Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 14, 1921, edition 1 / Page 1
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rrn TTTTTn TM EVERY STUDENT A SUBSCRIBER EVERY STUDENT A SUBSCRIBER MID Vol No. XXX. Chapel Hill, N. C, October 14, 1921. No. 4 PLAY GAMECOCK ELEVEN AT South Carolina Ha Strong Team But Odd Favor Tar Heel Victory. Preparatory to the state champion ship clash with State the Carolina squad left Friday for Columbia for the game with South Carolina. In yiew of the fact that such an im portant contest follows so closely upon the heels of this game it can 'hardly be considered in any other light than, as a practice affair, and it is not at all probable that the j first team line-up will participate in ; the 'entire game. j Reports from South Carolina how- ever, would indicate that Sol Metzer has gathered about him one of the strongest elevens that has represent ed the Gamecocks in many a year. Last Saturday the Gamecocks de feated Newberry College by the score of 7 to 0. They appeared slightly weak on the offense, though they presented a stone wall pn the defense, and it is not probable that Carolina will run up any large score against them especially so. since Fetzer is not going to take any chances on his regular line-up. All this week South Carolina has been conducting secret practices, and is sparing no efforts in their pre parations for the coming battle. The Columbia Record however, com menting on the game, frankly con cedes the odds to the Blue and White. CAROLINA PLAYERS DECLARED ELIGIBLE YftCKETY YACK PICTURES Other Plan Are In Process Formation by Editor of the Annual. Plans for the 1921-'22 Yackety Yack, Carolina's Annual, are already well under way, according to an an nouncement made by Ed Mathews, editor-in-chief, and Ike Thorpe and Jimmy Phipps, business managers of the publication, or several weeks work has been in progress on both the business and editorial ends of the annual, and this work will con tinue throughout the college year. ' Announcement is made that the of ficial photographers engaged by the Yackety Yack this year are in Chapel Hill this week at work on the indi vidual pictures used by the seniors and juniors and others in the annual . The managers are anxious for these students to make their arrangements at once for engagements with the photographers, as they will be here this week only for the individual pic tures. "The Yackey Yack will be great ly changed this year," stated Ed Mathews, with reference to plans for the annual this year. The make-up of the book will be decidedly dif ferent, and it 4s 'the belief of the editors that the change will be wel comed by the student body with great satisfaction. -. , The two Morris brothers, Roy and Fred, Allen McGee, and "Mule" Shirley, appeared in uniform on Emerson field Tues day for the first time in several weeks. They were out for reg ular football practice after a long fight over the question of their eligibility to play here this fall. Announcement is made by the faculty committee on alhletics that the fight is won by the players, and they are declared eligible with no strings attached. Roy and Fred Morris and Allen McGee reported here in the early fall as candidates for the 1921 football eleven. After certain stories appeared in the state papers, censoring the Uni versity for allowing the three boys to play here, alleging that they were professional athletes, the Athletic Committee investi gated the charges and tempor arily ruled the boys off. It was claimed that they received money for playing baseball with the New Bern club this summer-After this action New Bern's most prominent citizens, includ ing the employers of the seven Carolina boys that played ball there the past summer, signed affidavits, sent telegrams, and appealed in person to the com mittee for a reopening of the case. This was done, and on reinvestigation, the favorable decision was reached, declaring the boys eligible. Their appearance in uniform t strengthens the Carolina team materially. Fred is one of Fetzer's best bets in the back field, McGee is a good running mate, and Roy is a sturdy line man. Shirley lacks the experi ence of the other trio, but has wonderful possibilities for development. SCIENCE AND RELIGION SUBJECT OF HESS BY DR. ALLEN FOSTER Noted Lecturer Talk to Student In Chapel and Elsewhere On Interesting Theme. INITIATIONS ARE HELD BY THE SOCIAlfTERNITIES Eighty-Three Men Taken In This Year Compared With Over a Hundred Last Year. WAS HERE SEVERAL DAYS. LAUNDRY WILL BE SENT OUT ON EACH THURSDAY G. H. Paulsen, a Student of Laundry Problem, is Manager ef The New Laundry. FRESHMAN SQUAD ISSUED S ON II Only Fifty Candidate Excused From Gym Work For Football : Practice. Eighty-three men were initiated in the social fraternities of the Unj yersity of North Carolina Monday and Tuesday nights when the annual Dr. Allen K. Foster of the Northern fratornitJr initif io"8 were helL . - - , . . , f vear over a hundred were carried Baptist Educational Board delivered through the rituals but this year the the first of a series of short ' talks number of neophytes fell far short on the general subject of science and f the hundred mark, 'religion in chapel Monday. He re-' The initiation8 followed one 0f the . tt-ii j i . . irnreb oucuuuua usuuig seasons mained on the Hill during the first , o i- n TT t i i ever known at Carolina. Pan Hel- lour days of the week, and, in ad- ienic Council rules are alleged to dition to his lectures in chapel and have been widely disregarded in the Gerrard Hall, much of his time ! was' maa rush of the Greek letter clubs taken up in personal interviews with for their candidates. Pledging and ..... ...... I talking" without regard to rules, is : students interested in religious ques-8aid ,w teken p, ace. tions; Thursday he left for Westj Following is a list of the men ini Point Military Academy, wher he ' tiated Monday night: will be engaged in the samer kind Sigma Alpha Epiilon of work among the students there. I Weldon Williamson of Asheville, . , ..... Robert Darden of Wilmington, and Dr. Fosters work, which carries ArtmjJ. of pittsbor0i him into all the principal colleges ' ., and universities of the country, con- "e"" pPa fcp",on ,. , sists in attempting to reconcile re- , 7"" "YT 7 7',, . T i,vim, r,H mn,i Monfifi LJ Ambler of Asheville, John Zollicof- !ings. In his chapel talk Monday he fer of Henderson, William H. Holder if . . i neon f Tarhoro. Srnt.h Parham of ;said that nis main purpose was to TI , ... it . Combat the idea that a man had to te" William T. Leggett of ' do one kind of thinking in the class-j oro' room and another kind in his religi- Alpha Tau Omega ous life. He drew a number of par-' Bretney Smith of Asheville, Black- allels between religion and the yari- burn Johnson of Gastonia, William ous sciences, stating that there , are ' s- Tyson of Greenville, mysterious forces at work in a! of Kpp Sigma them, but that these forces operate Bernard Wright of Greensboro, to produce certain known results.' He Charles Norfleet of Winston-Salem, mentioned physics and biology as two Larv of Philadelphia, Fa, oi inese sciences in wnicn many years of careful investigation and expert- Lineberger of Belmont, ment have failed to reveal these hid- Sigma Chi hen forces and the causes back of w- Edwin Dunn of Kinston, Wil- them. There are certa'n definite" re- liara de Scott of Graham, Law actions, he said, which the scientists ' rence Thomas of Greensboro, Wil- may always expect, though he can-'liam Jones of HiSh Point, Baxter not explain them, and the same thing ouion ot Concord, fc. a. Brown ot is true of religion. ? i Concord, Robert A. Johnston of "The Modern Man's View of the Asheville, Fred Toms of Asheville, Bible" was the subiect of Dr. Foster's James Lee of Mt. Olive, Hammond talk in Gerrard .Hall Tue-'day night. : Griffith of Asheville He cave as his definition of the mod- Sigma Nu ern man, the man who wants lo'tfft-' Ernest Preston Mangum of Kinston, derstand a thing as it is. He said that vvmiam i. uixon oi Winston, r-u- the Bible deserved the respect of Sene B- Hardin of Wilmington. modern man on account of its long Sigma Pi Epsilon and honorable history and its pure Seymour Johnson of Goldsboro, literary value, if for no other rea- Charles Aycock, Jr., of Pantego, Rus- son. Considering it then from the ' sel1 Starnes of Asheville, Joseph theological standpoint, 03 a revela- Sevier of Asheville, Harry Field of tion from God, he asserted that the , Asheville. influence of scientific criticism had Theta Chi been to strengthen rather than di- j J. B. Reitzel of High Point. minish the credibility of this view. Leta p,j He defined the Bible as "the unfold- j Robert L. Grav of Newnort News. TWENTY-EIGHTH BIRTHDAY OF THE UNIVERSITY CELEBRATED WITH AN APPROPRIATE PROGRAM WEDNESDAY L SPEAK AT BIG REUNION President : Chase ''Addresses Large Gathering in Memorial Hall on The College' Anniversary. HONORARY DEGREE GIVEN Day is Perfect and Large Crowds At tend Exercises, Including Num ber of Visitor. Head of Allied Armies to Meet With Old Hickory Veterans in Nash ville November 4. Marshal Ferdinand Foch, chief of all the allied armies in the great final drive to victory, will be in Nashville November 4, to attend the opening day of the third annual reunion of the Old Hickory Association, veterans of the Thirtieth Division. The reception committee of the American Legion, in charge of the marshal's American itinerary, has in cluded the reunion at Nashville. This will be his only visit to the South. It is also probable that Admiral former class athletic field by the David Beatty, hero of the Battle of Grand Lodge of North Carolina Mas Jutland and the chief of the British ' on,ary that body having layed the navy, will attend the reunion. Deft-! . . . . ., j. u xt. j cornerstone of the Old East building nite acceptance has not been received . , , . . 6 aj- 1 t u 1 on October 12, 1793. A procession from. Admiral Beatty, however. it. ijiVj- , " of the student body in order of the Beside these distinguished visitors, I cla88e8 formed at the Alumni build and General Pershing, eight of the ing at 12:40 a m. and headed by twelve congressional medal of honor; the student band and Garland B. men of the Thirtieth Division will also rorter president of the student body, be guests of the Old Hickory Asso- marched to Memorial Hall where it ciation Four other medal of honor f ormed a lane through which the With the weather and all auspices good and propitious the 128th birth day of the University of North Car olina was celebrated Wednesday morning, the features being a speech front President Harry Woodburn Chase, the conferring of the honorary degree of LL.D. upon John Wash ington Graham1 and the laying of the 1 cornerstone of the new dormitory quadrangle to be erected on the men of the division fell on the field of battle There were but seventy-eight con- dignataries marched into the build After the invocationi by Rev. Mr. Henry With over fifty candidates out last Wednesday, the first .year reserve football team for this year begins to assume a nromisiner outlook. Lit- tie freshmen,' middle sized freshmen j"0" of the, ind f, f Va., Al Johnson of Rocky Mount, ..... . . . !to the unfolding mind of man." The David Jackson Cooper of Henderson, - si Kin -F nro Vwm av WAia rvi nn in 71 n .. . ' . ........ 1 ' i,.b u,5 iJible, he declared, is not a book of Edgar Newby of Hertford, Dick Co in tne large nuraoer 01 can- science, and should not be judged as Mrt of Wilson. Charles McNairy of such. He urged the students to ap- Kinston, Thomas Jacocks of Tarboro. ! ply the final test of experiment, just get jnela pj 1 n r.npv wmi n in npmiT.rv or nin acrv reading the Bible earnestly and in- dence. didates, many are especially promis ing, having made reputations in high schools and prep-schools. Most ofi gressional medals of honor awarded McWhoiter and the singing of the UUilUg bllG VTUX1U Wtti. U Will of them a soldier must be more than a brave and gallant fighter. Con spicuous bravery in action is reward ed with the distinguished service cross, of which there were some five thousand awarded during the war. To win the medal of honor, however, requires "conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty in action." The medal is never awarded ex- national anthem, President Chase ad dressed the assembly. The text of his remarks follows: October Twelfth 1921. "Anniversaries in the life of an institution like this have a double significance, a two-fold purpose. We pause for a moment like the traveler who has reached an eminnence from whose height he may surely survey cept after the most searching investi-1 both the way by which he has come gation. by representatives" of iM com- and the path' that leads onward be mander in chief. That nearly one- j fore him. Our minds dwell with sixth of all the medals of honor given ! loving recollection on what is past, in the whole army should have been but they are nevertheless insistently bestowed on members of the Thirtieth fixed on the future which that past Division it itself the finest tribute has made possible. We oer our that could be paid to the division 1 tribute of reverence and affection to J. Vance of Winston-Salem, Chas. WeHnetdHv was taken ud with the 'i it- ii v t -a t oievers 01 winston-aaiem, . wimam Wednesday was taken up with the telhgently before passing judgment , www nf nwl Wil, r' rrp Pni UJJUU lb. SCRUBBY RIVES STIRS IIP CONSIDERABLE PEP issuing of uniforms. Dr. Lawson announced that foot ball will not be allowed to interfere with gym work as it did last year, only fifty to be excused from gym work. This does not mean that only' fifty will be allowed to make try- outs for the team since all freshmen! ch?' .Le.dpr ..G.!t' that desire may report for practice after completion of the gym work. Since gym comes only three times a week, this ruling will not interfere AH ton of Darlington, S. C, Alexander Cooke, Robert Wooten of Mount Olive. Kappa Alpha- Thomas H. Woodward of Wilson, Livingston Ward of New Bern, John Purser of Charlotte. Phi Delta Theta . Winton Green of Wilmington, J Harold Griffith of Wendall, Marcus Wilkinson of Winston-Salem, P. , , ,. iBoney of Goldsboro, Conrad B. "Scrubby " Reeves, Carolina cneer,Lemly er, naa the student pody Denina pj Kappa Alpha with the practice to a." great extent. I Coach Fetzer's football charges for B. E. Coggeshall, Charles Iceman Upon receipt of notice from the'all it was worth Wednesday after- Monroe, J. L. KoWass, C. j. Saw- A "pep" meeting of tha old " . V varuiiiia mcuity, rurrrsb r uiuin u Student Behind Football Eleven Pep Meeting. coach, candidates will be excused nooa from gyni work by Dr. Lawson. ' . Each candidate was required to time variety took place in the sta- winston-Salein.- djums of Emerson field, in an effort jod,, Sigma Phi file ft card stating his previous experi- of Uig Carolina cheer Leader to get Leland Edmundson of Goldsboro, ence in football and the position tbe 6tu(Jenta behind the team for the! B. A. Boles, Allen Moore of Char- which he played when in high school ,and state College. i Kappa Phi or prep school. This and his weight The Carolina yells were taught the S. W. Maxwell of Charlotte, J. W. determine largely whether he will be freshmen and were given by the large Mobley of Charlotte, C. E. Mason of selected for the squad of fifty, "No 'crowd of students present at ' the King's Mountain. . . . , . . . , I meeting Wednesday. After a num-. Delta Tau Delta students unphysically fit will be al-1 o wefe gtulenta H; k. Reynolds of High Point, Gar lowed to play," Dr. Lawson said. formed a procession and gave a snake land Coble, W. B. Waddell of Hen- The concensus of opinion among dance on Emerson field showing the derson, Eugene Rollins of Hender- which first smashed its way through the defenses of the Hindenburg sys tem at Bellicourt. " The four congressional medal of honor men of the division Who gave their lives in battle are: Robert L. Blackwell, North Carolina, and First Sergt. Milo Lemert, Tennessee, of the One Hundred and Nineteenth Infan try; Corp. James D. Heriot and Sergt. Thomas Lee Hall, both of South Car olina and of the One Hundred and Eighteenth Infantry. The eight living holders of the medal, who are expected at the di vision reunion, are Calvin J. Ward, Morristown, Tenn., Sergt. James E. Karnes, Knoxville, Tenn., and Sergt. Edward R. Talley, Russelleville, Tenn., all of the One Hundred and Seventeenth Infantry; Sergt. Rich mond H. Hilton, Westville, S. C. Lieut. John H. Dozier, Rock Hill, S. C; Sergt. Garey . Evans Foster, Inman, S. C, and Corp. John C. Vil- lepigue, Camden, S. C, all of the One Hundred and Eighteenth Infan try; and Sergt. Joseph B. Adkinson, Atoka, Tenn., One Hundred and Nine teenth infantry. Reduced railroad rates of one and one-half fare for the round trip to Nashville have been offered to mem bers of the 0?d Hickory Associa tion. Tickets will be sold on the certificate plan. Certificates may be gotten from Frank P. Bowen, Knoxville, Tenn., secretary of the association, or from headquarters at Nashville. THE CAROLINIAN FEATURED ATHLETICS AT THE COLLEGE (N. C. Collegiate Press Assn.) Greensboro, Oct. 15. The October it W V iw v. w vg-av- "O .UOllW V 141IIVt iivi4 now "III S VI'W UV1 OUIlf UgVIIW vuas IIIO V. ASSWua the upper classmen on the campus, j Carolina spirit of absolute loyalty to 1 son, C. Y. Coley of Rockingham, 8th issue of The Carolinian featured Thursday is the day set for ,coU lection of laundry, from the students for ' the University laundry, accord in; to an announcement just made. Yesterday the first collection was . made by a representative of the laun dry, and each week a collection will be made on Thursday. G. H. Paulsen, manager of the new University laundry, comes to Carolina well recommended for his work here. Laundry Age, a monthly magazine devoted to the laundry in dustry, comments on Mr. Paulsen as a 'man of high standing," and con gratulates the University in securing this student of laundry problems to manage the plant here. The new laundry system here ' is an experiment, introduced at the Uni versity this year. All students were required upon registration to pay in advance for laundry during the first term, although some students de sired their laundry done in other1 Among the distinguished visitors scrub team. Edwards, the find of the olina students left the Hill to at- the time the procession of students channels. In certain cases this will here on University Day was Hon. year, and whom many predict wilt tend tha big show. The call of th filed in Memorial hall. Plans are be done and a refund will be made Josephus Daniels, former secretary of some day be the Carolina "Buck'? canvas and sawdust is always, strong being made this year to organize a the students, according to the Vnir'the navy, and editor of The News Flowers, showed up exceedingly welj to students, no matter what age they plee club, an orchestra, a band, and versity ruling. and Observer. A" the scrimmage. maybe. pther musical organizations. is that this is the best policy, since her football eleven. Roland Eutsler of University, Va., a large number of freshmen who j. . Coach Fetzer sent the squad Frank McGloughan of Wilmington, have no chance, go out for football , through a gruelling practice in prep-J Herbert Gosham of Rocky Mount, simply escape the rigors of the gym- aration for the South Carolina game.' Kappas Pi The possibility remains however, that A first string team composed of; ' Charles E. McCollum of Norfolk, promising material may be left off many of the varsity players with the Va., Thomas Wall of Pee Dee, W. A. mary of last year's freshman work. the squad, and that these will not exception of Lowe, Jacobi, and one Lemmond of Matthews desire to take both the gym work or two others whom he will prob-; and football practice. athletics at the college. The fall term sport will be hockey and will begin in a few days. Records made by the freshmen in physical educa tion will be published with a sum- The University band played pub- ably save for the North Carolina State Wednesday was ''Circus day" in , Hcly for the first time University Day, game, scrimmaged against a fast Durham and a large number 01 Car- rendenne various selections during what has been, and we dedicate our selves anew to what is yet to be. "If this be true of all our anni versaries, it is especially so today, when we are met here to celebrate both the beginning of the malarial existence of this University, and the inauguration of a definite programme for its physical remaking. The be ginning of its material existence for one hundred and twenty-eight years ago today, William Richardson Davie, founder and father of this University, in his capacity as Grand Master of the Masons, laid the cornerstone of the Old East Build ing, oldest of the structures on this campus, the first building erected at any State institution in America. The inauguration of its physical re making for the State of North Carolina-has made possible for us a definite and systematic building pro gramme, a programme .to continue, I trust and believe, until adequate facilities are present here for eyery worthy youth of this State who shall knock for admittance at our doors. And, as a symbol of the continuity of past and future, of the University of yesterday and that of tomorrow, it is altogether fitting . and proper that the masonic rites' that dedicated, to its high purpose the first build ing that was ours, should today con secrate to the use of the youth of North Carolina the first structure which the people of the State a few months ago made possible for the service of the greater . University which is to come. - "One hundred and twenty-eight years of history! Not very long, perhaps, as the historian counts his eras, since that bright autumn morn ing when Davie, and Moore, and Haywood, and the rest, marched in solemn procession under the forest trees to the chosen site. And yet what crowded years of human ex perience lie between. Years that were to witness such a change in all the world that six centuries, not six generations, might have passed. Napoleon's first great military ex ploit was three years in the future. France was in the throes of revolu tion ; a united Germany was hardly a dTeam; Russia was carving out a great European Empire for herself (Continued on Page Four.)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 14, 1921, edition 1
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