Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 3, 1914, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE T A R 'H E Eft- THE TAR HEEL Official Organ of the Athletic Asso ciation of the University of North Carolina. Published Weekly. BOARD OF EDITORS Editor-in-Ohief Managing Editor W. P. 'Fuller, T. C. Linn, Jr., - AMOTIATE EDITORS McDantel Lewis, J. F. Hacklkr O.C.Nance, N. A. Rkasonkr J. G. Cowan W. T. Polk. E. L. Applewhite J. E. Uoovwi MANAGERS "VL. Field - - Business Manager F. Bradshaw, - Assistant. Manager ".11. Cooper. - - Assistant Manager To be entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Chapel Hill, N. C. Printed by The University Press, Chapel Hill, N. C Subscription Price, $1.50 Per Year, Payable in advance or during the first term. SlntfU CopUt, 5 Cent. NOTICE All subscriptions to THE TAR HEEL are now one month over due. Please pay up at once and ave the Business Manager much trouble. This applies to Alumi as well as to students. TICKET SCALPERS The Eveninsr Telegram and Kecora (Kocky jvLount; in a marked copy of the paper calls our attention to an important point. It is concerning- ticket scalpers at Thanksgiving-. in Drier the statement is as follows: 5000 Carolina alumni and friends go to Richmond the day before or the day of the Thanksgiving game. There they find all the reserved seats either in the hands of the users or the ticket speculators. According to the article 1000 were in the hands of the speculators. The prices for the $1.50 tickets rang ed from $4 to S7 a piece. If a man happened to have a lady with him he was helpless. In our opinion the complaint is entirely justified. The people we want there first of all are the 1oyal members of the alumni who ,ave stood' by us through thick nd thin (mostly thin). After ur alumni have been cared for, incidentally if others want to see the game, that is all right, but look after the alumni first. A new football manager will be elected in a few days. We respectfully suggest to the new manager that the very first thing he plans, be a ticket bureau at Chapel Hill for some weeks be. fore the Thanksgiving game complaining about lack - of equip ment and supplies. These com' plaints have come mostly from a half a dozen men. In our opin. ion they were hardly warranted by the facts, It is with a great amount of pleasure that we express our be lief that the work of manager Boushall and graduate manager Woolen has been the most com petent this University has seen in a number of years. ' The season started with a dis couraging load of debt. The entire obligations of the Athletic Association were approximately $5000. Tod a v t he v are abou $1000. In the first place th largeness of the income was due to wisdom in scheduling games In the second place the smallness of the outgo has been largely due to the level headedness of the two gentleman mentioned above It takes pretty good nerve to sit tight when fifty young heathens and several coaches are swearing that they will lose the next game unless they have at once twenty new complete uniforms, twelve new foot balls, fourteen pairs o special made-to-order shoes, bale of blankets, a hundred new towels, and a new set of side ines. ; They sat tight, however, an as a result of that sitting, grad uate manager Woollen announces that the probabilities are that the Athletic Association will be- out of debt by commencement. A REPRINT. The Tar Heel wishes to repriilt verbatum an editoral which ap peared in last issue of the Maga zme untier tne title "l w o Proofs." ' "In the fall of 1910 the Fresh man football team of 1914 won a splendid, hard-fought victory over the Greensboro High School team by the score of 9 to 5. The Freshmen were already the piel ed prominent men of this class. After the game most of them passed the night in the grossest of bodily excesses. Not one of these was promiuent at the 191-1 commencement-nay, not one s;t on the rostrum. They were ac companied in their "fun" by sev eral of the High School boys, not one of whom will finish at their several colleges this year. I cr.u name six of those High School boys who, nowise superior to their fellows at the time, pre ferred to go home quietly and this year will graduate with high honors at their colleges. Prof. Horace Williams has been intimately connected with student life on this campus for over thirty years. In one of his where alumni can write and se-! lectures he says that he has never cure tickets at tli e regular price, seen a nan with character fail i An alumnus who goes to consid- ( Further, he has never seen Hie erable expense and trouble to son Of a man who debauched reach the seat of the Thanks- himself in his own college lib. .riving game is entitled to con-r fiinish his course here or succeed! iderably more consideration than i" after life n casual amusement seeker in, a Moral: distant city. . r ' ... ', ', .. tatives of other colleges in every case except one. The only team here that has no opportunity for outside competition is the gym team. We have just as good a gym team, and probably a better one than most of our sister col leges, but it has had no oppor tunitv in the last few years of f w demonstrating this fact. Why not stage one for that time between the close of the basketball season and the start of baseball -practice? It would help wonderfully to stimulate interest in mis branch of athletics. THE TRIANGULAR DEBATE 3C 30C 3C D D Virginia-Hopkins-Carolina Will De bate Again This Year The Carolina-Virginia-Hop kins triangle has been arranged again this year for the inter collegiate debates. As it was last year the debates will take place on neutral ground. Virginia and Carolina will debate at Baltimore, Carolina and Hopkins at Charlottesville, while Virginia and Hopkins meet here. These debates should prove of exceptional interest this year for since Carolina has'lost two and won two, this will be the decid ing year. The University has never lost a series of debates in her history and in order to main tain this record the teams repre senting the University this year must be successful against both Virginia and Hopkins The query for the debates will be definitely known before the holidays and the final debates will be held duriny the latter part of April. It is expected that even a larger number will enter for the. teams this year than last. , DRESSING ROOM GOSSIP. We must try again. Carolina isn't made of the stuff that turns yellow at the first or the tenth-- or the thousandth deteat. we don't give up. Real victory be longs only to the man who keeps on coming up an the time. That's what we're doiug. 'And if we keep on coming up we'll have to land on top sooner or later. The only team that gets it in the necK is the one that doesn't know how to take defeat. The only one that is really defeated is the one that, through virtue of defeat after defeat, comes within reaching distance of victory and then falls back without making one last attempt to grasp it. Next year perhaps we shall reach the victory point, and it is for us to decide whether we shall make the last attempt. But you know we will. EF folks improved with noA n rrmrh as VELVET does, thar'd be mo ladies ownin' up to bein over twenty-five. VELVET, The Smoothest Smoking Tobacco, is smooth with the mellowness that comes only of long ageing. VELVET is Kentucky's Burley dt Luxe with all its natural fine pipe qualities brought out, concentrated, and bet tered every trace of bite and rawness eliminated. 10c tins and 5c metal-lined bags. JgfyOUauoQ 1L It 1Z PATTERSON DRUGGISTS. mo OPPOSITE POST OFFICE PHONE 477 The FIollici&- Studio DURHAM, N. C. Official Photographer for Yachety YacH 1915 Studio in Chapel Hill open on Wednesdays beginning in Octolw. Carolina Pressing Club Next to Gooeh's Cafe EIGHT SUITS A MONTH FOR 1 . 00 Expert Repairing, Altering and Cleaning. - Satisfaction Guaranteed HARRIS P. ALDERMAN, MANAGER University Tailoring Company Makers of the Best Clothes Worn at U; N. C. Dealers in Felt Goods, Rain Coats, Mackinaw, Sweater and Ralmocaans We have the Best Pressers on the Hill, Try Ue. O. LeR. GOFORTH, Proprietor. Students, Patronize The Royal Cafe IN CHAPEL HILL BECAUSE THEY SERVE THE BEST. WHEN IN DURHAM STOP AT THE ROYAL UNIVERSITY BOYS HEADQUARTERS. Fruits, Candies, Peanuts! HERNDON HARDWARE CO Second Door Below Pickwick. SWAIN HALL A CO-OPERATIVE BOARCING PLACE FOR iivrvi,'irrv. mfv ' V A. ' -"J . X ' J J A 1 YOU GET THE BENEFIT OF ITS SUCCESS. $12.50 PER MONTH. S. J. BROCK WE LI; Phono 113 T. K. BEST Phone 3 B. B. AUTO SCHEDULE Phone 1B7 Daily Detween Durham and Chapel Hill Cliauffrur,: "RlilJ" ED,ERTON nH "RKD" SKWKM. SCHEDULE: LV. CHAPEL HILL LV. DURHAM 8:30 A. M. 9:50 A. M. 10:20 A. M. i.oo P. M. 2:30 P. M. 5:08 P. M. 4:00 P. M. 8:00 P. M 7:00 P. M. 10:30 P. Si. Leave Order in Durham at Levy'a Newa Stand Phone 37H We aren't beaten until we ad mit it. We aren't defea rod so ong as we keep fighting-. The loss of the game was a bitter one. But our pride in our team is untarnished and our faith in its prowress unshaken. We know it did its cleanest, stron-- st best. No team could do more. Oh, that we. on the side-lines could show half as much of the never-say-die spirit. Let's forget it and look forward to next year. Our eyes .aren't supposed to be in the backs of our heads. Let's keep our hopes THE GYM TEAM. high and sav to Virginia, a :.wl m own Carolinian scranner. I'Ul John Paul Jones: HANACER BOUSHALL A man who wins his moth - During the entire foot ball sea- gram here is given a chance t. son there has been the usual match his skill an I - Why damn it all, we've just be gun to light!", gainst represser,-' Subscribe to the Tar IIeei,. r A New Haberdashery Department ; A Dandy StocK of Caps, Hats; Shoes and Furnishings ; Everything for the Stndent ...........
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 3, 1914, edition 1
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