Saturday, February 26, 1927 THE' TAR HEEL Page Three DEFEATS MANLY FOR MAT HONORS Intra-Mural Department Soon to Close Successful Season. NEW SPORTS ARE ADDED S. A. E.'s and Betas Will Fight for Fraternity Basketball - Title. About ten more days and the most successful quarter of work ever carried on by the Intra 1 mural Athletic Department will come to a close according to a statement issued yesterday by Frank Butler, director of the de partment. Soccer has been add ed to the list of activities and boxing and wrestling have been reinstalled during the quarter. A J. J 1 i-..J i. 1 A great uesu inure sstuuenuj nave taken an active part than ever hefnre and officials are verv en thusiastic over the future pros pects of this popular branch of athletics here. . " ml . P L . 1 . 1 1 J 1 11 ine lraiermiy uasKeioau championship will be determined Monday afternoon when .the Betas play the S. A. E. quint. Cameron, Watt, Bowers,; , Wad- dell and Harvell have been de fending the Beta cause ' and Crudup, Ce Grand, and Huggins are the main-stay of the S. A. E. aggregation. A good game is -anticipated when these teams :. meet Monday. - - Carr dormitory captured the wrestling championship by de feating Manly by the over whelming score Of 33-0 at the final match of the tournament held Thursday night. ' Only three dormitories are left in the boxing tournament and the finals will be held about Thursday. Some good bouts are being held at each meet. The dormitories left are" Ruff in, Old West, and Mangum. Manly is leading the dormi tory league in the basketball fight. It is the only dormitory that has lost only one game. Some of the best teams in the basketball league this year were Pi Kappa Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Gamma Sigma Tau of the fra ternities and Manly, Grimes, and Old West .were the outstanding teams in tne dormitory league. After a few more days of soc cer training under the direction of Coach Ellingwood, games will be, scheduled. A large number are taking an active interest in soccer and it is very likely that a game will be scheduled with the University ,of Virginia during the spring. Practice will con tinue until Easter. v . s Valuable Set of Law Books Won By Jeff Fordham (Continued from page one) ; Corpus Juris. The more speci fic the answer, the higher the - grade given. After grading the papers submitted in the final ex amination, Mr. L. S. Forrest, in structor of Legal Bibliography, declared Fordham's the best pa per. The American Law Book Company was then notified of 'the decision, and they have ask ed Fordham for the address to ;'which he wishes the books ship- . ped. Hi.. Throughout the year the stu dents have been furnished with materials, questionnaires, and general information with regard to the use of this work, the American Law Book Company preparing these in order to teach the law students to turn to their book for the law. By this meth od they not only popularize their work among the future lawyers, but furnish tle students ? with, much valuable information. The Prize has not been awarded here before, but will probably be an Annual event inline future,, as n incentive to the students to use Corpus Juris (The body of the Law-i-Latin). 'j;': "' . . AT THE CHURCHES , BAPTIST . ' I Eugene Olive, Pastor : 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. Stu dent classes conducted by Dr. A. C. Howell and R. B. Lane. 11:00 a. m. Morning Sermon. "Sins of a' College Man." 6:45 p. m. B. Y. P. U. 7:45 p. m. Evening Service, "A New Earth." - CHRISTIAN -B. J. Howard, Pastor : 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. ." 11:00 a. m. Morning Semen. 7:00 p. m. Christian Endeavor. 8:00 p. m. Evening Service. ROMAN CATHOLIC Mass held on the first and third Sundays of the month in the Y. M. C. A. at 8:30 a. m. conducted by Father O'Brien, ,of Durham. ' METHODIST Walter Patten, Pastor . 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Sermtfn. 6:45 p. m. Epworth League. 7:45 p. m. Evening Sermon. PRESBYTERIAN W. D. "Parson" Moss, Minister 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. v 1100 a. m. Morning Sermon. 7:00 p. m. Christian Erideavor. 8:00 p. in. Evening Sermon. " CHAPEL OF THE CROSS A. S. Lawrence," Rector 8:00 a. m. Holy Communion. : 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. 10:00 a. m. Men's Bible Class. ,' 11 :00 a. m. Morning Service. 6:45 p. m. Young Peoples League. 7:45 p. m. Evening Service. CITY FATHERS VOTE TO PAVE GUTTERS University Drive, Ransom Street, and Gimghoul Road Will Be Improved. The city management has made preparation to lay con crete curbs and gutters through the whole length of University Drive and part of Ransom street and Gimghoul road. The three stretches cover a street length of 2950 feet, which will require 5900 feet of curbing. The improvement of the' Gim ghoul road will extend from the "five points" corner to ' the lit tle grass island near Hippol Castle, and that part of Ransom street lying between McCauley street and West University drive. Curbs have already been laid along the two blocks of Ransom street nearest Cameron avenue. Coates' Motive in Flunking Law Students Was Altruistic (Continued from page one) I talk to you this morning. You ask me to be reasonable. I have been reasonable. I grad ed your papers without knowing whose papers I was grading. I graded them again when I knew. And the grades remained the same. I have spent these last two days and nights in grading them again. I will bee reason able now. I will go over with you the conclusions I have reach ed and the grounds on which I've reached them. But before I do that, I ask you if you are willing to be reason able. Is there anyone here who feels he is so right he cannot be wrong? Anyone whose mind is so shut cannot be open to conviction. Then we will clear the ground and get down to the issues. There 'are some preliminary questions that I want to ask you : (1) Is there any feeling on the part of anyone that I have shown favoritism or practiced discrim ination between any members of this class? Then, (2J is there any feeling on' the part of any one that the examination itself was unbalanced or unfair-?. . . Then, (3) is there any feeling on the part of anyone that there any problem raised in any examination question that was not discussed fully and thof ough- ly on class or that on the class discussiott .throughout the term any man: raised any issue that I did not meet?. . , Then, as to manner of teaching, I know that I have placed the emphasis on discussion rather than on lec tures, on analysis and reason rather than on - arbitrary -. an swers or "dogmatic conclusions; that ; in addition to memory , I have required thought, and that many a time a man who has re lied on , his memory alone has been left up in the air with only the path of thought to lead him back' to earth; but, as a result of that wayvof teaching (4) is there any feeling on the part of anyone that he does not under stand the law of personal prop erty, or that he did not ' get enough from out this course to pass it?. . . ' Then that leaves two issues between us : (1) Not can , you pass, but did you pass? And that depends on (2) whether I graded too strictly, whether I set the standard too high. Do you agree that these are the is sues and the only issues? . . . Alright; then we will settle them by going through the records. (At this point Mr. Coates took them again. I will be reason on the examination and went through an analysis of them, and read answers from the examin ation papers of what he consid ered to be some of the best an swers and some of the worst). ; These things stand out in my mind from reading these pa pers: (1) Two or three men have passed whom I did not ex pect to pass, and many have failed whom I had not expected to fail. Some of you have work ed hard and have failed, and some who have worked notso hard have passed. But shall a man who passes fail because I had expected him to fail? And shall a man who passes fail be cause I had expected him' to pass? " - ; ' (2) These papers do not show that you have done the work re quired You will recall that at the beginning of this course I insisted that unless you had un failing memories you should (a) take in notes the gist of class discussion; (b) ; at the end of each day's .work to take fifteen minutes or half an hour to weave, in your own minds the thread of the discussions so as to make them your own; and at the end of each section to make a final analysis of the section as a whole, stating clearly the prob lems involved, the conclusion you had reached as a result of class discussion and your own thinking and the reasons that led you to them, n You will re call that throughout the course I urged it and required it, and that at the end of the first few sections I gave you an analysis I had made in order to illustrate my meaning. You thought that I was bluffing and you did not do it. It did not show at the show-down. T(3) In view of the fact that most of these papers state con clusions without giving reasons and write answers without rais ing issues, I wonder if you un derstood what the examination called for. I am at a loss to un derstand how that could be. Be fore the examination I took half an hour to explain that grades would be based on whether you saw the issues, how clearly you stated them; that the emphasis would be placed on analysis and reason and not on impression and memory. Throughout the year the emphasis has been plac ed on those things. The analy sis I urged upon you "and re quired of you at the end of each day's work and of each section involved it. Evidently these words did not carry into your minds the mean ing that they had in mine. ' If there is anyone who feels he made a better grade than he got, I welcome the opportunity to go over his paper with him, and if he, can. show me I was ,wrong I will change it,, but not other wise. If anyone feels that he did not understand the examina tion required and that if he had understood he could have done better, I will take upon myself the blame for his lack of under standing and give him another examination just as hard and no harder, to be judged by a stand ard just as high and no higher. ,Youj? committee has asked me to change your grades to give A's to the first 1 of the class, B's to 13, F's to 1. Mr. Rogers gave me these percentag es. I worked out with him their application to this ciass. In ac tual operation that would mean that in this class there would be 4 A's7 B's, 26 C's, 7 D's, 4 F's. That would mean that I would have to give A to one man who made B, and to three men who made C; B to 7 men who made D; C to 26 men who made D-, E and F ; D to 7 men who made F, and F to only four of the men who made F. I realize that I cannot grade a paper to-the fraction of a point; that I cannot perhaps very accu rately distinguish between a paper which rates 95 and one which rates 94. ButN I think I can tell an A paper when I see it, or a B paper, a C paper, a D paper, or an F paper. And I cannot turn in A grades when there are no A papers, or give B to men who make D's; or C to men who make E and F. I think there are men of ability in this class. They have told me so. You have told me so. And I agree with them and with you. But when A men do not turn in A papers, can I give them A's? If men with the ability to pass do not turn in passing grades, can I give them passing grades? I am surprised that they should make such a request. If I ac ceded to it I would lose my own self-respect and I ought to lose yours. You may say my standard is too high. That standard requires you to see the issues involved in a case, to state them clearly and argue them effectively. It is the standard of the practice in-law office and in the court room. Your clients will judge you by it. I think this law school should judge you by it. I think it cannot afford to set a lower standard tlian-you will have to meet there. You have told me that on this standard I am standing alone. You have the impression that in the faculty of this law school you have found agreement with your position and support for the stand you have taken. I do not question the right of any member of this faculty to agree with you. If he agrees with you I do not question his right to tell you so, or to back you up. If there are any such, the issue is drawn between me and them as well as between me and you. Some of you have told me that by holding to this standard I am hurting this University and this Law School. .That is a bitter thought to me. I would not hurt this University. It has meant everything to me. I came here as an ignorant, awkward fresh man. I left here with at least some little sense of insight and of power. In that changing, growing process I learned the meaning of Alma Mater. To hurt this University would be ' FOUND A 1927 Prospect High School Ring See Bill Neal at the Y. M. C. A. or Tar Heel office. PICKWICK THEATRE "Almost a Part of Carolina" SHOWS DAILY 3:00, 4:45 6:45, 8:30 REGULAR ADMISSION 10 and 25c Candy, Popcorn, Cold Drinks, a d Gum on Sale in Lobby. SATURDAY v Anita Stewart and Edmund Burns in "WHISPERING WIRES" Krazy Kat Cartoon "Kiss Crossed" Pathe Comedy "Under Two Jags" Latest Kinogram News MONDAY Irene Rich, Huntty Gordon, Lilyan Tashman and Otis Harlan in "DON'T TELL THE WIFE" George Lewis and Dorothy Gulliver in The Collegians The Relay like slapping my own mother in the face. I would not hurt this Law School. My hopes and dreams have centered in it. They cen ter in it now. I believe we can build here the Law School of the South which will give to men a training that the country can not beat, It is that belief that day after day inspires my efforts in these halls to work into real ity something of the substance of a dream. I would not hurt this Law School. There is a line from some old, play that comes to 'me now. It runs something like this: "Ev ery subject's, duty is the King's, but every subject's soul is his own." That flneans this to me : my duty is the Law School's, but my soul is my own. It is woven into my dream of this Law School. There are some things that mean more to me than your approval, more than membership in the faculty of this Law School, And this is one of them. Your sole complaint is that I have set the standard too high. The issue is clear, clearer than crystal is. I cannot change these grades. I will not drop that standard. But I will give you everything I've got. to help you reathlti"-''" "!"v;'';-'; Is there "anyone' who feels that these grades and the storm they have raised have aroused in him a feeling that he can no longer profit by instruction? . . . I thank you, gentlemen. . DR. D. T. CARR ' Dentist Tankersley Building . Chapel Hill, N. C. For Sale n 01dV Zeta Psi Fraternity House ; ! See -s " Chapel Hill Insurance & Realty Company TtfflltmillilHl ntmmml Professor Pipe's popular illustrated lecture . . . 'v.. You can learn far more about tobacco from old Prof. Pipe, than you'll get by studying every treatise ever written on it. , For Prof Pipe is the worlds most eminent authority on the subject, f . He knows tobacco from plant to pipe! Experiments with every known species have convinced the Prof, that the one perfect pipe tobacco is Granger Rough Cut. . . He points out reasons for this conclusion: (g) the Granger-grade. 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