Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 22, 1919, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
EXCHANGES R. O. T. C. INDOOR TARGET RANGE TO BE READY SOON The R. O. T. C. indoor target range on the third floor, west wing of the Administration Building will be ready for use about December 1. Rifles and pistols of .22 .caliber will be used. The rifle has a magazine which holds six cartridges and is known as the Savage N. R. A. .22 caliber rifle. The pistols are Colt automatics. At present the K. O. T. C. is fo! lowing out , the outlined course, de voting the major part of the time to making maps. University Daily Kansan '' CHEEK How's This for an ?Ali American' TeamT Wyscoki Lehigh. Savaria, .Lehigh. tSankowski, Missouri. Ptacek, Kansas Aggies. Tschappatt, West Virginia Wesley- an. - Polish, Shenandoah, Pa. ' Palutis, Shenandoah, Pa. Zillinsky, Shenandoah Pa. ' Valisky, Maiseville, Pa. Kostono, Maiseville, Pa. Czysz Michigan. Beaumont (Tex.) Journal ; The freshmen at Missouri Univer sity who enter into college activities are to be distinguished from their in active brothers by activity buttons which are to be awarded for both athletic and non-athletic activities. . . Fifteen hundred freshmen caps have been sold to the first year students at Ohio University. The freshmen are required to wear the caps until No vember 22 when they may discard them until spring. Ohio. SWIMMING TEST BEING GIVEN IN GYMNASIUM Tests, to determine the number of freshmen and sophomores that must take swimming lessons have com menced in Doremus gymnasium un der the supervision of Dan Blain, one of the University's expert swimmers. The tests will be given on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at three o'clock and those who can already swim are asked to report first in or der that as much time as possible may be given those who have not, as yet, mastered this art. It is interesting to note that these tests are being given in compliance with the one request of Mrs. Robert Parker Doremus, the donor of our beautiful gymnasium. Her only re quest when she gave it to the Uni versity was that every W. & L. man, before graduation, should learn to take care of himself with ease while in the water and save another f necessary. To pass these tests the student must be able to make a plain dive, swim the length of the pool twice, carry another man across it and re main for ten minutes in the water without touching the bottom or sides of the pool. -Ring Turn Phi. R. O. T. C. ADOPTS UNJFORM The classes in R. 0. T. C. work vot ed Monday, almost unanimously to adopt a uniform. The one they have adopted is a medium between a civil ian suit and an army uniform so that it will not lopk tout of place in civilian life. The moyement must pe acted upon by the committee , on R. 0. T, C, of which Dean Walker is head, be fore it will become effective Univer sity Daily Ka.ns.an. Indiana The students of dramatics gt,the Uniyersity, of Indiana are planr mag to give five plays during this semester. They will be as follows: "Madame Butterfly," "Suppressed De sires," "Neighbors," "Riders to the Sea," and "The Proposal Under Diffi culties." , Princeton Sixteen representatives of the Princeton speakers association were sent out to speak before civic clubs and high schools in behalf of the Roosevelt Memorial campaign. Cornell 1 he total enrollment oi freshmen and old students at Cornell University number 4,977. This is the largest enrollment Cornell has ever had. .. . .... : Harvard an old custom of having senior advisers for members of the freshmen class has been renewed this year at Harvard University. About 100 men of the class of 1920, have been chosen to act as big brothers of freshmen. Jazz in general and "The Vamp" in particular, are favored by university students in preference to more clas sical music, according to Columbia music dealers. , Columbia Plans are being made at Columbia University to revive the monthly magazine. None of the staff of the magazine have yet been ap pointed. The old name for Columbia magazine, the "Monthly," has been discarded. , Columbia, according to the latest reports, has the largest en rollment of any university in the world. The total registration is 15, 625. The entire number of those tak ing advantage of Columbia's exten sion courses is 7,441. . The l'ar Heel: $1.75 for remain der of the year. Subscribe! : CARR-BRYANT HIGH GRADE SHOES FOR CAROLINA MEN CARR-BRYANT BOOT AND SHOE CO. 106-108 WEST MAIN STREET DURHAM, N. C. cl)iffmart llewdr? (To reettsboro, ytovtt) Carolina PERSONALS George Hunt, '22,. of Oxford, spent Monday on the Hill. Vernon Rigler, who entered the University with the class of '21 is a midshipman at the U. S. Naval Aca demy at Annapolis. Marion B. Fowler, '18, visited friends on the Hill the first of the week. He holds a responsible posi tion with a Durham bank. Can You Beat This? FRUITS i SMOKES i. CANDIES DRINKS Everything for the "Feed" STATE AND NATIONAL PAPERS ..... . EVERY DAY IN THE WEEK J THE ONLY ORIGINAL AUto service FROM THE, HILL: ; , r 1 FROM DURHAM: 9:50 a. m-12:40 p. m. 8:3010:20 .. m. 2:304:00 p. m. 5:08 p. m.8:00 p. m. CS. PENDERGRAFT I'lthtAlUWecther Man " North Carolina Club Meets Monday Night All members of the North Carolina Club, and other students and faculty members who are interested in the Club program, are urged to ie pres ent at the next regnlar meeting in Gerrard Hal Monday evening, No vember 24, t 7:( o'clock. The Cluty Reconstruction Committee on Public Health, consisting of J. S. terry, Chairman, C. I Harrington, Black well Markham, and A. R. Ander son will present its tentative findings and recommendations , at this meet ing. This committee under the di rection of Profs. Bullitt and Branson, is thumbing thru the cream of the literature on public health in North Carolina and elsewhere, and will pre sent some thought-provoking re marks concerning present public health work, and the needed reforms in this state. . The meeting will be devoted to a discussion of: 1. County health departments, whole-time health officers, and public health nurses. 2. County or county-group hos pitals (public), and why. 3. Health and sanitation as re quired subjects in all schools receiv ing state aid. 4. Wholesome recreation, town and country, and why. Please remember the time and place, November 24, 7:00 o'clock, at Gerrard Hall. TAMING OF THE SHREW SUBJECT OF DR. KOCH'S LECTURE THURSDAY NIGHT (Continued from Page 1) regard comedy as a form of amuse ment not to be taken seriously. He had no comment to offer on the brain less presentation of the modern comedy except to state that there isn't enough cerebration in the mod ern comedy to clog the mind of a flea. "I have no quarrel with Charlie Chaplin" said Dr. Koch, "but his comedy is merely of the feet." "The genius of Shakespeare," de clared Dr. Koch, "rests in his ability to delineate character and as a por- trayer of .human sympathy he stands alone. His comedy is thoughtful, al ways of the mind. He does not dis criminate between the saint and the sinner. He writes of the hearts of men, be they beggar or king, rags or crowns. Before his fall the great Belgian poet-philosopher, Neitche, said 'all good things laugh' and Shakespeare's comedy laughs with the heart." Dr. Koch's impersonation of the va rious characters was an excellent piece of dramature and he brought out cleverly the psychology of the spoiled child and shrewish woman who had only to be shown her faults to cause a reversion to the true and beautiful woman she really was. ' FRESHMEN WALK THRU BINGHAM'S LINE WITH FIFTY-ONE TO ZERO SCORE (Continued from Page 1) continued to score at will. , - In the last quarter every Fresh man who presented himself in uni form was given an opportunity to get in the game, and they contin ued the good work of their predeces sors, scoring immediately oh a forty yard run. The features of the game were the long runs of McDonald, the line smashing of McGee, Maxwell , and Greenland the brilliant and clean tackling of McGee. The lineup: - ? Freshmen Shepard .... Hanby Pondexter Linney .. Corbett ..... Position Right End ;; Right Tackle Right Guard Center Fischal Left Guard Bingham ..... Graves Brown Browning Bryant .... Crowell Smith William, A. McDonald Left Tackle Maxwell McGee .... Green ..... Quarter Back Right" Half ' Brooks .. Woodard McKinney .... Bullock Ledbetter Columbia and Records TONE is a test for he ear, not for the eye. The glori ous voice of the Grafonola can sing its own praises far better than any words we can put in type. Before you fide, upon a phono graph you should certainly hear the Grafonola. Test its tone by ear. Play any record on any Grafonola when ever you like and ai often as you ljke. Wp haye all the latest Records. De , ctmbtt Records now on sale. Come in and hear them. Our doors open with a welcome. The Royall & Borden Company Corner Main and Market Streets, Durham, N. C. Grafonolas "SHINES THAT LAST" AND SOMEHOWTHEY JUST MAKE A NEW HAT TROM THAT OLD ONE DURHAM SHOE SHINE PARLOR mam sr." For That Immediate Need s Distinctive Stationery in Carlton Club Gentlemen Club" Symphony Lawn A pen that fits your hand . A Shaeffer or A Waterman , A Pipe that Smokes the Best The W. D. C. "Stratford" NORRIS CANDIES PATTERSON BROTHERS "The Rexall Store" Satisfies the national jp fjp ' demand for a whole LJ Hit some, pure and appe , , fifej . tizing beverage at the ; fpl ' '"' '' soda fountain or with'" MM I your meals. IPl Bevo will more than ' Sfejf P satisfy your thirst. rara ' wBL''' Anheuser-Busch ' . B . ; , : . st. louis' ' ' : It must be . Ice Gold : . .: mmaa iK - i if. iiTrnffrm M.i.Tcii "in :.; i'p-'iUit Full Back
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 22, 1919, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75