The Library, U.N.C. City. FINAL MEETING OF DI AND PHI SOCIETIES DI AND PHI HALLS 7:15 P. M. SENIOR SMOKER SWAIN HALL 9 O'CLOCK VOLUME XXXV CHAPEL HILL, N. C, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1926 NUMBER 32 CAROLINA WINS CROSSCOUNTRY MEET OF STATE Varsity and Frosh Harriers Bring State Championship Bacon Home by Vic- 1 j tories. GATE CITY WINS HI RACE Daniels, Elliott and Pritchett Finish Together Daniels and Goodwin End . ' Career, ' The Tar Heel cross-country teams closed their season in a . blaze of glory on Emerson field .Saturday between halves of the . high school football game when both the Varsity and Freshman teams walked off with the an jiual State Csampionship meet for the fourth consecutive year, The Varsity team, which .-won the Southern Confer ence title, placed all of her en tries among the first nine men to finish. This is regarded as a new record in the history of North Carolina track athletics, Captain Daniels, Elliott and Pritchett, three Tar Heel lum inaries, clasped hands about fif ty yards from the finish and romped across'the line in a triple tie for first place. The faces of the three distance men were wreathed in smiles as they gaily trotted down before the stands, holding- hands, looking for all the world as if they had just fin ished a five minute jaunt rather than a crruellinc raca..nver fnur miles of hilly Chapel Hill sand roads. The score of the Varsity was (Continued on page three) DEBATE SEASON OPENS THURSDAY - ' i . Carolina and Washington Teams To Discuss Light Wines and Beer Question. OPEN FORUM DISCUSSION North Carolina meets George Washington University Thurs day nighbat :30 in Gerrard Hall in the first forensic con test of the year. R. S. Nde and .Lee Kennett will' uphold the af firmative side of the question: Resolved. That the constitution of the United States should be modified so as to permit the use of light wines and beers. George Washington will have the negative argument. The debate will be conducted under the rules of the ' open forum, which is to say, the au dience, will be the judge, and de cide the winner. This question has occupied for some time a very important place in our political gossip, and as the next presidential election draws near it looms up as yet more impor tant For this reason it is hoped that the attendance will be as large as possible. ' , Representing Carolina on the negative side oft the question at eorge Washington University, Washington, are Morris H. Mogulescu , and Harry McGalli ard. Mogulescu is-a veteran of several varsity debates and is secretary of the Debate Council. McGalliard, a sophomore, mak ing his first appearance on a varsity debating team, i3 un doubtedly the .youngest of col legiate debaters, being but 15 years of age. He made a good record on the freshman team. McGalliard is a Chapel Hill boy and a graduate of Chapel Hill High school. BEST RECORD IN THE SOUTH ; zMAZn- HP1! HSu'l; - - ' H Jl 11 1 f - - ci ill trti The Tar Heel cross-country team pictured above ended its season in a blaze of glory Saturday by winning the state cross-country championship for the fourth straight season. - A few weeks ago the team journeyed down to Athens, Ga., and won the Southern.. Conference cross-country champion ship from a large field of entries by one of the widest margins ever piled up. ' Several of the men on the championship cross-country team were members of the Carolina track team that won the Southern championship in the Conference meet a scant ix months ago. Read ing from left to right members of the team are: Coach Dale Ran-son, R. -R. Tilley, H. E. Cox, B. H. Goodwin, H. N. Brown, H. B. Pritchett, Captain A. E. Daniels, and Galen Elliott. LARGE AUDIENCE ATTENDS SUNDAY MUSICAL CONCERT Mrs. LeGrand, Miss Read and Charles Vardell of Salem College Faculty Per- : form. PERFORMANCE PLEASES (By J. 0. Marshall) The largest audience to attend student's 'series concert this year heard Mrs."Audrey Clare LeGrand, soprano, Miss Hazel Horton Read, violinist, and Charles Vardell, Jr., pianist, members of Salem College fac ulty, in the concert presented Sunday afternoon in Memorial Hall by the University Music Department. Mr. Vardell began the pro gram with Beethoven's Sonata in E flat major, Op. 81a. This sonata is long, but not at all abored of Verbose, and its wealth of motives or themes all masterfully developed with Beethoven's characteristic unity and terseness were interpreted with a technic sufficiently am ple and satisfying. v This number and Haydn's Capriccio, played by Miss Read, were the only representatives of the classic school in a rather monotonous and thin program of realistic. music... The next group, three violin numbers, was played by Miss Read It was fortunate that her program selections were all unpretentious ; for- though her: interpretations are sensitive and have a simple imaginative ap peal, they lack'authority, convic tion, and vitality. The closing numbers of her ... two groups, Imps by Burleigh and Tam bourine by Gossec, were well-; applauded. . Undoubtedly, she! successfully presented the num-j bers as realistic music. Mr. Vardell's second group was composed of six sketches f6r the piano, From a Mountain1 Walk. These are Mr. Vardell's own compositions, and every strand of the tonal texture was (Continued on page four) . CAROLINA BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Jan. 15 Jan. 19 Jan. 22 Jan. 27 Jan. 29 Jan. 31 Feb. 4 Feb. 5 Feb. 7 Feb. 9 Feb. 12 Feb. 16 Feb. 19 Feb. 22 Feb. 25 Hampden-Sidney IK of Georgia Pending Wake Forest N. C. State College Duke University Virginia V.M.I. Maryland . Navy N. C. State College Wake Forest Maryland Duke Southern Conference Tournament.s"--s-v One more game with a conference team will probably be added since conference rules require that contes tants of the tournament play at least eight teams, which ' are members of the Southern Conference. Place Here Here Here Here Here There Here There There There There There Here Here The National University Ex tension Association, with 43 member universities and col leges, will hold its next annual meeting at . Chapel Hill, April 25-26-27, next year. . : ; MOREHEAD PICKED TO LEAD GRIDMEN Star Tackle Elected Captain at Banquet of Monogram Club Last Night. HUDGINS IS MANAGER Garrett Morehead, star tackle on the University of North Car olina football team, last night was elected to captain the Tar Heel squad for the 1927 season Morehead who hails from Char lotte, has just completed his sec ond year as a regular in the Tar Heel line. His work during both seasons has been outstanding, and at the close of this past season he was named at tackle on the majority of the All-State teams. " ' sua iiuagms oi Marion was elected manager of the varsity .squad and Max Barker of Salis Continued on page four) ENGINEERING SCHOOL, CREATED IN 1922, ONE OF BEST IN COUNTRY Present School Consists of Departments of Chemical, Civil, Elec trical, and Mechanical Engineering Little Time For Non Technical Study But Some Cultural Courses Given. "9 MEETING OF Y. Y. BUSINESS STAFF Important meeting of Yackety - Yack business staff this afternoon at 4 :00 ' in office in Alumni BIdg. Very importantt "All mem bers be there. From the very beginning of the history of the University Engineering has played an im portant part. Hinton - James, that well-known first student of Carolina, was .later leading en gineer of the state.- While cer tain engineering courses have been offered ,at the UniveVsity ?ince the founding, it was hot un til 1922 that the regular School of Engineering was established. For some years prior to that time the engineering work was included under t,he head of , the School of Applied Ecience. Courses. The present School of ' Engi neering now consists of the four major Departments of Chemical, Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineering. With the exception of Chemical - Engineering, the work, in these different depart ments is pratically the same for the first two years and indeed a part of the .third year. - This Consists of instruction in the fun damental principles of engineer ing as a whole rather than spec ialization in any one phase. The senior year is given over to courses along the line in which the student is most interested. During the four years of study certain non-technical courses are offered in English, history, ec onomics, and business adminis tration; but these so-called cul tural courses are delt with in a technical .way so that they may have some direct bearing upon engineering. The English courses stress public speaking and the preparation and writing of re ports. History is studied espec ially with"11 a view to ascertain ing the causes and effects of in dustrial movements. No lan guages are given at all. This may be considered a fault, but it is impossible to include more work of this nature in a four years course which must teach so much engineering. As it is, the School of Engineering is considered the most difficult , in the University and certainly re quires a maximum of time and effort. Six or seven subjects are taken each term and from twenty-eight to thirty-two hours of class per week are expected. Co-op Work The most distinctive phase of the engineering courses is the co-operative work, which every regular student must have be fore he can 'obtain his degree. This co-op work consists of an eight weeks summer school at the end of the sophomore, year and alternate six weeks work Continud en page fettr) ' TEN GAMES ON 1927 GRID CARD Georgia Tech Appears on Caro lina Schedule for Game at Atlanta. SANFORD UPSETS DOPE; DEFEATS CHARLOTTE 13-0 FIVE GAMES PLAYED HERE ! it The 1927 football schedule of the University of North Carolina has been increased to ten games: seven of which are against con ference teams. The, only change in the teams scheduled is the addition of a game with Georgia Tech. In order to resume footbal relations with the Techmen was necessary to make severa! changes in dates of other games on the schedule. The Georgia institution is given the date for merly held by Maryland ; Mary land is shifted to the former South Carolina date ; South Car olina is given the former Duke date, and Duke will be met on the Saturday preceding the Vir ginia game on the following Thursday! Five of the games next year will be played at home, and two of the others wil be easily accessible to the stu dent body. Carolina and Georgia Tech will meet on the football field next year for the first time in eleven years ; the Tar Heels lost the last game by a score of 6 to 10. The present arrangement is for two years. . The game next year will be played at' Atlanta, and the one the following year will be played here. Although Carolina has played as many as ten games in one sea son in the past, the following schedule is considered the strongest one ever arranged for the Chapel Hill eleven. WaRe Forest, Sept; 25, Chapel Hill U. of Tennessee, Oct. 1," Chapel Hill U. of Maryland, Oct. 8, Chapel Hill U. of South Car., Oct. 15, Columbia Georgia Tech, Oct. 22, Atlanta, Ga. N. C. State, Oct. 29, Raleigh V. M. I., November 6, Lexington Davidson, November 121, Chapel Hill Duke, November 19, Durham Virginia, November 24, Chapel Hill A. T. 0. Pledges Host The pledges of the Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity entertained the pledges of all the national fraternities on the campus at an enoyable reception and smok er Sunday evening from ' eight until ten o'clock., String music and clog dancing by local negro talent furnished the entertain ment. .. Delicious refreshments were served during the evening. Dr. K. C. Frazier, faculty member of the Fraternity, made a short talk on "The Relations of the Fraternity to the College Man." The A. T. O. neophites, hosts. Sunday night, are C. V. Hinkle, J, W. Patterson, and David Anderson. WHAT'S HAPPENING ' TODAY 7:15 p. m. Phi Assembly. Freshman Intra-Society Debate. Election of officers for winter Election of ifficers for winter quarter, and smoker. Manning Hall. , 7 : 15 p. m. Di. Senate, . Di Hall. Freshman debate, election of officers. . 9:00 p. m. Senior Class Smoker, Swain Hall. 9:00 p m. Johnston County Club, Y.. M. C. A. WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 8 8:45 p. m. Meeting of Beau- ( fort County boys to organize Beaufort County Club, Y. M. C. A. ' " THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9 8:30 p. m. Glee Club Con cert, Playmaker Theatre. Easterners Win High School State Championship By Virtue of Victory. FINAL GRID GAME HERE Lee County Team Outplays Charlotte in Everyway Frazier Scores Both Touchdowns. The growing ambitions of a fighting Sanford eleven were fi nally realized on Emerson field Saturday, when the boys from the east downed the Charlotte football representatives by a 13 to 0 count. The Sanford lads, by firtue of their victory over Char lotte, now occupy the champion ship chair of North Carolina high school football. Three times during the last four years have those orange be decked gridiron warriors from Sanford clawed their way to within one game of the much de sired football title, and twice they have been " ruthlessly de nied, once three years ago by an eleven from that same Char lotte. But Saturday, the cham pions of the east were not to be denied the sacred heighths occu pied only by the finest football team in North Carolina. The boys from Lee county, outplay ed, out fought, and outscdred the i . r puwenui eleven ironi me yueen cityr Statistics'alonff show that he new champions surpassed the losers in every department of the game, counting ten first downs to Charlotte's three. The largest crowd that ever assembled on Emerson field to witness a' high school game, had barely settled itself comfortably into the hard cement, seats, be fore Sanford had shoved over her first score of the day. On the third play of the game Char lotte, who had received the kick- on luiiiuieu ner uwu twenty- five yard "line and Sanford re covered. Two straight first downs carried the ball to within ' one yard of the westerners' goal ine, and from this point Frazier bucked it over. A little while la ter, in the same half, a blocked punt gave the Sanford lads the ball on Charlotte's twenty-eight yard line. Four Sanford men were all over the kicker on this play, any one of whom might. have blocked the pun but to Byerly, Sanford tackle, goes the individual glory of touching the ball firsts Two forward passes. i 'razier to Williamson, again placed the ball in the shadow of (Continued on page four) Benefit Dance Given Pi Beta Phi Social Successful In Rais ing Santa Claus Funds. The Pi Beta Phi Woman's, raternity gave an enjoyable dance in the Gymnasium Fri day night from nine . till one o'clock for the purpose of rais ing funds for the benefit of its settlement school at - Gatling- burg, Tennessee. The school is upported entirely by the Fra ternity and the assessments on the various chapters. The attendance at the dance by students and " co-eds was gratifying and reports from the officials state that the door re ceipts were large, making it pos sible for Santa Claus to fill the mountain childrens' stockings with toys and goodies for Christmas. ' !