TAR -L JLJLJL- OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE UNIVERSITY OP NORTH CAROLINA ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION VOL. 19 UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1910 NO. 8 HE r THE president s addrfss ANNUAL CELEBRATION OF THE PRESIDENT VENABLE SPEAKS OF HISTORY OP THE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1875. FOUNDING OF THE UNIVERSITY Some Figures Showing the Condition of the University as Compared with Similar Institutions In his address before the students and alumni on University Hay, Presi dent Venable said: ; :? s Carolina Passes One Hundred and Sixteenth Birth day with Commemorative Exercises IN MEMORIAM has i The one hundred and sixteenth an- The University was re-opened in 18- mversary of the University; was cel.e- 75 just thirty five years ago. It had prated Wednesday, October 12, with suffered greatly in the Reconstruction exercises commemorating the founding mil 'Phf. nlrl faniHv wac rlicm . or me institution . ana indicating; us ed, a semblance of instruction was present status and needs. For such an given to diminishing- numbers of stu- event the day was perfect. , A large dents, dwindling also in age and pre- "umber of visitors, among whom were paration until the end was reached and distinguished alumm, witnessed , or the doors wers closed. Sorrowfully took Part in the long procession of the months went by and the storms faculty and students that lormed in beat on the untenanted buildings shorn front of the Alumni Building and, led now of their ylory, and with only the by the University, band, marched to memory of the many noble sons whi. had once thronired their halls and gained there the strength and iuspira tion wtiicn made tnem great . in men country's service. The winds and the rustling leaves whispered of Wilson. the devoted missionary; of Bishoj Green andOtey and their great worl for church and education; of James K Memorial Hall. It was an interesting and significant feature of the University Day exercises thai heartiest greetings were brought to the University by the; presidents of our leading state institutions and that these men were, with only one excep; have drawn our strength from you in the past. I have the faith that in the future we may still look to you." Meaning of Pubilc Education V President R. II. Wright, of the Eastern Training School, spoke of the need and the meaning of public educa tion. He srd, in part: . ! "From the lav of my graduation, I have been loyal to my Aimer Mater and to the cause of public education. While we have not yet fully realized what public education means, there is a great awakening how going on along this line. To a student of history nothing is more significant than the growth of educational ' endeavor. We are coming to realize that our govern ment that all government is but the I .. . . . : , if . " . perintendant J. Y. Joyner, another t . tr ii i i j ai ' 1 uent venaDie tieiivereu. me principal address of the day. His address will te found under another head on this ( President Hill Beceives Degree After the President's address, the degree of Doctor Of Laws was conferr ed upon President Daniel Harvey Hil of the North Carolina Agricultural and I i j i j r i ja V ii' Polk who had ruled the nation; oi "'umnus arm ueau ui me siaie s puouc Leonidas Polk, the beloved Bishop school system, was also present. General: of Graham, who had so wise- I he exercises were begun with the ly ordered the opening of Japan; oi University Hymn, after which Presi- Benton; the great senator; of King the vice-president; of Murphey ami Yancey and Wiley, who had wrought for the education of all the people; of Pa&e Gaston and Bagger and Ruffin, the exeat iurist. of Pettierrew and Vance and a host of others whose names now cluster as stars on the walls of the Memorial Hall. All were gone, the campus deserted, Mechanical College. In his speech, the buildings open to storms and wan- which followed, President Hill ex dering strangers, apparatus broken or pressed his pleasure on being a visitor earned off, and this mother of genera to Chapel Hill and stated that he had tions of noble sons sat desolate in tne aiWayS had a peculiar reverence for ashes of her past. this institution How long were these Halls w "My first visit to this venerable silent to the tread of eager youth who University," he said, "was in the mem would follow in the footsteps of their orable year of its reopening, 1875. fathers? How long could, the people Though only a boy, I was profoundly of the State afford to have the training impressed with the almost delirious school of their leaders empty Jiow ioy 0f those who had assembled for long could the sons who loved her see tie great occassion. The buildings their mother in helpless and shame- and- even the trees on the campus were ful neglect? These were the cries decorated in token of the great rejoic that echoed through the State. The hng. that prevailed on every hand. Mrs doors must be open and the work be- Spencer was here, unable to restrain gin again, was tne answer, uuioi her tears, Dr. .Phillips, and others ot their war. stricken poverty her sons hallowed memory. gave for her restoration, and out ol a President Hill said that it had been looted treasury the people of the state his ambition when a boy to come to contributed to her support, and the the University as a student, but hav mother of the century past took up her ing- a grandfather who was president work again that she might become the Gf Davidson College and a father who mother of the centuries yet to be. In the sharp competition of the pre sent, destined to be still more rigorous in the future, what hope would there be for North Carolina to keep up in the race with an untrained citizenship? Will any state deliberately choose to be the lowest rung on the ladder, a hewer of wood and drawer of water for the others, laboriously furnishing the raw materials for the more'skillful fin gers and more ingenious brain to fash ion into useful form? It surely is not necessary to delay further over these arguments, made familiar in every cor- ypntinuftd, on piith pUgT was a professor there, he found his college course to be "predestined.". Dekn W. C. Smith Speaks Dean W. C. Smith of the State Nor mal College brought cordial greetings from that institution. "I can conceive," said he, ''of few happier lots than falls to me todaj-, bearing greetings to my alma mater from a true daughter of this University I the State Normal College. Con ceived and founded by your son Charles D. Mclver, presided over and guided by members of your family, she is, ineeed, an offspring of this institu tion. We rejoice in your progress, we Government becomes more democratic as people become more enlightened. Especially in a country like this does the government depend on popular ed ucation. The function of' our schools is 'v,. only, to train leaders, but to train citizens. This is what the pub lic school tries to do. America is to e credited with giving to the world jiq. Students and Alumni Whom Death : Claimed Since Year Ago. 'An impressive feature of the Univer sity Day exercises was the "In Memo riam" report. ' ' Professor 10. K. Graham, Dean of the University, read the names of those University students and alumni who had died since October 12, 1909. His report follows: i Marsden Bellamy, Sr., ex-'62. died December 1. 1909. .. : : A. B. Branch, ex 1892, d March 12, 1910. F. E. W. Brown, B. S. 1895,. d July 1910. i William Cameron, ex 1913 d Febru ary 3, 1910. I F .K. Cooke, med.1898 -1900, d Feb ruary 7, 1910. S. V. Daniel, A. B. 1860, d June 21, 1910. - W. T. Dortch Jr., ex 1913, d Febru ary 7, 1910. ' F. Fetter A. B. 1857, d July IS, 1910. J. L. Fleming, Law 1891-2 d Novem ber 1909. ; D. H. Gaston, uied vm 10 d June 7, 1910. H. B. Gudgar Ph.B 1905 d October 2,1910. . : V. E. Holcombe Law 1887-8 d De cember 15, 1909. , ; :" S. D. Hursey ex 1907 d June 14, 1910. S. H. Isler A.B. 1859 d April 4, 19 10. If J. M. Julian ex 1895 d September 16, 1910. ' J. D. Lentz A. B. 1897 d June 13, political freedom, as England gave individual freedom, and this through means of her public schools. Aimer Mater vs. Mother-in-law President R. II. RondthaW, of Sa lem Female College, contributed some humor which was thoroughly enjoyed His speech was such a one as is always welcomed coming- in the midst of long: program of a more serious nature. Hereferred pleasantly to some of his experiences while a , student here, mat ing an especially telling stroke when he declared that he was one of, the nineteen out of a class of twenty-five to fall on "Psych". He also made a "hit" when he informed the boys that while they rejoiced to call Carolina their Alma Mater, someol' them might not object to owning his college as their mother-in-law. President Rondthaler said that the Salem Female College was opened just nine years after the University opened its doors. Throughout the long his tory of the two institutions, they have tad a parallel growth. The Salem sejiool was perhaps the only of a sim ilar character in the south which re mained open during the Civil War, Referrinir to the elephantine size of the man. who was to follow him he in troduced, with a taking joke, Superin tendent W, R. Thompson, of the Stone wall Jackson ; Manual and Training School. ; vl . Remarks on the Unsocial Boy Mr. Thompson, entering into the spirit of the joke'on his great size, de clared that he was born in the same year that the University was re-opened, 1875, and that since that time both he and his Alma Mater had prospered and grown great. He spoke on a subject A. E. C. TaoW.te ex 19U d June 3, 1910. KB. Mm as A 15. ISM d April 20, 1910. I D. G. Rukerson A. B. 1854 d Nov ember 21, 1909. i J. C. Russel ex 1913. ! StLeon Scull B. S. 1885 d February 16, 1910. r Harry Skinner Jr. ex 1905 d Novem ber 5, 1909. J. F. Shoffner Jr. B. S. 1896 d Mar ch 24, 1910. J. E. Sheppard 1867-8 L.L.D 1889 d February 7, 1910. Wingate Underbill A. B. 1897 d Oc tober 28, 1909. H. E. Wilson Ph.B. 1900 d June 10, 1910. J. W. Wilson A. B. 1852 d July 2, 1910. J. E.' Wrenn ex 1906 d February 11, 1910. O. A. Young ex 1909 d June lb. 1910. Trustee B. F. Dixon d September 26, 1910. .,. In addition to these the University grieves to-day the memorable loss of two of its irreaiest and best loved in structors: , James Cameron Mac Rae, October 17, 1909. Eben Alexanler, March 11, 1910. May the sweet memory of their tine service here preserve their names in green immortality! It was unanimously voted dy the stu dents in chapel that this number of the TAR HEEL should be sent to those friends and alumni who remembered the University with greetings on Oc tober 12. . Instead of two issues of the TAR HEEL this week, there will be only thi one,