Carolina vs Clemon
t-) TiA Can .
Friday? , 8:30 P.M.
It
xyf '' V
Carolina vs Woii-ord
Tin Can
Tonight " 8:30
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1926
NUMBER 89
N A. CRAWFORD
jjditirtAiLA
FLYBG PHANTOMS
BURY DURHAM "Y"
OUTFIT BY 41 TO 19
Show Excellent Early Season
Form- Despite Cold
- Weather.
COBB AND HACKNEY STAR
Number' of Substitutions Offer Re-
Mrves' Opportunity to uispiay
Their Wares-.
A.-t.'ti." mil Doderer's Tar Heels
played to a full house! tlie Tin Can on
their first appearance on the liome floor
during the 1926 season and celebrated
the occasion by defeating the Durham
"Y" outfit in handsome style oy tne score
nf 1 to 19. ,r After licking Uie Hull City
team by a close count in their first meet
ing of the year last Saturday nignt tne
Carolina tossers snapped Into the fight
and piled up points with all the con- Mr. Atwood is Business Manager of the
jbtency of last year's Southern chain- Obterver-Dhpatrh, Utica, N. Y., and is
. Dions. I one of t,le leacling speakers at the News
Neither team seemed to be wearing
their scoring clothes during the early
minutes of the game, for sthe game had
vninv Rome time before the bull
WW. o "
drooped through the neting for the open
in goal. The Tar Heels started the
game with a swiff passing attack which
carried the ball into the Durham terri
tory, and during the third minute of I One of Three Such Books of
play Bunn Hackney dashed under the
basket and tossed one over nis neaa as
he went out at the end.
"Warhorse' Montgomery tallied for
the T five Vtad two field baskets by
"Sprat" Cobb Sent Carolina into tne leau
never to be headed. The cold weather
stiffened the players' fingers and at
times made the passing of both teams
ragged, but at other. Instances the pass
ing of the Carolina Phantoms wass too
fast tocfolkwr with naked eye.
Wi tb- score standing at 20 to 6
Carolina riding he big end, Coach San-
. x i t
CAROLINA MEETS
WOFFORDTONIGH
Play Three Straight Games In
A Row.
OPENS COLLEGE SEASON
paper Institute in session liehe now.
GRANT PUBLISHES
ALUMNI HANDBOOK
Past Two Years.
DEDICATED to MOREHEAD
Written for General and Central As
sociation's Work.
I Return of Abe Neiman to Carolina
Strengthens Prospects.
With two victories over the Durham
Y. M. C. A. to their credit, the Tar Heels
will open the colleglnte caging Season
here tonight when they meet the Wof-
ford quint in the Tin Cim at 8:30.
The Caroliuu team, winner of the
Southern championship for the last tw
years, opens its season with three games
in a row. Tonight it meets the South
Carolina team, tomorrow night Clemson,
another south state team, visits here, and
Saturday night the Guilford Quakers will
appear on the locul floor. '
The championship aspirations of the
Carolina squad have been greatly whet
ted by the return of Abe Jeiman, of
Charlotte, formerly a star player here.
Nehnon entered the University with the
Freshman class of 1920 and played on
the frosh team of that year along with
Bill Dodderert Winton Greene, Carl Mah
ler, and John Purser. . During the 1922
season Neiman dropped out of school and
returned to Charlotte. ' It is -said that
he lacks only a comparative small amount
of work in order to secure his degree
and that he has returned in order td
secure it. . ,.-
Students are being required to pre
sent their registration cards at the doo;
in order to gain admittance.
Yrittcn for Oeneral and Central Alumni
Amociation's Work
Written for General and Central Alumni
Association's Work
One of the' most unique books ever
published by a department of the Uni
versitv, is the "Handbook of Alumni
K th, Werrea . chance to show Work" recently from the press and now
. . .... I I j:. J.!l...l K.r Hi a Ponti-al Alumni
their wares. , Abe Neiman ana Artie "-e i
v.wmmK vnf their-'' chance before the
close of the first half and played a good The -wor is the product of much labor
and researcn on tne pari ot xhuuci i-.,
game. A various, tjtnes during the sec
ond, half a down or more substitutes
went into the line-up.
, The shining, lights in the white clad
constellation- were Cobb and Hackney.
Cobb led. the scoring for both teams,
' and that wRb all-round play of Captain
Dodderer- and Devln showed that the
Grant, executive secretary of the Gen
eral Alumni association.
The Handbook is dedicated to John
Motley Morehead, 179(i-18fi(i, A. B. 1817.
'In a packed dedicatory page he is seen
in the editor's summary phrases, stands
forth in lines of vivid" achievement, as
All-Southern trio had not forgoten the the first president of the General Alumni
tilings they taught Tulane's Green Wave Association, governor, builder of great
last March. Heflin and Perry stood out industry on the Dan River and of rail-
l (Coutimd on pag four)
MEDIOCRE EDITORS I
roads across the state, and who dreamed
his dream of a network of improved
highways, of canals, of port-terminals,
I of Inland waterway, of industrializing
the state, and of, a system of public
I schools from the primary grades through
the University this man who built our
Says Newspapers Are Greatest railroads and planned our highways and
f Pntilii TTtilitfos. mountain resorts. It is a far cry in tne
history of North Carolina from pre-i.iv
TALKS TO FIRST SESSION il-War to post-World War days but the
nmnhetic faets set' forth in the dedica-
TH Newspapermen That Public is catioll injected a mental interpolation on
Too Tolerant of Poor Newspapers.
Addressing tlwr first session of the
State Newspaper Institute at the Caro
lina Inn here last night, Ole Buck, field
manager of the Nebraska tress Asso
ciation declared that the "greatest pub
lic utility of all, the one that touches and
influences our lives most intimately, is
the one that unobtrusively comes into our
homes every, day the newspaper."
"One reason we are so Indifferent U
newspapers," he said, "Is because they
are "so numerous. Another is because
they cost so little. As a means of com
munication nothing else can approach the
newspaper In price. Just notice the large
amount of Information and service you
get for two or three cents a copy. The
the transmigration of building policies,
Morehead to Morrison, and the Concre
tion of dreams come true," says Frank
P. Graham, Associate professor of His
tory in the University, in his review of
the handbook.
Continuing Mr. Graham's review says,
Continued on page four)
OLD PHARMACY HALL
IS TAKEN M LIBRARY
Person Hall Being Remodeled to Use
Temporarily In Conjunction with
Present Library Building.
Person Hall, better known to the stu
dent body as the old Pharmacy build
cost of a telephone for a month is great-1 ngj is being completely remodeled for
tt than the cost of a newspaper for a
year. The cost of a 10-word telegram!
may be greater than the cost of a paper
for year.
"Suppose business concerns had to re
ly upon these means for making known
the virtues of their merchandise? It
would be- Impossible. Business would
be confined to small areas; It would be
. ...li-i. .i.a I mv.vGinf
use in connection wim u3
Library. The alterations are entirely of
L . ..rl II. a 1-fmir.tiim
a temporary nature, uu v.v....
is to be used only until the new Library
building will have been erected.
The interior of the building has been
so subdivided as to give a class room
and study on the east end. In the
nter is a lame stack room. On the
wt of ttu nuniLii, 1a ha Hi rnarmoiis I clrli- a storutfe room and : three
general -organisation of business that weeemlnar rooms. In the angle formed by
now have, and its consequent great pros-1 the center and the west wing there is an
perity." I entrance for freight. Above this en
Ole Buck and President Chase of the trance is a toilet for men, and a rest
University' th nrlni-lnl sneakers I nnin and toilet for women. The heat-
-r --- .... . i i -
ob the program tonight The session was J ing,' of a necessity, has been changed
opened at 7 130 o'clock with Jas. W. At- and the building will be heated from
alns, manaKlnar editor of the Gastonla I radiators already owned by the Univer
Gwette, president of the North Carolina sity and taken from South building.
"ess Association, in the chair. The In-1 New floors will be-laid where necessary,
titute Is being held under the auspices and the building will be completely re
' the North Carolina Press Association paired. : All the interior lighting will be
nd the Extension Division of the North changed by the University Consolidated
Carolina Pre Association and the Ex- Service Plants to adapt the bulldiiiK for
tension DMsioibi Derwrtment' of Jour-1 library use,
"Usm and News Bureau of the Univer-1- The existing style of architecture is
'ty. .... I carefully preserved, and the structure
Mr. Buck's addreut brim full of will be unchanged as to external appear
Merest for the newspaper' folk. He a nee, no new windows or doors being
(Coniniid on pag$ .four) Conttnutd on pagt jour)
HOPKINS STUDIES
PERSONAL WORK
Visitor from Northwestern
Studies Situation Here. '
REPRESENTS 14 COLLEGES
Association Striving for Better Or
ganization Along This 'Line. '
"L. B, Hopkins, Director of Personnel
siting the --campus ' this week in the in
terest of more efficient personnel work
Work at Northwestern University, is vi
on flic University campus. Mr. llopkins
is the, field representative of an associ
ation of fourteen of the most prominent
universities in the country which are
making attempts toward better organi
zation along this line.
F. F. Bradshaw, Dean of Men has
charge of personnel work on this campus
and is co-operating with Mr. Hopkins
in planning for better relations between
the University and the individual. This
personnel work, in its true sense, should
cope with the problem of the individual
in the institution. There is a difference
between saying that the purpose of an
institution is to suit the individual and
in saying that the personnel problem is
individual, for, regardless of the purpose
of an institution, the problem of the in
dividual is, always present.
One of the chief interests of the work
is the coordination of activity of all in
structors and faculty members who have
the point of view of the individual. There
arc two purposes in this: first, that the
professor may know the student better;
and second, that he: may better assist him
in educational effort. These two pur
poses of course, work hand in hand and
are largely dependent on each other.
Personnel work as outlied by thesf
fourteen universities involves a large
amount of research and study in addi
tion to tlie actual service rendered to the
individual. It is important to note that
by service to the individual the mean, not
spoon-feeding, but legitimate instruction
advice, and inspiration. They are work
ing for better relations and more cordial
term of friendship between the students
and professors on the various campuses.
Mr. Hopkins is .here as the represen
tative of these fourteen universities which
believing that they can accomplish great
er results by co-operative effort, have
agreed to work. He visits each of the
institutions and, while there, attempts
to discover, if possible, the consensus of
opinion . as to what most needs to be
done. The fourteen universities in the
association ares North Carolina, Prince-
n, Columbia! Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth
Cornell, Syracuse, Chicago, Northwest
ern, Minnesota, Iowa, and Stanford. The
University of North Carolina is the only
Southern institution in the association.
Pennsylvania State University is to
receive a collection of the apparatus
famous experiments, the most famous
of which was the discovery of oxygen.
The collection was made by the alumni
with the aid of the American Chemical
Society and is to be presented to the
university as soon as it is completed.
The exhibits will be housed In a fire
proof building next to Priestley's home
which the university has owned since
1920.
ALUMNI GATHER
HERE THIS MONTH
General Alumni Association To
Meet Here January 28.
PROGRAM IS OUTLINED
'-,
Wilifred B. Shaw of the University of
Michigan Will Be Guest.
The annual seslons ; of the General
Alumni Association will he held in Chap
el Hill January 28, 2!), 30; : .'.thougl
the sessions are intended primarily for
the officers or committees in charge of
the various fields of alumni activity, all
University alumni who have the time
and interest are urged to attend.
Following are the committees which
make up the General Alumni Associ
ation: 1.' The Officers and directors of
the General Ahlmnl Association; 2. The
officers and executive Committeemen of
each class organization, botli graduate
and nndegraduate; 3. The officers of
each local alumni association; 4. The
Alumni Loyalty Fund Council; 5. The
committee in charge of the Alumni Mgn-
ogram Club; 6. The Alumni Review
Board. 7. The Graham Memorial Fund
Committee; and 8. The Faculty Com
mittee on Alumni Relations. "
fhe General - Assembly is expected
tor (a) study the University; (b) con
fer in order to determine what the alum
ni should do, and how they can best cor
relate their efforts in achieving it; and
(c) officially determine policies for the
alumni body.
Abundant time is to be allowed
throughout the meeting for visits to dif
ferent University departments, faculty
classrooms, and laboratories. : Conse
quently the- opening event of the pro
gram will be the only formal one. The
guest of the Association for that evening
will , be Alumni Secretary Wilfred B
Shaw of the University of Michigan, also
editor of The Michigan Alumnus. Mr.
Shaw has been in alumni work at a
state University for twenty-flye years,
and is known to alumni workers as their
"Dean."
The program for the meeting is as
fqllowi,: . ... i v
Thursday, January 28
6:00 p. m. Dinner at the Carolina Inn.
President W. P. Stacy, of General Al
umni Association presiding.
Friday, January 29
9: a. m. Group .Meeting of various com
mittees. "
11:00 .a. m. General Assembly of the
General Alumni Association at Gerrard
Hall. President W. P. Stacy presiding.
(Continued on page four)
M. V. ATWOOI)
p - -
1
iliiili
lllpif
jffiiiiTyijiflr
-;-r::-:-:::y:lvi'::i;::iifeiS-
Speaking as an author and member of
the U. S. Department of Agriculture
Mr. Crawford will discuss the ethical
problems of the newspaper at the Press
Institute tomorrow afternoon.
CHASE SPEAKS TO
PRESS INSTITUTE
University President Welcomes
Newspapermen to Chapel Hill
HAVE IDEAS IN COMMON
LEATHER PUSHERS
ARE WORKING OUT
Coach Creighton Rowe's De
fense Class Training Daily
Tin Can Scene of Daily Workouts
Where Squad Is Developing.
The Southeastern corner of the Tin
Can assumes each afternoon all the ap
pearances of a miniature Madison Square
iarden. When Coach Crayton Rowe's
nixing team and self defense class dons
the gloves, the blood begins to fly and
11 save students who have been bored
tli the dullness of life around this cen
ter of education should sally forth- and
brave the mud of the South Road to see
the Tar Heel leather pushers in action.
Over sixty candidates for the varsity
and freshman boxing teams or members
of the defense class are working out
daily for two or more hours, and the
tunes-they play on the punching bags
nd dummies furnishes the music to which
he young Dempseys and Stribiings punch
each other around the squared circle.
With the first meet of the season draw
ing near Coach Rowe is rapidly shaping
his varsity, boxers to give a little more
than they will receive from their oppon
ents. The outstanding men are coining
to the fore in each of the weights and in
each class the competition has narrowed
down to two or three men.
Graydon Shuford, football star, and
Black are dominating the heavyweights,
Sliuford's ankle injury that he suffered in
le Mercer game in October is well and
he will probably hold down the varsity
berth in that class. '
In the light heavy class the competition
more keen, witli Ad Warren, Fowler,
Sapp, and Twiford doing the competing.
Captain Warren' will probably emerge
the varsity regular when the first meet
held.
Joe Bobbitt and "Piggie" Jarrell are
for blood when they get in the ring to
gether, for both are trying for the mid
dle weight berth. Proffitt was a member
the varsity boxing team last year,
while Jenkins hardened np while doing
the line bucking for the varsity football
scrubs last fall.
Kd Butler and Alex Shuford will fiht
out for the welter weight title and the
(Continud on pago four)
Newspapers and Universities Are
Alike in Striving to Find Truth.
Newspapers and universities are very
mucti alike in that both are striving to
find "truth and give it expression, de
clared Dr. H. W. Chase, president of the
University of North Carolina, who ad
dressed the opening session of the State
Newspaper Institute here last night at
the Carolina Inn.
That must be their common ideal "If
they are to fulfill their obligations to the
public," 4m ussected. ;"Only- through-the
preservation of such an ideal can society
hope to maintuin itself and to advance.
If history teaches anything, it teaches
that the ages, and the countries which
have contributed to human progress, have
been those in wliich'the mind has been set
free to range in search of the truth and
to declare it; while the sterile times, and
the sterile countries, have been those
which have attempted to restrict and to
subjugate thought and the search for
truth and the freedom to declare It.5f
Dr. Chase gave the newspaper folk a
hearty welcome to the University. H
was glad they had decided to hold thei
mid-winter meeting here, and he hoped
they would come again as frequently, as
possible.
Launching into his theme, the Univer
sity president declared that had univer
sities in the day the American govern
ment was founded been , the great in
stitutions they have since become, he
did not doubt that "their freedom would
have been protected by guarantees just
as specific as those given the press. Fo
it is freedom of precisely the same char
acter, and for precisely the same ends,'
he said. "As regards the press, this
point was absolutely clear to the found
(Continued on page four)
NEWSPAPER MEET
GETS UNDER WAY
Advance Registration Nearly
Reaches the Hundred Mark.
CAESAR CONE IS IN THE
INDOOR TOURNAMENT
Makes Very Good Showing In Elimin
ation Contests National Indoor Ten
nis Championship in New York.
The University was represented at
the 11th annual national indoor junior
tennis tournament, held in New York
during the holidays. This is the first time
that a ' student at North Carolina has
ever entered, the event, and in the face
of opposition from the best junior stars
of the entire country his showing was a
credit to the calibre of the court game
here. Ceasar Cone of the class of 28,
fourth man on the varsity team last fall,
and a memlier of the freshman team last
spring, was the sole representative from
the South. The entrants included two
of William Tilden's proteges, players
from Yale, Harvard, University of Penn
sylvania, and many of the large eastern
preparatory schools. Cone survived two
rounds and was defeated, only after a
hard fight, by Everett Smith, who was
one of the finalists in the doubles. As
the tournament was indoors and on
wooden courts, neither of which Cone
was accustomed to, his showing against
his three opponents was rather a sur
prise to the tennis enthusiasts both in
New York and North Carolina. As he
is only the fourth In rating at the Uni
versity, the team bids fair to be one
of the best college teams in the coun
try this spring.
HEADQUARTERS AT INN
Institute Will Continue Sessions Thru
Today and Ends Tomorrow.
Registration In the Newspaper Insti
tute is expected to reach 1.10 by tonight,
It was nnnounced late yesterday after
noon by officials in charge of this end
of the Institute, who were very enthusi
astic over the prospects of making this
session the largest in the history of the
North Carolina Press Association. '
These figures are based on- the ad-
ternoon was around the 100 mark. More
than fifty more delegates urc expected
to be in attendance before the conclu
sion of the Institute.
This newspaper institute, which Is be
ing conducted for the first time in North
Carolina jointly under the auspices of
the North Carolina Press Association,
the University Extension Division, the
Department of Journalism, and the Uni
versity News Bureau, is taking the place
of the regular mid-winter session of the
North Carolina Press Association. Rep
resentatives are in attendance from prac
tically every newspaper in the state, and
;everal out-of-the-stale speakers, prom
inent in the fields of journalism, appear
on the program.
Every department of newspaper work
is finding a place on the program and
representatives from every department
of newspaper work are expected. The
six problems to be discussed Include
ethics, editorial policy, business manage
ment, advertising, special problems of
the country weekly, and propaganda and
free publicity.
The institute got under way last night
at the Carolina Inn at 7:30 P. M., with
J. W. Atkins, president of the North
Carolina Press Association, presiding.
Addresses, the more complete texts of
which occur elsewhere iri this issue, were
delivered by Mr, Atkins, President Chase
and Qle ..Buck, Field JVIanngerj Nebraska
t ress .attsuciaiiun. ,
The opening, session for today is sla
ted for 9:00 A. M. at the Carolina Inn
where talks will be made by Robert W.
Madry, director of the University News
Bureau, Robert Latham, editor of the
Charleston Newt and Courier, and R. H.
Wettach, associate professor of law in
the University. An open discussion on
Propaganda and Free Publicity" will
(Continued oh page four)
SCHOOL DEBATE
QUERY DECIDED
High Schools Will Debate Eight
Months School Term.
HANDBOOK IS PREPARED
Will Compete' in Annual Contest for
Aycock Memorial Cup.
A short time ago K. H. Rankin, Sec
retuy of the North Carolina High School
Debating Union, announced that the
query for the 1920 high school triangular
debate would be: Resolved, Thut North
Carolina should levy a State tax on pro
perty to aid in the support of an eight
months school term.
This query was decided upon bv the
central committee of the Union after It
had received a very large plurality of
the votes of 3H high schools, beinir chos
en from a tentative list of thirteen quer
ies. The tabulation of the ballots cast
showed this subject had received a total
of 139 votes. Its nearest competitor re
ceived 53 votes, this query being: Re
Solved, That Congress should enact the
Sterling-Reed bill, providing for a fed
eral department of education and for
federal aid to the states for education.
As usual the extension department has
prepared a handbook for the convenience
of the contestants, containing a short
history of the Union, the regulation per-
tabling to the debates, a statement of
the query, and ' material on both phases
of thelssue at stake. This bulletin is
now off the press and copies are being
mailed to; all the participating hiirh
schools.
Under the head of explanations and
limitations to the query it is made clear
that the following qualifications will
exist.
First, the statetment of the auerv as
given above contemplates that North
Carolina should have a minimum school
term of eight months.
Second, it contemplates that North
Carolina should have state supervision
and control of the assessment of all pro
perty for taxation.
Third, it contemplates thut the Gen
eral Assembly of North Carolina should
levy a state tax, ad valorem tax on real
and personal property, to assist in raising
n equalizing fund for distribution among
(Continued on pagt four)
f