Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 11, 1926, edition 1 / Page 2
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Vdqst THE TAR HEEL Thursday, March 11, XSSQ- 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 toe Publications Union of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscription price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, for the ' college year. Offices on flist floor of New Building, Telephone 318-Red. West Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. Cg III I II. H. N. Parker. Harold Seburn... . 1. Editor Butinett Manager Editorial Department Managing Editor J. T. Madry .-.Tuesday Issue P. N. Olive , , Thursday Issue F. P. Eller Saturday Issue C W. L. N. Basetnore . Byrd . Assistant Editor Sport Editor J. O. Allison J. P. Aseby K. Barwick J. R. Bobbitt, Jr. H. P. Brandia D. D. Carroll W. G. Cherry Ben Satan 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. NeaL Jr. W. D. Perry W. P. Ragan T. N. Robbins C F. Rouse S. B. Shepherd, Jr, A. B. White Business Department Sarah Boyd . Jut to But. Mgr. T. V. Moore Advertising Department Chas. A. Nelson " Advertising Managtr Huron Holmes S. Linton Smith ' , J. C UaeelL Jr. Circulation Department Marvin Fowler . Dick Slagle Tom Raney Circulation Manager John Deaton Reg Schmitt Ton can purchase any article adver tised in The Tar Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver tises is guaranteed to be as repre- seated. The Tar Heel solicits adver tising from reputable concerns only, Thursday, March 11, 1926 ' The March Magazine shows Im provement. Marching onward to bigger and better exposes? The Tae IHeki, and the Cottonrills make their best bow. Faculty roles that Sophomores and Freshmen must take their work as they find it. What ho; no more slid ing home for a Phi Beta Kappa key on crip courses?' The University can settle down to normalcy again. The President has been retained, and coaches have been signed. State College is to open up a meterman's course. After the suc cess of "Red" Grange, we'd think a iceman's course would be more in order. Why college boys bust exams : Junior-Senior Party at N. C. C. W. on March 18th. 24,000 eggs scrambled when truck turned over in Denver. 24,000 eggs indicate that Denver is a close rival to Chapel Hill. - n i i i i ' i N. C. State College, with its handsome new gym, invites 700 high school bovB there for a basketball tournament. Carolina, with its Tin Can, plays wise and stages most of its games off the Hill. Favorite weekly saying of our fa vorite cynic: "Placing the date for the campus elections on April, 1 is al most as appropriate as calling them elections". Talking about laughing last. The Technician .thought the row between The Tar Heel and the Old Gold and Black over varsity basketball a big joke. But now we see that the two Wake County schools are at each other's throat over FRESH MAN basketball. And we've got a sideline seat. ' ' WE'LL BE EFFICIENT BY AND BY The faculty has decided that Freshmen and Sophomores must take freshman and sophomore sub jects. The Junior Class was found to possess a decided freshman tint and so It was decided that students : $ .. should hereafter be brought up as they should go. j We're getting right proud of dear old Alma Mater. . Compulsory gym nasium attendance really became compulsory during the past fall, and we heard yesterday that a freshman had received a card telling him that he was on probation for violating the compulsory chapel edict. And now a Freshman niust be a Freshman even in his class work'! When the University gets its Thou Shalt Nots completed we, hope that it'll jot them down so that the next college generation can imbibe them and not suffer from any ignorance of the law excuseth no man policy. , We understand that the traditional catalog of the University is to be re written and made intelligible. That' good news and the students will be only one of the two parties that will benefit from this revision. The Deans might compile a supplement to the catalog and inform both the students and faculty of all our pe culiar, unique, and necessary rul ings. A good many ot Jne members of the faculty would receive no harm from an occasional perusal of such a publication. OPEN FORUM Nominees Accepted North Carolina College, Greensboro, N. C, Mar. 4, 1926. Eoitob, Tab Heel University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, N. C. ' Dear Mr. Editor: We want to thank you for the prompt attention you gave our letter and ad- ertisement The two men, whom the Tab Heel nominated, we believe are the very ones for the place. We looked in last year's Tacketg Tack and had no trouble in finding Mr. Young's picture; but as for Mr. Couch s picture we searched rather diligently before we found his. . We think the Tar Heel used excellent judgment and we want to take this means of asking them to be our guests at Junior-Senior banquet. I am sure they come up to every requirement every way, and any one would con sider it an honor to have them as guests. We feel sure that neither of them will be disappointed, and that they will find us to be the queens of the college. Since the Tor Heel recommended these kyoung gentlemen so highly no other ref erence is necessary. Neither are the pic tures, unless they would like to give them as a personal gift. ",.x-)':. Please allow us to thank you again, Mr. Editor, and wont you see that the Messrs. Couch and Young get this invi tation? 'v.- May we sign this letter as, Just, v : . US. Kansas State Teachers College of Hays, recently celebrated the twenty fifth anniversary of its creation by an impressive pageant More than a thous and persons took part in the drama which was a true epic of the plains coun try. A crowd of about 1,500 people wit nessed the performance. The "T Heltisg Pet 1 l Vl -M By C W B The most difficult of tasks is that of putting down something of what pne has seen, heard, read, or felt It may that ' examinations are distasteful for that; still they are as inevitable as fall ing in love. And certainly more regular in occurrence and less sporadic in ef fect One more week, and the curtain will be almost ready to fall on Act of the year's show. He hardly counts? the Individual actor the student he misses a cue, he is hissed; and if he drops through the trap-door and out of the show, another puppet is in readiness to take his place. Tryout performances . .- . three months in length. Calendar Thursday, March 11 2:00 P.M. Geology . Club meeting, new East building. ' , , .- 7:30 P.M. Deutsche Verein meeting. 8:30 P.M. Bible Discussion groups. 8:30 : P.M. "Zellner" performance, Theatre building. . . . 9.-00 P.M. Sophomore smoker, Swain Hall. Friday, March 12 12. -00 M. Varser ' Address, Manning HalL m .... 6.-00 P.M. "Y" Cabnet Banquet, First Baptist Church. 6:30 P.M. Studio Production, Play- maker Theatre. Saturday, March 13 , 7:00 P.M. Phi and Di Societies, Phi and Di Halls. 8:30 P.M. Studio Production Play- maker Theatre. " Sunday, March 14 5. -00 P.M. Organ. Recital, Episcopal church. - ' Tuesday, Iareh 16 9.-00 A.M. Examinations, 9 80 classes. 2:30 P.M. Examinations,1 2:00 o'clock classes.. v -. --. Wednesday, March 17 9:00 A.M. Examinations, 11:00- o'clock classes. 1 ' 2:80 P.M. Examinations, 3:00 and 4:00 o'clock classes. Thursday, March 18 9:00 AJM. Examinations, 12:00 o'clock classes. 1 2:30 P.M. Examinations, 1:00 o'clock classes.- - " :; - Friday, March 19 " " 9:00 A.M. Examinations 8:30 classes. 230 P.M. Examinations, all conflicts. As for Theodore Dreiser's An Ameri can Tragedy. "Buy this book and read it ail. It will reward you as every other book of Dreiser's always does. Take the two volumes. Find out, once for all, the difference between a human flesh and blood, male man, full of real tenderness for life, and the smarties, the word sling- ers, the clever fellows, the nasty cocksure half men of the writing world." : And if we know who said that, we know another of those potent, virile American writers who dare to scratch beneath the sur face of social hypocrisy. , ' If in our youth we would seek and meet Chivalry, Love and God, we would perhaps do well to read more after the present-day, school of writers. ' Many of them have a passionate desire to, tell the truth, even if that truth blisters our ears, Facts, truth, realism,; are all clean. It is only the hypocrisy in which we try to hide these things that , is filthy. The younger writers are certainly "not satis fied with the hvrxjcritlcal make-shifts bv which the nation is trying to live. They expose the hidden sores that are putrid in our civilisation. But they try to un cover these sores only as the first step to ward curing them, and the outcry against their books is the angry protest of peo ple who would rather die of a loathsome disease than let the world know they have it" Artistic justice is an absurdity. I de tailed a Tar Hael renorter not ton ao to stand at the door of the Pick nd cas ually get, the opinions of twenty people regarding the picture; asking them "How was Pick?" as they filed out The an swers ranged from "damn good, pretty good, fair, pretty fair, not much, kinder ordinary, to jotten," Aesthetic appre ciation, . thenV pre-supposes emotional parity among men belonging to different physiological categories; such a test was unfair to that particular Pick. Morality and aesthetics may blend in icollegians, and may not A thing is beautiful ac cording to our individual enthusiasms. What does it matter of the crowd does not admire what we admire? There may be certain virtue in falling into the easy habit of belittling the world you -were born in by feeling yourself too good for it. That is' the chief fault of the young intellectual, Forgetting to re member that the world was a going con cern a long time before he showed up, he gets "bet up" over the prospect of reforming the whole works. Or else lets the hollow laugh of the synic echo the philosophy of life he has created for him self. Loving the vainglory of our own words, the pomp of argument, and the vanity of ideas, we forget to live in the simple faith that today is far better than yesterday, and that tomorrow will be better than today.; n-' There is progress in Tarheelia. Good roads state. New real estate develop ments. Swelled census figures of every town. Boom. Boom. First state in pro duction of towels and washboards and mica' and chairs and cigarettes, ' Prog ress. Watch us grow. Good ole North Carolina. Seventy-five thousand native white men and women of voting age who can neither read nor write. Living and dying in suffocating loneliness of spirit, heirs of all the ages, unable to claim their birthright. North Carolina needs a few facts exposed more widely; let the chambers of commerce flinch and squirm and try to cover up certain bits of realism about the grandest state In the union. - His work is not finished yet, he' who used to thank God for South Carolina because it kept us from being at the bottom of the scale. ' . Develop. Develop. It's time to begin breeding and growing and developing humanity. It brings on a yawn; business of put ting enough words together to equal one column. If , I were gifted with imagi nation, I might imagine myself a lime rick artist, then I would want to make rhymes. : "Of taverns quaint where poets dream, Of cafes gaudily agleam, And vice that's overbold; Of crystal shimmer, silver, sheen, Of Boft and soothing nicotine, . Of wine that's rich and old, Of all the living tide that flaws, From princes down to puppet shows." LOST One jrr ay-brown overcoat first of last week. May have been left in Library, Saunders, or Pea- body. Return to JOE MOYE, Sigma Nu House. ' CORRECTION' Mr. S. P. Truselle, of the Music Department, calls attention to the fact that his interview with a Tab Heei reporter on the importance of "Music as a Profession", was misinterpreted in the columns of the last edition. ; Mr. Truselle stated that the prestige of the-university justi fied a much larger Music depart ment, a goal which would doubt less be seen reached through the efforts of Mr. Weaver, head of this branch of education. ' He fur ther declared that a larger num ber of co-eds will be condusive to more musical interest and ex pansion, but he did not bemoan' the lack of such students.' He wishes to make it clear that his sentiments .and remarks' upon the work of this important department entertained no complaint of the present status of that school. ORATIONS ON PEACE TO BE GIVEN IN MAY A State Peace Oratorical contest will be held at Davidson College or in Char lotte May 3rd, 1926, at 8:00 p.m. it Is an nounced by the University Debate coun cil who received the invitation from Pro fessor Elwood C. Perisho, of Guilford College. .'" In the past this contest has aroused much interest on the campus here and the' fact that there are two cash prises up is expected to draw many contestants into the running. It is hoped that there will be a large representation out for the prises, since it is necessary that at least three men compete in the prelimi naries here before Carolina will be al lowed a representative. - ' ' The orations which are to be entirely original must deal with the general sub ject of Peace and no speech of more than fifteen minutes length will be accepted. prise of $60.00 is awarded the ora tion given first place, and one of $40.00 to the second best oration. ' Any one desiring further information about the contest or who wish to enter may see any member of the debate council. "ADAH AND EVA" WILL BE HERE MARCh 30 Gus Bolton and George Mjddletons Fa mous Comedy-Drama to Be Pre sented Here by Vivian Players. An inspiring comedy-drama of Ameri can "society by Guy Bolton and George MIddleton, Adam and Eva, will be pre sented in the Haymaker Theatre by the Vivian Players of New York Saturday afternoon and evening, March 20. This play was a "hit" from its first presenta tion on Broadway, where it ran for I solid year at the Longacre Theatre. It was wrlten by the authors of Polly With a Pant, 'another play which had a long run in New York. The play is clean and wholesome throughout, but its dialogueis sparkling and it has excellent dramatic sequence. The theme of Adam and Eva is woven about the old adage, "Happiness Must Be Earned". The story concerns the wasteful and thoughtlessly Idle family of James King, a wealthy widower who is perpetually' harrassed by. his family's demands. In sheer desperation Mr. King plans a business trip to South America and instructs his young business man ager, Adam Smith, to run and direct his household affairs as he would any other business assignment 'Cancelling charge accounts and curtailing allowances with a firm and indiscriminate .hand, Smith briskly proceeds to obey these .orders with .strict attention to details. In the meantime, however, he has caused al most riot and pandemonium in the fami ly. - He further upsets the even tenor of the lives of his eharge by convincing them that the King fortune had been entirely wiped out in the stock market and, consequently, that the earning of money by these dwellers in the lap of luxury was an absolute necessity. The story of the play is found in the manner in which they all strive to become earn est and faithful members of the working class through the mediums of , haber dashery, poultry, insurance policies, etc. and how they succeed in ultimately finding' undreamed of contentment and happiness. The romance of the play is found in the pretty love story, which parallels the development of the main plot . . --I Adam and Eva is funny and entertain ing from the start to finish and promises to be one of the best attractions that has been brought here this year. Use Classified Ad. Section of The Tar Heel and get results. METZENTHIN TO GIVE ' ILLUSTOATED LECTURE Subject Will Be "From" The Rhine to Berlin" Continuation of "Germany From Bremen to Berlin." Dr. Metaenthin, of the University Qer . man department will give an Illustrated lecture to the members of the Deutscher Verein at the regular meeting tonight at'. T o'clock. 'Dr. Metienthln's subject will ! be "From the Rhine to Berlin" and will be based on personal experience . and data gathered by the University profes sor in his travels over the European con- I tlnent last summer. The place of meet,,, ing has not been decided on as this goes to press but will be announced by posV ters on the campus. . ' Dr. Metsenthin's lecture is a continua tion of one which he gave before the club" ! a short time ago on the subject of "Ger- many From Bremen to Berlin." ' Due-i to lack of time, the lecturer only car-" ried his audience as far as tie Rhlnt Tonight '"the trip ''"'will be taken up at ; the famous old river and the audience will be carried in imagination over the' beautiful country between the Rhine and ' the famous old picturesque German , capital.'' - ' -:-; The Illustrations will consist 0f ian; tern slides showing scenes of places of Interest In the towns Included in the lecture, including many pictures of Tart 5 galleries, famous castles, and other places in Berlin. Perhaps the most kr-' : teresting pictures in the collection are " the views of the Bremen art galleries. " These views, give a very good Idea of ' the beauty, art and romance of the old v art galleries. - -V.;-: ' ' Asa Real Good SPORTING GOODS i $;; hC" Btrr at Odell's JFAr Quality Tell : K GaaEMSBoao, N. & . v-"-" BUILDERS' SUPPLIES si lt. R. CLARK DENTIST Over Bank of Chapel Hill Phone 385 Fick a pipe and pack it with good old TALK about "alliteration's artful aid" i printer certainly raided the "p" box that trip. But let that go! the advice is just as serious and sound as though it were couched in the careful diction of an English prof. Just get yourself a jimay-pipe and fill the bowl to the brim with Prince Albert. Light up, and let the first fragrant whiff tell you that no other tobacco is like P. A. -or can bel Cool and sweet and fragrant, P. A. has everything a fellow ever wished for in a smoke. P. A. can't bite your tongue or parch your throat. The Prince Albert process settled that in P. A.'s freshman year. Get yourself-a tidy red tin of Prince Albert today. The first load-up will tell you why pipes are so fashionable among young men today. ' , . the V i t. A. U toU iMnwim tm tidy r4 tint, found mni hslf pound tin humidor,, mni pound tryUt-tltt humidor wrlh , ipong moitttntr lop. And olwryt with mry bit of Hi end porch rtmovd y th frtneo Albnt pro. M&AtBERI no other tobacco is like it! C 1M,B. . RrMaTbut Company, Wlrabm-ekKia. N. C. '. t VT .
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 11, 1926, edition 1
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