H iiiLI ,0 Vol No. XXX. Chapel Hill, N. C, January 10, 1922. No. 22 FOR 1922 BASKETBALL SEASON BY MANAGER Quint Will Battle Some of Strongest 1 Teams in Country on Extensive ; , . Trip. PROSPECTS ARE GOOD With the opening of the Carolina basketball season here Thursday, the University as a whole is pleased with the outlook for a brilliant season, under " brilliant leadership, ; ; through a hard schedule in which some of the leading teams of the country will be played.'"-"; . "v':'"' " 1 Following the example set last sea son the Carolina varsity will invade the north on February 17 for a hard week's work, during which time they meet Virginia, V. M. I., Washington and Lee, University of the City of New York and the Army. Manager Jacob! has one date unfilled on the northern schedule, but has tentative arrangements with several strong teams for the night of February 24. The games in North Carolina are well arranged and the schedule will be well balanced. The Davidson game at Carolina is uncertain, David son demanding that Carolina play a return game there for the one played here. Manager Jacobi states that he is doubtful as to whether a trip to Davidson can be arranged. Trinity comes in f or ; two games, as well as Wake Forest, although the . Wake Forest game here is still un certain. North Carolina State will be played twice, one here and once in Raleigh and Elon gets one game at Elon, over which there will no doubt be a dispute, as Elon is one of .the best disputers in the state, and generally has a good basketball team for so small a school, with so many girls in it. : Trinity shows promise of having an excellent team this season, and .will no doubt prove difficult for the Tar Heels, and they always have in the past, v For many , years basket ball was Trinity's major sport, and they have always excelled in the in door sport. The State team doesn't look so promising. They lwve very jfctle ma terial for a great team, bu as State has a habit of springing ..surprises, such .as last season's football games nothing can be predicted as to their strength. The Virginia teams have always proved hard factors in the Carolina schedule, not the University of Vir ginia, but the other Virginia teams. V. M. I. won last year by a 38 to 23 score, and Washington and Lee II LANDIUIARKERS GIVE s WAY TO STBUCTUBES SIGNIFYING PROGRESS Old Inn and Old Central Hotel Com- ' ". ", Is In View. '. MANY CHANGES EVIDENT Two emblems of the Old Carolina, and landmarks for old University men, have' given away to progress within the past two months. The Old University Inn, for years a great in stitution at Carolina, and the Old Central Hotel, i the scene of many things now memories, have gone, or are going. ' The Inn was forced to leave.' Fire breaking out in its musty old garret wrecked it while hundreds of Caro lina students looked on and rejoiced, and the rats it had housed along with the students found other places of activity. The remains of the old Inn are being carted away now to be made into walks and roadways. The Old Central is being torn down and moved away to give place , for a handsome new church building, the building of handsome church edi fices having become a habit with the Chapel Hill church goers. Part of the Old Central is being rolled away I "CART" CARMICHAEL IS CHOSEN TO LEAD THE 1922 BASKETBALL QUINT Cartwright Carmichael, All South Atlantic Forward, and one of Carolina's greatest basketball exponents, was elected Captain of the 1922 team last week to take the place of Hanby' who did not return to school. Carmichael is generally known on the campus and his elec tion is no surprise to the student body. He rated it, both as a basketball player and as a leader. This will be Carmichael's second year . on the Carolina varsity, he having gained his name and letter here last year, and played on the Freshman reserve team year before last. He was the principal scorer for the Tar Heels last season, and the . year broke into basketball, the freshmen had one of the finest .teams in the history of the class. As a passer, shooter, and floor general he is undoubtedly the best in the State, if not in the South Atlantic states. Carmichael's election to the captaincy of the basketball team makes the second Carmichael to receive that'honor within the past three years. Billy Carmichael, one of the great basket : ball men of the State -was captain in 1918 and is here to play under his brother's leadership this year. The election of two brothers to such honors in so short a time is unusual in the his tory of University athletics. i MAKERS ML GO ON STATE TOUR WITH THREE ONE-ACT PLAYS The Miser," "In Dixon's Kitchen," and "Trista" Are Plays to Be Presented. ILL BE PLAYED HERE ITIAL With Two Carmichaels, Perry, and McDonald as Neucleus Carolina in Fine Shape. TEN DAY TOUR SCHEDULED , U. S. C. HAS A GOOD TEAM The Carolina Playmakers leave I The University of North. Carolina PVionol Will fn tlioi aoinnr1 ofnA moota tlin TTnivnraitv of Smith darn. ! tour on Monday, : January 16, with lina on the' North Carolina! court three original one-act Carolina Folk- here Thursday night in the first bas Plays to be presented in eight towns ketball game of the season and in the in eastern North Carolina. The com- j annual game between these two pany of players and directors will be ; teams. gone until January 27, when they; Very little is known about the rel expect to return to their own thea-! ative strength of the two teams, but tre for a performance that evening North Carolina bids fair to show the I nnrl fln nnnpnvnncu in Durham th ' nubile and the student bodv the best intact, while other parts of it are LOSES GREAT ATHLETE THIS YEAR "Runt" Lowe Has Abandoned Educa tion For The Art of Making Coin and Left College. being torn down and ripped apart I for stove wood and to be used in building barns and cow stables. Such is the life of a man constructed land mark which gets in the way of pro gress. V . .. The part of the Old Inn built out of brick for the purpose of shelter ing James K. Polk, the University's only United States President, is be "Runt" Lowe, Captain, of the 1921 squad, player on the football varsity for three years, two years represent ing Carolina on the baseball squad, and one of the most popular men ever on the campus, has left school accept a position with a Winston-Salem firm, and, will probably never represent ing blasted down and hauled away to Carolina again on the athletic field, build a walk out through the campus Whether Lowe ever appears as a from Alumni to' Battle Park. . No j Carolina football player or baseball doubt the University will name it man again, he will ever be a repre the "Elm Drive" or some other such , sentative Carolina man, and a repre name, and the identity of the Presi- sentative of the New University that FIFTY SCHOOLS TO ENTER High School Basketball Season Will Be Merry One This Year, Accord ing To Indications. With over fifty schools expected to enter, the outlook for the high school championship basketball series this following night. The three plays to be used on this trip are: "The Miser," by Paul Greene of Lillington; "In Dixon's Kitchen," by Wilbur Stout of Bur lington; and "Trista," by Miss Eliza beth Lay of Beaufort. The first two were put on at the Play-House here last year and the third was one of the three new plays brought out by the Playmakers in their December production of plays. basketball team of its history. No greater wealth of material has ever been asesmbled in the state, with the two Carmichaels, Perry, McDonald forming a neucleus for Coach Fetzer to build around. Carolina played one pre-season game with the Durham Y. M. C. A. and suffered a rather bad defeat, a lack of team work and practice, and an unfamiliar floor assisting the crack Y. M. C. A. players. "Si3" The schedule for the trip is as fol-1 Perry, said to be one of the finest lows: Henderson, January 16th; Roa noke. Rapids, 17th; Scotland Neck, 18th; Tarboro, 19th; Goldsboro, 20th; Wilmington, 21st; Red Springs, 23rd, and Rockingham, 24th, with the evenings of the 27th and 28th Carolina will be proud to own. He upheld the traditional sportsmanship of Carolina in his own way, and his dent's home here for a few days, will be, tramped over for. years to come. ' Other improvements are being made on the campus. All the walks i way was pleasing to the entire stu not built up with a brick guttering dent body and the state, will be raised and brick supports During the course of his four years given them. Sand and brick are be- and a half at Carolina the Winston- (Continued on Page Three.) UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS ACTIVE AT BIG MEETING ing placed now for the job, the win ter weather being ideal for just such , work, which - of course cannot be done in the summer time. One of the sad parts of the Inn fire was the destruction of four of the great elm trees growing along side the old buildings. The trees have been killed, along with all the grass and shrubbery within 20 or 30 feet of where the building used to be. The trees will be cut and other put in their places. Number of North Carolina Represen ' tatives Attend Meeting of Pro fessors of Modern Languages. " PHI INSTALLS OFFICERS FOR THE WINTER TERM W. E. Horrer Delivers Inaugural Address at First Regular Meeting Saturday Night. At a meeting of the professors of j modern languages during the holi- j days at Baltimore, several professors ; of the University took an active part, and two of the three vice presidents j that were elected for the next year are . Carolina professors. They are Edwin Greenlaw and J. Holly Han ford. Although Dr. Hanford is noti at present teaching in the University, his long service here has made him for us always a part of the Uni versity of North Carolina. North Carolina had one of the two or three largest delegations at the assembly. Those from here attend ing the meeting were: Oliver Towles, John M. . Booker, Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Leavitt, Jas. F. Royster, Henry Dargan, Norman Foerster, Dr. Dey, and T. S. Graves. Professor Foerster read a paper on "Poe's Critical Standards" in the American Literature section. Pro fessor Dragan read a paper on "The Concept of Authority," before the group meeting on the Classical Period. Professor Booker spoke on "Contemporary Literature." Profes sor Royster was chairman of the present day English meeting. The lighting system in Memorial hall is rapidly being completed so that evening performances may be held there in the near future. Officers for the winter term were installed at ti e first regular meeting of the Philanthropic Assembly Sat urday night. ; W. E. Horner was in stalled as Spsaker, G. Y. Ragsdale as Reading Clerk, G. C. Hampton as Sergeant-at-Arms, and E. C Jernigan as Speaker Pro Tempore. Mr. Horner in his inaugural ad dress stressed effectively the need of the adoption of the Assembly of the old Roman tradition that one must leave anybody or concern that one is connected with in a better condition than when one first becomes interest ed in this organization. He impress ed upon the members the necessity of continuing the motto of the three E's Efficiency, Enthusiasm and Ef fort. In closing his remarks, the new Speaker requested that an effort be mnAa hv the entire Assembly to in- v- o,whin ihxr fifhr now success. The new ti case kiiw utviuuviuii" ktj "1 men at the next regular meeting. B. F. Fountain and C. H. Yar borough were initiated into the As sembly, and B. S. Bowden was elect ed to the Assistant-Treasurership, a position made vacant by the failure of J. T. Wells to return to college this quarter. Two resolutions, the first requiring that one member re port on the life of one of the gentle men whose pictures hang upon, the;. walls of the Assembly room each meeting night, and the second re questing a statement from the Busi- Salem man has been one of the tell ing factors in the Carolina student life and activity. Three years on the football squad, two years on the baseball squad, president of the Ath letic Council, member of Kappa Sigma, and Golden Fleece, are hon ors few men ever attain at the Uni versity and his leaving creates a va cancy in the school life of the Hill that will be hard to fill. year, is the best in many years. Last possible dates for the performances in Chapel Hill and Durham respec tively. Several changes have been made in the casts from the original pro ductions due to the fact that several members of the first ones have left elimination basis, in the same man- school or are unable to make the trip ner that football was handled during because of academic obligations. The the past season. The schools in east j complete new casts are as follows: and west will be narrowed down to! one each. The winning team in the For "The Miser," a Tragedy of Farm east; will play the winning team in I Life: year forty-four schools entered. In addition to the large schools which have been competing for state hon ors, many small schools have enter ed.. : ;4.ne series will De run on an The championship series will be- Ida Lucas ..Katharine Batts gin immediately after February 11th,! Perry Lucas Geore Den"y a meeting of the managers being held , Tim Adams Hubert Heffner at that time, in order to arrange the i schedule. Although it is not de- j finitely known, it is expected that the semi-finals will be played here, as TO PRESENT COMIC OPERA "The Bells of Cornville" Is Play To Be Given At An Early Day. The Department of Music is pre paring a comic opera to be present ed during the early part of February. The opera which has been chosen is "The Bells of Cornville" known best, however by the familar name of "The Chimes of Normandy." : Tryout for the principal parts for both men and women have already been held and several have been fill ed although . there are some parts still open. The chorus parts also still have a few openings. First re hearsals will begin on Tuesday after noon and evening in the Music Room of Old East building. "The Chimes of Normandy" is a light opera after the order of the "Mikado" which was successfully presented here two years ago and the "Pinafore" performance of last year. Both of these operas were given before large audiences in Memorial Hall and met with much undertaking by the Music Pepartment promises to be equally as good as the two pre vious efforts turned out to be. The story for the opera comes, of course, from Normandy, and dates back to years ago with a picturesque setting. last year. Since the establishment of inter high school contests by the Univer sity, the following teams have won the state championship: 1915 Winston Salem from Raleigh; 1916, Durham from Winston-Salem; 1917, Winston Salem from Durham; 1918, Durham from Winston-Salem; 1919, Winston Salem from Wilmington; 1920, Wil mington from Charlotte ; Chapel Hill from Charlotte. For "In Dixon's Kitchen," a Comedy Romance of Country Life: Hirm Dixon . .Hubert Heffner Ma, Dixon . . ... . . -,,,. . . ., Ellen Lay Annie Lee Dixon . ; . . . Mary "Y ellott Jack George Winston Gilmer ....... . .Thornton Gholson Lemuel Isley George Denny a Play of Folk-super- STARTED LAST JULY Only Work to Be Finished is Tem porary Extension to Quadrangle. For "Trista, stition : ' Eph Hunter ..... .Anthony Combs Kezzie Ellen Lay Gaffer ........... .Huhert Heffnpr 1921' ' Dr. Trask George Denny Trista .....Katharine Batts Professor Koch heads the produc ing staff as director. He is assisted by George V. Denny, business man ager; C. E. Miller, stage manager; Elizabeth A. Lay, director of make up; Gordon Finger, director of lighting: and C. D. Blair, director of properties. With the construction beginning about the middle of last July, the University extension of the South ern Railway tracks was completed last week, and now the- only work to be finished is the temporary ex tention to the quadrangle, now in the course of construction. This temporary extension runs from the OR. ABERNATHY WMHS University Physician Speaks in First Chapel Exercises on Prevention of Disease Here. The first chapel exercises of the new vear were held in Memorial hall power house to the rear of the Med at the regUlar period Tuesday morn building, and was laid in order to ing. Attendance was about 50 per- save both time and expense in haul-1 cent of normal, due to the fact that ing building materials to the site of ! 8 Kre,at "a7 students had not yet ., , .. . completed their registration. the new dormitories. Dr Abernathy voiced a timey ine contract ior tne grading ana warning in regard to infectious colds laying the track was let to Mr. W. and other ailments common among C. Gadd. and the engineers in charge ' students at this time of year. He were the T. C. Atwood organization, emphasized .the necessity of report , , , , , .1 mg to the infirmary when suffering Several delays have been experi-jfrom ft cold M m to keep frQm enced during the course of construe-1 spreading the contagion. "You have in the south, a former Carolina man, has returned to school and will ap pear on the local floor Thursday night at center. South Carolina generally puts out a fair team, but has never in the past given Carolina any great degree of trouble. Carolina took the number of the Sandlappers last year in a 38 to 15 score, playing on the South Carolina court. Practically the en tire South Carolina team is back, and has been practicing since before the Christmas holidays, preparing es pecially for the game with the Tar Heels. ' " Saturday Carolina meets the Dur ham Y, M. C. A. and will probably redeem the defeat handed out before Christmas'.'"" Theie is no way to un der rate the Y. M. C. A. team even if such a course could be thought of. The Y. M. C. A. basketeers know the game and play hard. They intend to capture the southern Y. M. C. A. championship this year, and from previous appearances, they bid fair to do so. The next game after the Y. M. C. A, affair will be with Wake Forest, at Wake Forest on January 19. Nothing has been heard with refer ence to the Wake Forest team, but in other years they have always been contenders for state honors, and will no doubt be in the race this year. Y.FJI. C, A. INSTITUTES BOY STODY MEETINGS Professor Meyer , of Welfare partment is Head of New Movement. De- The Y., M. C. A. has instituted, under the leadership of Prof. II. D. Meyer of the Welfare department, a series of talks on the subject of "Boy Life Studies for Boy Leader ship," H. D. Farrell, a member of the Sophomore class and leader of the Chapel Hill Boy Scouts, will be in charge of getting these meetings started on a working basis. Professor Meyer's purpose in con ducting these meetings and deliver ing the lectures is to build during the present for the life of the future. He is seeking to impress upon the young men that "the boy of today is the man of tomorrow." At the initial meeting last Friday night it was decided that these meet ings should be held on each Friday night at 7:30. In speaking of the purposes of the meetings and the im portance of the young man realizing j his important position as the product from which the man of tomorrow will be formed, Professor Meyer also said that the passage from the Scripture, Two hundred high schools are now preparing for the annual spring de bates, which will take place late in March, the final contest to be held early in April. The subject for de bate will be, "Resolved, That the United States should enter the m.,. t th non. League of Nations." E. R. Rankin, receipts the Book Exchange and Swain Hall which would be printed (Continued on Page Four.) i o w n on l hopo wi a a -mart I rmr awotr tion, the chief source of trouble be-; no moral right," he said, "to re- chiidish thing s," means that one just mg the presence of a great number mam m your room and infect others changes hi9 work to life's real prob of large bowlders where excavating with the disease." .em8 and not neces9arlIy that one had to be done. There has been Dr. Abernathy also said a few ieaves childhood labor in abundance, but some little words in regard to personal hygiene, j There will be twenty meetings dur trouble has been had in getting ma-'He especially urged all students to ing the remainder of the year and the terial for the more parts of the con- use a toothbrush regularly, get more , oliowing subjects have been an struction work. Some trouble was than two suits of underwear so a8 !nounced. Boy in Social 0rd Male also given by property holders in the to be able to change oftener than I 0f Species, Social Stage, General vicinity, who were slow to release;, once a week, to keep their feet clean, of.-.., R(lv T.-f. n,.M.i.,ioti. the property on which the authorities and to stop eating heavy midnight Boy TraitSi Generic Boy, Inquisitive- The new extension is the property of the University, and not the South- associate director of the University extension bureau is planning to send out hand-books to all high schools on this subject. ,. , .. v . x , , Moral. 3oy, Religion and Boy, Boy President H. W. Chase, Charles T. in Sihool. Hp wWn n..ti ern railway, as was thought by many Woolen, and J. A. Warren attended and goy pay gtumbling Blocks Ju students here. It is probable that a meeting of the Executive Commit- venile Offenders Sex Life in Boy the passenger trains will later be run tee of the Board of Trustees in Ra- ' ; Jas far as the campus. leigh Saturday afternoon. (Continued on Page Four.)