Saturday, March 7, 1925 . . - Page THE TAR HEEL " The ' Leading Southern College Semi-Weekly .Newspaper Member of North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Published twice' every week of the col lege year, and is the official newspaper of the Publications Union of the Uni versity of North Carolina, Chapel Hul, N. C Subscription price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, for the college year, - r Offices- on first floor of New West Building. Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. , JSiltor J. y. Saunders ... J. H. Lineberger... Business Manager . Editorial Department H. N. Parker , ;. Managing Editor W. S. Mclver : Atiutant Editor W. B. Pipkin I i. AttUtant Editor Reporters M. M. Young . G. E. Wilkerson E. S. Barr W. T. Peacock F. P. Eller R.iB. Raney , C W. Baxemore B. C Wilson Spencer Murphey C. R. Jonas J. M. Sartin . Lucy Lay J. T. Madry Julian Busby . J. E. Farrior . L., A. Crowell - W. T. Rlghtsell. Business Department Harold Sebum Advertising Mcmagtr G. L. Hunter Att't Buaintu Mcmagtr v H. P. Brandis Circulation Department W. D. Toy, Jr. j . Circulation Manager " ' : Staff ( , Sebury Thorpe Marvin Fowler Ellis Farber T. E. Clemmons Anyone desiring to try out for the Busi ness Staff apply to Business Manager. Ton can, purchase any article adver tised in The Tar Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver .' Uses, is guaranteed to be as repre sented. The Tar Heel solicits adver tising from reputable concerns only. Saturday, March 7, 1M5 PARAGRAPHICS Basketball champions again! Atlanta scribes speak of the team as the "Tar Heel ghosts." At any. rate tne otner teams aid not have a ghost of -a chance to win the tournament. " We 'were not in the fortune-telling t uuoiiicoa octroi uouco agu tt in. 11 vr predicted that the Tar Heels would ' Oh, no ! It does not take a fortune teller or a prophet to foretell such things.: Alt one' has to do is to gaze on the Carolina stars. . With exams only a few days off we expect to see the light bill of the Uni versity go up. ' If unshaven faces are signs of exam periods then can exams be far off? . ! THE. TAR HEEL editor has been the recipient of several novel sugges tions for editorial subjects. A men tion of some will provoke a smile. Concerning the Small Number of Pea nuts One Gets for Five Cents at. the Pickwick. ; Concerning the Desire for Hot Water in the Quadrangle Build ings Between 5:30 and 6 O'clock. . SOUTHERN CHAMPS AGAIN Well, the boys did come through just as, we had predicted in our sheet of several issues back and win their third conference championship. The way that the Atlanta people regarded the Tar Heels is indeed interesting. Just before the final game Tulane was pick ed easily V as the winner, but those, "terrible Tarheels," as one sports writ er called them, upset the dope bucket and won the game and the tournament championship. To show just what he thinks of the Carolina team, Morgan Blake placed three men on his mythi .cal all-Conference team from the Uni versity of North Carolina. The one thing that impressed spec- .ubVBO will " 'I"V1 4 UJipUllClllB 1 was the manner in which the Tar Heel team could adapt itself to any style of. play. If a five-man defense was needed, the Tar Heels had it. If it was a man-to-man system, the JVorth Staters had it. They could make points from under the basket as well as from the middle of the court. It was bas ketball developed to a. high degree of perfection. ' ; , , Atlanta scribes' wondered at the man-to-man defense of the Carolina team, and yet we know they use the five man defense generally. They were -1-1 A - - I ... uuic m cnange wim sucn success as they did because they, were first and . foremost basketball players de luxe. The final few minutes of the game when North Carolina scored six field goals to their opponent's one exempli fied the basketball ability of the Uni- Vdrciv Ml.VAvn H t Tl ! . 1. i .wouj piajcia. : iiiurgixii mane wrme of that final drive as follows: "There were five minutes left to pjay and Tu lane was leading by two points, 26-24. Thereupon Captain Cobb, of Carolina. called time out, gathered his little nock around him in squatting posi tions on the floor, and they discussed the situation pro and con. We don't . ItnnW What rVtlth on wl fn MAn I.. .4 ...v it ,i ij duiu iv J 1 1 13 1 1 1 V 1 1 , uui perhaps he read them letters from their sweethearts. Anyhow, they rose inspired, and with the ardor that caus ed Leander to swim the Hellespont, carried the "fight so fast and fiercely to Tulane that in three minutes they had scored six field goals and were leading their opponents by ten points. O. B. Keeler, also sports writer for the Atlanta Journal gives his version of the three minutes: "It was the test of championship the crisis the ultimate pinch, that calls on nerve and speed and skill and the , long, long grind of careful training and self-de nial; the pinch that demands much of the brain and more of the region back of the belt buckle , That last solution is correct, for the Tar Heel team has just those things that are enumerated nerve, speed, skill, training, brains and guts. The Carolina ', system is one ' which is grounded in the very fundamentals of the players. It is a system that comes from within, one 'which is learned only from within. : If a foreign coach were to try to drive such basketball into a team it would be impossible, for no one can learn it unless the internal possibilities are .there. The 'Tar Heels of the basketball teams of the past several years have gone beyond the point where outside coaching can mean much, for they learn by doing. Coach McDonald and his men are real basketball players, and have the fun' damentals of basketball theory and basketball practice worked out from the bottom up. It is no wonder that such a team can win championships. The praise of the student body should go .for the hard work that the squad has expend ed in becoming of Southern Champi onship caliber. CONCERNING THE NUMBER OF PEANUTS ONE GETS FOR FIVE CENTS AT THE PICKWICK A real earnest request comes to us to write an editorial concerning the number of peanuts one gets for five cents at the Pickwick. As editor of the students' favorite semi-weekly we feel it our duty to the campus to write concerning the number of peanuts one gets for five cents at the Pickwick. In order to get an insight into the number of peanuts one gets for five cents at the Pickwick, let us go back into history and consider the utility of the number of peanuts one gets for five cents at the Pickwick. But a trip to the famous Carolina peanut house will remove the necessity for such research, since one will quickly find out just what is done with the number of peanuts that one' gets for five cents at the Pickwick. Instead of cracking the peanuts one gets for five cents at the Pickwick, they are used in attempts to crack the heads of the patrons of the Pickwick. - So we will now proceed with our editorial concerning the number of peanuts one gets for five cents at the Pickwick. We feel that one gets too many goobers for a nickle at the Pick wick. Although we have never .had occasion to count the number of pea nuts one gets for five cents at the Pickwick, yet our sensory organs (lo cated in the back of our head) tells us that the number of peanuts that one gets for five cents at the Pick wick is too many. . - , We hope that our campus friend is satisfied now that we have written an editorial concerning the number of peanuts that one gets for five cents at the Pickwick. , JACK COBB Wants Picture Praying Tar Heels Following the nation-wide circulation of Coach Monk McDonald's statement that the University's Southern Cham pionship quint were in the habit of pray ing before entering its games, a tele gram was received by the University News Bureau from .the New York Time requesting a picture of the Tar Heels kneeling in prayer. As the Carolina team is not in the mar ket for sensational publicity such a pic ture was considered as unobtainable and a stock picture of the varsity squad was sent to the New York paper. is ;;V if Captain 1925 Southern Champions and high scorer in Atlanta Tournament for second successive time. Delta Pi fraternity has announced the pledging of Thomas Faison, of Wlnton, and Robert Fields, of Ahoskie. EVENT 75-yd dash 60-yd low hurdles 4tO-yd run 880-yd Run Three Legged Race 75-yd Running High Jump Standing Broad Jump . UNIVERSITY INDOOR TRACK RECORDS Intramural Sports ' HOLDER OF RECORD ' J. J. McMurray, Ruffin, "21 ' G. B. Wynne, Steele, i-S Rufus McPherson, New Dorms, "24 Neal Wessels, Grimes, m M. S. Giersch and Tom Goodwin, Grimes, W. C. Huggins, Ruffin, '24 F. H. Corpening, East, '24 TIME 8.5 sec. 63 sec. -69.5 sec. '24 2min. 153 sec. 10.6 sec 5 ft 2 in. 10 ft. NEW BUS LAWS RAISE PROTESTS Chapel Hill Buses Forced From Time-honored Stand. ROUGH ON STRANGERS Petitions Being Circulated for Modi fication of Law. The new City of' Durham traffic ordi nances, which went into effect on March 1st, have drawn much fire from citizens of Chapel Hill and Durham. The ordi nance provides that no public automo biles may park anywhere within the fire liroits -of that city. As a result the Chapel Hill buses have - been driven from their regular stand in front of the Union Depot and are at present being forced to use a vacant lot back of the U. S. L. station as a starting point. The ordinance, it is believed, was aimed at the big buses that, ply between Raleigh and Greens boro and which have proved sources of annoyance to traffic in both Durham and the Capital City. The - Chapel .Hill buses are mainly touring cars, or small buses which do not interfere with traf fic, but unfortunately come under the sweeping law recently passed by the Durham city fathers. Not only are Chapel Hill buses de nied their time-honored right of park ing on the wide street ,at the Union Depot but the drivers are prohibited from soliciting passengers. As it is now, strangers and students will experience hardships in getting out of Durham to the Hill. ' ' Petitions have been circulating in Chapel Hill and, Durham for modifica' tion of the ordinance in respect to the Chapel Hill buses. Among the Chapel Hill signers are the following names: Charles T. Woollen, Chief George T. Fcatherstone, J. E. Gooch, Dr. W. de B MacNider, G. H. Paulsen, Dr. R. B. Lawson, Dr. F. P. Venable, Archibald Henderson, Dr. James B. Bullitt and Dr. Isaac H. Manning. . , n BAPTIST CHURCH ' Sunday) March 8th. . 9:43 A.M. Sunday school. llsOO A.M. Morning worship; tpp V ic, "Where Art Thou?" 0:30 P.M. B. Y. P; U.'s 7:30 P.M. Everting worship, top , ic, "Some Town Talk." Tfie CAROLINA. PLAYMAKERS PRESENT AS THEIR- THIRD STUDIO PRODUCTION George Kelly's r X5 --'-i -'f ";V,.'.; ' ' 'A' ''.".; "' Famous Broatlway Comedy Success ' ' , 'A rollicking satire oil the little theatre movement. Full of pep Rich with laughter A marvelous at traction for both young and old ! , A SMASHING HIT , V": ; " that "-- 1 Amazed, Amused and Startled New York j' i .Audiences for Two Years You Will Also Be! AT MEMORIAL HALL 8:30 P.M. March '10-11 TICKETS ON SALE MONDAY AT SUTTON & ALDERMAN'S ' Prices: $1.00 and 75c . SECURITY LIFE AND TRUST CO. HOME OFFICE WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. v - Every sensible man believes in insurance, but not every sensi ble man has insurance. So many people are likely to postpone doing the things they know they ought to do, till "next week, 'next month, next year". Think! Next month may. never come , for you. . N. j. . ' . Buy a Policy novo in your Home Company ' Gso. A. Gbimsuv Preiidt C C Tatlob Vice-Prerident and Qensral Mgr. TbiCompkuPnjict ftr tbt SundtrJ QilBuiUnt NnnYtrtCily CARK& tad : HASTINGS Architect! m -.a rf i i ' - "The New Architecture" A DISTINCTLY new tendency is apparent in architectural thought and design today. Architects are designing in masses the great silhouette, the profile of the building has become of far greater importance than its detail. There is a new visor and rugged n ess even in buildings which are conven tionilly classic in their detail. Masses mount upward, supporting the tower, accentuating its height. The new architecture is tending toward great struc tures rather than multiplicity of detail. . . -' Certainly modern invention modern engineering skill and organization, will prove more than equal to the demands of the architecture of the future. OTIS ELEVATOR COM PAN Y Offices in all Principal Cities o the World SI it Shows: , 3 :30 6:40 8:00 Regular Admission 25 cents MONDAY MARCH 9 RICHARD BAHTHELMESS in Classmates KINOGRAM NEWS , Tuesday ..........MARCH 10 LOU TELLEGEN, NORMAN KEARY and ANNA Q. NILSON in v " - Between -Friends WEDNESDAY ,;,.;..;,.:;..MARCH 11 ; HOPE HAMPTON in ' The Truth About Women Chase Comedy "HELLO BABY" Gump Comedy "ANDY'S TEMPTATION" THURSDAY , .MARCH 12 Barriers Burned Away A Drama of the Great Chicago Fire. ' x FRIDAY (...:..........1...:..............MARCH 13 THOMAS MEIGHAN in . . The Alaskan ' , By James Oliver Curwood Inkwell Cartoon "TRAPPED" SATURDAY ... ..........: MARCH 14 A x Matinee Only ' ' HOOT GIBSON in Hit and Run and Our Gaig Comedy "TIRE TROUBLE" . NIGHT SHOWS ONLY , Riii-Tin-Tin, the Wonder Dog, in . Find Your Man "Put the 'Pick' in Tour Schedule" , fc FITCH-RIGGS LUMBER COMPANY Flooring, Ceiling, Sash, Doors, Siding, Cement, Lime " , and Plaster ' :; Carrboro, N. C. Phone 233 Geo. F. MWm Wk. H. Rows Everything on campus In past four jrean heated by utNuf-Said" Carolina Heating & Engineering Co. Hbatuto, VajrrtLATnro axb Powna Pmirs - Phone 1408 Durham, N. C BUDD PIPER ROOFING COMPANY . DtnuuLx, Ntk Caxouw A ROOFING AND SHEET METAL WORK " 1J

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