Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 4, 1926, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
1 aq t THE TAR HEEL Thursday, March 4, 1J26 North Carolina is to be congratu lated, for it is North Carolina that will reap the benefit of his remain ing here. The progress of the state Leading Southern College Tri-Weekly I has been saved from a sadden and Newspaper ,, bV The The future nrnmisea tn Vie con- Press Association i uuuuuuu ui uic jpasi.. j.jic uuctnuc I of tolerance that has been advocated i i . y it v m . I ruDisnec. tnree limes every weeK oi "v- fi. TTiMi i rnlle.e vear. and in the official news-1 ' "V v paper of the Publications Union of the I apparently bearing fruit. The reso- local and $3.00 out of town, for the! tees were really votes of confidence college year. ' tn- n. Che A fnr M lmmi. Offices on (list floor of New West lr""u" Building, Telephone 318-Red. I Dr. Chase is Drobablv sacrificing much in remaining at ChflDel Hill. Entered as second-class mall matter at I rT . i j - . . j the Post Office. Chanel HilL N. C. nc uas -scu r coupcrauou .uu sympathetic understanding. The H. N. Parker Harold Sebum.... -Editor I state owes this to him not as a re- ....Jtusines Manager I turn sacrifice on its part but as a jduty and as a privilege. Editorial Department Managing Editors J. T. Madry Tuesday Issue P. N. Olive F. P. Eller Thursday Issue -Saturday Issue C. W. Bazemcre L. N. Byrd .. Assistant Editor Sport Editor COACH'S COLUMN By M. D. Ransoh J. O. Allison J. F. Aseby K. Bar wick J. R. Bobbitt, Jr. H. P. Brandis D. D. CarroU W. G. Cherry Ben Eaton Eunice Ervin B, K. Fowler Q L. Keel, Jr. Staff -J. B. Lewis v It; R. LitUe E, R. McKethan, Jr. U H. McPherson W. W. Neal, Jr. W. D. Perry W. P. Ragan L N. Robbins C, F. Rouse S. B. Shepherd, Jr. A. B. White - The circulation manager of the : Buccaneer announces that the March number of the Buccaneer will be delivered tonight begin ning at 9 o'clock. There have been . many complaints from students who claim that they have not been receiving their copies regu larly. The circulation manager , i explains that unless the students are in their rooms copies cannot be delivered to them in person, and cannot be responsible for their receiving them as he has to leave them in front of the door or in an unlocked room. Students who have failed to re ceive copies previously are urged to be in their rooms tonight. The Helfcg Pet By C. W. B. It is only the Philistine who seeks to estimate a personality by the vulgar test of production. . Too many hack writers, with millions of readers, yet miserable. Too few geniuses, with dozens of read ers, yet happy. Too few pioneers, who pave new intelectual inroads into the great Sahara of the South. Too few of the Telfair, Jr., type, recognizing that life itself is an art; that literature and letters may save us from mental and spiritual decadence where nothing else will. Half Mile, Parker "24, I min. 59 3-5 seconds. Mile, Bell 25, 4 min. 28 3-5 seconds. The road from Main Street to Par nassus is not so hard. Only fifteen min utes a day. Nice convenient little laps, Two mile, Purser '24, 9 min. 58 1-5 with on Msts in between. Makes us ls wonaer wny we aiant stay at home four yd. high hurdles, Moore 25, IS yerS d travel U of seconds. 120 1-10 seconds. 220 low hurdles, Moore '25, 21 1-10 seconds. taking it at from 12 to 16-hour treks per day, largely-taken up in, running around catching classes, trips to the li- Shot put (161b.), Pitman '07, 40 ft. 6 brary r the libraries, more properly The Harvard Glee Club had to with draw from the 1926 Intercollegiate Glee Club contest at New York, because the officials insisted on including Horatio Parker's Lamp in the West as the prize song. This song heads the list on 'the recent programs of the U, N. C. Glee Club. And they, sing it well. South of the M. and D. line we are not hyper critical! Certainly not in music. Masons are not architects; neither are students scholars, enough to pose as connoisseurs of music. . , for there are so many skunks and so f i-.iL.ii.i. nc reverence traditii have lots of it, , here in even. Although there has been a marked scarcity of trained material for both the freshman and varsity track squads, the strength of the letter has steadily in creased. The development of track athletics can in a large measure be at tributed to the new interest on the part of the student body, resulting in the ac tive participation of a larger group of men. .- This in turn has meant keener!5 1-2 inches. competition for the team, and often times the discovery of men who developed into star performers. Recent track history at Carolina is filled with the names of men who began their career on the cinder-path under Coach Bob Fefzer. The majority of the men on the 1925 team had never parti cipated in track and field, athletics be fore coming ' to the University. Only inches. Discus throw, Forham "24 127 ft 9 inches.' Javelin throw, Abernathy '24, 180 feet Broad jump, Wright 16, 22 ft 5 Inches. . , High jump, Ambrose "25, 5 ft 11 1-2 inches. Pole vault, Ranson, R. L, "24, 11 ft speaking; and in various other pursuits .' . , activities, they sometimes caH them. If fifteen minutes a day will do the trick, what will 720 minutes a day do? ' 47 times as much? 7 Or, if we are all Union, 480 minutes a day? What does it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own sense of humor? CAIIED TO RICIIHIOND BY BROTHER'S DEATH Catholicism leaves pagan beauty nude, I turns away its head and says i "Don't look at it, it's sinful" Protestantism Crams it into a sack. For the non-artist, art is always immoral. Is there a single outstanding poet, .a single brilliant art- Dr. R, B. Lawson Forced to Leave P. a single art gallery, a "single won- Team In Atlanta Tar Heels In derful work of sculpture, a single power- Good Condition. . " thinker, if we please, in the South today? Meaning something that really Dr. R. B. Lawson left Atlanta Sun- sets a mark In the field. The greatest : Business Department Sarah Boyd Asst to Bus. Mgr. T. V. Moore Advertising Department Chas. A. Nelson . . Advertising Manager Baron Holmes S. Linton Smith J. C, UzzelL Jr. Circulation Department Marvin Fowler .-Circulation Manager Dick Slagle John Deaton Tom Raney Reg Schmitt 1 I S i You can purchase any article adver tiser in ine lar Ueel witn perfect I majority of the high and prep schools of I gjnia capital. Great national park or something pro- saiety oecause everytnmg it aflver- this section. It is interesting to note Dr. Lawson accompanied the basket- Psed in western North Carolina. Prob- uses is guaranteed to be as repre- that six of the fourteen college records ball quint to Atlanta as trainer, and wy can't agree on that Develop our senteo. The Tar Heel pohcits adver- are held by men who began work on their was endeavoring to put Billy Devin, All- resources,. We have scenery, natural ad- t miner frnm rnntahU t . . . . . I J " " y special event under the tutelage of Southern guard, in playing condition ibe vantages, -everything. Develop. Fine. Coach Fetzer. We also note that three fore the final games of the tournament. The greatest undeveloped resouce of the x Marca 4, j.yzo of the last four lettermen to captain the six of the eighteen lettermen had exper- y morning for Richmond due to the attempt at artistic perpetuation in the lence in high or prep school. This is death of his brother, Rev, W. H. Law- South, the Stone Mountain proposal, was largely due to the recent incorporation I son. The funeral of Mr. Lawson was I squelched by the provincialism of the of track into the athletic program of the I held yesterdav afternoon in the Vtr- natives down there. Couldn't agree. Cobb goes, under the knife, 'twas Ty and not Sprodie. ! South today is the odd-looking spherical knob attached to the upper end of the 1 he king is king again in spite of the rebellious province of North Carolina. I team were inexperienced in this sort until WALKED TO DURHAM But their freshman year. BAREFOOTED IN COLD spinal column of "each smug citizen, A glance at the Carolina records re- I veal in a definite fashion the excellent "Stock Rises in Winter Baseball," said a headline in this paper not long ago. sleepy printer made that error, Probably thinking of baseball himself; thinking of the joyous vernal awaken ing, and of the days of youth, and vacant lots and match games and everything. The printers always get the blame. What if it should have been Football? Just another little typographical error. .We work, and so do the printers work, at all sorts of ungodly hours of night some times, that you may get the Tab Hsu to read at breakfast, freshly printed, and with the latest news possible. ' Whether all that is received appreciatively or not is not the point; rather it is, that an occasional error will creep In; and then it's the old story of asking the readers' indulgence, .7 ;-! ' "7 : "' Dreamers dream of the millenium. So cialists dream of free lunch. 7 1 dream of a national campaign for the exposure of fraud," to be followed by an era of intellectual honesty. ; Something that will strip aside the arras and show the heap- ed-up muck In the corners of the social mind. Something that will unmask the mighty and reveal the .donkey, beneath the regal trappings. Something that will put the searchlight on the peccadillo of low visibility. The. burble of flattery is more welcome than the gurgle of truth, We are so made. Society is soaked in fraud and absolute as is the purity of Messrs. Proctor and Gamble's 3 well- known lustra agent More open minds, and less of those intellectual Atlases who know almost everything and can burble the rest ; Fraudulent- politics in this state take on the semblance of state craft Fraudulent mouthing seems true piety. 'Fraudulent educational methods, with due apology to our Alma Mater, Heaven bless her, assume the mask of culture. If we would be intellectually honest, we might call a sham a sham, allowing that shams as, our virtues are better than no , virtues at all. , Mr. Mencken helps some, with his potent little Mercury.' Even if he does sometimes run a rabbit up the tree instead of a skunk, Two victories were won by North Carolina Tuesday, one in Raleigh and the other in Atlanta. News of the Raleigh victory was given to the students waiting for news of the Atlanta victory. It was met with a genuine yell of approval. Cheer leaders were not needed. Dr. Chase's decision to remain here might justify the modification, for his personal use, of the Tar Heel refrain to: I'm neither Tar Heel born. Nor Tar Heel dead, But when I die, 7; . I'll be a Tar Heel dead. A negro, deciding to commit sui cide, jumps intoa furnace. Decid ing that the fire was too hot, he jumped out and hopped into the river. And then we wonder how many times his Ma has told him not to go in swimming before the first of May. Alabama University, the conquer- er of Washington, condescendingly smiles upon basketball as a minor sport. She marvels at the interest displayed in it here. But Mississippi her near neighbor, evidently still thinks well of the floor game. n e are indebted to a returnee from Florida for this: Every bird carries a bill, and Every blade of grass has a green back, and Every wind that blows brings a draft, and Every horse has a check, and The negroes do their washing with Gold Dust, and Many of the folks ride on Diamond tires. DR. CHASE REMAINS The spontaneous outburst of cheer ing in Memorial Hall Tuesday night when it was announced that Dr. . Chase was to remain as president of the University, was indicative of the campus's gratification at the deci sion made by him. It was so cold Tuesday night that t k fitllffant tuutv was rinwillini. ir. w 1 improvement, which has taken place un-l nsM lWm fw(1,v m:, hir. tn rw A -I... I r i r,. I I . . , . ham, a stunt which has become the wuy, u.rcc returns nave moou e as- rI frm nf -I..- c...t f n.. if .. .v..i. I I -- Carolina wins the S. L C. basketball oi mem nave oeen oeiterea lime aneriour . trime during this period. Several have been two University students. were re once " smK-e not only willing to brave the eold. but son. the records as they stand now re- fn dn it farrfMW veal a preponderance of recent dates. I : , n . , . T . ui u.c rU u iuu labelled "There's One Bom Ewrv where from, six to fifteeen years. Take M:nut Et, - the Rn1, ritv Pan . - iu ul ine prCui reeorus. "Jnhn Trvino- f M..n ..J .. . "or tftawf mw Record Holders iClough Steele, of Saluda, students 100 yd. dash, McPherson 25, 9 9-10 1 at the University of .North Carolina, seconds. upon learning of Carolina's victory 220 yd. dash, McPherson 25, 22 sec- in 4he 80thern tournament last even- I Z n -. I onds. ing, siariea waiKing irom Cnapel 440 vd. run. Hoffman 10. 81 s-nnrl. HlU Durham barefooted to show I tneir joytuiiness over the victory, ac- cording to word received here. The I young men started their 12-mile hike at 11:15 o'clock, being given a big jsend off by fellow students, accord ing to the reports. The men . had not been seen in I Durham at an early hour this morn-1 ! ing and efforts to learn how far they traveled before their toes were nip ped by the freezing weather, were of no avail. It was stated by a stu dent at the state institution that the boys were so enthusiastic over the vic tory that they could not resist the temptation to walk the 12-m'iles bare footed to prove to the world that they were pleased." ion. v North Carv, But we must not make a fBti..u :t i. ji . . -umi x .t, r uc overurawed by it, daring to lay no impious hand on it, and viewini! with alarm those incorrogible souls whose ribald ridicule engulfs both the auto solemnized perpetrator of the fraud d his owlish dupes. STATE THEATRE MAKES . AN ATTRACTIVE OFFER There is published elsewhere in this is sue of the Tae Heel a guest ticket to the Edna Park Associate Players who are appearing at Raleigh next week. This plan of , offering a' guest ticket with each paid admission and a copy 0f the Ta HKi.,ad is' part of an endeavor on the part of the management of the popular Raleigh theatre to get Carolina students and f. people of Chapel Hill acquainted with what they consider the highest class of stock company in Amer ica. - ; The Edna Park Associate Players will present, two Broadway successes in the capitol city during the week of March 8-13; '"The Bat" and "3 Fellows and a fftrt" The first one, the Bat will run Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, while the latter will rim the remaining three days of the week. A large number of Carolina students is expected to avail themselves of this opportunity to see these two Broadway classics presented by a company of national fame at a bargain price. The Geology Club will meet this after noon at 2 o'clock in New East Building. 9" BIBLE DISCUSSION NO. 6 1. Is loyalty to Jesus as a per sonal God the central point in the Christian religion? 2. Did Jesus demand the prac tice of universal brotherhood? 3. According to Jesus' standard jf absolute unselfishness, how many businesses do you know of that would have to .stop? 4. According to Jesus' standard of purity and unselfishness, how many social customs and practices do you know of that would have to stop? 7 5. Exactly what did Jessu mean when He said, "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect"? Calendar Thursday, March 4 100 a.m. William Cain Civil Engineering Society, Phillips Hall. 2:00 P. M. Geology Club Meet ing, New East Building. 7:15 p.m. A. I. E. E. meeting, Phillips Hall. 7:00 P. M. Deutsche Verein meeting, Esplcopal Parish House. .7 7:30 p.m. Girls Basketball game. Chapel Hill vs. Garner, Bynum Gymnasium. 8:00 p.m. Baskatball game, East ern North Carolina championship. Goldsboro vs. Durham, Tin Can. , 8-30 p.m. Bible Discussion ' groups. ' Friday, March 5 ; 8:00p.m. Basketball game. West- ', ern North Carolina championship. Guilford vs. Winston-Salem, Tin Can. Saturday, March 6 . 7:30 P. M. Phi and Di Societies, Phi and Di Halls. 8:00 P. M. State, high School basketball championship, Tin Can. Sunday, March 7 4:00 P. M. Concert, Memorial Haii. ; . 7". -;' ' 9:00 P. M. Sigma Upsilon meet ing. Monday, March 8 7 -30 P. M. North Carolina Club Meeting.. 8:30 P. M. Y. Cabinet meeting, Y. M. C. A. ' 8:30 p.m. Indoor t Track Meet Tin Can. ' 90 P. M. FayetteviUe Club Meeting, Y. a M. A. Tuesday, March 9 8:30 p.m. Freshman Friendship Council meeting, Y. M. C A. you and spring are thrilling to the opening game of the year and your favor ite player drives out a homer as the stands rock with cheering have a Camel! CHAPEL HILL GIRLS PLAY GARNER TONIGHT The Chapel Hill high school girl's basketball team will play its first game in the championship race tonight with Uarner in Bynum Gymnasium at 71 o'clock. An admission fee of twentv- ftve cents will be charged. A good hard fought game is promised . when the two eastern group champions clash.' Garner has not lost a single game this season, and 'boasts of the record of nine consecutive wins. Chapel Hill is undefeated also, having won eight games. In these eight games played, Hogan for the local sextette has tossed approximately half of the points for Chapel Hill. Hogan will start the game off tomorrow night by playing Jumping Center for the Hill lassies, and if she keeps up her usual stride Chapel Hill will be dependent on her for a win or lose decision. The probable line up for the locals will be: L. Hogan, J. C. Gooch, R. F.; Durham, L. P.; Neville, J G.; Paige, R. G.,- and L. Walker, L. G. . . :,y fA ttil ..inftlja.., J I ilMj Into the tnakmg of this one cigarette goes all of the ability of the world $ largest organization of expert tobacco men. Nothing 1, loo good for Camel,. The choicest Turkish and 1 tCCOU Jhe rott ,Mul . Xhe most HT PackaS'. No other cigarette made is tiki Camel,. No better cigarette can be made. Camel, are the overwhelm, tng choice of experienced smokers. WHEN the first ball game is here. And the heavy hitter cracks the ball shrieking into deep cen ter for a home run have a Camel! For Camel adds the magic of its own fra grance to life's most fes tive ti-.ys. Camels are of evch choice tobaccos that the rcver tire the taste cr kaw a c'aretty after. tacts,- You'll get more corner tmcnt, more plea sure out of Camels than any other cigarette; So this fair spring day as a redoubtable batter lofts out one that it seems will never stop flying oh, then, taste the smoke that means completed enchantment. ' Have a Camel! Students at Iowa State College raised a "howl" when their noon hour was cut from 80 to 60 minutes. Our highest wish, if you Jo not yet know Camel quality, il "' . ynu try them. We ! vite ynu to compare Carneli with any telle made el any price. R. J. Reynold. Tobo ComPny Wiottoo-Salnni t.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 4, 1926, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75