Sunday, April 17, 1932
TAR HEELS TAKE
WIN OVER V.M.I.
OTLATERALLY
George Hinton Pitches Carolina
To Second Tri-State Vic
tory by Count of 7-5.
Paul Dunlap's home run to the
left field fence in the seventh
started a rally netting three
runs which added to one in the
eighth gave Carolina a 7-5 vie
tory over V. M. I. here yester
day afternoon. It was the sec
ond victory for the Tar Heels in
the Tri-State league.
Combined with an error and a
pass to first, three hits, one a
homer by Edmunds, gave the
visitors a four-run lead in the
first. The Cadets added their
final run in the fourth off two
hits, a single by Scott and a
double by Waite.
Carolina pushed over one run
in the first, Ferebee, who had
singled, counting when the short
stop erred on Dunlap's ground
er. The Tar Heels went ahead
in the seventh. Dunlap, leading
off, got a homer to left. Dixon
walked, going to second on
Croom's bunt. Powell flied out,
to center, and Pattisall walked
Both runners scored when the
first baseman let a throw in an
attempt to catch Hinton go
through his mitt.
Carolina's last tally came in
the eighth. With one down,
Ferebee. singled through short,
stole second, and went to third
on a passed ball. , Dunlap drove
in Ferebee with a single to right.
The fielding was fcaoly off, the
two teams making five errors
which figured in the scoring be
tween them. Willie Powell , and
Paul Dunlap featured afield for
Carolina, Powell leaving the
ground to make nice catches of
two drives in the sixth, and Dun
Jap pulling a double play unas
sisted to retire V. M. I. in the
first.
The visitors collected a total
of ten hits, two for extra bases,
off Hinton, who struck -out one
batter and walked one. Carolina
outhit V. M. I., getting eleven
hits, including a double and a
homer, off Mason. Mason struck
out three Tar Heels, passed
three, and hit one.
Dunlap. with a home run and
two singles in five tries, was big
hitter for the Tar Heels, fol
lowed by Ferebee with three for
five, and Powell with a double in
three trips to the plate.
Edmunds led V. M. I. with a
home run and a single in four
attempts. Two other visitors,
Outten and Scott, hit more than
one safety, each getting two for
four. Waite hit a triple m the
fourth.
Score by innings:
V. M. I. ! 400 100 0005
Carolina 102 000' 31x 7
TREATMENT OF STUDENTS
IN KENTUCKY PROTESTED
By College News Service
New York, April 15. Organi
zation of a national protest
against the treatment received
by college students who attempt
ed to enter the Kentucky coal
mining region was begun . this
week by the National Student
League.
Petitions were being circulat
ing on many university campi
throughout the country, express
ing "sincere disapproval" of
alleged unconstitutional acts on
the part of Kentucky and Tenn
essee officers who prevented the
students from visiting the coal
fitMs. The petitions will be
sent to Congress. .
The twentv Columbia Univer
sity students, who formed the
nucleus of the group headed b j
Rob F. Hall, nresident of th
Columbia Social Problems Club,
Sported on returning here that
several nf thpir number had
taen manhandled, threatened
&nd beaten by the officers.
TRACKMEN BEAT
NAVY IN OPENER
The Carolina track team
opened its spring season yes
terday with a 65-61 win over
the strong Navy team. Slus
ser in the low hurdles, Hub
bard in the two-mile event,
Smith in the pole vault, Brown
in the discus throw, Higby in
the broad jump, Marland in
the 440-yard dash, Stanford
in the high jump, and Leg
gette in the javelin event
were first place winners for
Carolina in the hard meet
which took place at Annapolis.
Modern University
Is Not Educational
Says Hart Stebbins
(Continued from first page)
in extracurricular activities, and
by his reluctance to tread the
path of learning along which we
have been trying to prod him. Of
late we have seen him losing in
terest in extracurricular activi
ties, and we are now prepared to
go ahead on another assump
tion; that the undergraduate is
really interested in being edu
cated, but that he seems indif
ferent because he does not be
lieve mechanical learning is edu
cation, or even a step toward
education. We are, therefore,
about to launch on a scheme
whereby the student can more
easily attack his subjects from
that angle which particularly
interests him, and in which we
shall demand fewer facts, more
ideas !"
What Is Needed
What is needed, according to
Stebbins, is a man who can give
a course in Browning at nine
thirty, giving no papers, and yet
contriving to make the students
believe Browning is the greatest
poet and the most brilliant, gen
erous, learned man who ever
ived. "If you think that of a poet,
you read him : you study all the
technicalities and subtleties
which are necessary to apprecia
tion. That is education, not the
reverse process which says, 'you
must study all these technicali
ties now so that you can like
this man better later on'."
In the whole atmosphere
there is over-emphasis on educa
tion ; there is no such thing as a
college education, and yet every
year thousands' of us sit around
beating our heads in despair be
cause we don't feel that we are
getting one. Those who come
to a university are divided into
two classes: those who expect to
get an education, and those who
expect to have a good time. With
the exception of a very few m
deed, who are in a position to do
work on their own, the first class
is disappointed because, as I
have said, the courses are not
studies, but tours; the second
class is disappointed because the
tours are not pleasant.
A Detailed Review
Stebbins is of the opinion that
real education is a detailed re
view, and that four years m col
We does not allow time enough
for the whole process. 1 he col
lege years," he writes, should
be devoted to the initial tour, to
the creation of a situation in
which anything a graduate cares
to read will-probably be about
something that he has come into
contact with before, and some
thing that he is interested in.
A general course in college is. as
valuable as it is interesting, ana
no matter how eminent a scholar
a member of the faculty may be,
if his lectures are boring, or if
his assignments are too techni
cal or unreasonably burdensome,
u,v ; TMiHnor prhication s that
11C lO piCKii
much further away from his pu
pils."
"Scran the Idea
The author points out that
this seems to be the aim of the
new nlan of study, but that peo
nlfl will be disappointed unless
we "scrap the idea of a college
education, and admit that the
four years constitute a prelim
THE DAILY
CAROLINA TENNIS
AND GOLF TEAMS
FACE BUSY WEEK
Tar Heel Contingents Will Offer
Strong Competition in State
Tournaments.
State championship golf and
tennis tournaments headline the
schedule for Carolina teams for
next week, but the Carolina
Virginia track meet at Char
lottesville Monday and the Carolina-Duke
baseball game here
Saturday are compelling the
same wide interest in North
Carolina sporting circles.
Bryan Grant, Wilmer Hines,
Lenoir Wright, and associates
will be heads-on favorites in the
net tourney here Thursday-Sat
urday, but the golf champion
ships at Sedgefield Saturday will
be something else. Only one
thing is certain, and that is that
there's going to be some grea
golf.
The Tar Heels beat the other
wise undefeated Duke team 91
81, but that meet might easily
have gone the other way if Cap
tain Joe Adams hadn't sunk his
last putt from off the green for
a birdie, considering that Alan
Smith lost three points when
Peacock of Duke beat his 71
with a brilliant 67.
Duke Strong Tennis Foe
Duke probably is the next
strongest contender for the ten
nis title. If the Tar Heels prove
too strong, however, there will
be an interesting battle when
teammate sets in to blasting
teammate in an inter-family war
as it was in last year's tourna
ment.
The Tar Heels' track meet at
Virginia Monday will give the
first line on Carolina's outdoor
strength in the Conference. Vir
ginia was runner-up in the Con
ference outdoor meet last year
and was just six points behind
when the Tar Heels won the
Conference indoor title in March
Curtis Spence Is Chosen
To Head Duke Y. M. C. A.
Curtis Spence of Norfolk, Va.,
was elected president of the
Duke Y. M. C. A. for 1932-33,
in one of the most hotly con
tested races in the history of
Duke politics. Spence was win
ner over Jay Phillips by a scant
margin of twenty-five votes.
Wendell Horne of Vienna, Ga.,
was elected president of the
Duke Student Government asso
ciation over John Brownlee by
a margin of seventy votes. In
the spirited contest it was neces
sary to hold a second day voting
Better Fellowship Council
A move to establish more
amicable relations between Duke
and Carolina has taken the form
of a council of Fellowship of
Reconciliation. A group of stu
dents led by Bill McKee, presi
dent of the Y. M. C. A. will meet
with a group from Duke in
Durham today to consider plans
for the reconciliation.
- T ; :
Students Attend Demonstration
.The first section of second-
year medical students attended
a demonstration of , an electro
cardiograph at Watts hospital
in Durham, Friday morning.
The entire class attended an eye
clinic at the White Blind Asy
lum, Raleigh, given by Dr. V.
M. Hicks of Raleigh, who was
a medical student at the Univer
sity in 1916.
inary tour."
'Yale can save its new sys
tems," Stebbins says, "it can
stimulate the interests of the un
dergraduates, and it can be sure
of having better educated alum
ni by taking a stand against the
inculcating of a faith in some
thing which is not only not uni
versal, but is virtually non-exis
tent : a college education."
TAR HEEL
Regalia Dead Line
Although a majority of the
class of '32 have already or
dered senior regalia for sen
ior week, May 9-14, the com
mittee in charge and Stetson
"D" are extending the dead
line through Tuesday, April
19, to enable all members of
the class to place orders.
Senior co-eds are urged es
pecially to purchase regalia,
which consists of a white,
slipover sweater on which is
sewn the class insignia, as 100
per cent cooperation from
the graduating class will aid
materially in the success of
senior week festivities.
Cameron Addresses
Geology Fraternity
Drj Frank K. Cameron of the
chemistry department was the
guest speaker Friday evening
at a social meeting of Sig
ma Gamma Epsilon, nation
al honorary geological frater
nity. Dr. Cameron told of his
experiences while on a trip for
the government to the potash
mines of Alsace-Lorraine, and
as a consulting geologist for the
Ohio Copper company at Bing
ham Canyon, Utah.
Miss Mary L. Cobb of Chapel
Hill was elected hostess of the
fraternity at the last business
meeting, and the following men
were pledged: John C. McCamp-
bell of Morganton, Erick , K.
Kjellesvig of Havana, Cuba; P.
P. Fox of New Hope, J. C. Hunt
of Asheville, J. C. Dunlap of
Dunlap, Clarence Jensen of
East Orange, New Jersey, and
Charles Hunter of Winston-
Salem. The initiation .will take
place Saturday, April 23.
Dating Bureau Pairs
Off Lonely Hearts
What is sometimes known as
the "lonely hearts club" but of
ficially, designated as the "dating
bureau" is in operation at the
University of Wisconsin. The
young: ladies of Barnard hall
and the young men of Tripp hall,
through their respective social
chairwoman and chairman, are
paired off in some fashion.
On certain days half of the
men are guests of the co-eds at
Barnard hall, while the other
half entertain the co-eds at din
ner at the men's hall. No an
nouncement has heen made con
cerning the success of the ven
ture. FOR SALE
Ford Sport Coupe, 1929 mod
el. Rumble seat, good condition.
Sell cheap. J. F. Kenfield, phone
4656. . '
YOU COLLEGE BOYS
ARE
EXPENSIVE
LUXURIES!
OFTEN a serious strain on the pa- -rental
oocket-book not only
-while colleee is in session but during
the summer. Here's an idea. It's liter
ally true this year that you can live in
Europe for less than you can at home.
Plenty of oensions or snug little inns in
fascinating spots in Europewill put you
up with three meals a day tor $40 or
$50 a month. With the present rate ot
exchange, vour American dollar does
wonders. Whynotspendthesummer or
part of it abroad and actually spend less
than if you were at home ? An excellent
opportunitytobrushuponyourFrench
or your English history, or whatnot.
Getting over and back is not hard.
Just about $200 in Tourist Class via
White Star and Red Star Lines on
some of the world's finest ships. We'll
guarantee you a jolly time. Seems to
us that the summer in Europe might
be the means of a pleasant reduction
of the family budget and a glorious
time for you in the bargain.
If you agree -why not try the family
out on it. If vou want more informa
tion, write us for our Tourist Booklet
or see any authorized travel agent.
WHITE STAR LINE
RED STAR LINE
International Mercantile Marine Company
CAVALIERS MEET
RmSTOMORROW
Trackmen in First Regularly
Scheduled Meet With Vir
ginia Since 1928.
Virginia's track team plays
host to North Carolina on Lam
beth Field Monday afternoon
in the first regularly- scheduled
meet between these rivals since
1928.
Cavalier track and field men
had not lost an outdoor meet of
any size since 1927 until the
Southern Conference champion
ship games last May. In Bir
mingham the Virginians took
second honors' two points be
hind the title-winning Tulane
team.
In Blacksburg, five seasons
ago, Cavaliers and Tar Heels
last competed with full teams.
Virginia won with 641,4 points,
North Carolina came second
with 56, while V. P. I. trained
with 33 V2 points.
Sports honors for the school
year 1931-32 are rather even be
tween Virginia and Carolina.
The Tar Heels, with Johnny
Branch as their ace, won the
football game 13-7. In basket
ball the Chapel Hill quint nosei
out a 26-24 victory in an extra
period.
Cavalier Boxers Win
Virginia retaliated by sweep
ing the boxing meet with a 6-1
count. And ten days ago the
Cavalier nine came from behind
to snatch a last-minute 5-4 de
cision in the first of the base
ball series. Two of these games
remain to be played.
Archie Hahn, Virginia track
coach, expects to be able to put
his full team strength into ac
tion against North Carolina
with one exception. Bobby Coles,
veteran hurdler, has pulled a
tendon and will not be able to
compete. 1
Trubrick Wins Pool Title
Trubrick defeated Barbano
yesterday morning in the final
match of the student pool tour
nament conducted in Graham
Memorial. The battle was .hard
fought and Trubrick succeeded
in winning with only a three
point margin. ' .
wfmmm.
if
FOR GAS AND AUTO ACCESSORIES
U.N.C. students spend per year in:
Chapel HilL...-
Durham
Greensboro
Elsewhere
It Must
The Daily Tar Heel
V
IS YOUR BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM
Page Three
GOLFERS DEFEAT
FURMAN 13 TO 5
The Carolina golfers continued
:heir unbroken string of vic
tories yesterday on the Hope
Valley course by defeating Fur
man 13-5. Captain Joe Adams
turned in a 71 for low medal
score. The summaries are:
Brown, Carolina, lost to Mc-
Gee, Furman.
Adams, Carolina, won from
Ashcraft, Furman.
O'Brien, Carolina, lost to Mc-
Williams, Furman.
Laxton, Carolina, won from
Garrett, Furman.
Brown and Laxton, Carolina,
won from McGee and Ashcraft,
Adams and O'Brien, Carolina,
won from McWilliams and Gar
rett, Furman.
MASTERPIECES OF
GOETHE WILL BE
OFFERED TUESDAY
(Continued from first page)
will play Beethoven's Egmont
Overture and Ballet Music from
Rosamunde by Schubert during
the intermission.
The third part of the program
will be four scenes from Faust
under the direction of Meno
Spann. He will be assisted by
Professors Koch, Booker,
Holmes, and Ericson, and by Mr.
Thurman, Mr. Collins, Eric Met-
zenthin, Nathan Shapiro, John
Manning, and Daniel Weiner.
Professor Howell will conclude
the performance with a reading
in English, of Goethe's Epilogue
to Schiller's "Song of the Bell,"
expressing Goethe's deep feeling
on account of the death of his
greatest friend and highest com
petitor in the love and esteem of
the German people. f
English is the "second" lan
guage throughout China.
Christian ScienceMonitor'
NOW IS THE TIME
to come in and look over our
stock of fine Spaulding sport
ing goods. We carry a com
plete spring line.
Thpmas-Quickel Co. 4
Main St.
Durham, N. C.
Mr. & Mrs. Dollar
SAY THAT:
4,002
...$1,140
.....$ 1,560
1,500
....$10,812
Be True That