Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 4, 1921, edition 1 / Page 2
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rage two .R HEEL, FEBRUARY 1, 1921. THE TAK: 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 1 . . . . WILLIAM E. HORNER) Ass,stant EdltorS JONATHAN DANIELS Managing Editor WILBUR W. STOUT Assignment Editor J. A. BENDER HUME BARDIN GEO. W. McCOY J. G. GULLICK C. J. PARKER ASSOCIATE EDITORS J. G. BARDEN JOHN W. COKER R. L. GRAY, Jr. L. D. SUMMEY J. Y. KERR W. H. ATKINSON P. A. REAVIS, Jr. J. J. WADE PHILLIP HETTLEMAN . M. W. NASH ) C. H. STEPHENSON f . Business Manager . Assistant Managers SUB-ASSISTANTS W. S. HESTER G. E. KIRKMAN J. E. RAGSDALE M. Y. COOPfiR 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 be as represented. We will make good immediately if the ad vertiser does not. EXCHANGES "Book Slishers V I s. 4 r man who mystifies wilJj, ppear W. AND L. TO HAVE JOURNAL- Iyer- ' ' ISM. the , At Its semi-annual meeting last at Gerrard Hall Saturday, February week the board of trustees of Wash- 5th. Tickets are on sale at Eubanks. ! ington and Lee university endorsed Admission is seventy-five and fifty i and approved the play of re-estab- cents. ; lishing the chair of journalism in the , jhe February number of the Car ; university and calling it) the Lee 0lina Magazine is expected to appear j Memorial Chair :- of .journalism in ' on the Hill this coming week. This honor of Gen. Robert E. Lee, who js the number published by the stu j originally founded the chair in 1869 dents in English 21, and is fully, if I not more, than up to the standard of the past issues. r""-- gS, state Fair Association next Wed- was his picture. The photograj'.day, February 9th. While in Ra was a striking resemblance of bi-jh Dr. Pratt will have a conference On the same page appeared .uictoith Governor Morrison in regard to 1 - i ' 1 . x . 1 r ) , 1 . . 1 . . il . XT 4.1. fy 1 .' vl.iaj(ties i iwo nmer croian, cne worn oi ine murui i .' ln..i r .... I o TECH TO HAVE AERO UNIT. Georgia Tech is to have an air unit of the R. O. T. C. The unit at j Tech will start with approximately fifty students. The lighter than air course has to do with dirigibles and airships. The heavier than air course has to do with airplanes. A student may enroll in either course. LELAND STANFORD. The registration in the University has reached a higher mark than was ever before attained at the begin ning of the winter quarter. The to tal number registered last night was 2,321 which is to be compared with 2,184 registered on the same day last year. It is likely that about 100 more students will register in the next few days, bringing the total up to or above 2,400. Vol. XXIX. Chapel Hill, N. C, Friday, February 4, 1921. No. 34 GOVERNOR MORRISON Speaking before the students of the University, while yet a candidate for the democratic nomination for Governor of the State, Honorable Camer on Morrison in a flourish of oratory expressed his regrets that the hard force of circumstances prevented his obtaining a college education while he was a young man, and pledged himself, if elected Governor of this Commonwealth, he would do his utmost to see that the cause of higher education was fostered in every possible way. He pledged himself speci ficially to see that the needs of the University were adequately cared for. To-day he is Governor Cameron Morrison, and although in the past some collegians had wont to refer to him as of the old school, he has come for ward on issues in a progressive manner that has surpassed the fondest hopes of the most ambitious. He has outdistanced those who thought them selves leading the progressive camp, and today stands in the forefront of all North Carolinians in the fight to make North Carolina abundantly rich in life as well as in wealth. Whereas, those who were largely instrumen tal in electing Mr. Morrison governor are standing in the twilight of the setting sun and looking backward, gripped by the old North Carolina that was poor and aggravated by the present financial depression, the new Governor is standing on the very threshold of a new day looking forward to the gold-rimmed tips of the hills ahead of him and uttering to all the , people of North Carolina "we want to stand up like a mighty giant of progress and go forward in the upbuilding of our state and the glorifica tion of our God." This stepping out from the men who were largely responsible for giving him political life; is a unique demonstration in North Carolina political life. And if by chance Governor Morrison siSould hot win completely the goal that he has set for higher educational support he will have the satis faction to know that he has lost "in behalf of a cause that will ultimately win." But, he nor the cause for which he is fighting can lose. All North Carolina is gradually but surely joining hands in what promises to shortly become a complete crusade for the cause of higher education, and under the leadership of Governor Cameron Morrison, the State is going to begin now, not tomorrow, to provide the essentials of its own life. The faculty of Davidson College have recently prohibited students of the college from owning automobiles while in college there. They claim that by making the distance from Charlotte to Davidson too short the autos were disturbing the work and general academic duties of the students. According to an announcement by Manager Joe Person of the varsity basketball team Yale University has been added to our schedule this season. The game has been schedul ed to be played in New Haven on 1 otl. nu:. a r cui uai j out. xuis is me lira i. time, to the knowledge of your correspond ent, that we have ever had a place on the Yale basketball schedule. ANONYMOUS LETTERS Tar Heel mail consists almost entirely of anonymous letters. The stream of such letters which has been flowing in an irregular manner all of the year has now increased to unbelievable proportions. Truly, we must be approaching the ocean. About such letters we desire to say just this much: The Tar Heel will pay about as much attention to them as a duck will to your pouring water on his back that's none whatever. It has come to the point that the first thing that we do on getting a letter from the post office is to see whether it is signed or not. If not, in the waste basket it goes. This waste basket class has been by far the biggest one recently. We appreciated criticisms, opinions, suggestions, or anything relative to our work, and our purpose in writing this is to say please "put yourself back of what you write." Otherwise it will continue to flow into the waste basket. AT THE PICKWICK Robert W. Chambers' popular novel, "The Restless Sex," has been picturized by the Cosmopolitan Pro ductions and will be the attraction at the Pickwick Saturday evening. Marion Davies is the star and the supporting cast includes such promi nent players as Carlyle Blackwell and Ralph Kellard. "The Restless Sex" deals with the woman who is not satisfied to be just a wife, but wishes to attain a niche for herself in the world of art. Stephanie Cle land, a pretty New York society girl, is the central figure, and her ambi tions and romance form the story. Lavish backgrounds, including a ball scene that is said to suroass anvthine- of its kind ever filmed, are features. The Pickwick presents Monday night Bryant Washburn in "A Full House." In the production Bryant Washburn appears as George Howell, a young attorney who gets into most amazing difficulties when he leaves his bride for a few hours to go on a business trip. This journey has a most amazing maze of complications involving another man's love letters, stolen jewelry, policemen and thieves. The feature for Tuesday night is "Blind Youth," produced by the Na tional Pictures Corporation and founded on the famous play by Lou Tellegan and Willard Mack. The hero is a man lived not wisely but too well. He was cast off by two women, his mother and his model, only to be rescued by a third who marries him. A few nights later she finds him alone in his studio with another woman in the small hours of the morning, and she has it on the word of his brother that things are as black as they appear. Then comes a queer quirk of psychology which saves the situation and many mistakes, resulting in an understand ing between husband and wife. ANNOUNCEMENTS Dr. E. J. Wood, B. S. 1899, well known physician and medical investi gator of Wilmington, N. C, will lec ture here Tuesday, February 8, under the auspices of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. His lecture,. "One of our Debts in Medicine to the British," will be of a popular char acter, of interest to all who wish for improvement in public and individual health. ; The Letz Quartet, composed of two violins, one viola, and one cello will give a concert in Gerrard Hall on the night of February 15. The Letz Quarter is one of the two great est stringed quartets of the world today, the other being The Flonzaley Quartet. It has traveled over the entire United States and has appear ed before some of the most critical audiences throughout the world. All tickets will be on sale in advance at Patterson's? .50, .75 and $1.00. The series of Sunday afternoon recitals, of which two numbers have already been given, will continue throughout the winter and spring quarters. There will be four and probably six recitals given. The fol lowing is the list of recitals to be given: 1. An Organ Recital, by P. J. Weaver will, be given during Febru ary. 2. Reading to piano accompani ment, by Prof Geo. McF. McKie and Prof. P. J. Weaver will be given in 1 March. I 3. The University Orchestra will appear in April. 4. A Lecture Recital on Folk Songs of the different nations will j be given in May, by Prof. P. J. I Weaver. There will be a chorus, composed of. different groups, which I will render the songs. MYSTERIOUS SMITH'S EFFORTS FAIL HERE "Mysterious Mr. Smith" has not returned to Chapel Hill yet to make further preparations to establish a chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. It is understood that he is still in Durham organizing the Klan there, but has said nothing about returning to Jhapel Hill. In the meeting at the school house on January 24, Mr. Smith explained the purpose of the Klan, and the work it has done in the far South. There was not much enthusiasm shown by the audience toward estab lishing the chapter here. Interest is still not very marked around town, toward this movement, and the mat ter will most likely be dropped, un less pushed more vigorously. Work on the production of the plays recently selected to be shown by the Carolina Playmakers on Feb ruary 11 and 12 has really begun in interest. Mrs. Frederic H. Boye, who has had quite a little dramatic ; experience is assisting the producing committee in the rehearsals of "The Vamp." The casts for all the plays FACT AND COMMENT Dr. L. A. Williams, Professor of School Administration, has recently been elected to full membership in the National Association of the Directors of Educations"! Research. This organization is composed of men who have made distinct contribu tions in this field. FULLER AT TULANE Myron E. Fuller, who coached the Carolina eleven during the past season, will be head coach of the Tulane University eleven for the 1921 season. Coach Fuller goes to Tulane recommended by no less a personage than Bill Roper, the coach of Tulane athletic council stated that he did not know of anyone he could recommend as highly for the Tulane position as Fuller. Carolina tween those countries and the Unit ed States. Dr. Pratt will also have a confer ence with the Commissioner of Labor and Printing in regard to co-operative work the departments are doing in connection with investigation of power used in the State, and with labor conditions in connection with the mining industry. Tom Wolfe, who - has this year been working in Baker's famous "Workshop" at Harvard, has had a play entitled "The Mountains" pro duced there. It won out easily in the first round of the competition, and almost certainly will be selected as one of the plays to be taken by a cast of plafers from the Workshop on a western tour this spring. Alfred M. Lindau, of class of 1917, has been awarded a faculty scholar ship in the Harvard Law School as one of the high average men in last year's work. DR. PRATT IN RALEIGH Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt, director of the North Carolina Geological and Economic Survey, meets in Raleigh Dr. ,S. E. Leavitt, of the Depart ment of Romance Languages, deliv ered a lecture on "Why Go To South America," before the School of Com merce Tuesday night in Phillips Hall. Dr. Leavitt has been in South Amer ica for the past year and while there made a special study of its problems, its advantages and the future rela tions that can be made to exist be- The recent cutting down of the trees in front of Gooch's and Fois ter's former stores, was to avert ac cidents which might occur in the future from falling limbs. The trees were badly burned by the fire last June and since that time have been slowly dying. If left up, they would soon commence to decay and be a danger to all passersby. As soon as the stumps are uprooted, new trees will be set out. Alan R. Anderson has resigned the position of Director of Class Ath letics at the University and Donnell Van Noppen has been elected in his stead. Van Noppen has been in direct, contact "with all branches of athletics here at Carolina, and is well equipped to assume the management of the system of Class Athletics. GOOCH'S CAFE EQUIPMENT SANITATION SERVICE What About That Feed? SMOKES FRUITS CANDY CALL ON THE Chapel Hill Hardware Co. FOR Guaranteed Cutlery. Also Paints and oth er necessary articles of the quality kind. 'WE STRIVE TO PLEASE With acknozvledgmenis to K. C. B. B 13.4 9. 3oocl "wheeze- m Allan McGee. Gus Dnwninw arA Oscar McMallan were initiated into' In packages of 30 protected by epecial moisture-proof wrapper. Also in round AIR -TIGHT Una of SO. I LOVE the ladies. . . . BUT LIKE most men. I OFTEN guess wrong. ON WHAT Will win. A SMILE from them. I ALWAYS say. IT'S BETTER to laugh. THAN EVER to worry. SO ONCE, when. -' THE DAM broko, and. A FLOOD hit town. I THOUGHT I d Just. ft CHEER UP my wife. ft ft ft - AND SO I said. . "IF THE worst comes. YOU CAN float down. ... THE RIVER on. ... THE- FAMILY music-box. . AND I'LL accomp.iny you. ON THE piano." ... WHICH WAS all v.rong. , .. POOR HUMOR, she said. . WAS OUT of place. ' ... IN TIME of danger. SO KIPLING was right " - "A WOMAN Is only. A WOMAN, but a good cigar. - IS A smoke;" only. . HE SHOULD have made It. ft ft MY CIGARETTES because. YOU'RE BOUND to get. A SMILE from them. THEY ALWAYS "satisfy." TAKE the silky, tender leaves of choicest Turkish ; blend them with the best Do mestic tobacco that money can buy blend them in the exclu sive, can't-be-copied Chester field way and you get a "smoke." Yes, and something more you get a cigarette that honestly "satisfies," J CIGARE T,fBS
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 4, 1921, edition 1
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