Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 19, 1893, edition 1 / Page 4
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DIRECTORY. University Directory. university athletic association. Walter Murphy, president :l J. T. Pugh, secretary. . . G. Little, treasurer. UNIVERSITY FOOT BALL TEAM. A. S. Barnard, captain. Charles Baskerville, Manager. UNIVERSITY BASE BALL TEAM. W. R. Robertson, captain , manager. UNIVERSITY GLEE CLUB. Chas. Roberson, president and leader. John L, Patterson, manager. Prof. K. P. Harrington, director, ELISHA MITCHELL SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY. Prof. J. A. Holmes, president ; Prof. J. W, Gore, vice-president ; Dr. F. P. Venable, sec retary and treasurer. Meets in Person Hall the second Tuesday night of each month. Jour nals issued twice a year. HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Dr. Kemp. P. Battle, president and corres ponding secretary ; H. M. Thompson, secretary and treasurer. Meets at the call of the presi dent.,:, ...... ... FRATERNITIES. (Secret.) - Phi Gamma Delta, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Sigma Nu, Kappa Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Sigma, Zeta Psi, Sigma Alpha Ep silon, Sigma Chi, Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Sigma. SOCIETIES. Theta Nu Epsilon, Sophomore, (Secret). The Order of Gimehouk. Junior. rrt me society meets in t-eDruary ana October. oanquei i nursuay nignt 01 commencement. Dialectic, (Secret Literary). Established 1795. meets every Friday night in the Di. Hall, New West Building. " Philanthrnnic. (Secret I itrarvV Pchlich- ed 1795. meets every Friday night in the Phi. nan, new nasi csuiiuing. University German Club, dent: C R. Turner. secretarv an.1 fro Meers at tne can 01 trie president Leader t. . A- e . . - seieciea ior eacn uerman. Shakespcre Club, Dr. Thos. Hume, presi- ueiiu meeis 111 uie I. m, I. A. nail ine ulird Tuesday night in each month. Library open une nuur eaui uay. UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE. Prof. Collier Cobb, Managing Editor. J. T. PUGH, Assistant Managing Editor. EDITORS: Di. Phi. C H, White, Caswell Ellis, H. M. Thompson, F. L, Carr, W. D. Carmichall, H. A. Grady. MISCELLANEOUS NOTES. A hen-pecked man is fowily treated says "Courier:" The University or Michigan has just enrolled two Chinese women as students. Nearly half the graduates of Monmouth" College have selected their wives from the girls who were with them in college. Who says co-education is a failure? It is probable that old maids think it an excellent institution. That "Courier" is" "full of little jokes." they take us off our feet by the following: "A contempo rary editor wants to know why it is that so many persons refer to his publication as ? .'sheet.' We would suggest that it is because so many people go to sleep over it." Come again! South College is no more. The veriest bricks of this venerable remnant of old Yale have been removed, in order to : furnish room for the foundation hf-thp nw V-m. " w - -w - a -w T T till derbilt dormitory, now in process of construction. EXCHANGES. The recitation periods at Yale have been changed from one hour to fifty minutes. ' The enrollment at Stanford up to date is 860. The campus at Yale is to be light ed by electricity. The University of Leipsic is worth nearly 20,000,000. A department of oratory is the latest addition to Chaddlock college. An electric course in swimming has recently been opened to the juniors at Vassar. ine uxiora undergraduate is portrayed to his American brother in a most interesting and amsuing fashion by Richard Harding Davis in the October Harper, and the American does not suffer greatly in the comparison that he naturally draws between the life portrayed by the clever journalist and his own. The American student may be, as Walter Besant claims, crude but he has certainly few of the aston ishing views of existence which have been developed in the mind of the Oxford undergraduate, who, Mr. Davis asserts, is without ex ception the most marvellous mix ture of slyness and audacity possi ble to conceive. The description of the boat race given presents a scene which an American cannot regard as anvthinsr but the height of the , ridiculous. Thames river being too narrow to permit more than one boat to pass at a time, the shells are start ed in single file the first about a hundred feet in advance of the second, and so on in like arrange ment until all of the sheljs engaged in the race have fallen into line. The object of each crew is to keep the boat in their rear from bumping into their own, while they endeavor to bump into the one in advance of them. This remarkable perfor mance is known as the vumping race and seems to us to be scarce ly as impossible for one to take seriously as an ordinary tub race. Mr. Davis throughout the whole article shows his usual bright sketchy style which never falls to attract large number of readers. Robert College, of Constantino ple, has 205 students, and of the 'twenty 'professors only seven or eight have American names. Bul garians, Greeks and Aimenians largely predominate among the students. Among the prescribed studies for the junior year are the Justory of the Byzantine Empire, critical Periods in European His tory and the History of Europe since 181 5. CMS! Mi!! (MS!!! JRflNT. Call on GEO. TRICE when vou wnf nice Oyter stew or fry. Bring him your Shoes when they need mending. GEO. TRICE, Main Street, DO NOT BUY Your Clothing UNTIL YOU SEE T. J. LAMBEf Wannamaker & Brown's Samples. 1 day Clocks from $1.00 to $3.00. 8 day Clocks from $3.00 to $3.50. Warranted to run well and keep good time. Dun.irinir rt f 1v-L-c Woti-hac anil !iii1rv a specialty. r-All vork warranted and prices reasonable. Chapel Hill, N. C. HEADQUARTERS OF Fine ClotHing SHOES, HflTS, -AND- ' 4 ".. Gents' Pumi6fiina Goods, Custom Made Buits a Specialty. Dress Suits furnished on short uotiae. a R. N. TOMS will reoresent me at Chan el Hill. Call on him when in need of any thing, T. J. LAMBE, The Clothier and Gents Furnisher, 105 Main St., Durham, N. C. Itlllll and Mi 11 Company SAMUEL SPENCER, F. W. HUIDEKOPER and REUBEN FOSTaeR, Receivers. OPERATING THE CREAT Washington and Southwestern Vfcstibuled Limited, AND THE Richmond & Dan ville Fast Mall, Between the North and South and Southwest. Thev are far superior to ail rjrevious stvUc Calf and see them. IS. W. ANDREWS, Ag't. at Alliance Store. C. L. LINDSAY, Dealer in Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoes, Hals, Clothing, Hardware, Groceries, Wagons, Horses, Mules. FURNITURE A SPECIALTY. Main street, - - Chapel Hill, N. C. DR. R. H. WHITEHEAD ! HAS BOUGHT OCT THE McRa e Drugstore and completely restocked his store With all the ar ticles necessary to the comfort and uses of the students. Mr McRae, who is managing the store, will be glad to see his student friends at all times, and will sell them Drugs, Candy, Cigarettes, Tobacco, Cigars AND STUDENTS' ARTICLES cheaper than at any place in the villaue. Prescriptions Carefully Compound ed at all times. A. A. KLUTTZ'S AT THE GLASS FRONT IS HEADQUARTERS FOR AlltfieBoDlsSUiiratf THROUGH PULLMAN PALACE SLEEP ING CARS BETWEEN New York and New Orleans, New York and Atlanta, : : : New York and Augusta, : : : Washington and Memphis, : AND Why are the foot ball men's stockings . like Dolly's? Some body said, "they don't mate." Close Connections to all Points reached via this Great Line. The Fast and Complete Service cannot be Exeelled. For time tables, maps, and other infor mation, apply to any ticket agent of the jvnmuuu ana jjanvuic Railroad, or to C. L. Hopkins, Traveling Pass. Ag't. .,r "" Charlotte, N. C. W. H. Green, w. A. Turk, General Manager. Gen. Pass. Agent. Sol Haas, Traffic Manager. General Offices : Washington, D. C, AND THE Common Schools. Also Stationery and Student's Supplies. I have a full line of BLAIRS TABLEIS and NOTEBOOKS. Wirt's Fountain Pen, Perfection Students' Lamps, Pratt's Astral Oil. A complete line of Gents' Furnishing Goods, Fancy Goods, and Toilet Articles. CONFECTIONERIES, FRUITS, CIGARS AND TOBACCO, POTTED MEATS AND PICKLES. Fine Hats and Hand-Made Shoes, A SPECIALTY. Having served "the Boys" and the pub lic generally for a number of years, I am prepared to offer a line of goods unsur passed in quality and at prices to suit the times. My Motto : The Best Goods for Lowest Cash Prices. Respectfully, A. A. KLUTTZ.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 19, 1893, edition 1
4
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