THE TAB HBBL
HERBERT HOOVER
K INVITED HERE
May Speak at Convention of
Association of Alumni
' i Secretaries.
Herbert Hoover, secretary of
the United States Department of
Commerce, may speak here at
the convention of the Associa
tion of Alumni Secretaries, to
be held here April 28, 29, and 30
Daniel L. Grant, University of
North Carolina Alumni secre
taryand president of the Asso
ciation, extended the invitation
to Mr. Hoover through Senator
Lee S. Overman, Salisbury, last
week. He indicated that he
would accept, although he has
not definitely done so 'as yet.
Over two hundred delegates
from all sections of the United
States and Canada will attend
the sessions. of the convention
A tentative program for the con
vention has been almost : com
pleted, and will be announced
within the next few days.
Hamilton Holt, president of
Rollins College, will be among
the speakers, secretary Grant
announced yesterday.. President
Chase will also deliver an ad
dress. '" '
Charles G. (Hell and Maria)
Dawes, Vice-president of the
United States, was invited, but
he was obliged to decline on ac
count of pressure of business
matters.
Billy Vanstory
TAR HEELS BOW -TO
THE GEORGIA BULLDOGS
Continued from page one)
Bulldog forwards, cut loose with
a literal deluge of long shots and
sent Carolina over the route so
many favorites have taken since
last Friday. One by one they
have fallen. First Tennessee,
and then Auburn, Maryland and
Georgia Tech in rapid succes
sion. Only Georgia and Vander
bilt remain, and tonight they
will battle for the choice mor
sel that has been the bone of
contention.
The Phantoms' last stand was
a gallant one and worthy of a
better reward. Their inability
to make their scoring chances
good proved their downfall.
Statistics show that the .Tar
Heels took 39 shots from the
court and made 7 good. Georgia
tried 30 shots and sunk 8 of
them, four of their baskets com'
ing in the last two minutes. The
Tar Heels made 6 foul shots
good out of 14 attempts, while
the Bulldogs counted 10 points
in 19 tries.
Billy Vanstory led the Caro
lina attack with 8 points, and
was runner-up for game honors.
"Florence, Georgia forward took
top honors with 11 points. Pur
ser of Carolina and Keen of
Georgia each counted an even
half-dozen markers. The score
at half-time was Carolina 9,
Georgia 8.
Line-up and Summary :
Carolina (20) Georgia (25)
Position
' Vanstory' 8) Florence (11)
' - R. F.
R. Hackney (3)' i-.Keen (6)
. L. F.
Purser (6) Drew (3)
B. Hackney (2) Forbes
R. G.
Morris (1) .........1 Turner (4)
." L. G.
Substitutions; Carolina Price for
Morris, Baggett for Purser. Referee:
Menton. Umpire: Sutton. v
W f J
' fi -I
; f
1 4 v
v hi- if
Billy Vanstory fired the Tar
Heels' parting shot in the 1927
tournament. With Georgia lead
ing 25 to 18, he loosed a long
"prayer shot" from the 'open
spaces. It whipped the nets and
brought Van's total for the game
to eight and his total for the
tournament to 30 points. ,
MITTMEN LIKELY
TOBE CHAMPIONS
The Tar Heel boxing team is
working hard for the coming
tournament to be held at Char
lottesville, Va. March the fifth
and sixth. Six teams have been
met and defeated by the 'mitt-
men this season. 4 The Southern
Boxing Conference is composed
of six teams besides Carolina
and the Tar Heels have beaten
all thesf. -
Taking into consideration that
this year is the second year for
the team to be under the tute
lage of .a regular coach, such a
chievement is phenomenal. With
three veterans as a nucleus to
build a team around, Coach
Rowe has done wonders towards
developing another Southern
Championship team. Captain
Shuf ord, Warren and Butler
came up from last year's team
and Brown, and Carpenter had
done some fighting previously.
Coach Rowe j easily developed
these men into good fighters and
Warren, Sbwford and Butler
have won all of their fights. The
lightweight and featherweight
classes have been handled by
Buck, Shaw,'. Cummlngs; Mathe
son, Russell, and Meiggs.
The tournament at - Virginia
will be attended by the Univer
sity of Georgia, the University
of Virginia, the University of
North Carolina, Washington and
Lee, V. P. I., and V. M. I.
C0-EO FINDS BIG
PUNCH IN BOXING
Declares Sport Is Real Interest
ing and Comments on Gen
tlemanly ' Conduct.'
"Pinky Morris
Terpischore Has Teeming
Week-End
(Continued from page one) "N
the neophytes seemed resolved
to make theirs of the highest or
der. During the grand march
led by Micky Block and Miss
Elizabeth Soloman, hammered
silver bracelets with the frater
nity's coat-of-arms 'were given
out to the representatives of the
fair sex. uAs honored guests,
: Y?
( ' '
if i-
' If
"Pinky" Morris will be a lead
ing candidate for an All-Southern
berth. His defensive play
scintillated in every game in
Atlanta. ' '
two national officers, M. B.
Wagenheim and George Macy,
were entertained by the installed
chapter. The men initiated this
week were Norman and Milton
Block, Henry Weil, Charles
Brown, Caesar Cone, Alvin Kar
tus, William Breman, and Joe
Berwahger; : "" ' . -
(Co-ed Cora)
I simply can't begin to tell
what a big time every body had
at the boxing matchs the other
night. Everybody seemed so
happy. The boys who partici
pated in the match certainly de
served the thanks of all true Car
olina men, for their cooperation
in giving every body a simply
wonderful show.
Boxing is simply grand. And
anyone who says that it is a
brutal sport should certainly be
ashamed of themselves. And the
boys were all such nice boys.
All the feminine spectators voted
that the Carolina men were
twice as good looking as the Cas
toria College boys. However
they were nice looking too. Each
man had his hair combed . just
as nice as could be.
So Grand
The whole thing was conduct
ed in a gentlemany way. The
players all wore gloves to keep
from hurting each other. And
even the floor was padded so that
if any one slipped and fell he
wouldn't hurt himself.
Boxing has changed a great
deal. Players used to fight un
til they dropped, but now all
that has been changed. When
the players get tired someone
rings a bell and they stop and
rest a little while. They even
had little chairs in the corners
for them to sit in and rest.
The umpire was simply grand.
Whenever the players got excit
ed and started to fight he would
separate them. No doubt he
kept them from hurting each
other just lots. He certainly
must have been brave.
Rings Bell Early
The man who pulled the bell,
let me ring it twice. There was
such a nice boy from Castoria.
His eyes were grand, although
on of them was a little black
where he had run into some
thing. It must have, been ter
rible to have had that happen
to him just as he was going off
on a trip. ' -
He was playing against a Car
olina, man. The Carolina man
slipped and fell down, and the
umpire began waving his arm
up and tlown, motioning for him
to get up. He had counted to
nine and I got so excited that
I pulled the bell, although there
was just lots of time left.
The players quit and rested.
They had to pick the Carolina
man up and carry him to his
chair. The Carolina man didn't
want , to play any more and so
he pretended that he was asleep.
But they found him out and
made him go back when the bell
rang. He ought to have known ,
better because there were . too
many people looking at him. ;
I can't understand why the
referee didn't help the players
up when they feU instead of
motioning for them to get up.
He must have been fanning them
too. . , , . .
After having such a fine time,
I'm klad to report that Carolina
won. I don't remember the exact
score. - .
University Trustees
f Recommend Twelve
New Men for Board
; The committee on University
Trustees recommended twelve
new members to the Board of
Trustees of the University. The
recommendations will be approv
ed by the Senate and House n
joint session early next week:
The term of each person rec
ommended is for eight years.
The twelve recommended will
fill vacancies on tlfe present
board, which were caused by the
deaths of some and the expira
tion of terms of others.
The joint committee consider
ed a list of 19 men from which
the 12 were selected.
The election of former Govern
or Cameron Morrison was close.
Out of the 22 votes cast by the
members of the joint committee,
the former Governor received 12.
, The list of those recommended
are: W. C. Woodward, of Nash;
Fred Sutton, of Lenoir; J. T.
Mangum, of Haywood; R. T.
Fountain, of Edgecombe ; Cam
eron Morrison of Mecklenburg;
Dr. Charles E. Maddry, of
Wake; J. G. Murphy, of New
Hanover; R. E. Little, of Anson;
David B. Smith, of Mecklenburg ;
Claiborne Royall, of Wayne; and
A. B. Andrews, of Wake.
Southern colleges will never
get an even break with North
ern schools until coonskin coats
go out of style. - Arkansas
Gazette.
The most discouraging fact
is not that the prisons are so
overcrowded but that they ought
to be more so. Ohio State.
"-It is a safe bet that the man
who sings "how -dry I am" is
a wet.- Norfolk Virginian-Pilot
Oeancr Politics Open
Frum la Held By Crp
(Centinned from page me),
students. They were : All voters
must register 5 days before the
nominations are made; any can
didates who withdraw must do
so 48 hours after their nomina
tion; sub-assistant managers of
athletics must try out a period of
time and then be selected by
the teams ; immediately after the
nominations there must be pub
lished in the Tar Heel a con
cise list of the nominees for the
convenience of the campus at
large ; and every candidate will
be required to make an open
statement in the Tar Heel of the
sources of organized support
that he has.
, F. S. Gilreath deplored the
lack of attendance, saying that
the group could transact no busi
ness. Carroll replied that, in his
opinion, the group was not call
ed to transact business for the
campus. He told those attend
ing that their presence was re
quested for a simple discussion
and not a majestic ruling on
campus-wide matters. , "This
meeting was called," he said, "to
gjve the campus its chance to
discuss all suggestions that
might arise; Their fate does not
depend on the interest of bW
ing student body bu upon Xk
interest of the election commit:
tee." ,;
The only one of tb fly psr.
gestions that would require th
approval of the student body i
the one which would disfran
chise men who did not register.
All the other suggestions are
within the jurisdiction of the
elections committee.
Six of State's Ten Most
Beautiful Things Found Here
(Continued from page one)
8. The porticoes of th Stat Cap.
itol.
9. Exterior of Christ Church, Ra.
leigh. !
10. The living spirit of Ed Graham,
which here, there, and yonder in North
Carolina may be glimpsed flaming in
the souls of some of those who knew
and loved this man.
The State Capitol at Raleigh was
mentioned most often in the lists sub
mitted. Christ Church, also at Re
leigh, was second. . Other things men
tioned were the run for a touchdown
by Walter Fuller in the Virginia
game in 1919, the spirit of Dr. Poteat,
president of Wake Forest college,
Isaac Irwin Apery's essay on "Vio
lets," and "the spirit of helpiullness
taken by North Carolinians toward
negroes." ' .
So far, no modern has invent
ed an intelligence test to equal
matrimony. Austin American
Boy . . . girl
pipe...
Edgeworth
happiness . .
f
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55 .
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