Page Four THE' TAR HEEL K ORDER OF GRAIL GIVES A DANCE (Continued from page ene) Herndon with K. G. Dacy, Carolyn Winston, Bobbie Henderson, Kelly Richardson with C. E. Harris, Mil dred Russ with L. T. Moore, Ruth Bryan with E. V. Core, Dora Gold stein with J. Witter, Marilee Shaw with Hubert Morris, Rebecca Ogburn with T. B.' Ogburn, Julia Webb with E. B. Green, Anna Belle Webb with Henry Johnston, "Jo" Paul with W. A. Peak, Mickey Weinberg with M. H. Mogulescu, Fleda Marks with H. G. Katz, "Kat" Redfern with George Laney, Cursee Annfield with Ker Spier, Ruth Ashmore with Tom Ev erett, Miriam Ashmore with Clay Brown, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Caffey, "Kat" Absher with J. B. Meridith, Ellen Cummings with R. B. David son, Sudie Creech with J. H. Moye, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Wilson, Mrs. Sol Silverman with Harry Schwartz, Sara Schwartz with Joe Shapiro, Dot Abell with E. J. Evans, Miriam Sauls with Dick Martin, Tarasa Graham with John Cantrell, Edna Nixon with Carl Mott, Emily Paddock with Stan ley Stern, Lillian Fog with Tom War ren, Leone Creel with Jack Froheck, Sara Boyd with Fred Weane, Er nestine Reynolds with Kermit Per kins, Evelyn Frogdey with William Scott, Catherine Johnston with Paul Woodson, Mary Gelds with 0. W. Souza, Blanche Stoker with Allen Whitaker, Augusta Rose with Henry Rankin, Jr., Francis McKorcle with Arther .Branch, Mary Bern Reynolds with G. R. Dosier, Jr., "Lib" Davis with Kike Kyser, Russell Davis with D. F. White, "Bill" Davis with Wil liam Bunch. Tuesday, November s, jpff IMPORTED FANCY WOOL SOX JACK LIPMAN'S UNIVERSITY SHOP Tar Heels Down N. C. State By 12 to 0 Score Saturday (Continued from page one) wav for several lnnr runs while Jenkins gained consistently onc line bucks. v After the ' backfield which opened the game had labored unsuccessfully for fifteen min utes to score, Collins injected a fresh set of ball carriers into the fray. The newcomers were equally unsuccessful in their at tempts at running up points for Carolina. The second quarter was more closely contested than any other period of the game. spectators Degan to predict a knotted count. Scores in Fourth 4 Again in the third quarter :mi;iimiiiiiiiii!i!iiiii)iiitiiiii;;i;ii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i!iin;;iii;i;iiui;ii:unu ORFHEUEfl " Velcomes You Always The Home of Musical Comedy .. ., ' and - Vaudeville 3 Shows Daily :-: 5 Shows Saturday Carolina ran rampant over the techmen but .failed to cross the goal line. A decided advantage in punting aided State greatly The last period was half over before Edison Foard eluded all tacklers and raced around end for a touchdown. This breaking of the ice stirred the Tar Heels to greater deeds. Before three minutes had elapsed, following the interception of a pass by Dill and a run by Ferrell, Steve Furches pushed through for the necessary one yard to tally six additional points. ' Carolina was unsuccessful in both attempts to goal after . touchdown, though Morahead's try, follow. ing the first touchdown, struck the cross-bar and bounced back, Dill played a wide-awake game at left end for the Tar Heels. Foard, Shuford and Fer rell were consistent ground gain ers in the backfield. Carolina's entire line functioned well, lim iting the Wolfpack to two first downs during the game. Outen and Melton played best for State. Carolina displayed a greatly improved offense in the Satur day affair, and succeeded in keeping the Wolfpack on the de fense throughout practically the entire game. The lineup .v . State : Pos. . Carolina Beatty ; - Dill L. E. ' Lambe , . Morehead V L. T. - V Vaughan Faulkner American Life Is in Danger of Becoming Balkanized, says Pres. H. N, MacCracken L. G. Logan (C) Nicholson Schwartz Whisnant R. G. Evans Warren R. T. Goodwin McDaniel R. E. Ridenhour ....:.-. : Hackney Q. B. Melton Ellison 22222 STETSON "D" ffL TAILORING LINE On Display TODAY and TOMORROW STETSON "D" "NATIONALLY KNOWN JUSTLY FAMOUS" All Stetson "D" Clothes Pressed Free for the Entire College Year. . aiiniiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitttttii)itiiiiiin;iimil Hiiiiiinmiiin Morris Outen LH. R. H. Ferrell Jenkins F. B. Score by Quarters: State ...... 0 Carolina ....... 0 I I I 1 1 -s o You can bat out lots of good stuff with f 0 0 00 0 0 1212 Scoring: Touchdowns, Foard (sub j for Ellison) ; Furches (sub for Hack ney). Substitutions: State, McDow ell for Melton; Hennessa for Mc Dowell, Ford for Vaughn, Vaughn for. Foard, Bynum for Lambe, Aus tin for Beatty. Carolina, Foard for Ellison,' Shuler for Faulkner, Shu ford for Jenkins, Furches for Hack ney, Young for Ferrell, Supple for Whisnant, Whisnant for Supple, Gresham for Foard, Howard for Warren, Block for Shuford, Eby for Morehead, Ferrell for Young, Supple for Whisnant, Lipscome for Schwartz, Josephs for Sthuler, Lassi- ter for Ferrell, Sapp for Dill, Hack ney for Furches, Presson for Mc Daniel, Ellison for McDaniel, Davis for Supple. Officials: Maeoffin (Michigan) referee; Major (Auburn) umpire; Uooch (Virginia) head lines man. a Remington Portable Typewriter IT is surprising how the Remington Portable helps with college work. Long reports, theses, and transcriptions of lectures simply roll out of this ma chine. Yon don't have to be an expe rienced operator to speed - up your writing to an unbelievable degree. Your theses and reports look better, too, and quite naturally create a mors favorable impression on the professors when they are written on the Reming ton Portable. , , . Weighs only 8 H pounds, net, and is the handiest, fastest, simplest to operate, and most dependable of all portables. Smallest, lightest and most compact standard keyboard portable. $10 down and $5 monthly 9 af ' -v.. . ONE AND TWO-PANTS SUITS at '. .. JACK LIPMAN'S UNIVERSITY SHOP (Continued from page one) ochial education are to continue. it is very important that they should be publicly minded,' and such is not the case at the pres ent time. "The rural districts in many parts of the country are rapid' ly becoming isolated in spite of the automobile and the radio, and the population moves stead ily toward the town. The drift of the population is in the otb er direction in Denmark, and there is no sociologist in Amer ica wh6 does not wish that the same wre true with us." "Such a situation calls for ex perts trained in public health, in social welfare, in political &d- ministration, ready to step in to the new institutions as they are formulated for the democ racy of the future, and such training, it seems to me, is an essential part of a liberal edu cation." ... x ;The Value of Trusteeship fDespife the jeremiads of many writers who lament the hurry and distraction of our age, the chief characteristic of the twentieth century, is the preva lence, of leisure." : Dr. MacCracken discussed the application of leisure to loyal ties, with particular reference to trusteeship. Trusteeship has become such an important avo cation that special training is now needed to insure efficiency in that field. ; :., Defining trusteeship as "the habit , of association of persons in private capacities for public ones," he asserted that "we have long ignored- the value of vol untary serviceNln maintaining the welfare of our, democracy, that we have faileato realize what it has contributed in un paid and unrecognized benefit to the commonweal. . We ave, therefore, failed in our system of education to include this func tion as one of the prime duties of a citizen. Let us trust that this deficiency in American ed ucation, this blindness in pub lic opinion, may soon be remedied. "There must be a wider edu cation upon this function and more training for it in our uni versities in order that the over worked .trustee may be a really useful and loyal member of a few social institutions. , Every student who has enjoyed the benefit of an academic educa tion is morally bound, it seems to me, to accept such trustee ship. There may be temper aments unfitted by emotional inability for the responsibilities of trusteeship, but there is no Btsfocket and Portable . The Recognized Leader in Sales and Popularity i ' f f m Diiiwa B THE BOOK EXCHANGE , Y. M. C. A. BUILDING REMINGTON TYPEWRITER COMPANY 808 S. Salisbury St., Raleigh, N. C. PEPPERMINT . FLAVOR Used by People oS ReOnement Because Wrielev's. besides being a delightful confection, attords beneficial exercise to the teeth and clears them of food particles. Also it aids digestion. . , , cm After Every Meal ODD TROUSERS JACK LIPMAN'S UNIVERSITY SHOP Hiking or What Not Double Your fun with A KODAK No matter what type of sollege fun you indulge in, you double it with a Kodak. We want to show you our line of Kodaks come in any time. ''. Kodaks $5 up , Finishing Foister's cure for such temperaments so good as a little experience in friendship." Neighborhood "America has long been not ed for its spirit of neighborhood, particularly among the popula tion that is not densely settled, but there are signs that forces are at work in our social life that tend to deaden that spirit. "American life more and more tends to assign to the police men the duties of the social worker," Dr. MacCracken as serted. "In refusing to recog nize the responsibilities of neigh borhood we are in danger of producing a Balkanized life, . "We talk about Balkanized Europe with its - little nations and its villages hostile to one another. But what about our own Balkanized life? If the principle of neighborhood is for gotten we shall be1 confronted with the same conditions." ;, Dr. MacCracken believes "international neighborhood" to be a possible goal. "What the good Samaritan did in Judea the American Red Cross has done in Japan and is doing to- oay m uuDa. it does it because !1 A- -1.1 11.. 0,! it uicrues me situation on the minimum oasis 01 Human need it seeks to go no further. Other international movements, and they are legion, are attempting to follow out the same idea in otner neias. "Scarcely any movement bur time is more significant than the traveling abroad of Ameri can citizens, and we are learn ing new ways of traveling. ye are traveling1 to study people and not museums. We obtain friends rather than purchase guide books. We identify y Vi,Q abroad by the friends we have made and not as places where we saw certain statues or stain ed glass windows." Geo. F. Messner . Wm. H. Rowe Everything on eatnput in past four veare heated by u Carolina Heating & Engineering- Co. HEATING, VENTILATING AND POWER PIPING Phone 1466 Durham, N. C. BUDD-PIPER ROOFING COMPANY Durham, N. C. Roofing and Sheet metal Work uJia to EiGia 2 7 rJt'irirsKk-., i f (xnUemen: -1 Sn"u?ri'irOv,.n.... a -' other-i TParfci? T?ent sidCTrai Ti2 ("'"Ht c m Pen And it wnrir these Wen- Where the Peru 1 Traffic stoppedJo watch this test of the Parker DuofolaNon-Breakable Barrel Point Guaranteed 25 years for mechanical Perfection and wear "PRAFFIC stopjped as big Frank Ket cheson, Supt oASteel Construction for the George A. Fiiller Co., hurled two Parker Duofold Pns from his perilous foothold on a slender steel girder atop of the new Stevens HoVel, Chicago. One pen struck on asphalt, the other on cement away thW bounded into the air, then landed in the Weet unbroken! We wanted to trivia the nuhlir nrnnf l . . ' - more convincing than i i . wo uave snown Dy a seJ ' that the new Parker Permanite barrel do no fall on corridor or eld harm it Get this sturdy black-tijVped lacquer-red any guarantee. So ies of heroic tests lofold Pen with break. Be sure ssroom floor can beauty at any good pen coWer. "Permanite" tha able Material of whiVVi' Pens and Pencils are noj lustrous, light-weight, ai weak, fade or shi PotJutDuooU PwU to match ti P, Ouer-ri J3.50, "ikj BroOwr Th'PamukPrn Company, jANiaviil w",lEon,,u .D.uiAlE; KIWTOIK, CHIC. . -' ' XOEONTO. CANADA fon-Break- all Parker made is I does not ink . . s: Lady DuooM, $) Ouer-sizt, $4 ..WiicoHtiM tlO.ATlAKTA.DAttAt NDON, INOLAND V

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