Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 28, 1922, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE TAR HEEL November 28, 1923 CI) e Car $ eel 'The Loading Southern College Semi Weekly Newspaper." Member of N. C. Collegiate Association Press THREE SPEAKERS DUE CHAPEL PERIOD FRIDAY Published twice every week of the col lege year, and is the official organ of the Athletic Association of tho University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscription price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, for the college year. Entered at the Post- Office, Chapel Hill, N. C, as second class matter. Shirley on Traffic-Blocking, Dr. On Bed Cross and President Chase on Immigration. Dey Business and editorial offices rooms , 8 and 9, New West Building. Office hours 2 to 6 p. m. daily, except Sat urday and Sunday. J. J. Wade Editor Assistant Editors j C. B. Colton .... G. W. Lankford . E. H. Hartsell ...... Managing Editor O. Y. Ragsdale .... Assignment Editor BEPORTEBS H. D. Puis H. R. Fuller E. D. Apple J. E. Hawkins Walker Barnette R. C. Mnultsby W. S. Berryhill C. 0. Rowland F. M. Davis, Jr. W. T. Rowland A. L. Dowd L. T. Rogers W. J. Faucette J. M. Saunders Ik J. Brody ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT Staff A. Weil W. L. Norton J. H B. H. Miller -CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT W. C. Perdue . . . Circulation Manager A. K Shackell ... Ass t Circulation Mgr. Staff -T. D. Wells R. L. Briggs O. Li. Jones B. F, Pearce J. I. Kallam R. F. Stainback The Business Manager will be at tho Tar Heel office, New West Building, every day from 3:30 to 5 p. m., except ing Saturdays and Sundays, You can purchase any article adver tised in The Tar Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver tises Is guaranteed to be as repre sented. -W8 will make good immedi ately if the advertiser does not. Vol. XXXI. Nov. 28, 1922 No. 19 Chapel Friday morning was a suc cession of short talks by E. R. Shirley, Dr. W, M. Dey, and President -Chase. In a pointed little speech Shirley, pres ident of the senior class and athletic association, protested against the' prac tice which some students have lately engaged in, of crowding around and retarding the departure of autos car rying fair visitors to tho high school football games away from the Hill, This, as Shirley put it, is often em barrassing to the visitors, and is total ly foreign to the dignity of collego men. Moreover, it sometimes results in accidents. Dr. Dey, of the French, department, then briefly presented the cause of tha Red Cross. He explained that its pur poso since the war has been to render service to the army and navy; to fur nish nurses and medical aid in locali ties where they cannot be easily ob tained: to nrevent calamities resulting m T f , l. I 1 V H Yri;gn f d to provide a jun - STUDENTS LIKE MUSIC SAYS PROFESSOR McKIE Business Manager THANKSGIVING Thanksgiving is here. The day is set aside as a national holiday, and in earnest and sincere prayer we lift our heads to the Maker with an expression of thanksgiving for the blessings of the year. No year passes but what humanity has much to be thankful for. Some years are marked by financial difficul ties, by poor health in our families, by an unusual number of worries in the various phases of our life, or by hun dreds of other troubles. But every year has, as well, its blessings. In the face of trouble and danger often we over look the fine things that come in our lives, but they are inevitably there, and whatever our station there has been a provision for some degree of happiness, for which we should feel truly and sin cerely grateful. ' This has been for the country a good and prosperous year. Here on the cam pus it has been exceedingly fine and healthy. As undergraduates we have more to be thankful for this year than ever before in practically every respect We ought to be especially thankful for the great strides that the institution has taken, and for the great Univer sity that now we have the privilege to attend. The material prosperity the splendid football team for all this we should be thankful. Matter not the degree of our ortho doxy, it cannot be out of order for every single student of the University to pause a moment this Thanksgiving sea son and reflect on the blessings that he has enjoyed and register a feeling of genuine gratification. ior Red Cross for the benefit of t,he young people.j. He appealed to the students to respond to the drive which is being made now by the Red Cross. Dr. Chase spoke on the crowding of America's industrial centers by im migrants, and the conditions resulting from the introduction of this foreign element. "The south has a great op portunity," he said. "The tide of im migrants have never swept over it. It has remained the old historical cen ter of America, and has lacked noth ing in the past but natural resources. ino intiustriai area Jias material re sources, but it lacks the Americanism which the south has. The material re sources or Worth Carolina are being developed, and the human resources which it has always had are as promis ing as ever. It is our duty, then, to help assimilate the crowds of immi grants which are continually pouring into our country." A visitor to Chapel Hill who might find his wyav into the Pickwick theater and take home his opinion of college culture froirt wlint he found there. usually not Iikelv to hnve a very ex alted idea of Carolina taste and enlight enment. Really, the very much tattered rags in lieu of music, that is vended at the Pickwick, usually, is not a very good criterion of tho Carolina man's likes. ah tins is simply quoting trom a tetv remarks that Prof. McKio made, inci dentally, before his class in public speaking, a few days ago. He went on to say: "When I go to the Pick, I find that the studeuts do like to hear music, for when the orchestra stops for an instani there is an immediate cry for 'music!' The students take what they can get, and yell if they can't get anything. "But that the students like real mu sic better than banging has long been an opinion of mine; and recently it wa3 confirmed. I happened to be in the Pick on an occasion when the orches tra played 'Sole Mio. ' When this selec tion was done, the usual clamor was lacking, and instead the audience ap plauded in real appreciation, until the orchestra 'played it again' and again." Professor MeKie concluded by won dering if the Pickwick management might not do well to cater to the real tastes of their patrons, rather than to their vacuity. ' VIRGINIA-CAROLINA EECOBDS North Carolina Virginia 1892 18 (first game) 30 26 (Second game) . . . . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 ..... 1893 1S94 ..... 1S95 1896 ..... 1S97 ..... -1S9S 1899 (no game) 16 34 6 46 12 0 .......... 1900 17 6 1901 .... 23 12 1902 ......... 12 16 ..T. 1903 ......... 0 11 . .... 1904 ......... 12 17 1905 0 1906 (no game) 4 ........ 1907 ......... 9 0 1908 31 1909 (no game) 0 1910 9 0 1911 ......... 28 0 ;.. 1912 ......... 66 7 1913 .'. 26 3 1914 20 0 1915 ., 14 7 1916 ......... 0 1917 (no game) 1918 (no game) 6 .. .. 1919 ......... 0 0 1920 ......... 14 7 1921 3 ? 1922 ... ? Get Your Laundry In Before you leave for your Thanksgiving Vacation, and be assured of some clean clothes when you get back to the Hill. The Laundry U.N.C. Get the Thanksgiving Boll Weevil before you leave on your trip, and send a copy to the folks at home. SELECTION OF RHODES SCHOLARS C. R. Bagley, . former Rhodes scholar to Oxford University from Trinity Col lege, will be in Raleigh Thursday to help conduct a contest for the selection of the two scholars from North Caro lina who will receive the Rhodes Schol arship this year. n tt 1 'U9 -mm Dr. Jesse F. Steiner, chairman of th-j committee on prison legislation, togeth er with Dr. H. W. Odum, Dr. J. H. Pratt and Dr. W. B. Sanders, went to Greens boro Thursday to attend the meeting of the committee. m H Hi IFt DON'T MISS THAT BIG TURKEY DINNER ! . AT : ' GOOCH'S CAFE QUALITY - SERVICE SINCE 1903 ftd REPORTERS ADDED TO STAFF J. O. Bailey and W. M. Saunders, both of the sophomore class, have been selected, after three weeks' in tensive competition, to fill the two vacancies recently occurring on The Tar Heel reportorial staff. Among the other contestants, J. M. Roberta and R. W. Linker deserve honorable mention. : MARS HILL CLUB ENTERTAINED Meeting Friday night in the Peabody building, the members of the Mars Hill Club of the University were guests or their eo-ed member, Mrs. F. H. Eaton, former teacher in Mars Hill College. With the members present were outside invited co-eds. The room was taste fully arranged and the fun of the evs ning passed off to the delight of all present. Tables were arranged for the playing of progressive games of various sorts. Concluding the entertainment, refreshments were served. Professor Harold D. Meyer, of the sociology department, went to Mebane Friday to organize two Parent-Teachers Association. Dr. Meyer has been very prominent in this work throughout the state. Published in the interest of Elec trical Development by an Institution that will be helped by what ever helps the Industry. Shoes.. Which kind gets you there the quickest? Two college men were walking down the road, when a classmate wrhizzed by in his car. "Pretty soft 1" sighed one. Said the other, 'Til chow him. Some day I'll own a car that's get hz ctopped thirty ways. " ' The more some men want a thing, the harder they work to get it. And the time to start work : ing such men at college know is right now. All question of classroom honors aside, men would make college count for more if they realized this fact: Yoa can buy a text book for two or three dollars, but you can sell it for as many thousand once you have digested the contents. . This is worth remembering, should you be inclined to the self-pity which social comparisons sometimes cause. And anyway, these distinc tions are bound to be felt, even though your college authorities bar certain luxuries as un democratic as perhaps they are. The philosophy that will carry you through is this: "My day will come and the more work I crowd into these four years, the quk!:cr I'll make good. " ' Electric Company Since 1S69 makers and distributors of electrical equipment 'Number 23 of a series v - I - i . f r J 1 - M. h V -t m, i -XT- 9 v O. E. CO. " ' V, .2 t- Thi Utfimtr Rmldmg, Ntw Yuri City xtittca ec w cmiore, Arcliicccts Architecture Today and Tomorrow ' I 'HE great buildings of today, designed m masses which rear nift-J- ged, mounting profiles into the sl:r. forrtsii even greater and more missive structures for the next hjU' century. Always a close co ordination of architecture and ensineering. c design and construc tion, the architecture of the future will lind architect an J enf,i..ter working ever more closely tugc ther. Certainly modern invention modern engineering sViil and oreani ntion will prove more than equal to the iiaizi-i c?'!h. architecture of the future. OTIS ELEVATOR COMPA N Y Offices in all Principal Cities cf the Vorld Josephus Daniels Says ; "I am very glad to see that your Com pany is building up a large life insur ance business. I was glad to take a policy in it, and am glad to commend it beeauso I know that the principle upon which it is established is sound and that the men in charge of it have business ability of the highest order combined with integrity and honesty." SOUTHERN LIFE AND TRUST CO. HOME OFPldB : : : : : . : . . GREENSBORO, N. C. A. W. McALlSTER, President ARTHUR WATT, Secretary II. B. GUNTER, Vice-President and Agency Manager Capital $i,ooo,ooo Insurance in Force $50,000,000 .. : v. v. v. : : " 'fi 'Hi f. m fi fi fi :: : fi 'f. fi 'fi : : : : fi gVfitiVXXfi'fi-fi fi Is guaranteed to relieve Head- i ache, Neuralgia, LaGrippe, Ear- ache, almost instantly. If it fails H to relieve, your money will be $ refunded. I NTO the making of the shoes which wil be sh n urn . by our representativ this seazon, there has gone the style sense of designers in fluenced by the demands of younger men. Youth wil be servd and a constant recog nition of this fact is back of the popularity of the John . Ward shoe with generations of collegians. The John Ward representativ displays in the Y. M CA. November 28-29 itiOaiu (trect-NewYorkCity We Invite the Fac ulty and Students of U. N. C. TO MAKE OUR STORE - HEADQUARTERS WHEN IN DURHAM Should you need Furni ture and Rugs it would give us pleasure to serve you. We have sold the fraternities and the Uni versity at Chapel Hill and have given them satisfaction. We can please you . also. Royall & Borden Chapel Hill Street Opposite Grand Central Garage DURHAM, N. C.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 28, 1922, edition 1
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