THE TAR HEEL, JANUARY 28, 1921.
Page Two
.THE TAR. HEEL " .
"The Leading Southern College Semi-Weekly Newspaper."
Published twice every week of the college year, and is the Official
Organ of the Athletic Association of the University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscrip
tion price $2.00 local, and $2.50 Out
of Town, for the College Year.
Entered at the Postoffice, Chapel Hill, N. C, as second class
matter. .
Editorial and Business Office, Room Number One Y. M. C. A.
, Building.
DANIEL L. GRANT Editor-in-Chief
H. C. HEFFNER Assistant Editors
WILLIAM E. HORNER ( " Assistant Editors
JONATHAN DANIELS Managing Editor
WILBUR W. STOUT .. Assignment Editor
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
J. A. BENDER J. G. BARDEN - JOHN W. COKER
HUME BARDIN ; R. L. GRAY, Jr. L. D. SUMMEY
GEO. W. McCOY J. Y. KERR -V W. H. ATKINSON
J. G. GULLICK P. A. REAVIS, Jr.
C. J. PARKER J. J. WADE
i
PHILLIP HETTLEMAN V. '.. . . Bwiness Manager
M. W. NASH 1 " ; . , t Assistant Managers
C. H. STEPHENSON )
SUB-ASSISTANTS '
W.S.HESTER G. E. KIRKMAN
J. E. RAGSDALE M. Y. COOPER
S. E. HOBBIE LAWSON DAVIS
H. L. BRUNSON
You can purchase any article advertised in The Tar Heel with
perfect safety because everything it advertises is guaranteed to
Le as represented. We will make good immediately if the ad
vertiser does not.
1,
Vol. XXIX. Chapel Hill, N. C, Friday, January 28, 1921. No. 32
few have done, and any of us expect to do, but to still be aggressive in the
conduct of business and to have a vital interest in public affairs is indeed
notable.
We reverence our venerable alumnus today, and hope that we too may
be able to visit the "Fountain of Youth" of which he partook, and be able
seventy-five years from today to handle our own affairs, and be a guardian
for the. welfare of state and University. And we hope that Dr. Hawkins
may have many happy returns of the' day. '
"CAROLINA IN 1960?"
(By W. H. GAITHER, '23)
GHEENLAW ADDRESSES
CHARLOTTE A.DIENCE
Speaks to Southern Association of
College Women on "Relation
of School and Society."
COMMENCEMENT BALL.
The action of the senior class, under the leadership of W. D. Car
michael, in changing the. manner of handling the commencement ball is
highly commendable, and it is to be hoped that the following classes will
perpetuate the system thus initiated.
Heretofore, what should have been a ball managed by the seniors, for
the seniors, it has been run by a single man giving as little as he could get
away with and charging as much for personal gain. And varying amounts
from a few hundreds of dollars to a thousand or more have been made by
permitting some individual to capitalize the ball for personal gain. It was
q highly unfair system, and we are at a loss to understand why it has been
permitted to continue.
This time it is to be financed by the senior class and given as cheaply
as is compatible with a first class occasion. If there is a deficit in the
treasury, it is the deficit of the class, if there is a balance in the treasury
it also belongs to the class. This practically guarantees services equal
to, if not superior to those that have been given; in the past, and at a much
cheaper amount to those attending.
The proposal of the change was made by Mr. Carmichael after he had
been elected as ball manager under the old scheme, and was in a position
to make five hundred or a thousand dollars. It is a wonderful demonstra
tion of a fine spirit.
"The Relation of School and So
ciety,' was the subject of Dr. Edwin
Greenlaw, Kenan professor of Eng
lish and head of the English depart
ment of the University, discussed
last Friday night in Charlotte before
a large audience . of college gradu
ates, under the auspices of the Char
lotte chapter, Soathern Association
of College Women.
According to Dr. Greenlaw there
shall be no return to the so-called
"normalcy" as long as the American
colleges exist, because the American
idealism fought for in the great war
shall be preserved in these places of
learning.
He continues to say that, "That
great spirit which made America
enter the war will continue to exist
in our colleges in the future. The
world-wide golden rule and the stu
dents must catch the same thing."
Dr. Greenlaw further states that
one of the facts in the present edu
cational crisis is the inability to se
cure whole-souled teachers to lead
the youth of the State and Nation.
To interpret life so that the stu
dents may go out and be an intergral
of the throbbing life of the street
and home is the function which the
school or college has, Dr. Greenlaw
.claimed.
In concluding the speaker declar
ed that life must be held up by the I
colleges in such a way that students
will get a glimpse of the life they
are to live.
IN MCE OF CHAPEL
Effort to Be Made to Encourage the
Attendance of Upper Class
. men at Chapel Meetings.
v THE PENNSYLVANIA DEBATE.;
The victory in debate on Saturday night over the University of Penn
sylvania is an ever-lasting tribute to the men who Were engaged, and
to the entire University; 1
One of the Pennsylvania debaters was heard to remark that there were
about seventy men who entered the preliminaries for the varsity team that
was to debate us. The men that they sent to" Chapel Hill would certainly
indicate it. They were all capable debaters, and each of them has nad
previous varsity experience. The debate was of the first quality. Not dur
ing this college generation has anyone heard moTe skillful handling of
f gures'and percentages than that of Rabinowitz, of the Pennsylvania team.
And. the other men handled their arguments equally well. We regret that
Captain Hettinger, of the Pennsylvania team, was unable, on account of
throat trouble, to make his debate.
A representative debating team of the big northern university with its
thirteen thousand students was met by a representative debating team of
the University of North Carolina, with its thirteen hundreds of students,
and the northerners were put to flight. This is our sixth consecutive victory
over the Pennsylvanianh. Throughout our history the debating teams that
represent the University have been generally superior to those with whom
we have debated, and the work of Boyd, Beers and Taylor is a fitting emu
lation of our past record. Taylor's work was almost masterful.
This is, first of all, an intellectual community, or at least this is its
aim, and there is no more fitting illustration of the quality of work done
than in our debating record. In no other field of the intercollegiate con
tests has the University a comparable record, but our other contests are
physical. This, we believe, demonstrates to a degree at least that the Uni
versity is standing by the thing for which it was established to develop
men, and has not lost itself in the side-shows.'
The Campus Cabinet has appoint
ed a' new committee to take charge
of Chapel. Alan McGee, C. W.
Pnillips and M. W. Nash have been
appointed with Francis Bradshaw
ctiiig in an advisory capacity.
. Erforts are being made by the
committee to get more attendance on
oh.Ut.el by the students, especially
the upper classmen. The Chapel is
cae o;ily center where the students
can- gather and form a co-ordinate
jtudent body. Realizing this the
joiAiuittee is formulating plans
whereby the programs will be made
is attractive as possible in an effort
to attract the upper-classmen into
coming to Chapel. All announce
ments of interest to the student body
as a whole are sent out through
Chapel and for this reason the com
uiittee is endeavoring to attract all
t. dents to Chapel so as to keep all
jt'.. dents in close touch with happen
ing.) here on the campus.
A plan to give upper-classmen one
side of the Chapel and to move part
oi the Freshmen on the lower floor
upstairs is under consideration.
EXCHANGES
KANSAS UNIVERSITY.
Th' gang was there.
About fifteen hundred of the "loy
al sons and daughters of Kansas" at-
NEW BOOKS AT THE LIBRARY.
Arnold, Engelbert Die wechsel
stromtechnik. 5v.
Bradford, Gamaliel Prophet of
Joy.
Grinnell, George B. When Buf
falo Ran.
, Hartness, James Human Factor
in Works Management.
Kelly, Roy W. Hiring the Worker.
Le Gallienne, Richard The Junk
man, and other Poems.
Lindsay, Vachel The Congo, and
other poems.
' Mackay, Constance 13 Patriotic
Drama in Your Town.
Marsh, Abtie Z. Home Nursing,
fori A a A 4-riA fi rcf rnaafinc' ir fV a itooi
which took the form of r basketball Liwhall, L. ,C, ed. Readings in
rally.
It was the first basketball rally in
the history of the University., ,
-. Six hundred Kansas retailers are
expected to attend the Sixth Annual
Merchants' Short Court held at Law
rence, February 7 to 11, inclusive,
under the auspices of the Extension
Division of the University. '
The first assembly of the quarter
will be held tomorrow morning - at
10 o'clock in the Assembly Hall.
Count Ilya Tolstoy, son of the late
Count Leo Tolstoy, the noted Rus
sian author and philosopher, will
speak on "The Truth About Russia."
NEVADA UNIVERSITY.
Honolulu, T. H., Dec. 27. Univer
sity of Nevada defeated the Univer
sity of Hawaii, 14 to 0, here today in
che first football game evar played
oetween the Honolulu team and an
eleven from the mainland.
SNOWBALLING.
It snows. If it melts before- you read the first sentence you may not
fce interested in reading further. v -
They tell us there is a code of honor by which nations fight. How
mucn less should there be one by which men comrades play.
C 1 11! 11. j. i .
ih.vwu.uu.v lne iresnman is good sport, but in this the sophomore
should observe a strict code of fairness and scrupulous regard for personal
and property rights that will prevent the unpleasant occurrence of a year
ago. a man s room is his own home, and the window panes are the prop-
ri U1 lne university. Both should be observed.
There's ulentv of krmrf. ift- iu j-...i. .- .' 1; .v -" .i --
' oiiunuoniiis nit iresnmen wnue tney are
on the campus. Be careful, sophomores, to let alone the man who is in his
loom, ana give him H while he is on the campus. In this way you
can reduce them to a proper consciousness of their status in the University,
and have no regrets for self after it is all over.
SIMPSON & SIMMONS.
The Student Council at Simpson
College, Iowa, has adopted the Hon-!
or System. Simmons College, Texas,
is another institution where the same
system has been adopted. In the lat
ter school,, the' vote was 448 to 40.
j Industrial Society,
Masarjjk, Thomas. G. The Spirit
of Russia. . , ,.. ,
! Meiklejohn Alexander The "Lib
eral College.,
; Middleton, P. H. Industrial Mex
ico. . ? . .' -.
Payne, E. G. Education in Acci
dent Prevention. - .
JEoyce, Josiah Race Questions,
Provincialism, and Other American
Problems.
: Santayana, George Three Philo
sophical Poets.
; Secrjst, Horace Readings and
Problems in Statistical Methods.
. Simpson, Charles T. In Lower
Florida Wilds. '
! Stevens, Doris--Jailed for Free
dom. ; Usher, Abbott P. Industrial His
tory of England.
Wallace, Henry Agricultural
Prices.
' Walsh, Thomas Hispanic Anth
ology.
, Wright, Florence S. Industrial
Nursing.
The Carolina student on his way
to the Orange county metropolis
walks leisurelv from the Union Sta
tion at Durham to the adjoining side
walk,' where he is accosted by nu
merous drivers of lovely limousines,
who would trladlv solicit his natron-
age for their respective auto lines to
Chapel HUI. The student is courte
ously seated in the car which im
mediately leaves and is soon on the
beautiful cement highway to this
famous city. If he is a freshman.
the student notices, the absence of
any rush of students such as he has
iieard men speak of who attend oth
er colleges. After a most pleasant
fifteen minutes' ride, the young man
dnds himself at the door of his apart
ment house and after having paid
ihe jitney fare of twenty five cents,
.8 conducted by the landlady to his
.spacious suits which he occupies
alone. As there is an abundance of
rooms, he gets this suite for onlv
Ave dollars a month, while still oth
er good rooms may be obtained for
four. After a very refreshing
luncheon, served in his room by his
French maid, he walks over to the
Alumni building to register. He is
met at the door by a porter who con
ducts him to the lounging room
where he is given schedules and cards
and is advised as to his courses by
one of the many assistant-registrars.
Having further noticed the absence
of a rush in any form, he is told by
the porter uion askine-. that th
great number of officials and the large
amount of space easily take care of
the three thousand students.. Hav
ng decided upon his courses he is
aext ushered into the presence of the
registrar himself, who immediately
pronounces his schedule excellent
and tells him that he may if he so
desires, pay a visit to the treasurer
to receive a check for having come
to this School, or if he nrefera io
treasurer will mail same to him. How
ever, having plenty of time, the stu
dent goes to the treasurer's office,
where he is quickly and Dolitelv rmir).
Having complied with these neces
sary formalities, he returns to his
suite for supper, quite satisfied with
his impression of Carolina.
NEW BOOKS
; Allen, Frederick J. Business Em
ployments. Bergson,. Henri Mid-energy, Lec
tures and Essays.
Blachly, Clarence D. Treatment
of the Problems of Capital and Labor
in Social Study Courses in the
Churches.
Blackmar and Gillin Outlines of
Sociology.
Boucke, 0. Fred Limits of So
cialism. Brooks, John G. Labor's Chal
lenge to the Social Order.
Camp, Walter C Football With
out a Coach.
. Carpenter, Edward Pagan and
Christian Creeds; Their Origin and
Meaning.
Clark, Ellery H. Track Athletics
up to Date.
Cleveland and Buck The Budget
and Responsible Government.
Day, Clarence This Simian
World.
Dealey & Ward Text Book of.
Sociology.
Dicksee, Lawrence R. Business
Organization.
Diffendorfer, Ralph E. The
Church and the Community.
Eagle, Solmon, pseud. Books in
General.
Emerson, Harrington Efficiency
as a Basis of Operation and Wages.
Ewing, Perry V. Southern Pork
Production. v
Fisher, Irving Stabilizing the
Dollar.
Fletcher, Alice C. Indian Games
and Dances With Native Songs.
Franck, Harry Roaming Through
the West Indies.
Gardner, Fletcher Practical Sani
tation.
Gibbs, Philip Now It Can Be
Told.
Greenbie, Sydney Japan Real
and Imaginary.
Lincoln, Joseph C. The Portygee.
London, Jack Hearts of Three.
Poole, Ernest Blind.
Stoddard. Lothrop The Rising
Tide of Color.
At the last convention of the New
England Music Trades Association
held in September at Boston, credit
was given the Eighteenth Amend
ment for the overwhelming demand
of the past six months for musical
instruments. Manufacturers .
several months behind in filling their
oraers.
RALEIGH JAMES HUGHES
ARCHITECT
510-11 American Bank
Building
GREENSBORO, N. C.
W. B. SORRELL, Ref . D.
OPTOMETRIST
AND
JEWELER
Chapel Hill N. C.
?
VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY.
Valparaiso University, Indiana,
has reorganized, selected a repre
sentative board of trustees, elected a
new president, and is but for a mil
lion dollar endowment. This marks
a new epoch in a remarkable school.
T)E SENECTUTE ET DE AMICITIA"
Graduating from the University seventy'-five years ago, and .till iU ard
ent supporter as it fight, to meet present day demands, i. the record of Dr
Alexander B. Hawkins, of Raleigh, who celebrated his ninety-.ixth birth
day on Tuesday last. To live for this long . period i. quite more than
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH.
The University of Utah was the
scene of a trial by student court of
the sophomore leaders charged with
kidnapping the . innocent freshman
president, a violation of constitu
tional rules of the student body.
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA.
The schedule of the Varsity Track
team for this spring looms as one of
the hardest that has ever been at
tempted. In addition to the regular
iputh-Atlantic, meets have been ar
ranged with Penn. State, Harvard,
Navy and probably Johns HopkinB.
B. Y. U.
Brigham , Young University re
:ently defeated Princeton Universi
ty in a debate held at Provost, Utah,
rhe subject was, "Resolved, That
.he U. S. should pass a law prohib
ting strikes in essential industries,
onstitutionality waived. This was)
a hard fought debate.
NEW BOOKS.
Arnold, Jacob H. Farm Manage
ment. Beveridge, Albert J. Life of John
Marshall, v. 3 and 4. '
. Brasol, Boris Socialism vs. Civ
ilization. .
' Cohen, Octavus R. Come Seven.
Devlin, Robert T. Law of Real
Property and Deeds.
Fisher, Irving Elementary Prin
ciples of Economics.
, 3 ox, John, Jr., Erskine Dale,
Pioneer.
Gale, Zona Miss Lulu Bett.
Gibbons, Herbert A. France and
Ourselves.
Gill, C. 0., and Pinchot, Gifford
Six Thousand Country Churches.
Grant, Robert Law and the Fam
ily.
Grey, Zane Man of ' the Forest.
Gulick, ' Luther H. Philosophy of
nay.
Harris, Emerson P. Co-operation:
the Hope of the Consumer.
Jackson, Henry E. The Com
munity Church. . j
' Shackleton, Ernest South.
Shaw, George B. Misalliance",
Fanny's First Play, etc ' :
!- Swinnerton, Frank September.
- Thayer, William R. The Art of
Biography.
Wharton, Edith The Age of In
nocence. . ,
Wilkins. Mary E. Shoulder of
Announcing The Arrival ol
SPRING DRESSES
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A beautiful showing of these new modes
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Elevator Service Up.
Ravvls Knight Company
DURHAM, N. C.
Shoe Prices That You Can't Resist
Officer's Dress, mahogany calf , Eng
lish last $7.50
Endicott-J ohnson English last, ma
hogany calf $6.50
Munson last field shoes . . . . . $5.00
Navy, black American calf, cadet
last ........ ...... $7.50
Why should you pay more? We
guarantee every pair of shoes in our
store. - Government Quality Means
the Very Best.
Army & Navy Stores
One Door North of Main.
108 Church St., Durham, N. C.
Atlas. . - ;