The Leading Southern College Semi- Weekly Newspaper" ; ' Member of 1 N. C Collegiate Association Press Published twice every week of the col lege year, and is the official newspaper of the Publications Union of the Uni versity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C Subscription price, $2.0Q local and $3.00 out of town, for the college year..- :-'' ''-. " ;; Offices on first Building. floor of New West Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C J. M. Saunders J. H. Lineberger ', ,, Editor . Butinett Manage: H. N. Parker . W. S. Mclver W. B. Pipkin . . Managing Editor .Attittant Editor Attittant Editor Repohtem . M. M. Young L. A. Crowell E. S. Barr W. T. Peacock F. P. EUer R. B. Raney C W. Bezemore W. T. Rightsell ' James VanNess Spencer Murphey t G. E. Wilkerson J. M. Sartin .. W. N. Cox " Lucy Lay J. T. Madry B. C Wilson v C. A. P. Moore ' E. R. Patterson ' Julian Busby j J. E. Parrior Anyone desiring to try out for the Busi ness Staff apply to Business Manager. You can purchase any article adver tised in The Tar Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver tises is guaranteed to be as repre sented. The Tar Heel solicits adver tising from reputable concerns only. Saturday, October 11, 1984 PARAGRAPHICS The freshman team looked real in pressive at times yesterday. Here's hoping that the varsity eleven can pull some pretty gains for points this afternoon. The whole University student body rejoiced over the . outcome of the , world's series. A rousing welcome is expected to greet Mule Shirley, Caro lina s contribution to the winning Washington club, upon his visit here. . Rumors are abroad that the Carolina Magazine has been converted into tri-yearly publication. At any rate the board should try to get it out every once in a while.,. Announcement comes that it will come out on Friday, but the announcement fails to say which Friday. ' 1 1 '. Now that the Buccaneer has ap peared and showed its quality, the Alumni Review issued and displayed its wares, the campus is awaiting the ar rival of the Carolina Magazine and the Tacketg Yack. 'Also the Intramural Sport Gram is being published regu larly. It should be stated that the articles in the Open Forum column must be ac companied by a name not just ini tials. The writer may request the edi tors to leave off his name in print and put the initials, but the name must be known to the editors before the article gets in the columns of the paper. . a . Grail dance officials are calling atten tion to the fact that the Grail dances will be kept up to the standard of last year. They claim thattfio disorderly conduct or drinking will be tolerated at the dance tonight. This is a matter that is made necessary by the regula tions placed upon the Grail by the vigi lance committee of the German club. ' ;:.: ,;; CARRYING THE UNIVERSITY TO THE STATE. One of the greatest departmental growths of the University in the past several years has been the Extension Division, yet this division of the Uni versity has received less credit and less acknowledgment for its develop ment probably than any other depart ment of the institution. i The question of whether it is better to educate the several hundred stu dents of the state who come to Chapel Hill than to carry the work of the Uni versity to the people of the state is no longer discussed except by an unpro gressive minority. . The Extension Di vision has proved that both are possi ble and at the same time it has ex panded its service to the state very widely in the very years that develop ment within the student body has been at its highest point. The term "University of North Caro lina" has come to mean more than an institution located at Chapel Hill in the county of Orange, It has come to mean a progressive spirit in educa tional circles throughout the whole state. The Extension Division is car rying its work forward in rapid strides. Large numbers of correspondence stu dents have been enrolled as non-resident students. These individuals are students of the University just the same as residents of the campus. They have advantages offered them through the correspondence courses and exten- something which most of us haven't. He sion classes that well nigh reach those impressed the Washington managers offered on the campus itself at Chapel with it down in Florida during Spring HilL As a matter of fact there are ad- training. -He has pepped his way to the vantages to correspondence work that I hearts of thousands of Washington are not to be had in any other kind baseball fans. He has that something of study. Today a person can take the equiva lent of a year's work on the Hill, and be off the HilL Teachers are enabled to secure degrees that would other- which will keep hirn In. the game for a long, long time. Mr. Shirley may become the star first sacker in the league. But in spite of his wise never be received. Literary clubs I present fame and in his potentialities and organizations receive invaluable I along that line, it will be many a day held from the University through its I before I forget the time he ran out on extension service. Several full time pro-1 the field to substitute In a game! of foot fessors- and agents are employed by I ball played with Davidson College back this branch of the University to carry! in the 'year 1923. on its' work throughout the state. . ! I R Some time back we ran across a defl-1 our football team played a worthy nition of a college which we clipped Bame of ball against Yale last Satur- out and here quote: "It is the purpose day. You have every reason to be of the College to provide a selected satsified with the showing they made group' of men with a comprehensive up there. " It was a different team from background of information about the I the one which opened the season three world 'and its problems, and to stimu- weeks ago. It was very good to watch. late them to develop their capacity for I The Bulldogs did not run through your rational thinking, philosophic under-1 team. They had to play real football to standing, creative . imagination, and I win.: Of course they got; the big break aesthetic sensitiveness, and to inspire! of the game. The other touch downs were fought for. Your team played good ball under the circumstances. them to use these developed powers in becoming leaders in service to so ciety." The definition struck our eye as be ing very good, but yet it does not cover the field of a university. The Speaking of circumstances, this is what the sports writer for one of the New York papers told me between difference, we believe, lies in the duty halves.; He said: "I always feel sorry of the university carrying "rational I for a Southern team playing up here. thinking, philosophic : understanding, In the first place you are never at your creative . imagination, and aesthetic best. You ride a thousand miles, your sensitiveness" to the masses in so far men are train tired, have dust colds as is possible. We see in the field of I end haven't time to get back your foot- me extension division mis opporiu-1 Dau legs oetore tne game. You are nity. We feel proud to lay claim to I playing against the best coaching in such a divsion that has made such I the world, you are in an entirely differ' huge strides towards the attainment of I ent football atmosphere and you have the goal stated in the above definition J been beaten for years." That man knew on a universal plane. . , let what he spoke. ' . r -; So we take this opportunity to praise I : ; S ' tne work of this part of the University Several of the state papers have been and also to make an appeal to stu- telling how Yale played her substitutes dents to consider and learn more of Jm the second half. They did that very ine program ana plans or tne great- thing, but most of the subs were from er University.' Following the Ball With Jtx Cox RHYMES OF A GROUND KEEPER My tongt 1 tune to another ttring, No more of ball player) do 1 ting, For the morning dew it cold, An' the frott it on the pumpkin, My field it full of football boyt, Sweet to my edrt'it that toothing noite Of line buckt, tignalt and puntin'. ' -V- -. It feels' kinder good to be slinging it through a sports column to boys again. I tried t hold put., this year but my last year, readers began to clamor and pester me., to write them some sporting news 'til ' I began to feel the obliga tion. ' For instance, one night both of them accosted me in front of the drug' store and demanded immediate service. So here goes. - , H Did you know that The University had three former stu- dents in the Major Leagues this past season. . They were, Larry WoodalL alternat- tag first string catcher for the Detroit! Tigers. Mule Shirley, substitute first baseman wit,h the Washington Senators. Red" Johnson, substitute third base-l man with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Yale's last year freshman team. 'That I team, another sports writer told me was the best he ever saw on a Freshman field. You might remember that , they won from the Harvard Freshmen 65 to 0. Can you comprehend what that over whelming score means to this year's Yale team. Think it over, fellow, think it ; over Harvard Freshmen 0, Yale Freshmen 65. - There is something fascinating in a trip to the Yale campus. My interest to the place dates, back, a dozen years or so I used to read in books about the Merrywell. boys, Frank and Dick, I be lieve. These chaps played everything up there from football to baseball, they picked up on the side, letters in soccor, tennis, swimming, hockey, roller skat ing, bowling, and Lord knows what else. They played everything they had up there, but, to the best of my memory they didn't go on class." Any way the man qidn t say anything about stuaies. Oh, yes, Yale is a great school. Think I will run a special train up there some day to give every man, woman and child connected with the University a chanc to look the place over. the Today We play Trinity. This will mark our new start in State football affairs, Trinity has shown that she has a great Coach behind her every move. Howard Jones has brought to the South same style of play which made him success in the West. I understand that the Trinity team has taken to his tac tics? like ducks to water. For this "rea son the game will be highly interesting Then ' we want to win this game. . We have got to make the kind of showing worthy of a University team. Saturday should prove a revelation to some of the doubting ones. We may loose, but it will take a team playing a superior brand of football to beat us. I believe that we loose it will be because of the ex ceptionally good playing of the visitors and not because of another sorry exhi bition on our part. Do you get it? G. C Hampton, Jr., is practicing law in Greensboro. Hampton received his law degree here last commencement. Artemus Ward, pharmacy, '24, is en gaged ' in 7. the drug store business Biltmore, N. C Trinity-Carolina Today Emerson Field BE THERE Methodist Church Services October 12th. Dr. W." S. Bernard at Sunday School Rev. C C Norton, morning sermon. Mr. J. LeRoy Smith at Epworth League. Dr. L. R, Wilson, night sermon. ALL WELCOME. ,". ' ' To this list of Carolina big league celebrities we should add the name of -a man we all know. Dr. Bob Lawson, pro fessor in the medical school, trainer for Carolina athletic teams and grand keeper of the gymnasium, played in the big show before you , or I were born. Doc was with the old Baltimore Orioles and later worked for the New York Giants. That was when Patrick Moran (deceased), John McGraw, Iron . Man McGinnty, Christy Mathewson, and oth er Immortal baseball heroes were in their prime. The old-timers will teli you that Lawson packed a mean curve ball and he had control. Buddy, he could make basebal do tricks. .'.V'- 'v- The University of Alabama claims the Southern Championship in Major League representation. ? They have four men in the big show. . Luke and Joe Sewell, brothers, with the Cleveland Indians. Riggs Stephenson on the same team. Lefty Wlngard, who won several games for the .Saint Louis Cardinals, in his first year, top, is from Alabama. It might be said for the credit of the Alabama folks that these boys are regu lars while Larry Woodall, is our only! representative-who claims this honor. : . At this writing the score stands at three all irt; the world series. The gal lant Senators are fighting for the rag as I no team has' ever fought before. It goes without saying that the University is more than proud, of kt representative on sucn m nne learn. '- We. will wait 'til the smoke; hep cleared away to really! sing Mule Shirley's 'praises as they I should be sung. , GREENTREE'S SHOWING 1 : - Monday and Tuesday October 13th and 14th At Sutton & Alderman 1 'fed M. iPi Three Years -- 2) 2) bervice a jviuie was in the Union Station at Washington last , .Sunday morning to I pass the buck with the football players. He 8 the same old Mule. Full of pep, I kicking at the stable door and rearing to play baseball. Shirley has IT. That 1921- 22.'. 19i,163 meals 1922- 23 , ..207,983 meals 1923- 24 312,809 meals ' . I ... 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