Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 3, 1922, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE TAR HEEL, FEBRUARY 3, 1922. THE TAR HEEL "The Leading Southern College Semi Weekly Newspaper." Member of N. C. Collegiate Pre 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 Postofflce, Chapel Mill, N. C, aB second-class matter. Editorial and Business Office, Room No, l, Y. M. U. A. Building. J onathan Daniels ... . Editor-in-Chief C. J. Parker, Jr. Lb V. summey . . , J. J. Wade.... . B. H. Barden. . , "Assistant Editor , . Managing Editor Assignment Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS R. L. Tkempson, Jr. L.. B. Midyette J. Y. Kerr Thomas Turner R. S. Piekens G. Y. Ragsdale J. G. Gullick E. H. Hartsell G. W. Lankford C. Y. Coley C. B. Colton , H. D. Duls R. L. Gray, Jr. J. L. Apple Marshall Y. Cooper. A. S. Havener. . I. J. Stevensea . .Business Mgr. Assistant Mgr. . 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. ? clear the "that's where my money goes" of the campus. One other thing remains. It would be well for Swain Hall to publish a like state ment of its operations. Not so marked as the discontent that was about the inner workings of the Book Exchange are the dis satisfactions that come from those who board at Swain Hall. This is not so wide a question, as it does not affect the half of the University who board elsewhere. - . Nevertheless we would like to sug gest that while the University man agers are making statements as to the financial operations of its various co-operative activities that one be made of the workings of Swain Hall which affect almost a great a part of the student body as the Book Exchange. SKETCHES R. L. T Jr. Contributions for this column are more than welcomed, the Editor will consider anything. Address " all copy to R. L. T., Jr., Box 23. UNCLEAN! UNCLEAN! Vol. XXX February 3, 1922. No. 29 BOOK EXCHANGE STATEMENT. Sometime early in the year The Tar Heel echoed the sentiment of the campus in voicing certain un satisfactory condition that seemed to be present in the operation of the Book Exchange. The Tar Heel at that time suggested as a remedy for the discontent, so evident among the member of the student body, that the Book Exchange publish in the columns of The Tar Heel a statement concerning its operation. The Tar Heel is happy that it will be able to publish such a statement in an early issue. The president and the business manager of the Univer sity have accepted- the suggestion of . The Tar Heel and within a week or two it will be ready for publication. This action will do much to clear up any misunderstanding on the part of the student body and should help . materially in bringing about a better feeling between the student and the power that be. To publish this statement will be one of the happiest duties of the editor of The Tar Heel and with the rest of the University tbey are looking forward with con fidence in the belief that the state ment of the business manager will . make for a more certain understand ing and a closer co-operation. For the second time the president of the University has issued a state ment to the people of the State as to the statu of the "Tar Baby," in which he most emphaticly states that the "Tar Baby" is in no sense of the word a publication of the Uni-1 versity of North Carolina. It is very j proper that he should do this. The ..tt ..lun litis tr.fj.1lv unworthv frartla ant.t.rtiinrlr.rf Kir rirjavofta efnmna magazine should be told and retold coffee s thoge who cho()se Gooch's. A stranger coming to Chapel Hill for the first time and taking in the highly diverse scenery of the busi ness section of our adopted city would on looking; at Gooch's Cafe, think that he had come in contact with the reg ulation marble topped table restau rant that is in every town. But as is the wont of strangers, he would be mistaken. Gooch's is by no means the regular cafe, it is an institution, it is the University's coffee house and the center of Chapel Hill's wild night life. . In Gooch's more than in any other dace can be seen the University in . m!n iniivn ITawa .ImfwAan d-la V i-v lifCs. " uuutakui juviCf vcvn ecu wis v ui of 10 and 2, come all types. There perched on the counter with his knees drawn up under him and drinking a glas of milk is the student. Grouped around that table are the percipitents of a late card game discussing the whims of dame fortune and the wis dom of Foster and Hoyle. Wandering around the place, with an outward air of bragadocio and an inward fear of law and order, is the Freshman Drunk who watches the door for possible student councilmen. And at another ITEMS OF INTEREST - W H. Bobbitt, permanent presi dent of the class of '21, spent Tues day on the Hill. Mr. Bobbitt is .at present practicing law in Charlotte. ; Prof. M. C. S. Moble, dean of the school of education, delivered a lec ture today at Wendell on the sub ject, "Community Spirit in the School." STEER CLEAR. There's a committee a-workin' here boys, They's all got their heads together To teach us how to conduct ourself In any kind o' weather. For to teach us polite manners, . To give us the polish of the rich; The right way for to hold our forks ; Whether to use "what" or "which." Don't you listen to their barkin When they tells you what to do; It'll shore corrupt your morals, An' make a Willie out o' you. I'm glad manners ain't contagious, Cause I'd have 'em you can bet I've et longside a fellow's gottem Three years and I ain't caught 'em - yet. .. T CHAPEL GETS APPLAUSE Dr. Patterson Explain Nature of Marionette Show to Clear Up Misapprehension. JEWISH RELIEF FUND Perhaps no .other people have so suffered and are now suffering more than the Jew of Russia and South eastern Europe. To alleviate in some manner the dreadful situation of these unforunates the Jews of Amer - ica are carrying on a splendid cam paign for their relief. The fund for the help of their own people in the devastated lands of Russia is being raised under ' the direction of the Jews of this country but the great campaign for the relief of these starving people is too great a thing to be the work of a single race- or a single creed.' . All America must feel the tremendous appeal of these broken people who have no hope than the great heartedness of the people of America. The Jewish Relief Fund campaign comes to us after many other drives for money for many great purposes. Yet this drive has about it a human stppeal that will touch the splendid sympathies of the American people in such a way as will do much to better the unhappy conditions of these peoples who are dying in the terrible cataclysm that has made the southeast of Europe a place of chaos, plague, and famine. SWAIN HALL. When the Book Exchange pub lishes a statement of its operations much will bave been done to make name of all Carolina. until no person within the whole breadth of the State can possibly fail to know it for a cheap and vulgar sheet selling its filthy wares under a lying badge of University sanction. In the present case the statement is made primarily to the High Schools of North Carolina. Recent ly those who are in charge of this "Tar Baby" sent out to the High Schools of the State a letter con cerning the publication of The High School Number of the magazine. That letter bore the line of "the University of North Carolina" and that the schools of the State might not act under any misapprehension the president of the University has sent to those in charge of these schools a letter stating in no un certain terms the exact status of the sheet whose only reationship to the University is that in Chapel Hill they carry on their work of copying the low wit of all writers of the vulgar and the cheap. It is almost inconceivable that a magaxine beginning in the burst of very real success that first attended it could sink a low as the present publication. Consistently it has in sisted in printing the filthy, con sistently it has coupled its name with the dishonest methods of certain men connected with it, consistently it has been low and rotten and of questionable honesty. Much of its material has been boldly copied from other magazines. Men con nected with the corporation bave left trail of bad checks all over North Carolina. The places of printing has been changed several time once at least because the corporation was markedly alow in the payment of bills. Stock in the corporation has been sold at meetings of University alumni who were not aware that the magaxine was in no manner an organ of Carolina. Many of these mis deeds the corporation places at the door of one of it former officer who is now sought by the law for bad checks passed by him and cer tain other crimes of which be is guil ty. Be this a it may, a man or a corporation is known by the company it keeps. 4 The University is determined that none shall judge - it by the ' "Tar Baby." The word that there is no relationship should be sent to all North Carolina.' , The stockholders of the corporation, many of them men of high standing in their communi ties and their state, should feel the same repulsion at associating the wealth of their names with such a paper. Tbey should call for a state ment from the corporation. Belief here is that the corporation is on the verge of bankruptcy and that any demand by the creditor would (end the whole fabric of filth into failure. That is the best course. Let the whole structure of it be destroyed that a new, better, and cleaner thing may be reared out of its ruins that may not only be an organ of the Uni versity but a credit to the great to consider themselves the "Inteli gentry." Gooch's is a great place; it would pay you to know it. Fish and Bones. The other day while we were trav eling from Greensboro to Durham, we heard a peculiar argument in a smoking car. Two men were talking about the Darwinian theory. One man said to the other, "Why you don't believe you came from a fish do you?" The other man answered, "Well I would sooner believe that than think my wife came from a rib." A fat old man in the corner who was getting tired of the argument broke in, "Aw can the gab, you are both poor fish and both bone-heads." AT THE PICKWICK j ; ; ; TELL HIM NOW. If with pleasure you are viewing any work a man is doing, If you like him or you love him, tell him now; Do not withhold your appreciation, till the parson makes oration, And he lies with snowy lilies o'er his brow. For no matter how you shout it, he won't really care about it, He won't know how many teardrops you have shed; If you think some praise is due him, Now's the time to slip it to him For he cannot read his tombstone, when he's dead. More than fame and more than money is the comment kind and sunny, And the hearty, warm approval of a friend; For it gives to life a savor, makes you richer, stronger, braver Gives you heart, and hope, and cour age to the end. Patrons of the Pick will have a chance to see the old truism of "The If he earns your praise, bestow it, The University orchestra appeared in chapel for the second time this quarter and as usual was greeted with enthusiastic applause by the students. The program consisted of two num bers: "Overture, The Light Cavalry" and "Song of India." The latter se lection, Professor Wiegand announc ed, was played by special request Prof. A. H. Patterson made a few minutes' talk, explaining the nature of marionettes. This, as he explained, was to clear up doubt in the minds of some students who were uncertain as to whether the attraction offered by the Playmakers Friday night, Tony Sarg's Marionettes in "Rip Van Winkle," would be worth going to see. . DAVIDSON WILDCATS DEFEAT WOFFORD BY SCORE OF 30-21 Davidson, Feb. 1. The Davidson Wildcats won a hard fought and at times rought basketball game from Wofford here last 'night by a score of 30 to 21. The Wildcats were somewhat handicapped due to the long lay-off on account of mid-term examinations. Captain Crawford and Mauze played a Bpectacular brand of bas ketball for Davidson. The defensive work of Lindsay and Rogers was the outstanding feature of the South Carolinians' play. Davidson really won the game in ine nrst nan wnen tney ran away from their opponents, the period end ing with the home team leading, 17 to 7. versale Delia Lingua Italians. Ramsay, William: Gases of the At mosphere. Robertson, John M.: The Problem of Hamlet. Rowe, Nicholas : Dramatic Works. Sargent, Charles S. : Silva of North America 14 v. Tarkington, Booth: The Country Cousins. . Whitman, Walt: Uncollected Poetry and Prose. Baker, Ray P.: History of English Canadian Literature to the Confederation. Bakahy, Alexander! The Path of the Modern Russian Stage. Cohen, Octavus R.: Highly Colored. Committee on the War and Re ligious Outlook Missionary Outlook in the Light of the War. Croce, Benedetto: History: Its The ory and Practice. Dixon, Thomas: The Man in Gray. Eddy, Sherwood: Everybody's World. Fleming;, Daniel J.: Marks of a World Christian. Fosdick, Harry E.: The Meaning of Faith. , Fosdick, Harry E.: The Meaning of Service. NEW BOOKS. ODE: TO SMOKE first five years are the hardest," por trayed in real life, which is an actual reflection of real life, when the Gold wyn picture, - "Dangerous . Curve Ahead," by Rupert Hughes, comes to the local show house on Saturday evening. Miss Helene Chadwick, call ed the "most photographed girl in America," has the principal role, and she is ably supported by Richard Dix, "Lefty" Flynn, of Yale athletic fame, TSdythe Chapman and others. ' The story of the play concerns the: early married life of a small-town girl who was the belle of her com munity before her marriage to an easy going domestically inclined hus band. Inwardly chafing under the restraints imposed by the cares of her home, and the rearing of her two. children, she seizes the first oppor tunity to taste again of the butter fly life in society, while her husband is away on business. How she avoids the dangerous curve, and is brought to her senses by the illness of her little child, eagerly resuming the yoke of domes ticity, is dramatically portrayed. One of the best Paramount pic tures made by the Paramount cor poration in England, will "be shown at the Pickwick on Monday evening. It will be "The Bonnie Brier Bush," a picturization , of the Rev. : John Watson's famous novel, "Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush," published some twenty-five years ago. The story gives wonderful homely and intimate) pictures of Scottish village life, and at the same time, by way of contrast,' contains scenes of . almost feudal splendour, showing how a Scottish nobleman of the old school enter tained his tenantry and the gentry of the surrounding country. It is if you like him let him know it Let the wofd of true encouragement be said, Do not wait till life is over and he's underneath the clover, For he cannot read his tombstone, when he's dead. Anonymous. "Sonny" Graham Celebrates Birthday With Snow Fight. "Sonny" Graham, only child of the late Edward Kidder Graham, observ ed his tenth birthday last Tuesday at the home of Professor Louis Graves. A splendid snow battle, be tween sides chosen from the 25 boys who were his guests, was the feature of the occasion. It is a rather re markable co-incidence in this latitude that last year he was able to observe his birthday in the same manner the lone snow of the year being upon the ground on the date of the oc casion. After the battle, in which I!tory was loudly claimed by botli aides, re freshments were served. All the guests were unanimous in their ex pressed sentiment that "Sonny" have many more happy birthdays. WEEK'S TRIP TO FLORIDA Dr. S. P. Canon, Secretary of the American Council of Education, . to Visit University. By Meade Feild. We've heard about fogs in London, As thick as the blackest night. We've heard of Saharah's sandstorms, That blot out creations sight; But the tales we heard were told by a bird Who never came out our way, For the smoke that comes from the power plant domes, Sends chickens to roost all day. We've read about Polar regions, And marveled their customs queer, Where twilight runs for six long months, And the sun never gets real near; But look my friends where, tyiat smokestack ends, Relinguish your wonders all, For the truth you'll grant, that a big power plant, Makes bright mid-day, nightfall. We've watched the destroyers smoke screen, As it hugs the ocean swells, And surely thought that so much stuff, Belonged to the Seven Hells. But now who will dare such sights to compare, With the smoke screen down our way. For the smoke that comes from the power plant domes, Sends chickens to roost all day. NEW BOOKS. Dr. H. W. Chase is spending this week in Florida. He went more for a pleasure trip than for any busi ng nf t.h fw .mpn tit flt :negs interests. However he is in corn- relies for ita anneal on fine ehar-Pany and in conference with Presi-i rt.AriAtion and human Interest. nd dent Murphy, of the University of it is unique; for it is a story without Florida. nd Dr. S. P. Capen, eecre- a hero and without a villain. Donald i UA "lc uncu oi r-au- Crisp, the producer, plays the im-!cation- , portant role of the stern, rigid elder Dr- Chase expects to have Dr. of the "kirk" whose sternness all but Capen here from Feb. 10 through provokes a tragedy in his own home. H- When on the Hill he will not Mary Glynne, popular with American ; give any lectures but will confer with motion picture fans, has the part of the faculty committee and will at Flora, his daughter. The principal tempt to learn the machinery of the principal college organizations with Barrowcliffe, M., and Carr, F. H.: Organic Medicinal Chemicals. Bogardus, Emory S.: Methods of Training Social Workers. Brown, Philip A.: The French Rev olution in English History. Church, George E.: The Aborigines of South America. Gollancz, Israel: The Middle Ages in the Lineage of English Poetry. Henderson, Bernard W.: The Study of Roman History. Herman; Melville: Moby Dick. Herman, Melville: Typee. Home, John: Works. Maeso, Carlos M,: El Uruguay a Traves de un siglo. Petrocchi, P. : Novo dizionario Uni- Aesop: Aesop for Children, Pic tures by Milo Winter. Baker, Arthur E.: Concordance to the Poetical Works of Alfred Lord Tennyson. Bates, Katherine Lee : Once Upon a Time; Pictures by Margaret Price. Clark, Edwin C: History of the Roman Private Law. Duhem, Pierre: Le Systeme Du Monde. Fabre, J. H. C: Souvenirs Ento mologiques. Foye, J. C: Handbook of Mineral ogy. Grill parzer, Franz: Werke: Criti cal edition. Herbart, Johann F.: Sammtliche Werke 19 v. Hornblow, Arthur: History of the Theatre in America. Mead, Frederick S. : Harvard's Mil itary Record in the World War. Mother Goose: illustrated, by Kate Greenaway. Patri, Angelo: Schoolmaster of the Great City. Reid, Gilbert: A Christian's Ap preciation of Other Faiths. Saccardo, P. A.: Sylloge Fungorum 13v. Smith, E. Boyd: The Circus. Smith, E. Boyd: Seashore Book. Smith, E. Boyd: Farm Book. Stevenson, R. L.: Child's Garden of Verse, illustrated by Jessie Wil cox Smith. Sonneck, 0. G. T.: Early Opera in America. Sonneck, 0. G. T.: Miscellaneous Studies in the History of Music. Thayer, Alexander W.: Life of Ludwig van Beethoven. BROADWAY CAFE Student Headquarters Greensboro, N. C. DURHAM BUSINESS SCHOOL Offers: Standardized accredit ed courses, including short hand, typewriting, bookkeep ing, etc. ; Inspect at Patterson Bros. PIPES yff f etoppar v. Inthentem .X y atop all N- moisture ' Agents far tin Vn'tUd Slain and Canada CROSVENOR NICHOLAS & CO., Inc. 12 Eart 48b Street New York CitT scenes were photographed in land and are most beautiful. Scot- The Center of Population.. The center of population Is the cen ter of gravity of the population of a country, each Individual being as sumed to have the same weight ' In the United States the center of popu lation bat followed the parallel of 39 degrees latitude and has moved In a westward direction during the last 125 years. a view to giving them information for improvement and of the system at other universities, and also of getting knowledge of the University's system of education and organization so as to pass it on to some other college. Duration of Moon's Eclipse. , A total eclipse of the moon may last as long as one hour and forty-five tnlnutp. IHXMZHZHKHXMZHZHZHZHXHZHXHXHXHZHXMXHZHXNZHZHXHXMXMXHl PICKWICK THEATER NEXT WEEK MONDAY "The Bonnie Brier Bush" . A Paramount Picture. TUESDAY ""FfrsNaional Picture" WEDNESDAY "TwoKindTo Women" Tuimcnsv . A Robertson-Cole Picture. THURSDAY "Way Down East" rnm.v ... By D. W. Griffith. FRIDAY "A Certain Rich Man" .A Hodkinson Production. CATimriiv r. A SgWwyn Graphic. SATURDAY "For Those We Love" A Goldwyn Picture m And a Larry Semon Comedy. MATINEE 3:30 NIGHT 6:45 and 8:00. S3 H M n s N S3 M S H S M M X H S M M H H IXHZMXHXHXHXNXHXHXMXHXMXHXMXHXHZHXHXHZHXHZHZHZHZMZMZHX
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 3, 1922, edition 1
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