I Wednesday, January 28, 1925 THE TAR HEEL Pag S 3 K . J- '' 523 13 STREET " "JUST BELOW F" WASHINGTON, D. C. The ' LalEge Tailnrs . nfTtie SOUTH WILL DISPLAY AT - CAROLINA' SMOKE SHOP "February 9th and 26th .The 'only exclusively high grade Tailors showing at Southern Colleges. , . . Your inspection of our full line of the finest 'imported woolens for Spring and Sum mer is cordially invited, G.' L. MYERS, Representative Chapel Hill,. Insurance and Realty Co. , . n " Insurance and Real Estate CLOTHES FOR THE COLLEGE MAN The SACK SUIT (Two and thrtt button) KjXJV with that conserv atism carefully dressed men demand, and tailored in ap propriate, richjatterns that stamp them as dis tinctive. . i 3250 to M250 natLUXENBERG bros. 841 Broadway, Nbw York Next Showing at PENDERG RAFT'S February 9-10-11 Out style memo, book wnt frc on requeat Y STUDENTS V will find an attractive line of ) Furniture i Rugs and X)r aperies j . AT r- ' ;V:.r""' I : POPE MATTRESS CO. CHAPE HILL HARDWARE COMPANY Cutlery, Artist's ' . y Materials SHOE SHOP: , IH CONNECTION PHONE 144 ROYALL & BORDEN Furniture for the home, echoote and fraternitiei ' DURHAM, M. C. We have furnished the dormi tories, many fraternity and faculty homes because we of fered them good service, and food furniture at a reasonable price. '" ;' 1' - P CHRISTIAN & KING PRINTING COMPANY Dutham North Carolina MANY GIRLS EXPECTED FOR WEEK-END DANCES Big Grail and Fraternity Dance Will " ' Be Held Friday and : Saturday Nights. . The announcement that the Order of the Grail will give its first dance of the quarter next Saturday night has met with much delight among the lovers of the light fantastic on the campus. The fact that a fraternity chapter here is giving a dance in the Carolina Inn on Friday night will .mean that a bevy of out-of-town girls will be on the Hill for the week-end. Grail members say that announce ments have been formally sent to many campus organizations,' and that a num ber of boys have asked or are planning to ask girls down for the week-end. Bynum gymnasium has again been se cured for the affair and music will be gin promptly at nine o'clock. The North State Eight Orchestra, which has made quite a good- reputation for good music for itself, will play. Chaperones have already been asked and the committee in charge of the dance are enthusiastic about the success of the dance. Fayetteville . . Club Meets The Fayetteville. club held its second regular meeting of the quarter Monday night with-14- present. Four new mem bers were admitted. A letter to the University club of Fayetteville was read, and P. N. Olive gave a talk' on the his tory of .Cumberland county. Prof. Ed gar Thompson of the . rural sociology department will speak to the club at the next meeting February 9. NEW PHI SPEAKER WAS INAUGURATED Phi Assembly Not in Favor of Fore ' ing Increase In the Nation's s Population. ' The inaugural address of the newly elected speaker, Frederick Parker, fea tured the regular session of the Phi Assembly ' Saturday ' night. ' At ' this meeting Wj T, Couch., introduced sug gested amendments to the present con stitution whereby the . Phi Assembly should in the future be' conducted on a plan similar to the House-of Represen tatives thus operating in direct co-ordination with the Di Senate, which body was so named recently when the old title "Dialectic Society" was discarded and the society started on a new : syS' tern of procedure . modeled after the State Senate. The bill, "Retolved, That compulsory divorce should . be required of every couple in whose home a child Is not born within two years after marriage," was after discussion by . Page, Young and others, overwhelmingly defeated by the Assembly. The bill, "Resolved, That North Carolina should sell 35 million dollars worth of bonds for road build ing purposes in this State," was tabled for further discussion at the next meet ing of the Assembly. SPORTOGRAMS by Bill Peacock , ; $ Because of other pressing and 'arduous duties on the Tab Heel, Bill Peacock is able to All his -sports column but once a week. He has persuaded the writer to alternate issues with him. ' ' In the last three games the Tar Heels, minus their captain, . have been - out played and out-scored by their oppo nents during 'the first half. In each case they have shown a remarkable fight ing spirit and have gone back and won the game. 1 . ; If a team, when behind, consistently comes forward and wins despite odds, it is a reasonable conclusion that such a team has plenty of fight It takes an uphill battle in sports as in anything to bring out those qualities for the teaching of which Intercollegiate Athletics exists. An outstanding- achievement by a Car olina athlete, which is not commonly known in North Carolina, was the per formance of L. H. Moore at the Olym pic tryouts last spring. s ANNOUNCING A Continuation of Policy "Food cooked to eat . Not just to sell" , , The Carolina Cafeteria Next to Post Office Two years ago Hannes Kolehmainen, a countryman of Nurmi, held 14 world rec ords. In the 1912 Olympic Games he won the 5,000; 10,000, and the 20,000 Meter Cross Country races, establishing new world records for each event. He ran six races in seven days, win ning them all. One afternoon he wbn a three-mile race and that same evening broke the world's record for 5 miles. It is an achievement worthy of note for a country with population half that of New York City, to produce two such marvelous runners. Each, in his day, has been called the "greatest of all time." And. there have been others al most equally famous. The names of two students making straight "A" grades last quarter were omitted from the list printed in the Tar Heki. ,. They are A. K. King and Mrs. Frank Rowley. Announcement that Walter Damrosch will appear in Raleigh with the New York Symphony Orchestra on February the 13th, is of much interest. ORPHEUI! DURHAM, N. C. 8 SHOWS DAILY 5 Saturdays and Holidays . NOTICE STUDENTS If you want to see a real good peppy musical comedy drop in the oriPHEun the Only Vaudeville Theatre in Durham - Have your , Pressing, Cleaning and Altering Done Right at WEAVER. TAILORING CO. Nest to Post Offloa Moore, who holds the unofficial South ern record in high hurdles, won his pre liminary heat in New York, in the Eastern Divisional tryouts, which quail Aed him for the finals held on the Har vard track. There were 30 men at Harvard, win ners in the 9 divisions into which the country had been divided, contesting for the Olympic team. Again Moore hur dled his way to victory and qualified for the final heat. He was one of 13 qualified from whom 5 were picked to represent the United States in Paris. - According to these ' records Moore is among the 13 best high hurdlers in the entire United States. Quite an achieve' ment for a, man in his first year at hurdling, and one about which the Uni versity may well boast. ' v. A good bit of the credit should go to Coach Bob Fetzer, than whom there is no better hurdle coach. He took Moore, who had never hurdled in his life, and within one season made him into a strorfg Olympic contender. The other night at the Brooklyn In door Track Meet Georgetown Univer sity won the two mile Invitation College Relay, establishing a new world record for the distance 7:471-6. Boston Col lege was second. The G. U. win was very interesting because last year these same two teams man for man contested in the Inter national Relay, and on that day Boston College established' a new 'record. ' Re venge is sweet. ' Right now the sporting world is at the feet of Faavo Nurmi, marvelous Fin nish runner, who .trains on dried fish, for his almost superhuman work at the Olympic games and his remarkable per formances recently on American indoor tracks. '." - " ' . Nurmi holds ten indoor records (prob ably, before this Is published the num ber will, be fifteen), nine of which he has broken and one established ' since January 5. His records aret 1,000 me ters; 2,000 meters; 3,000 meters; '8,000 meters; 1 mile; 1 miles; iy8 miles; 2V miles; 3 miles; and 2,000 yards, r . Saturday night Gunner Nilson, a Fin nish teammate, enjoying a handicap of 100 yards, led Nurmi tp the tape by a yard, being the first defeat for -Nurmi during his American campaign. It was not such a defeat after all when one considers the 100 yard handicap. , An all-American track team appears in ( the 192S Spaulding Athletic Alma nac as follows: 100 yard dash Chas. Paddock, Los Angeles A. C. 220 yard dash Jackson V, Scholz, New York A. C. i; : 440 yard dash-r-Horatio Fitch, Chi cago A. C. i 880 yard run Schuyler C Enck, Penn State. - 1 mile run Raymon B. Buker, Illinois A. C. . . . V 2 mile run Joie W. Ray, Illinois, A. C. 120 high hurdle Dan Kinsey, Illinois A. C. 220 low hurdles C. R. Brookins, Iowa State C. Pole vault Lee Barnes, Hollywood High School. - Running broad jump Robt. L. Leg end re, Newark A. C. Running high jump Harold M. Os born, Illinois A. C 16 lb. shot put Clarence Hauser, Southern California U. ' ' Discus Thomas J. Lieb, Illinois A. C. Javelin Eugene Oberst, Notre Dame U. . Pentathlon Robt. L. Legendre. Decathlon Harold M. Osborn. ROOMG FOR RENT Heat W ater Lights $7.50 per month . 204 SHORE STREET CUP TO BE GIVEN IN LATIN CONTEST High School Contest Comes in February. AUSPICES OF UNIVERSITY To Aid in Stimulating Interest in Latin. Campbell Tells of v Need of Missionaries - Foreign missions as a life work has been stressed to a large number of stu dents here during the early part of the week when Archibald Campbell, of the World Student Volunteer Movement, ad dressed three meetings and held several personal conferences on the campus. ' Mr. Campbell, during his short stay on the Hill, spoke Sunday to the University Volunteer Band at a luncheon held in the Presbyterian social rooms, addressed students of the freshman and sopho more classes at chapel Monday, and ap peared before the Y. M. C. A. cabinet on Monday night. : Foreign missions, according to Mr. Campbell, needs men now. If Christian students would get behind the move ment, he thinks that the job could be put across, and concluded his chapel address with a plea for missions as a vocation. ' As a member of the Washington Uni versity rowing crew' several years ago Mr. Campbell gained athletic fame, and is at present making his home in Korea where he is engaged in mission work. During his college career he aided in the surveying of parts of Alaska, and has also been a somewhat extensive traveler in other parts' of the world. His talks here were enlivened by inter esting anecdotes of his experiences with other peoples. ' . The following men have been pledged by Phi Delta Pi:", Dick Freeman, Salis bury, Roy Share, Salisbury, and Gilbert Joyce, Reidsville. . ' The University extension division and the Latin department will conduct a contest in Latin for high school students, participation in the contest being open to accredited North Carolina public high schools. The contest throughout the state will take place on February 18. The object is to aid in stimulating interest in the study of Latin in the high schools and to test the student's knowledge' of Latin in the simplest and most direct way; that is, by translation and by ques tions on grammar. It is not the intention of the committee in charge here to use the papers sent in to rate a school in comparison with other schools, but fitting recognition will be given to schools whose students do best work. The tests wil be forwarded from Chapel Hill to the individual schools in 6efled envelopes and are not to be open ed until the time when they will be giv en under the supervision of high school authorities. A signed pledge will be necessary. The individual school will select the three best papers from the total of the papers submitted in the local contest and will send these three papers to the committee here. To insure com plete impartiality in estimating the papers submitted, the faculty members of the Latin department tof the Univer sity will act as the sole judges of the papers sent here. ' The extension division will provide the award of a. trophy cup to the high school whose student submits the best paper and honorable mention will be given to several schools whose students submit next best papers. Members of the committee are: G. A. Harrer, chairman, E. R. Rankin, secre tatryt; R. R. Roseborough, S. G. Sanders and J. M. Gwynn. INTRA-MURAL LEAGUE STANDING Week Ending January 24 Fraternity A. T. O. Kappa Alpha Sigma Chi Zeta Psi . Chi Phi Beta Theta D. K. E PL Phi Delta ChL S. A. E Gamma Delta Theta Chi Delta Sigma Phi S. P. E LL Pi Kappa Alpha Phi Kappa Sigma. Kappa Sigma Phi Delta PI Dormitory West, : : South New Dorms East Steele "J" Grimes Carr . Manly , s "G" : . Mangum p t Ruffin . 1 Smith .W. 4 4: . f" 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 . 2 1 1 1 0 0 ' 0 W. 4 3 3 S . 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 ' 1 1 0 L. 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 L. 0 1 1', 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 4 President Chase : ' Thank Students Students who attended the dedication exercises for Manning Hall held here last week when the Legislators and other prominent visitors were on the campus, were publicly thanked in chapel Mon day morning by President Chase. Dr. Chase seemed well pleased with the large numbers wholurned out to wit ness this Important event and told, the freshmen and ' sophomores in a few words during regular chapel exercises. Kappa Pi Fraternity announces the Initiation of G. M. Beasley, Jr., of Monroe, on Jan. 22. , . YACKETY YACK NOTICES All the proofs taken, by the Yaekety Yack photographer on his first trip which have not yet been returned must be brought in this week. They wilt be re ceived on the second floor of the Y between 2 and 3 in the after noons. The Yaekety Yaek will take the ' privilege of selecting proof for each man who does not return his proofs this week. Fraternity pledges will be run in the 1925 Yaekety Yaek sub ject in each case to the approval of the respective fraternities. MANGUM CONTEST t All Seniors intending to try for the Wiley P. Mangum medal are advised to submit their sub jects to their respective deans by February second, according to announcement by Praf. G. M. McKie. This is an absolute re quirement for all Seniors in tending to try for this medal Pet. i.oob 1.000' 1.000 .750 .750 .750 .500 .500 .500 M0 .500 .250 '.250 250 .000 .000 .000 Pet. 1.000 .750 .750 .750 .600 .500 .500 .500 .500 .600 .250 250 250 .000