THE TAR HEEI, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1921. THE TAR HEEL "The Leading Southern College Semi Weekly Newspaper." Member of N Association Published twice every week of the college year, and is the official organ of the Athletic Association of the University of North Caro lina, 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 mil, in. u., as seconq-ciass matter Editorial and Business Office, Room 1NO. I. 1. JW. L. A. DUllUinjr. to elect well known and awkward full backs, dance leaders, and well liked social men, managers of teams. That is the old cherished plan of the camp C. Collegiate Press us election. Almost it is tradition here. The other plan, that we would like to suggest, is perhaps a bit radical. We would like to put forward a method of procedure whereby tbe man with not quite so ready a smile or so free a friendliness but with a greater ability and willingness for work might be elected. Many of us are blind but all of us may see if we so desire. For the position we should set, each for him self, a standard and vote for the man we think would be best fitted for the position. The football team has naturally a more intimate know ledge of the managerial abilities of the two' men than the rest of the campus. Go to some member of the football team and ask him: Which of the two assistant man agers have done most for the Uni versity eleven? ' Who do you think would make the best manager? But do not stop with any one man ask several. One man might be pre judiced but tbe group will give you the truth. With that knowledge you can see clearly your way td decision. Jonathan Daniels. . . .Editor-in-Chief L D sSmmey ""Assi8tant Editors J. J. Wade. .... .Managing Editor b. n. Jjara en. .. .Assignment HJditor ASSOCIATE EDITORS R. L. Thompson, Jr. S. B. Midyette J. Y. Kerr G. W. Lankford Thomas Turner C. Y. Coley R. S. Pickens C. B. Colton G. Y. Ragsdale H. D. Duls J. G. Gullick W. C. Bourne E. H. Hartsell Marshall Y. Cooper. . .Business Mgr. A. S. Havener. . . . . , I. J. Stevenson Assistant Mgn SUB-ASSISTANTS J. V. McCall W. J. Smith A. E. Shackell W. C. Perdue W. J. Faucette A. E. Laney C. L. Smith W. S. Tyson You can purchase any article adver tised in The Tar Heel with per fect safety because everything it advertises is guaranteed to be as represented. We will make good immediately if the advertiser does not. Vol. XXX November 8, 1921 No. 11 FOOTBALL MANAGER On Thursday of this week the fall election for certain offices in the Ath letic Association, as provided for by an amendment to the constitution passed in the Spring elections last year, will be held. Most of the of fices to be filled at this time are comparatively unimportant but among them is one to be filled that should and must be occupied by man of energy and ability and that is the manager of varsity football. Of all athletics here and in all col leges, football looms largest and is more completely interesting to all students and alumni. AH of us have at heart the well being of the foot ball team and we can each one of us do a very real service for the team that will go out next year to represent the University on the grid iron if we are wholly conscientious in our use of our vote in the election that takes place on Thursday. After the Thanksgiving Day game with Virginia the men of the foot ball team will meet and choose a man to captain the eleven of the year 1922-23. They will meet and decide with a clear sightednesi born of long association with their team mates and a knowledge of the abili ties and failings of their team mates and they will not be wrong in their decision. On Thursday we will have to make a like decision and a decision on which much that the team of next year is to be will depend. Most of us will go blindly into the balloting without any brand of definite know ledge as to who is the correct man for the job and vote casually for a thing that means so very much to Carolina. I wonder if we will do this thing, as we have before, or will we all vote not for "Jimmy" Rags dale or "Dave" Sinclair but for the football team and the University of North Carolina. Most of us are blind as to the abilities of the men whom we must place at the head of all arrangements tor the well being of our team, but if we are interested in the team of Carolina we can find out such things as will make us see and see clearly. Many freshmen will exercise in this election for the first time their right of suffrage. They are particularly unfortunate for in the short time they have been here they have hardly skimmed the surface of men's values and are hardly able to judge for themselves as to the rela tive merits of the two contestants. Many sophomores, juniors, and seniors are in an even more pitiable position for after their years here they have advanced no farther in STUDENT FORUM On To Winston-Salem. All together Studes for a special train to Winston-Salem to witness the final game of the season before the Carolina-Virginia Classic Thanks giving. Get us a train "Scrubby" for this game and we will cheer the all Southern football machine to a fifty point victory over Davidson. We will redeem our defeat last Fall by piling up a big score. The student body should attend this game in a body for very obvious reasons. To see our team lead David son to the slaughter pen will actually generate pep, and create a winning spirit which will ultimately mean Virginia's defeat. It is our time to win from Virginia. We can do it; but it requires effort on the part of the students. Nothing aided so much in the winning of the V. M. I. game as did the remarkable enthusiasm evidenced by the students here on the campus before the team left for the Capital City of Virginia. In order to really become saturated with a victory over Virginia we need to see this game with Davidson Sat urday to see our team since it has put on a new winning armor. We have seen only one game this fall. and the result of that game by virtue of luck was very discouraging. To see the game with Davidson will convince us that we have the team that will send Virginia to the Dreamless Dust for quite a while. We want to show our team that we are supporting them cheerfullv and not reluctantly by attending the Carolina-Davidson game in a larger body than we even went to Raleigh. uet us the train, Scrubby. Get us a good schedule. Get us cheap rates and we'll show the VARSITY that we are the STUFF as well as they are. To see this game Satur day will do us more good than we can possibly state in words, so the battle cry is ON TO WINSTON SALEM. Whoop it up boys, and let's surprise the Salemites by taking the spoils. Iarl Y. Coley. SKETCHES By C. J. P., Jr. Gentlemen Hoboes. Gentlemen Hoboes That may or may not have been the impression created in the lobby of the aristo cratic old Jefferson Saturday morn ing when various and irrearular groups of sooty and begrimed Tar Heels began to straggle in and to lend atmosphere to the staid pluto cratic appointment of the place. Since the mvsteries of clairvovancv have not yet come within the erasD of the mere dilletante gatherer of this and that, we will never know just what was actually thought, but we will make the assertion and ve hemently that Richmond knew something was up. There are those of an older gen eration who cry out blattantly the short comings of we who now hold ascendancy in the realm of colleere. and make their dire predictions of the end of all thines. We know them, and bear with them erentlv in their delusion, and make for them these slight phrases of refutation. which we little doubt will be char acteristically shrugged away as mere rantings coming out of an unheath- ful state of youthful ennui, but nevertheless: Nearly four score Carolina men made up the "fast freight" delega tion on which the press of two states have made comment Those Carolina men wanted to see the game and they saw it. Mere matters of how and why had no effect upon their desires or decision. There must have been lurking some where among the student bodv a hunch that all would be well and that Carolina would win, anyway some seventy-five men left Chapel Hill last Friday evening for Rich mond and all of them got there in time for the game. True some of them, through lack of knowledge of the law of the road, were detoured around via Norfolk and Newnort News, but that was of no conse quence as the major purpose was ac complished, and the blue and white delegation was in full force at Mayo held Saturday afternoon. You can talk about the spirit of V. M. I. or some other kinds of spirits, and the Carolina spirit re puted to have been buried just after the regime of S. A. T. C. But this was new spirit a spirit of get there no matter what the obstacles and that is the very thing that we wish to call to the attention of older heads who say with so much assur ance that we of the present are lacking in the qualities of character istic of the past. The hobo trip to Richmond sd- pears to us as considerably more than a mere lark. "American County Life Association" at New Orleans, November 10-12. The main subject to be discussed is "The Village or Town and the Out lying County: What Should be Their Relationships?" President Chase will be away until the 11th of November to attend the meeting of the Association of State Universities at Mew Urleans. Dr. Archibald Henderson was the principal speaker at University of Virginia, November 3, at the unveil ing of the George Rogers Clark monument, presented to the Uni versity by Paul G. Mclntyre. Dr. H. H. Crane is to 'represent both College and State DeDartment of Public Welfare at the 15th annual meeting of the Southern Medical Association, Hot Springs, Arkansas, November 14-17. The Elisha Mitchell Scientific So ciety will meet November 8 at 7:30 A M., in Chemistry Hall. Dr. W. C. Coker and Dr. H. P. Venable will deliver talks on "A Visit to Lapland and to Some Old Herbaria" and "Isotopes," Fourth Quarter. Forward Dass. Lowe to Cochran. seven yards first down. Johnson six yards over right tackle. Lowe fum bled, Blount recovering on V. M. I.'s thirty-two yard line. Johnson six yards left tackle. Johnson seven yards center, Gillon three yards through center for first down. John son four yards North Carolina pen alized fifteen yards for holding bail on V. M. I.'s thirty-one yard line. Forward pass, Lowe to Johnson, fif teen yards. G-llon one yard through en lev. Lowe loses ten vards end. Lowe attempted drop kick thirty- yard line. Final Score Carolina, 20; V. M 1,7. CAROLINA ATHLETES TO HECEIVEMEAL TICKET Best Player of Each Team, Donated Ten Dollar Ticket By Gooch's Cafe. FEATURES OF THE GAME The announcements and regula tions of the High School Debating Union for 1921-22 were recently sent out to all High Schools. The query for discussion this year will be: "Resolved, That the United States Should Enter The League of Nations." THE GAME IN DETAIL (Continued from Page One.) ITEMS OF INTEREST The lighting system of the two reading rooms of the library have been improved by approximatelv one j hundred per cent. The old bulbs of 100 watts each have been replaced by bulbs of just twice that power. This ads greatly to the illumination of the two rooms and makes it much easier on the eyes of the students who study there. AT THE PICKWICK Henry Asbury Vaughan, of Winston-Salem, was initiated into the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity Saturday night. Edward Mitchell, known all over Richmond as "Okey," sporting edi tor of The Times Dispatch, and one of the best in the South, treated members of The Tar Heel board with unusual courtesy while in Richmond. Mitchell secured passes tj the game Fr oil U 1 J 1 J - ' 1 i 1 i oil wo uuaiu wiiu uesirea uiem rnnofflnfia I3n.ATV 41.. U : 1 1 . 1 nnl .wn.rA - . 1 I vv..wv-..v. j.i.ucjr, bile Ultlliailh gave M1CIII CVCIJT BBClSUHlCe pOS- star of the Broadway stage success, j sible. The entire Times Dispatch and "39 East," is coming to the screen Evening Dispatch staff showed mark of the "Pick" next Wednesday even-'ed interest in 'the Carolina students nil. : 1 1 ml pi.t. ty . .li. i . ing, the 9th, in "The Stolen Kiss.1 a Realart picture of the first magni tude. The story 19 based on the book, "Little Miss By-The-Day," by Lucille Van Slyke A stirring picture of Hindu ac tivity in British East India finely pre sented and splendidly acted, is "The Bronze Bell," a picturization of Louis Joseph Vance's notable novel by Thomas H. Irice, which will be shown at the "Pick" Thursday night. The story deals with a rebellion against British authority which how ever, is an incidental feature mere ly, for a powerful love romance dominates the action. Much of the action develops in a Hindu Temple and in America. Courtenay Foote and Doris May are in the leading On Friday, November 11th. Arm- istice day, the chief attraction at the visiting the plant. The Kappa Pi Fraternity initiated the following men into the secrets and privileges of its organization Saturday night: Zack Filmore Lone-. Rockingham, N. C; John T. Bennett, Jr., Wadesboro, N. C; and Nelson P. Liles, Lilesville, N. C. Venable two yards through right guard. Pritchard broke through. nailed Drewry behind line. Drewry punted fifty yards to North Carolina thirty-yard line. Johnson two yards through line. Bunting returned two yards. Bunting two yards throueh line. Venable three yards through center. Forward pass V. M. I grounded. Drewry punted fifty-five yards to Johnson on North Carolina fifteen-yard line who returned fif teen yards. Johnson one yard through line. Johnson twelve yards through right tackle for first touch down. Johnson two yards left tackle. Lowe two yards right end. Carolina pass grounded mid-field. Lowe punted fifty yards to Cadets' ten-yard line. Carolina was given the ball, V. M. I. ran touching. For ward pass grounded. Carolina pass grounded on V. M. I. ten-yard line Lowe alternated dropkick from Cadets' thirty-yard line. Drewrv punted sixty-five yards to Carolina's thirty-yard line. Johnson returned ten yards. Carolina forward pass blocked by Westcott. Halt up ball Carolina's forty-yard line in her pos session. Score end first half: N. C, 0; V. M. I., 0. Second Half. Hunt replaced Gray for V. M. I. Summers kicked to Johnson, who re ceived on his fifteen-yard line; re turned ball sixty-five yards to V. M I. twenty-yard line. Johnson" one yard through line. Lowe five yards for first down. Ball V. M. I. eight- yard line. Lowe, left tackle, 3 Johnson, left end, 3. Ball on V. M i. tnree-yard line. Johnson over left guard touchdowns. Blount mised by far aroal. Score N. C, 6; V. M. I., 0. Lowe kicked to Shannon on V. M. I. five-yard line. Ball returned fifteen vnrHs J Venable one; yard through center Drewry kicks fifty-five yards to Car olina thirty-yard line. Johnson re turned twelve yards. Gillon one yard through line. Lowe over cen ter for eight yard3. Johnson one yard for first down. Johnson four yards through tackle. Johnson seven yards for first down over left tackle Johnson two yards right tackle Gillon, no gain. Lowe three yards through line. Carolina lost ball on downs on V. M. I. thirty-yard line Booth replaced Hunt for V. M. I Bunting four yards, then line. Far ley fumbled on his twenty-vard line but recovered. Drewry kicked thirty yaras to lorty-hve-yard line. John son returned five yards. Ballan, V M. I., forty-yard line. Barber replaced Wescott for V that came his way. The two ends were fast in cettinp down under punts and seldom failed to throw any interference the Cadets man aged to run. The game was a positive proof that Carolina had the better team. No team could ask for a harder fight ing opponent than V. M. I. and they certainly knew football. Carolina was the class of the field and proved of the most daring exhibi tions of footLull ever seen in the South was witnessed in the last seven minutes of play when V. M. I. scored her lone touchdown. The Cadets received the ball on downs on their own five-yard line. Several new men went into the backfield, including Ryder and Faulkner. Then the fun began. Fiom their own five-yard line the V. M. I. eleven began to use the fan formation that made thejn famous last year and from then on it was a V. M. I. triumph. One out of every three passes was com pleted and they averaged 20 yards to the pass, going down the field 95 yards for a touchdown in less than lour minutes. No such passing has been seen in an opponent of Carolina. It was dar ing in the extreme to start passing from any point in their own terri tory and it was almost foolhardy to start passing from the five-yard line. It was a "Bo" McMillin stunt and deserves everything good that can be said about it. Five thousand people came Dart of the way over the James River to see the game. The grandstand was a galaxy of brilliant colors, some Carolina, more V. M. I. Many found it very interesting to watch the grandstand during time out and be tween halves. The day was perfect for football if not for open air traveling. A slight chill was in the air. makinsr an overcoat a necessity and the game fast. Mavo Island is richt in the middle of the James River and is reached from the main bridge be tween Richmond and South Rich mond. Every available nook and corner of the island was covered with To the best player on every Caro lina football, basketball and base ball team Gooch's Cafe is going to give a ten dollar meal ticket. Start ing with the present football team this will be a permanent practice. Besides giving the meal tickets, the manager, C. E. Gooch, is eoinsr to make of the right wall of the cafe an athletic photograph gallery. The picture of every man that wins one of the meal tickets will be hung on the section of the wall devoted to his sport. According to the plan presented by Mr. Gooch and accepted by the football team, every one of the three teams mentioned from now on will decide on who they consider the be3t player on that team. The meal ticket will then be given him and. a five by seven photograph of Mm procured and hung in the cafe. As time passes and these photo graphs accumulate they will form one of the most interesting spec tacles on the Hill. There will be three pictures added to the collec tion a year, in ten years the gal lery will contain the pictures of 30 of Carolina's best and by the time our sons are ready to come to the University this collection will be a historical asset. Under each picture will be a de scription of the player, his name, the date, and some such phrase as Carolina's best. Darked automobiles and for blocks each way from the bridge the streets were lined with cars. Richmond showed its appreciation of a major football game by coming to see it Football history at Carolina will never bear repeating unless the V. M. I. game at Richmond is men tioned. It was a brilliant victorv. r obtained through magnificent foot ball, and the best team won. In the grandstand Governor Davis and Mrs. Davis occupied seats on the front row. After the game Gov ernor Davis remarked to a Tar Heel reporter, "The game was a beauti fully played one, arid has made a football fan of me. I would like to have seen Virginia win of course. but I am perfectly willing to admit that the best team won." Lowe tried for a field goal twice and failed both times. Three times the Varsity came within ten yards of the V. M. I. goal line without crossing it. That B.lngs Him to Time. Jud Tuiiklns snys a woman can al ways make a man fond of his work or bis home by threatening to make him go shopping with her. 1 calculating the worthiness of men for , Pickwick, will be "While New York positions than hv tha nM tlm ' Sleens." nrnrliiad Kr IV... T n.M. . "i . ' Vj uio x1 urn but sadly not outworn, system that CorPration. There will be a mat said if . man was a ood fellow he ' iTf a"d, niht Shows " thil was the man for the job. By such 1 f 1 ot the local post , o. xy sucn of the American Legion will be ad a system we have for years continued mitted free. The Order of the Grail gave their first subscription dance of the year last Saturday night. A student orchestra rendered the music. There were several out-of-town trirls at tho function and most of the local talent, and all seemed to enjoy themselves. me dance was to be given for the purpose of buying blankets for the football team, but the Stygians had already donated them before the dance came. Miss Lula Bussbee, of Raleigh, spent the week-end with Dr. and Mrs. Charles Mangum. Dr. E. C. Branson, Professor of Rural Social Science, will attend the Fourth Annual Conference of the M. I. V. M. I. pass broken up. Laine rvo. yards over center. Laws one jard left end. Lane punted outside on V. M. I. twenty-yard line. Far ley, no gain right end. Hunting fumbled and Pritchard re covered V. M. I. twenty-yard line. Johnson center .three-yard. John son left end, 2. Johnson right end, 10. Ball, V. M. I., six-yard line. I Lowe through line Johnson two yards over right tackle.1 Gillon over for touchdown. Blount k'eked goal. Score N. C. 13: V.! 0. j Summers kicked beyond the N. C. ' goal. Lowe nine yards, right end.' Johnson one yard through line, first down. Lowe ten yards, ritrht end. first down. Gillon, one yard. J01.. j son, one yard. Quarter up. Back in N. C. possession, her fortv-flv. yard line. Score N. C, 13; V. M. Profit-Sharing Profit-Sharing In amounts ranging from $0.03 to $19.80 was paid to students on last Profit-Sharing Day If we haven't what you want we will get it for you. Coupons with candies and tobacco. -.-' Next Profit-Sharing Day Saturday November 12th 9:30 to 5:00 University's Co-operative Store. The Book Exchange "It Pays to Save The COUPONS. I Profit-Sharing Profit-Sharing