E T ID 11 TT w W"I MA ttVimk IT JL JA. OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA VOL. 20 UNIVERSITY OF, NORTH 5 CAROLINA, CPIAPEL HILL, N. C., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1912 NO. 18. CAROLINA DEFEATS WAKE FOREST THE SPIRIT OF CAROLINA Is 18 to 15 the Result j f a Fiercely Contested and Ex citing Game at Raleigh THE RESULT HAPPILY A SURPRISE Varsity Quintet Got Mad and Pro ceeded to Show How Deceptive Ad vance Predictions and Comparative Scores May Be Nearly one thousand people last night saw the basket ball team from Wake Forest gc down in defeat at the hands of the strong- (jUIUlCL ii win iuc uuivciaii) ui North Carolina, the seore being"! eighteen to fifteen. j However, it Was no walk-over for the boys from the Hill, and if t l?e game.1, ad been five minutes longer tho result would have been in favor of the Baptists. It was in some words a surprise, for it was conceded among those who have been keeping up with the game recently that Wake Forest would put it all over the Univer sity team, but actual playing told a different tale than advance predictions. r.s Two Years Old in December. Candidate for the Varsity in Nineteen Hundred and Blank. ' Thissturdy looking side-wheeler is the son of Dr. R. P. Noble, now surgeon for the Southern Railway at Ensley, Ala., once catcher on the Varsity, member of the famons 1903 team, who with his team-mates defeated Vir ginia twice, overwhelmed George- town and Washington and Lee, land captured the championship It was the largest crowd pres-: Qf the South. ent that has so far attended a ; game at the Auditorium, and if the interest in the game increases j as fast as it has within the last ten days basket ball will become ! an important factor in the ath-j letics of colleges and schools. It ' .... , i has often been said by old.expen-j enced athletes that basket ball j was a girl's game in its entirety, The record of that team for four days was: N. C 10 Va. 3. N. C. 15 Va. 15. ' N. C. 13 W. and L. 1. N. C. 13 G. W. 4. 51 runs 57 hits. 5 home runs. 7 errors. The team later in the season beat Program For Junior Week. m. '3.30 p 8.00 p, 10. 00 p. tn. m. 10.30a. m, 3.30 p. m 8.00 p. m 10.00 p.m. m 11.00 a 3.00 p. m. 8.00 p. m. 10.00 p.m. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10. Baseball game Davidson vs. Carolina. Junior Orator's Contest Gerrard Hall. Gorgon's Head Dance Bynum Gymnasium. THURSDAY, APRIL 11. Baseball game Fresh-Soph. Baseball game Faculty. '. ' Senior Stunt Bynum Gymnasium or Gerrard Hall. Junior Reception Library. . , FRIDAY, APRIL 12. Cotillion Club Hop Bynum Gymnasium. Track Meet Wake Forest vs. Carolina. Glee Club Recital Gerrard Hall. German Club Dance. The above program for the coming Junior Week festivities Was submitted to the faculty last week and approved,' It will be seen at once that the various committees have provided a very full and complete program for the entertainment of the (fair visitors during their two days stay on the Hill. ; t : Besides the more ithan usual completeness of the program, the principal change between it and the programs of former years is in the substitution of a Junior Reception for a Junior Prom. The reception is to be given by the Junior Class to the Senior Class, the faculty, and'to all visi tors on the mil. i he juniors intend to make the reception the most notable event of the week. but no girl can play thegamein the y. . . Charlottesville 4 tc 1. 1 The7 are more secretive about i ! A 1 J " I i 1 11 J t - .i rouirh manner that it was played last night. Some of the boys re ceived some hard falls and there were several personal fouls called on different players. , The houors of the game can not be distinctively claimed by any one side, for at times both teams played good ball and at other times they seemed to lose the proper interest. Wake Forest was not in their usual form and was very slow in covering the players. The University team played their best ball in the last half when Wake Forest team was at its best and worked hard to overcome the lead made by the University in the first half. The game started with Wake For est defending the south goal and Carolina the north goal. Beam for Wake Forest made the first goal of the game soon after play, a minute later Tillett for Carolina made a goal and Smith for the same team made a goal, putting Carolina in the lead early in the game.- Chambers fouled and Dowd of Wake Forest, threw free goal. R. Holding made a fine run and threw a very difficult field goal. M. Beam fouled in..:. i ii 1.1 i a They were some sluggers in those ineir indn ine sen,ors auoui j their 'stunt. Nevertheless the ,. , chairman of the committee says x lie vuuiii: Ktiiucmau naa or ,A .... J .e,i6 ... r , jit will be a reaaysfone mio training lur ine , , . , , . , - ... J i ar TOhirh all Vitine nt thmffc man will be a brilliant affair, one Varsity. He neither chews nor smokes, neither does he drink dopes. And he has got a good eye. Clancy says he "looks good." In a letter to Prof. E. K. Gra ham, the boy's father says: ''As the baseball season is near at hand and every one is talking of the winning team Carolina is going to have this year, I thought it might offer you some pleasnre to get a look at Carolina's south paw in 19- -; and to know that al fVinncrh T cannot nlav with the team any more, I still have the The student and especially those connected with the varsity are ! happen. It will not be informal, but will be as far from stiff form ality as is possible. The recep tion will be a departure from the usual form of social events at the University. It is under the con trol, however of men who have ideas, and as a result its success is assured. The faculty ball game is not entirely a new thing here, but as a Junior Week feature it has been absent from former I programs. any more, success of the team at heart and and am beginning to train a ft- hander to hold just as the old George Green down Virginia 1903 did when and I had the very anxious to see it. General Lee wants to get some points on inside baseball for the Virginia games of the week following, and turned from what promises to be their most successful tour. They will be able to entertain the most critical. The seniors are working on the stunt. Its exact nature will not be revealed until the night of the performance. Laugh ter and fun will be in every minute of the stunt. Last, but by no means least, are the dances. The Order of Gorgon's Head and the German Club will give dances; the Co tilhon Club a bop. The last of these will take the place of the usual Junior Prom. It will be given by the non-frat men to all fraternity men in college. Progress Made en Raising the $500 pleasure of forming the battery "vM.u.wgcic.u. muirh 1,VW1 fhPm twice the same formation for use in capturing season. "It is my intention to have him enter the University as soon as he is prepared." This is Carolina Spirit put in action Let the team this year of it and those four .1 ! . t .A games win appear on tne ngni side. and Smith made a free goal. Chambers of Carolina ffet some . ran with the ball too much and Dowd made goal. The next play was the prettiest of the game, and was made bv Ervin, of Carolina, "What do vou chartre for your all the students, especially the the rag again in the Carolina League. The faculty ball game together with the Fresh-Soph game, admitted to be the classic of the class game series, will form plenty of fun for one day. The junior orators contest is the only think on the entire pro gram reminding one in any way of intellectuality. It will be, however, of absorbing interest to who ran around interference from rooms?' center of court and threw a very "Five dollars up." difficult goal. Utley was given a wjut pm a student" personal foul and Smith made a "Then it's live dollars down." Ooatlnued on fourth pg. -Cornell Widow. members of 1913 The Glee Club recital and the Senior stunt will appeal to the music and fun in all healthy peo ple. The musicians will have re- The committee appointed two weeks ago to secure subscriptions towards the $5C0 to be raised among the students has made fairly good progress. The com mittee has worked hard and faith fully. The response of the students has been in the main very encouraging. So far the committee has been able to raise about $425. Of this sum $47.50 was subscribed by merchants and business men of the town. About $100 has been paid so far. The committee is still at work trying to see every man in college in or der to get his subscription. The money thus subscribed will be due during the first week of March. Students who wish to pay and those who have not sub scribed and wish to do so should see Raymond Lee at once. Below is given a list of men who have subscribed as much as $5.00: Senior Order of the Golden Fleece, $100.00 Pickwick Theater, 10.00 Austin Carr, 5.00 Banks Mebane, ' 5.00 Ransom Saunders, . 5.00 Albert Marks, 5.00 Spencer Nichols, 5.00 Eubanks Drug Co., 5.00 Patterson Bros., 5.00 A. A. Kluttz, 5.00 University Supply Co., 7.50 Gooch's Cafe, 5.00 Brown-Rogers Co., Stockton & Ilendrix, Agents, 5.00 FINAL LECTURE AT Y. M. C. A. Delivered by Professor E. K. Graham on "Relation of the Student to Religion." . . LARGECROWD PRESENT GREATLY IMPRESSED The Address a Clear Analysis on the Subject and a Thoughtful Consider ation of What Should be the Proper 1 Relation Professor E. K. Graham de livered the concluding lecture of the "Science and Religion" series last Tuesday night at the Y. M. C. A. The attendance was doubt less the largest that ever attended a lecture in the Y. M. C. A. au ditorium, all the seats, a few ex tra chairs and the gallery even be ing filled. Prof. Graham chose as his subject the "Relation of the Student to Religion." , He said that he was not sufficiently acquainted with either science or religion to discuss them in an in structive manner and so took the above subject which is of vital importance to students. The ad dress was a very cleat analysis of the proposition, with a thought ful and earnest consideration of what should be Jthe proper rela tion between the student and re ligion, and profoundly impressed those who heard it. A synopsis of it is given here: "Set us first ask what is the . attitude of the ordinary student to religion. It consists chiefly of recollection and reaction. It is very likely a memory of what the student may have read or heard of the Jehovah of the He brews visiting iniquity upon those against whom he conceived anger. , Or perhaps it is a recollection of something c onnected with a church, a creed, a representative of religion, a miracle, or a re ligious institution like the Y. M. C. A,- , The student has come in contact with one of these things and has reacted .against it, from it against religion, and '"from re ligion against God. Thus'vhe has reacted against religion bc- cause of a mere form of religion and has come to be very little in terested in it. It bears much the same sort ot relation to him as death, being far-off in the future. He is interested rather in imme diate things such as his college work, his companions, his sports, things close at hand. The aver age college man lays out a pro gram similar to this: getting through college, settling down, marrying, perhaps, getting re ligion and dying. This is a wrong view of life. "Man is interested in truth. ' He shows it by pon- dering over the story of Jonah and the whale and in his actions every day. The Bible is a record of the struggle of humanity for truth and God. These are the things men really want. But they go about it in the wrong way when they try to catch them by such means as a high powered automobile. This matter is not one of reason but merely of recognizing one's true status in the world and his relation to God, Continued on fourth pag

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