THE TAR HEEL Official Organ of th AtMetic Awociation of the University of North Carolina Published Wklr STUDENT FORUM BOARD OP EDITORS THOMAS 0. WOLFE.... ....E&itormOhief ASSISTANTS W. H. ANDRKW8. JR. II. O. WE8T JOHN KERU............... . Managing Editor T. 0. TAYLOR..'........ :...A.tsignment Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS W. L. Bicthk W. JE. Matthews C. T. Leonard . W. W. Stout A. L. Pureikoton J. A. Bender P. IlETTLEMAN D. L. Grant C, R. Sumner C. T. Boyd J. P. Washburn W. E. Horner R. B. Gwynn II. C. Hekpneb BOARD OF MANAGERS tf. G. GOODING . ..Buine Manager . ASSISTANTS J. E. BANZET, JR. A. C. LINEBIJRGER sub-assistants; J. E. Orayton, Jr. M. W. Nash Jack Warren To be entered M secondolas matter t ifca postoffiee at Chapel HilL N. 0. Printed by Thb 8imah Pkivtmt, 10, Durham, N. 0. SaUcription'Price. $2.00 Per Year, Parable in Advance or During the First Terra SingtelCopie, 5 Cents N B Material intended for publication must be in not later than Tuesday mid night of the current week. Address news matter to Managing Editor; business cor respondence to Manager. THE TAPPING OF THE GOLDEN FLEECE The tapping of the Golden Fleece Tuesday night made history. Gerrard was bulging with a capac ity crowd of students. The Governor made the best address he's ever made here. Then came the tapping. The form of tapping was the same the impressive ceremony of those two masked figures wearing the fleece. But the setting was different. For the first time, perhaps, the entire stu dent body was given a chance to see the ceremonies at a time when all could be present. And at the apex of the evening the ceremonies came, came attended by a dramatic tension on the part of that audience that tes tified to the fine solemnity of that occasion. A distinct step forward has been made. The student body has gained an impression it will not forget. Never before has the fine purpose of the Golden Fleece, which has been a great builder of our campus life, been more definite in the minds of the stu dent body than at present. The Fleece has done a big thing. Every one will be helped. A SMOKER WITH A BACKBONE On Wednesday night the Senior class had as its guests the University faculty. The attendance was well over one hundred. The clas of 1920 has never hard such a smoker. It is doubtful if any University class has had such a smok er. The froth and bubbles of such affairs was present, in the talks, of course. But there was something sol id and meaty about this smoker also. Finally, the relationship between those two groups of men, the Seniors and the faculty, was laid bare and in that open uncovering there was a sacred exchange of confidences. The president said it for the fac ulty. And he certainly said it. He told shortly and simply the story of the University reeling' after the bat tle from its own tragic losses, of the"1 all-pervading gloom, with reference to the future. And the Seniors came back this war class of 1920 moved by the impulse to help their Univer sity in its restoration. "We think you're a great class," he told them. "God bless you all." He sat down then, but the class was deeply stirred by what the president had said. They knew he had made an utterance for himself and the faculty that rang true and deep. During the intermission the faculty and students mixed around and in their genial comradeship, got all tangled up so that when the evening was over, a general unscrambling was necessary. : The student-teacher relationship, we think, is one of the finest of hu man relationships when it is marked by the understanding and sincerity of that meeting. It was a great even ing. The University, is going to profit by it. The Tar Baby, in pursuance of its course of doing all things well and albeit,, cleverly, has sprung some thing new in creation with regard to its attitude towards its humble sub scribers in Chapel Hill. We don't want to be considered kickers, knock ersor that still more despicable animal- bellyachers, but ie seems to us that the subscribers of the aforesaid publication have an inalienable right not, perhaps to life, liberty, etc., but to receive their Tar Babies on time. This we believe to be inseparable to men on the campus a veritable "im maculate conception," as it were, in the being of men who laught at the Baby's jokes but who object to waiting three days after the Baby goes on sale in town to get theirs out of the postoffice. We don't know the big . idea that impels the management of the Baby, Inc., to indulge in such a policy as this towards its subscribers here. If it i3 the fault of the postal officials we lay it - to the already very much clattered-up door of the Honorable Burleson, Esq., but if the management is merely seeking to lift our kale by compelling us to subscribe and then buy an extra copy or else wait and run the risk of growing stale then, Gent, with all respects to you. we pronounce impure cussedness on your part and register herewith our right eous indignation, etc., etc. The sub scribers Gent, of the T. B., Inc., have a right to their copies of your es teemed publication after they are on sale at Roisters and Sim Jim's even if you lose a few dollars thereby. T. C. Taylor. Watson, International Y. Industrial Secretary Addresses Y. M. C. A Dr. Hamilton Contributes Volume to N. C. History An important contribution to the history of North Carolina is embodied in three quarto volumes, bearing the imprint of the Lewis Publishing Company (Chicago and New York, 1919). Volume I, by R. D. W. Con nor' (U. N. C, class of 1899), Secre tary of the North Carolina Historical Commission, is entitled: "The Colon- nial and Revolutionary Periods, 185'- 1873." Volume II, by W. K. Boyd. rofessor of History in Trinity Col- ege, is entitled: "lhe Federal re- iod, 1783-1860." Volume III, by J. deR. Hamilton, Alumni Professor History in this institution, is en titled: "North Carolina Since 1860." No extended review in this place is permissible for lack of space. At tention is called to the features of this work especially deserving of at tention, namely: the immense quan tity and variety of. some materials upon which the authors have drawn, materials which, in many cases, have not been drawn upon by those who have written the state's history; the scholarly character of the work, each volume being written by a trained historian, deeply versed in the his tory and literature of the period; the f.-T 'i. i j 1 i l 1 1 taieiui tiiauoii oi autnorrcy ana xne bibliographical lists, which should prove useful to students; and the un affected, straight-forward style of all three volumes, even though each is written by a different hand. In his volume, Mr. Connor's purpose, as he states in the preface, "has been to bring out more fully than has here tofore been attempted the relation of North Carolina to the British Em pire in America of which it was a part';' and this he has done more fully and effectively than anyone who had preceded him. Professor Boyd's task was perhaps the most difficult of the three for two reasons: . First, that it lacked the romantic color and high narrative interest afforded, in the one case, by the founding of the colony and by the great drama of the Revolution, in the other by the war of the sections with its complex and stirring aftermath of reconstruction; and second, that the Federal period has been less studied than any other period of our history. Much research was required for the production of this volume, and chapters of excep tional interest are: "Banking Prob lems, 1804-1835," "Religious Develop ment After the Revolution," and "Academies and Higher Education." The author of the standard work, "Re construction in North Carolina," had already established himself as the leading authority iri the Civil War and post-bellum eras; and his interest in current political questions, constitu tional reform, and large isses of public welfar give authority and force to the volume by Dr. Hamilton. Of particular interest are the chapters on "White Supremacy," "Educational Development," and "Social Tendencies." Declaring that all relationships be tween. labor and labor control must have a humanity of soul and spirit in order to be of permanent success. James B. Watson, industrial secretary of the International Y. M. C. A. move ment. spoke to the Y cabinet and others Tuesday afternoon in the Cab inet room. Pie asserted that it was his experi ence to know that the more men put into any service the more they like the work and that in four years of college life the individual was given an opportunity to meet and know other men as would never be pre sented again. One per cent of the country's popu lation, Mr. Watson said, are college men and that one per cent are vir tually the leaders of the country. So, he continues, to us comes the respon sibility of preparing ourselves for leadership, ' and develop , our possibil ities to permanent assets. College ' students, according to Mr Watson, are apt to put foreign la borers off into a corner and call them a "problem." The unjustness of this classification he shows by citing cases of well-educated men of foreign race doing menial jobs in every part pi tne industrial world. One instance was of a miner who was formerly proiessor of Languages at the Uni versity of Cairo, Egypt. In speaking of this problem. Mr. Watson disapproved of the way the b.eas were bundled back to their respective countries. "No doubt," he says, the deportation was conducted with the best of intentions, but it is said that Hell, is paved with eood in tentions." :? Mr, Watson is one of the secre taries of the industrial department, international committte Y, M. C. A. He is a graduate of Pennsylvania State College, 1909, where he was ac tive in college affairs and was gener al secretary of the Christian Associa tion during the first semester of his senior year. He was general secretary of the Y. M. C. A. at the Colorado School of Mines from 1909 to 1912, and at Stanford University, California, from 1915 to 1917. During the interval he was in South America, where he work ed with the students in the govern ment schools in Argentine, Brazil and Uruguay. He was the first man to introduce Y. M. C. A. work in t.h universities of Brazil, where he work ed three years, dividing the time be tween the capitol, Rio de Janeiro, and tne second city of the country Sao Paulo. During the period of the war. Mr. Watson served most effectively in the army camps of California, and as as sociate personnel secretary for the western military department, under the war work council. Later he served as executiv secretary of the i. 1VL. U A. work for the Portugeese army in France. In connection with this work he . visited, Belgium Eng- and, bcotland, France, Spam" and Portugal, and: has recently returned to America to tak up his duties with the international committe. Professor R. B. Cowan has just re turned from New York, where he visited for several days. THE ilOGRAPH Si Goodmark's fond ambition's bud Is neatly nipped by our friend Dud. With forty others in like fix Si owns the economis six. Three chosen spirits were by a four bo shocked that they are now no more. But though they're gone, still lives their name - Forever in the Hall of Fame, Along with two of last year's class, Who made the Superhuman Pass. Though we make ones in Greek and Latin And our grades on rock pudding fat ten, Though we do passing well in History And from its heart pluck out the mystery, Though we astound in Gastronomies, icss To those who pass in Economics We doff our hat and bend our knees, And strive their passing whim to please, To say to them: "Well may you chortle For you have made yourselves im mortal. Sit here in-front, we're glad to go Way back and sit on the last row." Mazeppa. The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity team defeated tha Kappa Sigma fra ternity team Thursday afternoon, March 11th, in the semi-finals of the fraternity league now being played in the gymnasium. The score was 37 to 2. This eliminates all other fra ternity outfits from the series, and the finals will be played soon between the A. T. O.'s and the Sigma Nu's, the latter having won in the semi finals from the S. A. E.'s. Kentucky Kernel. f wri '. ftnrtrtg Ittni ClrtV. V ,' Judgment In the selection of your ClotHes need not neces sarily be based on tech nical knowledge of clothes making. When you come to a store like this you've taken the first in good judgment. You place your reliance for good quality and good style upon the reputation of the store or the makers of the clothes we handle. You rest the assurance of good service on our policy of GUARANTEED SATISFACTION PRITCHARD-BRIGHT CO. Brief Cases, Music Folios, Student Cases Gunrmiteed eoods are your protec tion. Insist on the original. Sold by all relinble dealers. Lif ton Mfg. Co. New York THERE'S A DIFFERENCE' NiWS-Mi: ll-rvi ".Mlf t3T- ' iSU)' Always Good STIMULATING PEPIFYING EXHILARATING At Founts In Bottles 3 GIBSONS Here Now 1 Guitar I Guitar . , 1 Mandolin $54.00 $34.00 $47.00 A reasonable allowance for that old instrument. A. B.OWENS 37 South! An unusually interesting series of j articles, involving detailed research, has ben apparing in the High School Journal. This " series, entitled "The Academy Movement in the South," is written by Professor Edgar W. Knight, whose work in secondary ed ucation in North Carolina (Houghton, Mi m Co.) is widely and favorably known. Part of an address eriven by rofessor Knight before the North Carolina Teachers' Assembly, at Ral- lgh, N. C, November 26. 1919, on Tublic Education in the South; Some nherited Ills and Some Needed Re forms," occupies the leading position in School and Society for January 10, 1920 (vol. xi, No. 263). Alumni Cy Thompson Says- To Ex-Service Men: President Wilson has signed the Sweet law recently passed by Congress, making many de sirable changes in the six per manent forms of Government Life Insurance. The choice of lump sum settlement to your estate is one of them. Come in to see me in my of fice opposite the ' campus and learn in detail how you may re instate your lapsed policy or convert all or any portion of yours. Unless you need additional coverage, particularly for pro tection to credit, we . will not even discuss the advantages of the superior service that the first-chartered purely mutual Amercian company offers over most commercial companies. Cyrus Thompson, Jr. District Manager JOHN W. FOSTER "BULLY" MASSENBURG College Agents 'Perfection in Protection" illlMMiMilEl If , WMgElTiiMimini V IP i FORM FIT TnTOTimTnrmnfllllllliPiw BERWICK- lYi in. GORDON 2 in. Arrow MfGOLLARS curve cut toft shoulders pe fatly. CLUETT, PEA BODY & CO i INCtatatf EUBANKS DRUG COMPANY , 'Prescription Druggists CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THEY HAVE A WAY OF Cutting it Correctly AT THE A. W. HORTON BARBER SHOP ON MAIN STREET DURHAM