Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 20, 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
Page Two THE TAR HEEL Saturday, November 20, 1928 CIjc Car fee! Leading Southern College Tri weekly Newspaper Member of North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Published three times every week of the college year, ana is xne omciui newspaper of the Publications Un ion of the University of North Caro lina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Subscrip tion price, $z.uu local ana $3-uu oui of town, lor tne college year. Offices in the basement of Alumni Building. Telephone 4M. J. T. MADRY.............v..............;.....JE7ditor F. F. Simon. :. Business Manager Editorial Department Managing Editors J. F. Ashbt",.,,; -....Tuesday Issue Byron White .-..... Thursday Issue L. H. McPherson.... Saturday Issue D. D. Carroll.. .Assistant Editor J. R. Bobbitt, Jt.....A88ignment Editor Staff J. H. Anderson W. P. Perry J. M. Block J. P. Pretlow J. E. Coggins T. M. Reece Walter Creech D. T. Seiwell J. R. DeJournette S. B. Shephard, Jr. E. J. Evans J. Shohan D. S. Gardner F.L. Smith Glen P. Holder W. S. Spearman T. W. Johnson W. H. Strickland W. E. Kindley, Jr. Wm. H. Windley Alex Mendenhall H. A. Wood H. L. Merritt J. 0. Marshall Business Department W. W. Neal, Jr Asst. to Bus. Mgr. Charles Brown ...-..Collection Mgr. G. W. Ray. -Accountant Managers of Issues Tuesday Issue..... ..M. E. Block Thursday Issue...L.... James Styles Saturday Issue. ;. Worth Eby Advertising Department ' Kenneth R J ones. Advertising Mgr. M. W. Breman.... LocalAdv. Mgr. Edward Smith...VaimaJ Adv. Mgr. "William K. Wiley - Ben Schwartz G. W. Bradham Oates McCullen W. R, Hill W. B. Bloomburg Circulation Department Henry C, Harper .Circulation Mgr. R. C. Mulder C. W. Colwell Douglas Boyce -Filer of Issues Tom Raney W. W. Turner You can purchase any article adver tised in the The Tar Heel with perfect safety because everything it advertises is guaranteed to be as represented. The Tar Heel so licits advertising from reputable concerns only. Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office,. Chapel Hill, N. C. Saturday, November 20; 1926 PARAGRAPHICS Co-ed Cora says if the woman pays, why is it the men are al ways broke? should express themselves at once or there won't be a chance of getting the change made this year. The committee on the e aualization of quarters meets soon to decide the question defi nitely. Express yourself toute de suite. 1 ' . ,.. - .... f Open Forum . "KIKE" KYSER AND THE CHEERIOS Freshman Fritz says a hypo crite is a student that goes to classes with a smile on his face. Girls who wear cotton stock ings are either over-confident or don't give a damn. Doubtless the alumni who are here attending the conference are jubilant over the rapid prog ress being made by Alma Mater. The man who sent us abet ter addressed "To the Auditor" evidently thinks that we do our work on adding machines in stead of typewriters. Nota Bene, Carolina co-eds. One hundred and seventy-five co-eds at the University of Kan sas are out competing .for the rifle team. The Carolina Rifle Club would be glad to have you out.. . Headline reads "Five Virgin ia Stars on the. Injured List." "Greasy" Neale has pulled this one before. But just wait until the Turkey day game and see how many of the Virginia stars are out of the game. We don't expect to see the freshmen put up such an exhi bition today as they did last Saturday. They know what is expected of them as Carolina representatives and we feel sure that they are going to wipe out the blot of last week. Students who would like to see the proposed change made in the time for the Easter holidays Too much cannot be said by way of commendation of the or ganization which has brought a- bout the finest spirit ever seen here among the Carolina stu dents in cheering and support ing the teams. Within a period of less than two months this or ganization has made itself fam ous throughout North Carolina and many of the nearby states and its arganizer and leader has iridelibly written his name- in University annals as making an excellent contribution to univer sity life. When this organiza tion appears on Lambeth Field in Charlottesville Thanksgiving Day wearing the blue and white two hundred and fifty strong, the student body, the Univer sity, and the State will be proud of its product. The history of the Cheerios is short but important. With on ly three of last year's regulars reporting for the football squad this fall, a new group of coaches and a new system to be installed the student body faced a dismal outlook for the season. Then the first two games were lost and the famous Carolina spirit be came depressed in the students. Pessimists were saying the spirit was dormant, if not dead. It was then that Kike Kyser con ceived the idea of forming group of students to bring a- bout a revival in spirit which would give the football team bet ter support. One week later this cheering unit appeared on Em erson Field and received the wholehearted support of the en tire student body. The result was that the Tar Heels, who were doped to lose to the Game cocks by at least two touch downs, received such moral sup port that they put up the pret tiest fight seen here in a long while and turned back the in vading team defeated. And such has been the result of every other game played here this fall, a Visiting teams, coaches and . spectators have extolled the smooth working cheering unit and spirit of the entire student body. Organized cheering has long been in existence in northern and western institutions. The imported coaches from the west have said that they have never seen a cheering unit better or ganized and directed than Kike Kyser"s organization here. The student body recently heard President Chase at a pep meet ing say that during his sixteen years here he hadn't seen a foot ball team better supported from the sidelines than this year's. Carolina's cheering unit makes a pretty spectacle when it marches out on the field before and during the halves of the games. The visiting spectators seem to enjoy this feature as much as any part of the fracas. Then the spirit-makers return to the stands and the entire stu dent body joins in., and lends wonderful moral support - Monday night Kike Kyser and his Cheerios are presenting a Cheeri-O-Show in Memorial Hall to raise funds to help de fray the expense in sending the group to Charlottesville to lead Tar Heel students and support ers. It is our hope that every student will show his' apprecia tion of the work done by this group this fall and contribute liberally at the door where the optional admission fee will be used. Alpha Lambda Tau announces the initiation of T. R. Keith, of Currie, N. C. and E. C. Chrisco of Badin, N; C. Editor of Tar Heel: I wish to address this letter to the Tar Heel freshman re porter, Mr. Glenn Holder. Your article concerning our coaches and their, system in Thursday's Tar Heel was inter esting. It was well written and so far as I see it one of a much higher type than the usual story. So much for that There is one phase of it, one sentence, which was unfortu nate. You stated an untruth ! You stated it without the usual newspaper man's alibi of "al leged," "it is reported," or what not. I speak directly of your al lusion to R. L. .Sides. You state the system as 'being too severe for his southern temperament You imply that his loyalty to Carolina was not strong enough to call him back to face, the pun ishment, and that before leav ing the squad he said several harsh things to the coaches and the squad. Really that view of this man makes most upper- classmen smile, because obvious ly only a Freshman would have written them. Sides is a very close friend of mine, and I happen to know that before the season opened, he - had his . tonsils removed. There were complications -from this operation, and during prac tically the whole practice he par ticipated in, his weight was marked up 10 pounds or more, less than he tipped the scales This certainly wouldn't indicate a lack of the famous Notre Dame system - of fighting spirit : At the time he resigned from the squad he talked over the situa tion with two, of the-coachesj and it was not a case of show ing anything like the wrong spirit. No "hard" talk was giv en the coaches or the squad. An upper classman would hes itate to make such statements of a letter man, and one who has taken such an active , part in student life here, and I take ex ception to the statement mere ly to correct an impression which your article might give to the men who do not know from observation that the re marks are "all wet." R. S. W. Editor of . Tar Heel: : .After talking with a large number of students I am satis fied that the proposed charge of moving the Easter holidays up four weeks and having the holi day period a week between the ending of the winter quarter and the beginning of the spring quarter will meet with the ap proval of the majority of the students. I need not elaborate here because the editorial in the Thursday issue of the Tar Heel explained the reasons pro and con and the pro reasons clearly outbalanced those con. In all my four years here I have won dered why this proposed plan hasn't been" in effect befoVe. m. t. j Phi Delta Phi Holds It's Fall Initiations The : fall initiations of Phi Delta Phi, law" fraternity, were held last week. A feature of the occasion was the banquet held in honor of the initiates and pledges at the Carolina Inn immediately following the cere monies. ": Two sophomore law students received the rites of the order, and one member of the frater nity, Professor Chas. T. McCor- mick, a transfer from the chap ter at Texas University, affiliat ed with the local chapter. The men initiated were Fred Parker, of Goldsboro, and John Wigg, of St. Petersburg, Fla. SPECIAL EDITION OF TAR HEEL TUESDAY The' Tar Heel will pub lish but one issue next week.' "Elaborate plans ,are being laid to make that is sue the best of the year. ; The. work of preparing the material for the Tues day's edition will be shared by the three managing edi-' tors. ; A number of special features will be carried a long with a large number of pictures. of the Carolina team. The keynote of the paper will be the "On to Virginia" slogan, and a boost for a Tar Heel vic tory on Lambeth Field at the annual Turkey Day con test - PITT . COUNTY CLUB HAS REGULAR MEETING At the regular bi-monthly meeting of the Pitt County Club held Thursday night, commit tees were appointed to secure an orchestra and to secure the names of the county alumni who wish to attend the banquet and dance to be given by the organ ization : on Wednesday night, December 29. Each member of the Club will take a lady to the banquet and will be allowed to invite one boy to the dance, which will probably be held at the Greenville Country Club. Following the regular busi ness session, the members en joyed a social hour at which time light refreshments . were served. The next meeting will be held Thursday night, Decem ber 2. The committees will make their report at that meeting. SEABURY TALKS i Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of Harold Burke of Taylorsville, N. C. and B. Moore Parker of Raleigh. Geprge T. Seabury, Secretary of the American Society' of Civil Engineers, was here on a short trip Wednesday, and ad dressed the William Cain Stu dent Chapter of the society at the regular chapel period, in Room 206 of Phillips Hall. Mr. Seabury talked about what the national society is. The so ciety has eighteen directors elec ted from the various sections of the-country, who in turn elect the officers. He told about the Executive Committee, Research Committee, Aims and Activities Committee, and the Student Chapter Committee, of which Dean Braune is chairman. The society . meets four times each year in different sections of the country. The meetings are in this way carried. to the people, who are close enough to attend at least one of these. Next April, the society will meet in Asheville, North Caro lina. Mr. Seabury is here to make arrangements for : that meeting with Gilbert C. White, President-of the North Carolina section of the society, arid Con sulting Engineer of Durham, and H.:F. Janda, Secretary of this section, and Associate Pro fessor of Highway Engineering at the University of North Car olina. l;v; '';-' ..' -v;-. ; Miss Dewey Mitchell enter tained delightfully at a small dance last night in honor of her guests.. A number of college students were invited to. the dance,: which was held at the Country Club. DR. R. R. CLARK : DENTIST Office Over Bank of Chapel Hill Telephone 385 WHAT'S HAPPENING TODAY 2:30 p. m. Freshman Football, Carolina vs. Vir ginia, Emerson Field. 9 :00 p. m. Grail Dance, Bynum Gymnasium. S MONDAY, NOV. 22 7:30 p. m. North Car olina Club,; Saunders Hall. "The case for the short bal lot," a paper by Alvin S. Kartus. , 8:00 p. m. Cheeri-O-Show,-Memorial Hall. 8:30 p. m. Y. M. C. A. Cabinets, Y. M. C. A. TUESDAY, NOV. 23 8:00 p. m.- Phillips Hall Auditorium. W. S. Hos ford of the Western Elec tric -Company will lecture under the auspices of the School of Commerce and the School of Engineering. Nearly all the plays being present ed in Paris theaters this season were written by dramatists under thirty years of age. NatIIIIEII CLOTBSES Our Representative Mr. Gib Collins . will be at CAROLINA - SMOKE SHOP Monday and Tuesday November 29 and 30 Nat LUXENBERG 9 Bro. 37 Union Square, New York . ' Bttwttm ! &ntkSt$. the sunshi me WHEN Greek or calculus gets you into a tight corner, tie a tin to trouble a tidy red tin of Prince Albert! Tamp a load" of this really friendly tobacco into the bowl of your jimmy pipe and light up. Watch the sun crash through the clouds with every puff! P. A. can't bite your tongue or -parch your throat, no matter how fast you feed it, because the Prince Albert process gave Bite and Parch the air at the start. Cool as a Laplander's lap. Sweet as apple cider. Fragrant as spring blos soms. That's Prince Albert! One pipe-load invites another. And . . you can hit P. A. from morning till midnight and it won't hit back. Don't put off to tomorrow what you can smoke today. Get a tidy red tin of P. A. and turn on the sunshine , , . now! P. A. t$ icU mmim fa My red litu, found md AW. pound tin humidor,, mni found cryilal-gUs, humidor, with tponge-moiilentr lop. And alway, with trerf bit cf bit and parch removed bf thi Princt Albert proctir. PRI K AL mm no other tobacco is. like it! ) 1924, R. I. Reynolds Tobacco taipany, Winston-balcm, N. C.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 20, 1926, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75