THE TAR HEEL, FEBRUARY 22, 1921.
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CETTING THE NEWS
TO THE CAMPUS IS
A GOOD SIZED JOB
(Continued from Page 1)
on The Tar Heel yet remains to be
done. About three-fourths of the
copy is yet to come in. This is turn
ed in on the following nights, name
ly Saturday and Tuesday. It is on
these nights that the managing edi
tor sees his worst labors. Sometimes
the last article is finished at 1 or 2
o'clock and sometimes at 3. On this
night the make-up of The Tar Heel
must be completed. It must be seen
that every event of any importance
is "covered," and that every man on
the board has done his work. The
full amount of words or material
must be handed in, for the paper
must be filled up, no matter how long
into the morning it takes. The copy
must be edited to see that it con
tains no inaccuracies, errors, or of
fensive expressions. The last heads
must be written out for the printer.
All these and many other details
must be looked after by the man
aging editor before sleep can be
thought of.
Sometimes it happens that a story
is overlooked, or for some reason not
handed in. In such case a member
of the staff is assigned the extra duty
of preparing the story, after he has
already done his regular amount of
work for the week. And this is usu
ally done at a late hour, for it is not
usually known until late that the
story is not coming in on account of
the fact that the reporters do not get
all their work finished many times
until late in the night. '
At the time when some changes
were being made in the dates on
which the paper went to press, there
was a misunderstanding about the
night when the last material was re
quired to be handed to the managing
editor to be mailed to the printers.
One night at this time the managing
editor waited until 12:30 for a story
which a member of the board was
covering. At this hour, the reporter,
who did not know that the make-up
man night had been changed, had
just finished his class work for the
next day and was preparing to retire.
In came a student who was sent from
The Ttar Heel office to tell him that
it was necessary for the story to be
written that night. So there
TOMORROW WILL MAKE
THE 28TH BIRTHDAY
OF TH ETAR HEEL
(Continued from Page One)
University. Then over 60 per cent
of the student body was on the sub
scription list of the college publica
tion. Today there are over 1,400
was students at the University and not
nothing for him to do but write the half of them are subscribers to The
story or to "fall down on his job," Tar Heel.
and he chose the former. He gave j In lgg4 & blication WM
up all hopes for a good night's rest ,aunched on Hm wh-ch threaten.
anu vy c ;ou ne naa lurnea out a
1,200 word story.
sometimes about 11 or 12s o c
ed the prosperity of The Tar Heel.
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American Hat Works and First Class
Shoe Shine Parlor
Opened with a new system and service.
Viit Us When in Durham. .
203 Main St., Opposite Courthouse
ffiHBMSWEHEMSK3KISMSK3KIE53aMEMEHSK3B3H
PICKWICK
WEDNESDAY
An All-Star Cast in
"CLOTHES"
A Photodrama of The Love of Luxury and the Luxury of Love
THURSDAY
Wm. S. Hart in
"SAND"
A Typical Western Role for "Bill" Hart.
FRIDAY
Dorothy Gish in
"FLYING PAT"
A jazzful light comedy of young married life.
SATURDAY
Matinee 3:00 P. M.
"THE WORLD AND HIS WIFE"
Featuring Alma Rubens.
Night Two Show. 1
"THE GREAT LOVER"
Goldwyn Presents A Frank Lloyd Poduction.
Two Shows as Usual
Orchestra during the First Show.
MZHXHXHXHZHXHXMZHXHXHZHXHZHXHX3I3XI
SiSgiSS!S.2MaSSM3Mg5i3;S;3:;
35 years
of fine
Tailoring
Enables Kahn Tailoring Com
pany to give you a Made-to-Measure
Suit with these qual
ity requisites:
- Autheritic-y in
dividualized, style.
None hut 109 per
cent pure wool fab
rics; Excellent hand
tailoring;
And perfect fit
that conies only in
garments' correctly
made to the mea
surements of the
wearer.
Reproduced from lull 0ag mJ in Feb
I9tk Saturday Evening Post
Easter
is
March 27th
Order Your Easter
Clothes
NOW.
The Book Exchange
SAVE THE COUPONS.
.This paper was The White and Blue,
it is learned that there is a shortage. . , . ... , ,
. t , . . , . e that The Tar Heel was published
of material, and a reporter is askea ' , , . ,, . , , ... , ,. ,
j j . j only in the interests of athletics and
to get up five or six hundred words. L , ,, , . . . .
t..4. t j 4. i if u tfuceiviit e . The chief interest
the reply. "And besides, everybody
has gone to bed and I can't find out
anything."
"But that doesn't matter. We've
got to have it."
And before the make-up is finish
ed, the paper has it.
One time when The Tar Heel was
being sent to the printers in the aft
ernoon mail, there was an emergency
which caused a member of the staff
to miss his dinner on account of hav- I
ing to work from the time he came
f the new sheet was in the literary
societies which they claimed to
looter, tiut tne White and .blue was
short lived, finally combining with
The Tar Heel in March, 1895.
On May 7, 1903, The Tar Heel
published an issue printed in blue
ink. The occasion was a victory in
the second annual debate between
Carolina and Johns Hopkins, and the
defeats of Virginia, Washington and
Lee, and Georgetown in baseball.
Colored cuts of the victorious de-
EDWARD K. GRAHAM
was a PILOT policyholder and boost
ed the Southern Life and Trust Co.
Any man who enters the life insur
ance game will want such an endorse
ment for the Company that he is to
represent.
For information write the
Southern Life & Trust Company
HOME OFFICE: GREENSBORO, N. C.
CAPITAL ONE MILLION DOLLARS
off his last class until the time the i baters and the triumphant athletes
mail closed. On this occasion three
typewriters were kept going at the
same time by the editors in the
strenuous, nerve-racking work of
trying to write several hundred
words in a few minutes and under
such pressure.
All The Tar Heel work is this year
done in more of a professional
style than formerly. A style sheet
is being completed that is as elab
orate as many of the newspapers of
the state. The whole editorial force
is well organized and each man ha3
a definite part of the work tj do.
The editor-in-chief writes the edi
torials and has general supervision
were run, giving it the air of a Sun
day supplement. On December 7,
1905 a duplicate of this issue was
printed, the occasion being a victory
over Virginia in football. Again
cuts of the team, individually, col
lectively, and in action, were run.
Other important dates in the his
tory of The Tar Heel are: May 2,
1907, when a special edition con
cerning the Southern Student Con
ference at Asheville was published;
a special eight-page edition during
the Commencement of 1908 was put
out; January 14, 1911, when a special
Y. M. C. A. edition was circulated;
in 1917 when The Tar Heel ran as
1 CIGARS
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W
S
SODAS
WHITTED'S SPORT SHOP
Leading in All Sport Dope.
CAROLINA MEN ALWAYS
WELCOME.
Successor to Durham Cigar Store,
Opposite Post Office,
DURHAM, N. C.
PIPES SPORTING GOODS
When You Are in Durham send her a box of
WHITMAN'S SAMPLER
She'll appreciate it
On the Corner On the Square
THE MAIN STREET PHARMACY
of the whole paper. The work of the ! eight-page paper ; in 1919 when
managing editor has already been j th four-page pictorial section at the
described. Each of the two assist-! end of the year was started, and in
dint editors is responsible for the j U20-21 when The Tar Heel was
usual amount of worse being tuned ' converted into a bi-weekly of the
in and for each reporter covering j ordinary size and then later changed
his "run" for one of the two iss ies to the regular newspaper size.
of the week. The assignment edi
tor has charge of tbe assignments,
So The Tar Heel has successfully
passed twenty-eight years of publica-
both regular and special The re- tion and has proven itself a depend-
porters, or associate editors., each able medium for the expression of
nave a regular run to cover and spe- general news and college topics. Dur-
eial assignments in addition.
STATE QUINT SNOWED
UNDER BY CAROLINA'S
SPEEDY BASKETEERS
(Continued from Page 1)
ing this time it has grown from a
small, dingy, four-page weekly with
practically no heads to a much larger
four-page bi-weekly newspaper with
headlines and appearance equal to
that of a large daily.
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
and White came back even stronger
than in the first. During this period
State scored but four points while
Carolina was amassing 36. Woodall
and Morris were substituted for Han
by and Erwin after the 50 pink mark
was reached, and did good work aid
ing in getting 12 more for a total
of 62, the largest number rolled up
of a Carolina quint in a number of
years.
Although decisively beaten, it is
not to be said of State that she did
not put up a good game. Groome
was their individual star, registering
two fields and making good both ft.
shots. The goals registered by Park
and Deal were booth beautiful shots
from near mid-court. The Red and
White fought every inch of the way,
but with the record of a poor season
behind her she entered the game with
all the odds against her, and was
simply outclassed by the organization
that the night before nearly doubled
the score against Davidson.
To name the star for Carolina
would make it necessary to name
seven. Every man who played in
tne game played well. The number
of points scored is nearly equally
divided among the first five men, and
to the entire team goes credit for an
exhibition passing, guarding, drib
bling, and shooting that stands un
parellcled on the local court.
Line-up and summary:
Caroilna (62) State (10)
Shepherd Deal
R. F.
McDonald Williams
L. F.
Carmichael Groome
C .
Hanby Park
R. G.
Erwin Johnson
L. G.'
Substitutions: Carolina: Woodall
for Erwin, Morris for Hanby. State:
Silmerman for Deal, Leeper for
Silverman, Weaver for Park.
Summary: Field goals: Shep
herd 6, Hanby 6, McDonald 5, Carmi
chael 5, Erwin 5, Groome 2, Deal
Park 1.
Foul Goals: Carmichael 8 in 13.
Groome 2 in 2.
Refree: Stewart.
F1NCHLEY ANNOUNCES
AN EXHIBITION OF CLOTHING
AND HABERDASHERY FOR COLLEGE MEN
Mr. Frank Graham went to Bur
lington Friday night and spoke at a
luncheon of the Kiwanis Club of
that city on the educational situa
tion in North Carolina.
GOODIE SHOP
WED., THURS., FRI.,
Feb. 23, 24, 25
Jack Wilkinson, Representative
SUITS
OVER-GARMENTS
GOLF SUITS
TUXEDO AND FULL DRESS SUITS
WHITE OXFORD AND MADRAS
SHIRTS, COLLAR ATTACHED
NECKWEAR
HATS AND CAPS
FINCH LEY DESIRES TO SUPPLY YOUR REQUIREMENTS IN ACCORD WITH YOUR
OWN IDEAS OF STYLE. THE MATERIALS ARE OF UNQUESTIONED QUALITY
AT PRICES STRICTLY IN ACCORD WITH PRESENT-DAY ECONOMY DEMANDS.
CUSTOM FINISH WITHOUT
THE ANNOYANCE OF A TRY-ON
READY-TO-PUT-ON
SWot 46th. Stroot
NEW YORK
No. 369 College
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