricul
ture, Dr. G.W. Forster, State
College; The Relation of Farm
ing to Our Economic System,
President F. P. Graham,' Chapel
Hill- The Necessity for Scienti
fic Farming, D. R. Coker, Harts-
ville, South Carolina; An Agri
cultural Program for JNorxn
O. Max
(Continued on page two)
Georgia Tickets
Today is the last chance to
get 50-cent student tickets for
the Georgia game on sale at
the Book Exchange. Tickets
must be accompanied by pass
books at the gates.
mwiK
Meeting of Western Class A
Group Called to Consider
1931 Plans.
E. R. Rankin, of the Uni
versity extension division, has
returned from Salisbury where
he presided over a meeting of
the Class A western high school
conference, which convened in
that city last Monday night.
. The purpose of the meeting
was to arrange the basket ball
contest schedule of this confer
ence for 1931. The games will
be played during the months of
January and. February, and the
final game for the state title of
the Class A conference will be
played in Chapel Hill early in
March.
The names of the high schools
which will participate in the
western conference are: Ashe
ville, Charlotte, Vinston-Salem,
Greensboro, High Point, Salis
bury, and Gastonia. The mem
bers of the eastern class A con
ference are : Wilmington, Golds
boro, Rocky Mount, Raleigh,
Durham, Fayetteville and Wil
son. In the west, each school will
play each other : twice, while
those in the east will play only
once. ' .
PRATT DONATES
THREE BOOKS TO
MUSIC LIBRARY
The music department was re
cently the recipient of a gift of
three volumes of Famous Com
posers, donated by Col. Joseph
Hyde Pratt of Chapel Hill. The
volumes are highly valued by
the department both from a
standpoint of literary excellence
and completeness of detail. They
were published at Boston in 18
91 by the J. B. Millet Company,
after much research in the mu
seums, libraries, and conserva
tories in England and on the con
tinent. Men like Arthur Foote
and John Fiske engaged them
selves in the compilation, and an
exhaustive search was made of
many private libraries and col
lections to find the plates and
material for the very complete
set of illustrations and biogra
phies:
Colonel Pratt obtained these
volumes in 1896, yhile he was
teaching at the New Haven
Scientific School. Since then he
has been engaged in many civic
activities in' thestate and was
at one time a state geologist. At
present he is the active head of
the Red Cross, and takes part in
many other organizations of
civic interest, as well as the wel
fare of the University.
BRADSHAW GOES TO
Y. M. C. A. MEETING
Francis F. Bradshaw, dean of
students, will leave this morn
ing for Chicago to attend the an
nual meeting of the National
Council of Young Men's Christ
ian Association. Dean Bradshaw
has been a member of. the person
nel division of the council for
three years. The meeting will be
held through October 23. :
The personnel division "seeks
to bring to bear upon the means
used for selecting, training,
placing, and transferring of sec
retaries the best that modern
personnel science and education
al theory offer. It conducts in
dependent studies and experi
mentation, and maintains a co
ordination and clear and sincere
relationship to all personnel re
search in progress throughout
the association."
70SM ATHLETES
REQUEST FUND!
Petition President-Elect Graham
For Active Support of
Enlarged Program.
The Women's Athletic Asso
ciation met Thursday, October
the sixteenth, at five o'clock
in Spencer hall. The meeting
was called for the hearing of
a petition originating , with Mrs.
Marvin H. Stacy, which re
quested of President-elect Frank
Graham support for athletics
engaged ill. by co-eds.
Mrs. Stacy reported that Gra
ham would have funds provided
for volley-ball, basketball, and
archery: She said that Ida Cur
rie, president of the athletic as
sociation, would be responsible
for the details. 5
Miss Gladys' Angel, of the ex
tension division of the Univer
sity, has offered her directorial
services each Friday. She spoke
of the devotion to athletics of
the girls in the northern univer
sities, and urged the girls of this
University to demand more
facilities.
Ida Currie reported that Coach
J. F. Kenfield would set aside
tennis courts seven and eight
for coed use, and that Dr. R. B.
Lawson would coach girls' bas
ketball two nights each week.
MORE DOPE FOR
SOUTHERN FOES
BYSEORTLIGHT
.... ..
Collins To Be Prominent Speaker
At Coaches' Meeting in
New York.
Coach Chuck Collins broad
casted more dope on southern
grid teams last Wednesday night
over the B. C. Sports-light pro
gram from station WPTF in
Raleigh.
According to Collins; Georgia,
Vandy, Tennessee, Kentucky,
and Alabama have about the
best aggregation of football
players ever seen below the Mason-Dixon
line, and that .these
teams will place high in the
Southern Conference. Kentucky,
Alabama, and Tennessee have
very stiff schedules, and will be
lucky if they emerge from their
struggles this season undefeated.
Tulane has an easy course this
year and should go a long way
toward retaining the champion
ship that school won last year.
Although Tulane lost to a north
ern t rival, that game has no
standing on their conference
status, and they will be point
ing for the comparatively easy
remaining games with all force
they can muster. Speaking of
the Carolina team, Chuck ad
mits that the Tar Heels have a
schedule which is anything but
easy. Carolina has already met
V. P. I. and Maryland, defeat
ing both, and ahead of the Blue
and White aggregation are
three of the most dangerous
teams in the country Georgia,
Tennessee, and Georgia Tech.
These games come on successive
Saturdays, and if Carolina comes
through a winner in all three
games they will have to play
"heads-up" ball, and perfect
their defense to a higher point
of perfection.
Coach Collins had his assis
tant, Rex Enright, scouting the
Yale-Georgia game last Satur
day while Bill Cerney, backfield
coach, was covering the Tennessee-Mississippi
game. Enright
says that Georgia looked mighty
good, and pulled s. "spinner"
Continued on paga tw)
EPISCOPAL TEA SUNDAY
An informal tea will be given
by the Episcopal church in the
parish house on Sunday after
noon at 4 :30. This plan of week
ly teas was used all last year,
and the same idea will be carried
out this year. These weekly
socials afford an opportunity for
the students attending to form
new acquaintances, and plans are
being made for a large gathering
at the Sunday afternoon enter
tainment. sigma xi mm
FOR FIRST H
LfilV
TUESDAYEVEMNG
Members This Scientific Society
Are Invited To Attend
Meeting.
The Sigma Xi scientific soci
ety will meet for its first meet
ing of the month next Tuesday
night at 6:30 o'clock in the as
sembly room of the Baptist
church. The business program
will be preceded by a supper for
the members. ' : ,
The program will be an infor
mal discussion of chemical re
search in physical, analytic, and
inorganic chemistry. These will
be expounded by Dr. Frank K.
Cameron, Dr. Floyd H. Edmister
and Dr. Horace Crockford, mem
bers of the chemistry faculty.
Researches to be discussed at
the coming meetings of the year
are being made by the three di
visions : physical chemistry, ana
lytic chemistry, and inorganic
chemistry.
The officers in charge for the
year are: Dr. Otto Stuhlman,
Jr., president; Dr. John N.
Couch, vice-president ; and Dr.
E. T. Brown, secretary-treasurer.
All members of the society are
urged to attend this meeting
along with members transferred
from other institutions, and who
are now living in Chapel Hill.
Those persons desiring to attend
should notify Dr. Horace Crock
ford of the, chemistry depart
ment. STATE MUSICIANS
WILL MEET TODAY
Greensboro Oct. 15. The
complete program for the second
annual conlerence oi music
teachers and supervisors, that is
to be held at North Carolina
College Friday and Saturday,
has just been issued at the office
of Dr. Wade R. Brown, dean of
the school of music at the state
institution for women.
The North Carolina musi
cians, more than 100 of them,
will register at the music build
ing Friday morning at 9 o'clock,
and at 9:15 o'clock will hear Dr.
Victor L. F. Rebmann, of New
York, speak on the subject
"Musings, in Retrospect and in
Prospect, on the North Caro
lina State Contest Instrumen
tal Music and Music Education
in General."
Bruce -A. Carey, of Philadel
phia, is to talk to the assembly
at 10:45 o'clock on vocal music.
Both men will conduct clinics
during the afternoon Friday,
Dr. Rebmann at 2 o'clock, Pro
fessor Carey at 3:30 o'clock.
A dinner, in the Florentine
room of the King Cotton hotel
at 7 :30 o'clock in the evening
will close . the conference ses
sions Friday. L. L. Stookey, of
High Point, will preside at the
meeting, and the two visiting
speakers and others will make
short talks.
The conference will be con
tinued Saturday morning at 9
(Continued on page two)
ii
iilAi
AT
LS CLOSE
RUSMG SEASC
i T
Bids To Be Distributed in Ger
rard Hall at 2 O'clock, Con
cluding Rushing Period.
The curtain will be lowered on
the last act of the rushing sea
son of 1930 this afternoon when
several hundred new men gather
in Gerrard hall at two o'clock
to designate their choice of fra
ternities. Executive Secretary R.
B. House and Dr. J. C. Lyons
will be assisted by the execu
tive committee of the Interf fra
ternity Council in handling the
new men. Jack Ward, Will Yar
borough, Tom Hunter, John
Cooper and M. D. Holderness
compose this committee.
According to Ward, who is
president of the council, the new
men will meet in Gerrard hall
at two o'clock thisafternoonl
There they will be divided into
groups and seated alphabetical
ly. No talking will be allowed
among, the men after they enter
uerrard hall. Further instruc
tions will be given after the men
meet.
Beginning with the opening of
the University the acts have
changed of ten. The first one was
silent. - Freshmen were herpr
fraternity men were here. But
neither could make any move in
dicative of rushing. "
Friday, September 26, brought
the second act when the new. men
viaiteu me various nouses Dy in
vitation. Two days of this and
the real rushing began. For two
-JXJ J.1. ' L i ...
weeks rushing has been going at
full steam.
sut it was not until last week
that the process known as "high
pressure" began. By that time
the fraternities knew whom they
were going to bid and the new
men had some hazy ideas about
fraternities. But when "high
pressure" week got underway
rushers and rushees alike began
to show the wear and tear.
Rushing ended midnight,
Wednesday. The last night, des
pite an abundance of rain and
mud, showed those new men
who had not made up their minds
wandering from house to house.
The others, those . who made
their decisions 'and showed no
indication of changing, seemed
happy. They went to picture
shows, listened to radios and
smiled when there were con
ferences between rusher and
rushee.
The season was quiet. One
would hardly have known that
rushing season was in progress
except for the crowd around
Pritchard-Lloyd Drug Co. Ru
mors of violations of rules float
ed about, but investigation by
the committee of the Interf ra
ternity Council disclosed noth
ing. Either the boys who knew
refused to tell or they were just
talking.
"Cut-throat" rushing was
rumored, but the accused frater
nities always made vehement
denials. Admissions of such
would have been fatal.
"All in all the rushing season,
worked well," Jack Ward, presi
dent of the Council, said. "Of
course there were violations, but
we couldn't get any reports, and
we aren't detectives."
President Graham Speaks
In Greenville Tonight
President Graham is to speak
this evening at the dedication of
the Sheppard Memorial Library
in Greenville. The dedication will
i be held at 8:15 d. m.