Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 13, 1926, edition 1 / Page 2
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Pag$ THE TAR HEEL Saturday, February IS, iqq ' The Leading Southern College Tri-Weekly Newspaper Member of 'North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Published three times every week of the college year, and is the official news paper of the Publications Union of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C Subscription price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, forthe college year. Offices on first floor of New Building, Telephone 818-Red." West Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C H. N. Parker.. Editor Harold Sebum.... Business Manager Editorial Department Managing Editors : t, J. T. Madry - " Tuesday Issue P. F. N. Olive . P. Eller . Thursday Issue -Saturday Issue C W. Bazemcre L. N. Byrd Assistant Editor Sport Editor three teams with a perfect record. They defeated the strong Tau Epsilon Phi team Wednesday, almost doubling the score, which is saying a plenty. When the Pika's meet the Kappa Sig's next week, one team will have to come down from the high perch. Which it will be is hard to say. Either way, the game promises to be one of the best of the season. The first real accident of the basket bal season occurred Thursday afternoon in the game between ' F and G when "Mickey" block, of F, broke his thumb. F continued the game with only four men and were defeated by Manager Summer ville's G outfit. ' Speaking of Tall teams Smith takes the prize. Four of Smith's first string players are over six feet tall, and they are able to play the ball all over their opponents heads. This gives them a great advantage, and has been a big factor in their victories of the season. It came near to putting Carr out of the running.' "" ; ' ' J. O. Allison J. F. Aseby K. Barwick J. R. Bobbitt, Jr. H. P. Brandts D. D. Carroll W. G. Cherry Ben Eaton Eunice Ervin R, K. Fowler C L. Keel, Jr. Staff J. B. Lewis R. R. Little E. R. McKethan. Jr. L. H. McPherson W. W. Neat Jr. W. D. Perry W. P. Ragan I. N. Robbins C. F. Rouse S. B. Shepherd, Jr. A. B. White Business Department Sarah Boyd - Asst to Bus. Mgr. T. V. Moore Advertising Department ; , Chas. A. Nelson Advertising Manager nyron Holmes a. Linton smith J. C Unell, Jr. , Circulation Department Marvin Fowler Circulation Manager UicJc Slagle - John Deaton Tom Raney , . " Reg Schmitt .Yon 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, February 13, 1926 Vr miMIDRAL SPORTS Intramural Office, 114 Almrmi Building West, by defeating Carr, left Steele perched on top of the Dorm League percent column, Steele having a perfect record. Steele has made overwhelming scores against all her opponents, and It looks as if they will be champions again I the faculty plan the curriculum. MIW.,M.MI W.-W. .Qft The Out in the fields the first (and the very first) hint of Spring blew over Orange county , soil in the few warm days not long ago. Perhaps It is the prong of the harrow in -the heart that makes men secrete something which the race needs for its permanent happiness, something like Art? Agriculture paid tribute to Athens; in .a lesser degree to Babylon. The sight of freshly turned soil. " The promise of growing things. The farmer is indeed an artist. The seed catalogs are out. Hogs and corn and peanuts and cot ton are carefully watched and tended in the state of North Carolina, Ribbons of concrete, sixteen feet wide, are laid through remote areas, by farmers' doors. Good roads. Proseprity. Fine, fine Yet boys and girls, after they leave high school, are turned into Institutions 'where the game is to get them through some how, make standardized . graduates of them at any cost. Got any individuality? Crush it The Board of Trustees know! best what you should study. They make ' What PROF. JANDA RECEIVES RECOGNITION OF WORKI Permission is Asked to Use His Picture In Distinguished Alumni Section Of The Wisconsin Badger. Professor Janda, who probably has the heaviest teaching schedule of any engineering professor in the University, has recently received recognition from his alma mater, the University of Wis- BIRDS-EYE VIEW OF THE SPORT WORLD By L. N. Btd Wuxtra! Wuxtra! That's the war cry of the Flying Phantoms on their north-1 this year. Marjenhoff, Steele's star cen- kind of degree? We have all kinds. Go ter, and Prevatt are playing high class to college. It's the proper thing to do. ball and are the leading scoreres for the What's four yeas? Don't you get cer Steele combination. Steele and Carr I tain little initials to sign after your hook up Monday, and if Carr wins name? It has been so. It will be so. three teams will be tied for the top Some of these days the State (the best place in the Dorm League, Carr, West, m Union) will find that hogs and and Steele. If Steele wins it looks" as I corn ana peanuts and cotton and bard if the championship is settled. Some roads are not .the best things to brag real basketball will be played Monday, about Men and women are of some eon- sequence. It s time to begin breeding xnarcn i, ine annual insra-Murai and growina- humanity. indoor meet will be held. Lasfvear 1 96 men took part in the meet and lne bouta wind is soughing among the twelve teams were enterd. Ruffin I stately oaks of the campus. Soulful sen- dormitory under the leadersrip of timent stirs deeply. Fain would I make Scratch" Gierech won the meet Gus sibilant speech register, the emotions that McPherson was high point man with P,ay on these worn keys. - The hour 15 points in his favor. Twelve events Ion smce naTe the Jngersoll hands stood are run off in this meet, and it is one j vertically, crossed, and the calendar date of the best events of the Intra-Mural changed another day. It is morning, program. Now is the time to start almost. ' I had something to say. The training for this meet, since the team elusive idea came, lingered, went It is in the best condition will win. Start Sone- But I have filled up two more training! inches. Columns are so long. W e might prolong this thing indefinitely, and then Wrestling and boxing will begin Wed- the column would be filled. But collcee nesaay nignt. inese matches will he men are discriminating. The. Ta Heel run off in tournament style, and the is read over coffee and grapefruit these managers will draw for their places at days, and forgotten. So is this column. the meeting tonight. Last year several I Wonder how much more it will take to campus notables, including Punk Wei-1 fill it? If I could think of a poem or born, Dick Thorpe, Rabbit Bonner, and I something. ' Verse eats up space. It Bull -Underwood, were among the en- cannot be unsaid. The old typewriter trees in these contests. Seven weights, has a busted back shift in both wrestlinir and hmfimr. will mnl I D m - i A J T .JJ 1.. JJ LI . ouuucmj. iiuu aiiuujcr Llllllg up each team. The PI Kappa Alpha's have been lead ing the league in scoring and up to the X. T. game was one of the four teams with a percentage of 1000. Wednesday the Chi' Tau's took their measure and defeated them by the score of 20-17, The first half ended with Pike's leading by 2 points. The second half was particularly nip-and-tuck affair with fouls proving-the undoing of the here tofore topnotchers. The Chi Tau's played a good game and this makes just one more victory to pile up against their few losses. Perry was the star of the game, shooting several field goals and making good his opportunities at fouls. Brand and Scoot played their usual good game for the P. K..A.'s. West stinging with the defeat ad ministered by Steele took revenge on the other league leader and beat Carr by the score of 20-19. The game meant much to Carr, for on it depended their keeping pace with Steele, and the score will tell the tale .of how hard both teams fought. It was probably the cleanest game in the history of Intra-Mural Basketball. Only one foul was called, and that was against Carr. This made good and probably cost them the game. Corbett and "Red" Smith played a bang up game for West at both the forward positions, but the unusually good guarding game played by Coffey and Cooper was the deciding factor m the victory. . The Zeta Phi's and the Alpha Chi's had a good game Thursday; the Zeta Psi's winning 15 to 13. At the begin ning of the game the Zeta Phi's had only four men on the court, so the Al pha Chi's got off with a rush and good lead. A little later, after adding Char lie Rouse to their list, the Zeta's got the steam roller steamed up and over came the margin piled up against them. Both teams are considered strong ag- ' gregations, and as the low scores Indi cate, the game was marked by close guarding on both sides. Nash John ston for the Zeta Psi's led in this play ing an unusually good game at guard. Toy. and Rouse did the shooting for the Zeta's. Hollet and Ward were the out standing players for the Alpha Chi's, with Ward as the" high scorer for. the game... The Covingtons are still starring for the Pika's and still keeping them on top. This team continued its winning streak this week and is one of the The cage schedule for Monday after noon with one alteration runs as fol lows: Monday, Feb. 153:30 PJW. Steele vs. Carr, Court No. I. G vs. Carolina Smoke Shop, Court No. 3. .. Chi rlil vs. Theta Rho, Court No. 4:30 PJU. F vs. J, Court No. 1. Theta Phi vs. Beta, Court No. 2. And I wrong, here in writing eighteen Inches of filler. The old Underwood has gone wrong. More diphphiculty. Two of the ceys have come loose. The ephs and cays, Because of that we'll have to omit such letters phrom the spelling, and call it a niistaque. I've phound that one can do much after phranc confession of handi cap. I don't lique the loox of this spell ing at all, but the typewriter, not me, is to be phound phault with. But iph the ph's and e's an4 x's and q's hold out I shall ceep (sound the c hard) the column East vs." Grimes. Court No. S. Zeta Psi vs. Pi Kappa Phi, Court l"8 phter a Phashlon tm I can phix a jj0 :, . iBcnuun -pnpimir. ii wiu DC pnour or phive weex bephor I can get new ceys I. M. Gattman, manager of the Caro-for the old machine. But maybe I can lina Inn,! most delightfully" entertained I phix them up somehow. I'll have to wait the Durham Lodge of Elks Thursday and phinish this tomorrow. PVPtl in Cr . a anKa f fl. a OnHni:nA T I .s , ., . . ouirowcu (tnouier maenme. ine evu f uu . auuui nj Kuests were i , I wora present from Durham as guests of Mr.l Guttman's hospitality. The music was furnished by Hal Kemp's band, which seemed to try to improve on its already I nationally known reputation as a mu- goes on. I must finish out this col umn. It is interminable. -I almost yielded to the fancy to carry the thing to an end, in a burst of thunder like the Light Brigade. But-what ought we to 1icUCCl C ,1 til n.lP It" .'.in wa nAn. sical organation. Durmg intermission Haven,t they gettled ,t aU nIce,y and vxaMiaLc icircauiucuut were servea in -j u ... i . . .. , with no bloodshed? There are no more the banquet hall of the Inn. L ta,u r-i-i.! i... u. "practically cleaned out they tell us. Chapel Hill country club on Saturday, Now we Pure the even tenor of our February 13. iway. Carolina Doys . . . . uooa Doys. There is peace in Tarheel ia. Mid-term reports majr be obtained at J Haven't said a thing so far. Hadn' the omce of the registrar on Monday, intended to. That is all there Is to it CONFERENCE CAGE LEADERS TIED UP Tar Heels and Kentucky Colon els Knotted for Lead em invasion, or it would seem so when THREE VICTORIES EACH one looks over the records of their games ' on the trip. "Wuxtra periods" is a dis- vrK"' Maryland Fall From Un ease that they have contracted and it is , defeated List Last Week, playing havoc with that won-and-lost xhe Tnp Heeg and the Uni sitv . column, and it may play stUl more havoc Kentucky " Colonels ar i Professor Janda became a . member than it has already wrought Three five piace m the Southern Confer,...!. TT of the U. N. C faculty in 1921. He minute periods in two straight games is baU race havlng won three "l was granted a leave of absence in the enough to tell on a team of iron men, iogt none m game wlth othe,8lme8 fall of 1924 when he was made assistant 'or one of those five minute rounds is ference teams. Both teams have hM director of the Highway ' Research very near as bad on the players as a full the Conference basketbaU crown w Board of the National Research Coun- half in the regular playing time. m tournament play at Atlanta. tlJ v " ell. He served with the activities of When the regular forty minutes of twklam taking off the title in 1921 i the Highway Research Board for a nIav is .fter a clos. -d r.. tmaht the first tourney held In the South, whn. period of sixteen months, during which contest u,,. teams are let down from a the Tar Heels have annexed the top time his work was so outstanding as to high po;nt. of tension, and in case of a honors three times since that time. tie score they must strain themselves up I Kentucky started the 1925 tournament to the high point again for the come-1 with a rush that looked good for the back. That strain tells quicker than any flnals at least but the Georgia Bulldogs other, for it leaves the nerves - of the Put a spoke In the Colonel's wheel when players on the ragged edge. With that they downed the first champions by" a additional drain on the Tar Heels and cont of 32 to 31 in the closest nH ing an alumni section devoted to those the usual strain worked by long days on hardest fought game ever seen nn alumni who have received unusual pub- the road they have been playing wonder- Atlanta floor. Kentucky was leading lie distinction in the year 1925. , ; f ul ball. They may not bring an nn- by one point less than half a minut to A small number of alumni who in the broken string of wins back from the Play, but the Buldogs fighting with nil year 1925 have so distinguished them- North, but they will leave a reputation the tenacity that their name indicates selves in their field of endeavor, who behind with the northern basketball fans rushed -the ball down the floor' and shot have by their other performances won as a bunch that plays hard to win, but a 1 ,0' the basket as the timer raised his produce the following letter-; THE 1927 BADGER University of Wisconsin My dear Mr. Janda: The 1927 Badger "Wisconsin's Sym bol of Progress" is this year innovat exceptional public attention, and who bunch that plays clean as well. are representative of the Wisconsin tradition of service and progress are to be. included in this section. Needless to say, this selection of distinguished alumni, which promises to be an annual feature, will be a most interesting de partment of the 1927 Badger. You have been selected by a special liodger committee including well-known faculty members and students for this section. Accordingly, this is a personal request for permission to use your pic ture. . Unfortunately I have been unable to secure a picture of you, "hut I . shall deem it a personal u favor, if before January 22, you would send direct to me your picture. I should be glad to have also a letter from you giving exact facts and descriptive informa- ; One of the high spots of the northern trip last year was the game with the Navy. The midship men won by a score of 39 to 20, but the Carolina tossers played a game that drew comment all over east and north. It was not their brilliant playing that drew the comment either, but it was their clean play. . They played through the entire game, which was unusually rough, without mak ing a single personal fouL A record that reflects more credit on the University as a whole than if the basketeers had won by an over-. whelming score. pistol. The ball arched high, the pistol I sounded, and the ball dropped through the netting, all these events happening in I the order named. Kentucky was defeated and Georgia went Into the semi-final round of play. This year the Colonels have the avowed intention of avenging that one point defeat and of carrying the title back to Louisvillle. So far they have gone well toward the accomplishment of that intention, for they have won every game played with Conference quints this year, a feat accomplished . only by the "Flying Phantoms" of the University of Tar heelia. This record ia especially good when the fact is seen that only half of the - Conference teams have annexed half of their games. The percentage is And speaking of clean sport; one ofbem8 watched closer than ever this the cleanest branches of athletics takes yc" because only 10 of the 22 teams tion about your work during the year the siBL in the spring. That is track can enter the Tournament in Atlanta 1925, before the twenty-second also, and field sports. All competition is man February 26. which date is the necessary deadline for to man, everything open and above-board, The Virginia Cavaliers and the Old this section. and there Is no opportunity for trickery I Liners of the University of Maryland By so doing you shall insure the sue- Dr dirty work- Nothing brings a man had dear slates until the beginning of the cess of the most usual alumni 'section out for hi8 true xU quicker than a track Past week. Last week though the Tar any university has yet dared to nro-l111661, AU of which leads to the factHeels swept the Cavaliers away before . . I il l 1 1 m . i ... .. I A - 1 1 t .a. . - - iuai me lar neei, cinaerpatn men will iuclr ue"-: onsiaugnt ana won 47 to 10 start their 1926 season Saturday night w one of the one-sided game of the when they go to Richmond for the an- wek, while the Virginians came back nual South Atlantic Indoor Games. the following night and took the Old , , ' Liners off of their high perch. K.vax.u uaie nanson nas oeen eroom-l m.. tt: . j j t . I . . . , I wuifWKJf VI 1U1&S15S11JU1 nuvsnccu round out mar his sneed artists tnr this initial . . , . through investigations such things as: whiie Coach Bob Fetzer ha7b; .giving 11,? ' C'g" ""V, Economic value of reinforcements in hie i ..v auiuiK k iru. urdcuce. i A;f.a t . . i . concrete Davements. h,a tu. u '. . "ul " ior me Dasnet dirt Mti : .Tzzrr ' m c: rr 1 t.-' "owm, tn lost f -j I ouiau ou mi, UJIU LUC'WO;il OI LUOSC I duce. Very truly yours, : . " Editor-in-Chief. The 1927 Badger ine work with which Prof. Janda has been connected has Culvert pipe investigation, and Initial Hit fn th. T C TT ..vfl. 1.. . I u.w m fcJ. V . UULUL QUU im ' v me who nave oeen out nas Deen namiiered ... . . , urban aspects of highway finance prob- by the rotten weather cndiUons The LHZ ZZJTZ nZ irncK iias oeen a repuca or the I : . . ... . , The V,ni ni r..... . ..itinn.i c. - m..j .t . , aKMIUtS iu wim over w points, -. ..v.,u.i iuiiu VjUUUCIX IS I l"ul"uai uca ux 1UUU, JCjVCH lUc OOorQ I vrKll l. 1 , - . merely a clearing house for the num- track which has been laid out on the with ; their opponents renisterin 374 erous tests which are conducted In diff- fleld has fond its supports none too se-Lnint- aik.7 : erent parts of the U. S.-the tests on nd it gives beneath ihe feet of the number Sr"!1" JJr0'"0 tallied against her in sev. games of ixiai tests are run " "v"0'" uw. which sh. h.. k Tt: . . .. - . " rr, : : - rcn u Jonas wm w t d wiu, pows .c uruugnt logeuier at us depart- tw o.-.u .. scored hv each to.m .nl Jto n-nt. --. - a.a.ysis. student body wfll watch Captain Jonas are M foll0WSi Theta Kappa Nu announces the nlcdir. I m his initial performance of the season. ing of the II. B. Field, Decatur, Georgia; He ,owered the half-mile record In every tt. Kouse. Rose Hill. V r : . r a lll: scneauie last year, and he , ... i.i . . - - i Dickerson. Coraneake. N c may take a pot-shot at the indoor mark encicy , m t oaiuraay nignt. other men who will be """ssppi Miu-term reports will be ready at watched are Elliott arid PritchetK o-n. Maryland me omce or tne registrar today, Opp. February 15. Calendar Saturday, February 13 19:00 A. M. American Society Civil Engineers, Phillips Hall. 7:30 P. M. Phi and Di Literary Societies. 80 P. M. U. N. C. vs. Florida, Tin Can. - v Sunday, February 14',- 6:30 P. M; Young People's In terdenominational Union, Presby terian Church. . . Monday, February 15 8:30 P, M. Y Cabinet meeting. . Folk Plays matinee and night Theatre Buiding. Tuesday, February 16 8:30 P. M. U. N. C. vs. Wake Forest Tin Can. 8:30 P. M. Freshman Friendship Council. Folk Plays matinee and night Wednesday, February 17 10:30 A. M. Dr. .Nathan Kraus, Memoriul Hall. K- Circles. We always come back to where we started. Write columns and say noth ing. ; Newspaper men do it every day, Make words dance. Press agents do it, Fill gaping columns," thirteen ems wide. Read the Dial. Do something intelligent Perhaps next time; Be collegiate. Eat sleep, study, catch classes. Then next day do the same thing. You'll be edu cated, after a while. Go out for activi ties, they'll broaden you. Name in the Tar Heel. Fine. Jazzed up cultures, Dollars and cents.- Education. Shall we be "thinkers that do not falter beneath the condemnation of the sleepy, mud- covered herd that grunts and ambles its way down the ruts to oblivion?" When you get to the end , of your rope . tie a knot in it and hang on. LOCAL FILLERS Mr: W. D. McMillan brought his wife and twins home from Raleigh Thursday afternoon. They are reported to be getting along very nicely. BAPTIST ; Eugene Olive, Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sunday school. 11. -00 a.m. Regular sermon. 7:30 p.m. Sermon. CHRISTIAN i i B. J. Howard, Pastor 9:43 a.m. Sunday school. -11 :00 a.m. Regular sermon. 7:30 p.m. Services. CHAPEL OF THE CROSS (Episcopal) A. S. Lawrence, Rector 8:00 .a.m. Holy Communion. 9:45 a.m. Sunday school. II :00 a.m. Sermon. 7:30 p.m. Sermon: "The Permanent j Value of the Old Testament" CATHOLIC Services on the first and third Sun days of the month at 8:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Y. M. C. A. LUTHERAN Student group meets every Sunday night at 7 in the Y. M. C. A. ; : METHODIST Walter Patten, Minister 9:45 a.m.-Sunday school; M. R. Tra- bue, teacher of the students' class. " 11:00 a.m. Sermon. 7:30 p.m. Sermon. PRESBYTERIAN W. D. "Parson" Moss, Minister 9:45 a.m. Sunday school. 11:00 a.m. Worship. 7:30 p.m. Sermon. - their freshman year. with a good lead. The Richmond neet Alabama competition, and both will go in with a determination to bring back the mile title that Andy Bell annexed last spring. There is still one little matter that furnishes dope for, the bull sessions of the student sport en thusiasts and that is the coaching situation. Who's gonna be. the lucky guy any way? " Harry Stuhldreher and Don Miller are still languishing in the western part of the state waiting for that definite answer that the committee on the selection of a coach promised them by Friday of this week. While they wait no new develop ments come from the headquarters of the gentlemen in power, and reports still go the rounds of THIS MAN and THAT MAN coming up for consideration. While all that gossip persists the Stu dent body has settled back and is breath ing three wishes daily that the "Two Horsemen" may be tendered a nice fat contract The students at least can see the advantage the signing of these coaches would mean for them and the University. Stuhldreher and Miller have delivered the goods both as players and coaches, and the belief of a certain re ligious sect is that "what has been will be again." Why shouldn't that be true in sports as well as In matter of church P One thing is sure! That is that W. L. Pts. Pts. Pct North Carolina 3 0 128 67 1,000 Kentucky . 3,0 96 71 1,000 Mississippi 8 1 346 227 .889 Maryland 5 1 180 133 .833 Virginia I 4 1 154 150 .800 Georgia 6 3 330 277 .667 Tulane 8 5 "0 374 .615 Miss. A. and M. 3 2 139 128 400 Louisiana State 4 3 166 185 .571 N. C. State. 3 3 185 155 .500 South Carolina 1 1 58 77 .500 Alabama 3 4 176 176 .428 Vanderbilt 2 , 3 4 166 182 .428 Georgia Tech . . 3 7 251 277 300 Auburn . 1 4 157 206 200 W. and I 1 4 145 194 200 Florida 0 0 0 0 .000 Sewanee 0 0 0 0 .000 Tennessee f, .V 0 2 ' 49 74 .000 V. M. I. " - " . . O S : 68 89 .000 V. P. I. 0 4 80 126 .000 Clemson o 5 100 197 .000 the "two horsemen' would have the entire support of the Tar Heel students! . Aside from the matter of winning teams their accepting an offer to coach here would in all probability mean two or three hundred more freshmen here next fall. The chances are that con temporary with their signing for the job freshman applications would flow In on the registrar's office In such a stream that an extra force of clerks would be necessary. Victrolas and Victor Records STRING INSTRUMENTS AND SHEET MUSIC? ' Oldest Victor Establishment in Durham H. A. GASKINS Musical Headquarters 417 East Main St. DURHAM, N. C. New Victor Records Every Friday 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 13, 1926, edition 1
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