BASKETBALL SEASON OPENS TOMORROW rm I jjj Till FAYETTEVILLE AND WIN STON PLAY TOMORROW Vol No. XXX. Chapel Hill, N. C, December 9, 1921. No. 20. CAROLINA BASKETEERS TO TACKLE DURHAM T RESOLUTIONS PASSED T nr Grady Pritchard Elected Pilot Of The 1922 Football Team Football Will Be Seen No More This Season Eleven Give Away to Quint. DURHAM TEAM IS STRONG Old Man Football, with gray hair and wrinkled face moved off the stage last Saturday, and tomorrow the young and dimpled form of basket ball, will make its entrance. With the exit of football and the entrance of basketball the entire stage setting has changed, all costumes are dif , ferent, and most of the players move away to make room for others. Durham Y. M. C. A. will present a team Saturday night that will be worthy of Carolina. The game on the Durham floor will be one of the best of the season as the Y. M. C. A. ' always plays basketball and plays good basketball. The Carolina quint has been prac ticing for the past two weeks for the game tomorrow night. "Cart" Car michael, Billy Carmichael, McDonald, ' Ambler, Green, Williams, Lineburger, Brown, Marhler, Wright, and a num ber of others will wear the Carolina uniform, and from those mentioned Coach Fetzer will probably choose the team that will appear in the first of the Carolina basketball drama. Hundreds of Carolina students will . go over to Durham to see the game, ' and from all reports they will be well repaid for their time and efforts. Prospects for the Carolina basket ball season are good. Among, the names mentioned above are listed : some of the men who made the Caro lina team last year the state cham pions, regardless of Elon, and "Cart" Carmichael is listed J in Spalding's Guide as the finest forward in the South Atlantic division. vi) ; t Other fine materialis present from 1 last year's freshmen team and "Billy" Carmichael was captain of the squad year before last. . .. - Craven County Alumni Claim That There Were Several Irregulari ties in Championship Game. Chapel Hill Man Elected By Team To Lead Eleven In 1922 Has Been Outstanding and Brilliant Player In Line Well Deserving of Honor. ASKS COMMITTEE DECISION The following letter comes from N. G. Gooding, secretary of the Craven County Alumni Association, with reference to the Fayetteville- New Bern game played here last Saturday. Below the letter is a copy of the resolutions drawn up by the association: ANNOUNCED THIS JEEK Exams Begin on Friday, December 16 With All 12:40 Classes Except Accounting. The registrar's office has published the following schedule for final ex aminations: Friday, December 16, 9:00 A. M. All 12:40 classes except accounting I (HI). Saturday, December 17, 9:00 A. M. All 2:30 classes except English 31. Saturday, December 17, 2:30 P. M. Comparative Literature 4, Edu cation 63, English 31, English 121. Monday, December 19, 9:00 A. M. All 8:30 classes except Geology 21, which will be held at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday, December 20, 9 :00 A. M. All 9:25 classes. I Wednesday, December 21, 9:00 A. M. All 10:20 classes. Wednesday, December 21, 2:30 P. M. Business Law. Thursdav. December 22. 9:00 A. M. All 11:45 classes except Ac-! counting I (I) and (II) and Business Law. I The registrar requests that any errors or apparent conflicts be re ported immediately. The drawing courses will have examination periods fixed by Professor Paul. All exam- inations will be held in the regular . class' rooms used during the term: unless notice is given to the contrary. New Bern, N. C, Dec. 5, 1921. Mr. Jonathan Daniels, Chapel Hill, N. C. Dear Jonathan: In compliance with instructions of the Craven County Alumni Association, I am enclosing to you a copy of resolu tions drawn up in a meeting here tonight wtih the request that they be inserted in your paper in Friday's issue. If you are acquainted in anyway with the conduct of the New Bern Fayetteville game last Saturday, you will understand what such procedure means against the University. We are deeply sorry that the occasion for this request has arisen, but alumni here and hundreds of town people are aroused over the affair. Alumni are unable to defend the University against the tirade of criticism that has followed the episode. They are not ready to condemn her for the unfortunate thing; they are asking her to right herself in their own eyes so that they may justly defend her in the future. The view in asking that these reso- lutions be placed before the students at the University through the col umns of The Tar Heel is but to get New Bern's side of the matter be. fore a broad-minded, free-thinking group of men.- Inasmuch as the af fair took place in their own institu tion, it is our belief that they should be acquainted with our demands. j Grady Pritchard, for the past three years a tower of strength in- the Car- olina line, and during the past season the outstanding linesman of the State, was elected .Captain of the i football team for i922 while . the j team was enroute to Chapel Hill from the Florida game last Sunday. j The announcement that Pritchard will pilot the 1922 team came as no e'special surprise to the "campus or the football followers of . the State. It was predicted that he would pos sibly be elected and the general opinion is that he. will make the team a great leader. Pritchard has been playing regu lar on the Carolina varsity for three years and during that time has proven to be the fastest linesman, the hardest tackier, and one of the most "con sistent players on the team."-:. The new captain lives in ' Chapel Hill and is very popular on the- Hill. He will, of course, be at' his old position in the line next year. ' The prospects for a great team under Pritchard's leadership look brighter now than ever; before. Practically every man under Coach Fetzer this year will be back, and a wealth of new material poured into college this fall. Captain Pritchard bias fair to be the leader of one of the greatest Carolina elevens ever turned out. (Continued on Page Titfo.) NUMBER CHANGES ARE RESULT S. I. A. A. MEET Will Have Little Bearing on State Teams For the Coming Year. Elon College Third In Modified Marathon Race Elon College, represented by Mar letter, Brannock, Scholz, and Hainer, took third place in the Times-Dis patch modified Marathon race held in Richmond Saturday. Forty-eight men entered the race, athletic clubs, University of Virginia won first place, University of Rich mond, second, and Elon College third. Marlette received a silver medal i for being one of the first ten men to j finish, Out of the 48 entries the Elon men took the following places:! Marlette 10th, Brannock 11th, Scholz 13th, and Hainer 19th. j Dr. C. S. Mangum, head of the faculty committee on athletics, and Dr. A. H. Patterson, member of the same committee, returned early in the week from Atlanta where they attended the meeting of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association. Rules put into effect by the meet ing will have very little bearing on the Carolina, or state teams for the coming year. The playing of any man present on the team during the past year is not prohibited and the placing into effect the three-year rule in 1926 will not effect Carolina in the least. The three year clause in the gen eral agreement rules that a man may play one year freshman ball and three years varsity, after that he is not eligible for college athletics. This goes into effect in 1926. I No more jumping from one school to another will be allowed, but that rule goes into effect January, 1922, and is not retro-active, therefore not effective in the case of men now present at the University. The summer baseball hoodoo has possibly been cleared up forever, at least it is hoped so by all concerned. A man may play on a college team and in the summer play semi-professional baseball for expenses only. The sum fixed for expenses is $7 a day, which means that most of the baseball men will play ball all sum mer if they can make it. The ruling out of several teams in the South may affect . the sched ule being made for next season, and may have some effect on the basket ball season. V. M. I. has been included into the conference, and will do much to ward clearing. up disputes as cham pions in the South Atlantic. Last year V. M. I. clearly demonstrated they were champions, but they were unable to claim the championship un der the S. I. A. A. ruling. Post season games got it in the nck. All post season games are banned, unless permission Is given by the executive committee, and a post season game with Florida next year went aglimmering whan Florida was ruled out of the association. X IV J) J SHEIKS AND MINOTAURS THII BE DETERMINED IN THE CLASH HERE SATURDAY Pan Hellenic Council Draws up Re- Fayettevilla High School Champions solutions Favoring Abolition of Sophomore Organizations. ACTION WAS UNEXPECTED FRITZ LEIBER SPEAKS BEFORE STUDENT BOD! Famous Actor Stresses Value . of Shakespeare's Plays as Source of Entertainment. Fritz . Leiber, well-known Shake perean actor, spoke in chapel Mon day morning on the appreciation, of Shakespeare. Mr. Leiber's company played in" Durham Monday night, and the chapel committee took advantage of the opportunity to secure his ser vices for the 11:45 period. There was nothing affected or "highbrow" about Mr. Leiber. The only thing about his personal ap stock in trade for players of Shakes as being out of the ordinary was possible. Anyone who is willing to do- by saying that it was an essential for the meeting, "God's Will .With perean roles. He stressed the value of Shakespeare's plays as entertain ments, as something to go to for en joyment and pleasure, rather than as a means of development along strict ly intellectual lines. The actor told of the solution in his own mind of the problem of Hamlet's sanity. Through playing the part, he said, he became con vinced that Hamlet was neither abso lutely sane nor absolutely crazy. "Hamlet is a universal character," he said, "and in any universal char acter there is a big strain of in sanity." According to Mr. Leiber, the "bel lowing" and "mouthing" of would be interpreters of Shakesperean characters has done a great deal to turn the theater-going public against these plays. This unpleasant feature is now a thing of the past, he said. SPEAK ON 01 AND PHI Work of Literary Societies Thorough ly Presented By The Two Presidents. Forsyth County Club Plans To Entertain Winston Team When the Winston-Salem High School football team comes here Sat urday for the state championship bat tle with Fayetteville, they will be the guests of the Forsyth County Club, who will make all arrangements rel ative to their stay here. A smoker will be given to the team Saturday night by the club and everything pos sible will be done to see that their visit to Chapel Hill is as pleasant as possible. A large number of rooters from Winston-Salem are expected in Chapel Hill Saturday for the game, and the Forsyth County Club is de sirous of taking care of as many of them on the Hill Saturday night as possible, nyone who is willing to do nate one or more beds for this oc casion is asked to get in touch with Edward Scheidt, the secretary of. the club, at once. Seth Bostick, class of '24, returned to the Hill Tuesday night from his home in Charlotte, where he, has been detained since . Thanksgiving by a severe attack of tonsilities, mak ing necessary an operation fop the removal of the offending organs. The presidents of the two literary societies, C. L. Moore, Phi, and J. D. Dorsette, Di, made reports of the work of their respective organiza tions in chapel Tuesday morning, the second of a series of activities' re port to be made to the student body under the auspices of the campus cabinet. Moore reviewed the history of or ganized debating from the time of the establishment of the first debat ing society in 1795. He told of the changes that had taken place in the societies since the early days of their existence, and declared that mere debating was not the sole purpose of the literary societies, but that their work consisted in "the cultiva tion of lasting friendships and the promotion of useful knowledge." Speaking of the Phi and Di so cieties individually he compared them to two political parties, saying that the Phi represented the liberal ele ment, while the Di was more con servative. He explained the changes within the former organization by which it had been transformed into an assembly, modelled after the gen eral assembly at Raleigh. Dorsette dealt chiefly with the value of society work in present-day student life, accepting the distinction between the two as shown by the former speaker. He declared the fact that there had not been an oppor tunity to bring the work of the so cieties before the students earlier in the quarter. At a meeting of the Pan Hellenic Council of the University Tuesday the following resolutions were pass ed by a large majority: "Resolved, that the Pan Hellenic Council go on record as being opposed to Sopho more "Social Orders" and as favor ing the abolition of those now in existence, and that all members of fraternities represented on the Pan Hellenic Council are hereby prohibit ed from belonging to Sophomore Orders." For the purpose of this resolution a Sophomore Social Order is deemed to be any social organization initiat ing Sophomores, with the exception of the Academic fraternities and the German Club. This resolution was an agree ment with a former inter-fraternity agreement and a ruling of the faculty and Trustees of the University, which this Council requests be en forced. The votes cast by the representa tives of the several fraternities were as follows: For the resolution : Beta Theta Phi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Chi, Kappa Alpha, Alpha Tau Omega, Pi Kappa Phi, Delta Sigma Phi, Theta Chi, and Sigma Phi Epsilon. Against were: Delta Kappa Episilon, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Those not voting at this meeting were Kappa Sigma, Sigma Nu, Zeta Psi, Phi Delta Theta, and Delta Tau Delta. These last will be given until Saturday to cast their vote. The matter of Sophomore orders was first brought to the attention of the University in 1905 at which time the fraternities, urged by the faculty, agreed to attempt to have them dis continued. The Board of Trustees passed resolutions to this effect, and, the Sophomore Orders which were then in existence in the University of East, and Winston, Western Champions, Play. BOTH FIGHTING TEAMS (Continued on Page Two.) FOOTBALL ELEVEN HAD N Enthusiastic Reception Was Accorded Tar Heels, Who Came Home Heavy Laden. ELEM OFFICERS Regular Program of Debate Carried Out Following Election of Officers. The Freshman Debating Society elected officers for the winter quar ter Monday night, that being the last meeting until after Christmas. J. M. Saunders- was elected president; L. T. Rogers, vice president; F. G. Rob inson, secretary-treasurer, and J. S. Blair, chaplain. The query, "Resolved, That the government of the United States is superior to that of Great Britain," was debated and decided by vote of the society in favor of the affirma tive. ' Philips-, Gudger, Saunders and Colling upheld the affirmative, while Blair, Rogers, and Coates defended the negative. The Carolina football team return ed from Jacksonville Monday morn ing very much enthused over the re ception given the Tar Heels in the Florida metropolis. Banquets, pa rades, dances, and other forms of amusement kept the entire team busy from the time they arrived Friday ur.t'A the team pulled out late Satur day night. Trophies of various kinds, ranging from the ordinary bottle in which they store "Roseneer Wine" to cases of prize stuff, costing many shekels and much trouble getting it back. The Florida fruit juices, always fa mous, have grown more so on the Hill since the return of the. victors. Friday night the alutrrii of both institutions in .'ncksonvilla gave a dance for the team, and chc mem bers of the said team danced two dances and went to bed under orders from Coach Fetzer. Saturday morning the whole city turned out to witness the Florida Caroiina parade, in which hundreds of cars, flying Carolina and Florida colors, took part. After the game Saturday a dance was given at the Windsor hotel for the team, and the whole team took part until the dance was over Sunday morning. The team left the winter resort early Sunday morning and came into Chapel Hill Monday at noon. The Atlantic Coast Line Railway sent a man with the team and the company did everything possible to make the trip a success. Among the team, wise and other wise, one man carried his palm beach suit and wore it the entire time he' was in Florida. Among other things this self same man did was to visit the ostrich farm and ride one of the long-legged birds. He had his pic ture taken also. Alligators have become common around the Hill since Monday. Over, a half dozen of the young things were brought back and have become cen ters of attention. , East will meet West on Emerson field Saturday when Winston-Salem battles Fayetteville for the State High School championship, Winston holding the title for the western part of the state and Fayetteville beating New Bern for the eastern section honors. Two teams that have taken their places through sheer fighting will meet, and the team that fights hard est on Emerson field will be the State High School champions until Decem ber 11. 1922. The Carolina student body has seen Fayetteville, fighting a bigger, and really better team to a standstill, they have seen Fayetteville's fleet back field carry the ball 50 yards on four plays for a touchdown, and they kns v what to expect from the fighting Scotch. Winston is the unknown quantity of the game. They come after having defeated the best teams in the west ern part of North Carolina, and press accounts of games show that i.he western part of the state puts out real football machines. Ashevillfi, Shelby, Monroe, Greensboro, and others have gone down in defeat for Winston to be able to come to Chapel Hill, and all these teams have good coaching and fine records. The game between the two teams marks the absolute ilose of football so far a sCarolina is concerned. Bas ketball will have taken its place. The entire student body is expected to turn out for the gum? and root for the two teams, the rivalry between the western part of the state and the eastern section has always been In tense, both in athletics and in liter ary activities. No effect will be made to forecast a winner. Such would be folly, be cause everybody thought New Bern would win from Fayetteville except some few men on the Hill who have 4 hunches, and several hundred Fay etteville people who drove over muddy roads to see the game. . The Fayetteville crowd will be (Continued on Page Two.) S YELLOTT WHITES BEST CHRISTMAS CHEER Prize Offered For Best Carolina Christmas Sentiment Won By Woman Student. Miss Mary Yellott is winner of the prize offered by the Seeman Christmas Agency of Chapel Hill and the University for the best sentiment pearonce which attracted attention mas time. The prize consisted of five dollars in cash and a set of fifty handsomely engraved individual Christmas cards. Copies of this sentiment are being put on cards and will be placed on sale at several places in Chapel Hill and throughout the state in the form of Carolina's own Christmas greeting sentiment. Serving on the committee which decided the contest were Professors Koch, Hibbard, and Graham. The winning expression is as follows: "Sure the Long Leaf Pine is the Christmas sign And a sign of right good cheer. So a bit I'll send to a good old friend. Just to say I wish him here. This spray of green for good cheer I mean And more, dear friend o' mine, 'Tis a friendly hand from the Christ mas Land The land of the Long Leaf Pine." The design is to have a spray of green from the long leaf pine in the upper left-hand corner of the card. The Carolina debating team, com posed of T. L. Warren, W. E. Hor ner and F. A. Grissette, left the Hill yesterday for Philadelphia where they will debate the University of Pennsylvania team in the annual inter-collegiate contest between the two universities. f i f i i f : t 1 ! (