Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 2, 1913, edition 1 / Page 1
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n 7" Weather Reports Absolutely no Chance of being dry time H H Weathc.ford Speaks in Chapel Monday 8s00 11J OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA VOL. 22 UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. CHAPEL HILL; N. C, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 2. 1913 NO. 3 V IT DR. W. D. VEATH- ERFORD IS COMING He Will Talk inChapel Mon day Night One of the Best in South AUTHOR OE SEVERAL VALUABLE BOOKS A Graduate of Vanderbilt. Mr.Weath orford is One of the Moat Practical and Successfnl Workers I Anion College Students in the South. Wi D. Weatherford Ph.D. of tbe International ' Committee of the Young Men's Christian Asso ciation will speak in GerardJEIall Monday night at eight o'clock. No man in the student movement of America is as close to the col lege men of the South. He is a graduate of Vanderbilt where he stood out as a scholar and leader. Any man who has been to the Blue Ridge Conference will tell you of his personality and power Clear, straight forward, forceful, he appeals strongly to college men in the Southeast and West. Rpad what the men of the- West say of him. Dr. Weatherford. has made ; real contribution to the sociolosji cal questions of the South in his studies of the negro. r II is two books are now a valuable part of the little library on this question which has been contributed to by such men as Albert Bushwell Hart and TMsrar Gardner Mur phy. . ' . : Carolina men have an oppor tunity worth while in the chance to hear a strong man who has given his life to the college men of the South. ALL MUSIC NOW IN TUNE. The Glee Club continues in gayety and has a rollicking time three nights every week. About thirty men have been divided up into four parts and are at pres ent learning to sing "Hark the Sound." Next Week every new man will be tried out in a quar tet composed of himself and throe old men. The quality of har mony produced will go to his account either on the debitor credit side. Every body,s tuning up. The Club meets Mondays, Wednesdays and Friday at ' o'clock sharp. , . . All we can hear from tbe Band is music and lots of it. must be doing things. The First Year Meds Too. They I I.. riM. .1 . AI.a tittiM- tint F vuiuursuay mc ia meaicat cuss met m me xvieuitdj building for the purpose of or- ganizing. Mr. U b. Koysier ot the Second Year class called the meeting to order and acted as chairman until the election or a President, lie then turneu the meeting over to the newly ' e elected President. The follow ing meu were elected to their re spective offices: President, J. D. Boushall, Jr.; Vice-President, R. M. Cox;Sec-Treas., Ralph Spence and Historian, H. L. Brockman : Subscribe for The Tar iieel. YET MORE COUNTY CLUBS Club Presidents Meet. Plan Years Program. We hail with 'great joy the ie organizing of the county clubs, which has taken place during the last two weeks. By this time practically all the clubs have met and elected officers for the com ing ear. A meeting of County Club presidents was held in the Y. M. C. A. on last Friday. The object of the meeting was to dis-' cuss matters which concern the welfare of. the clubs as a whole' and to make some defiinate plans for unified club work. I. M. Bailey, who was elected president of the County Club Association last year, presided at this first meeting of 1913-14 Three com mittees were appointed to look after matters pertaining to the program,, membership, and pub lication. The president of each club is held responsible for the work of his county club. The constitution is the same under -'Inch the organization worked SSJKi Sii:' II10.WM WJ 111 pil CUM I IKJl 111 . CL 11 VI distributed among the county clubs. Under the auspices of the County Clubs Presidents Associa tion,' Prof;; E. C: Branson of the University of Georgia will make an address in Chapel Thursday nis-ht concerning- 'count v club work, laving; especial stress on the work8 of the Johnson County club last year. Since, the last i.-sue of The Tar Heel several more county clubs have organized. Buncombe starts this year with twenty four members. The of- neers eiecieu ai.wie -irsi nieeuiitfi were: A. ts. Lireenwooa, presi dent; C. E. English, vice-Presi deMt; G. A. Shuford, Treasurer; L. C. Barber. Secretary; J. G Cowan, corresponding secretary Duplin organized last week with eighteen members, ten of them being- new men. The of fleers for the coming year are W. F. Taylor, President; F. E Wallace. vice-President; and M. McD Williams, Secretary. The Mecklenburg County held an enthusiastic meeting on last Thursday nig-ht. Thirty men out or the torty-four eiiroiieu were present. In the first place ith trl nwinsr officers w e r e elected: President, G. M. Long; viee-President, F. O. Clarkson; Secretary, E. Y- Keesler; Treas- urer, if. ri. Mcuau. The club decided to discontinue the usual picture in the Yaekety- Yack. Part of the money thus saved was voted to send 1 he L z.v ' I n , . Q hi h schools in the countv It js thought that iu he hi h schoois .wm kn0v something of University affair aml oecoine interested in the institution itself. Afler deciding to hold meetings three months the Mecklen burg County Club adjourned. The Orange County Club held its first meeting at the Y. M. . C. A, Thursday night, September 24, i 1913. The officers were eiecteo as iuuuws. x iciut-ui, F. Bradshaw; vice-President, J. Ray; Treasurer, b. Kooertsou; ''''' EUGENE C. BARNETT ' Tins is the man who success fully represented Carolina, in debate with the University ol Pennsylvania and who'now repre sents Carolina at the very heart of one of the mo.t far-reaching charges of modern times. He is our message bearer of a better life to 'the young men a Hangchow, China. DR.' C. L RAPER HONORED Head of a Dist ict in New Government Bureau. Dr. Charles Lee Raper has ac cepted an appointment as cor respondent and adviser of. the United Stales Rural Organiza tion Service, a new bureau of the United States Department o Agriculture. His territory in cludes the four states. South Carolina, North Carolina, Vir L,inia, and Maryland. ; The purpose of the Rural Or - : (;,: tn . u-M n am Aa l lull ic i Rnymi rural life and its conditions and to lend its aid to improving these conditions. Dr. Raper's work is to keep the Washington office in formed as to the general econom ie conditions in nis territory, particularly as to mortgage and credit condition, tenancy, and organizations for econ omic and social betterment. He is to advise the Washington of fice as to the possible improve ment ot these conditions ana as to what legislation is desired, Dr. Raper has been the head of the department of economics in the University for thirteen years, lJunug tins time tie nas hpfM1 artivelv ene-ap-ed in P-eneral . -j --- economics and more recently in the field of transportation and taxation. His work for taxation reform in North ! Carolina, Vir- g.inia; and other i states has mria n ,imKoi- nf ' speeches on cooperative; marketing of farm products and cooperative credit institutions for farmers. .He is generally recognized as one of the leading men in his line in the South. . ; Still They Resign George Strong resigned his position af Editor-in-Chief of the Magazine last Saturday night, W. P. Fuller was elected in his place and Tom Boushall was chosen to fill Fuller's former pos- itiofl of Assistant Editor. A; HIGH SCHOOL CONTEST Final Game to be Played at Chapel Hill. In order to stimulate among the secondary schools of the State greater interest in athletics, and especially t o encourage greater activity in the inter school athletics, the General Alu -,ni Athletic Association of the University of North Carolina has decided to inaugurate ' this ; year a State-wide contest in foot- ball among the public high 'schools, city and rural. The (plan evolved by the committee on high school athletics will not in tertere in any way with any schedule" that has already been made ny any team. l he rules and regulations governing this contest are as follows: 1. For this year the contest shall be open only to public high schools, city and rural. 2. Any team representing a public high school, city or rural, that has not been defeated by a team of similar rank up to and including November 15 shall be eligible to enter the contest, pro vided it shall have played at least three games. 3. To be eligible to a place on the team, a player must beabone fide student of the high schnol he represents. To be a bone fide seudent, he shall have been in regular attendance for a least one third of the term up to the time of any game in which he partici pates and made passing grades on his work. 4. Immediately after Novem ber 15. the committee on high school athletics will arrange pre liminary contests for the purpose of selecting two teams which shall come to Chapel Hill for the final contest for the State high school championship. The General Athletic Associa tion will bear all expenses, in cluding transportation, of J the two teams selected for the final . . ... ... contest; and while on the Hill these teams will be entertained by the Athletic association The committee will be glad to communicate with any school desiring: to enter this contest and respectfully asks tfiat all schools meeting the requirements herein set forth will, immediately after November 15, give notice of their desire to enter the contest. The committee is composed of the following-members: 1 N. W. Walker, Chairman, T. G. Trench ard, E. R. Rankin. C. E. Ervin. Secretary. Any school interested will Mr. com- please communicate with Ervin, Secretary of the mitt. e. PROF. WILLIAMS RESIGNS Prof. Horace Williams, prof - essor of philosophy, here for twenty four years, has resigned his position. He has as yet made public no reason for his action although it is expected that he will issue a statement in a fewj days. He will continue his classj room work for the rest of the lie then in'ends to scuoi year. devote his time to traveling and writing. . CAROLINA MERELY DUCKS BAPTISTS Wake Forest Puts Up Game Fight. Too Light To Make Headway ERWIN AND TAYLOE FEATURE The Contest Was Slow. Waather : Partly "Responsible But Team Hasn't Enough Fight. Line Not Aggres sive. There Were Costly Fumbles. Line plunges, off- tackle gains, fumbles, hit-and-miss forward passes. Out of this mixture on a warm, sluggish afternoon 'the our defense prespiided the Immer sionists with 0. The scoriug came in the " se cond quarter. End runs by Tay loe and line plunges bj Erwin had driven the swine-hide to Wake Forest's f yard line. The prospects of a touchdown so ex cited the Varsity that they drop ped the precious pig-pelt, which was recovered by Wake Forest on her 1 yard line. The visitors punted. Tayloe returned , the punt 15 yards, and a fter a few preliminary moves he fell across the Baptists' goal line. Tandy kicked goal. Here Carolina put in the second team line,, Orr giving way to Lord at quarter. The two teams were then - evealy matched and played to a dead-lock. Each side tried the forward pass with partial success. Daniels of Wake Forest made a touchback by in terrupting a forward pass which had it been successful would have give Carolina another touch down. .In the last quarter the Varsity came back with all its men but failed to score. The chief trou ble seems to be that the line does not charge. Tayloe and Burnett made gains every time a suggest ion of a hole was made and Ervin just made gains anyhow. Huske did good work oil end. - But those who know don't feel discouraged about the score. Just wake up the' line a little and allow our quarters to gam a bit more, experience and the team will be a hummer. Then remem ber that it was pretty ; hot just standing on the side lilies. Foot ball isn't exactly a summer pas time. The crowd that witnessed the game was probable the largest ever on the field.' All the stu dents were there; thanks to the Athletic fee. In addition there were some 400 outsiders. Trini ty and A & M. were well repre sented. ". :;'' ;- The 'ine up: Carolina Wake Forest Center iR - Abernethy Carter Tandy : Right Guard Co well, Andrews . Left Guard Johnson, Foust Olive Britton . -"g L. Abernethy Right Tackle Moore Boshamer Left Tackle dwaras, "amsey - roweu Concluded on third page , ,
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 2, 1913, edition 1
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