Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 25, 1927, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE TAR HEEL Tuesday, January 25, 1927- )t Car tel 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 ' newspaper of the Publications Un ion of the University of North Car olina, Chapel Hill, N. C. -Subscription price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, for the college year. Offices in. the basement of Alumni Building. Telephone 403. J. T. Madry..........-.::.. Editor F. F. Simon. ..J., ..Business Mgr. Editorial Department Managing Editors J. F. AsHBY...................-...,Tuesday Issue Byron. White......:... Thursday Issue L. H. McPherson Saturday Issue Stop looking at the picture of the lady who is scantily clad, If you want to see more of her, go to Durham this week and at tend the grand opera. ' THE YACKETY YACK ROW D. D. Carroll :. .Assistant Editor J. R. Bobbitt, Jr Assignment Editor Staff J. H. Anderson J. M. Block Walter Creech J. R. DeJournette E. J. Evans . D. S. Gardner Glen P. Holder J. W. Johnson J. O. Marshall H. I Merritt W. P. Perry': J. P. Pretlow T. M. Reece D. T. Seiwell S. B. Shephard, Jr. J. Shohan F. L. Smith W. S. Spearman' W. H. Strickland Wm. H. Windley ... Business Department W. W. Neal, Jr. ..-..Asst. to Bus. Mgr. Charles Brown......t Collection mgr. G. W. Ray ...............Accountant i Managers of Issues Tuesday Issue. -W. R. Hill Thursday Issue... James Styles Saturday Issue .JEdward Smith Advertising Department Kenneth R. Jones .Advertising Mgr. M. W. Breman Local Adv. Mgr. William K. Wiley . Ben Schwartz G. W. Bradham C. J. Shannon Oates McCullen W. B. Bloomburg J., H. Mebane .. , M Y. Feimster Walter McConnell A. J. McNeill . Circulation Department ' Henry C. Haroer.-.vCtrcitJaiton Mar. R. C. Mulder Filer of Issues C. W. Colwell Tom Raney Douglas Boyce W. Wl Turner You can' purchase any article adver- tised m the TAB Heel vnth perfect safety because everything it adver tises is guaranteed to be as repre sented. The Tar Heel solicits ad vertising front reputable concerns only. . r ' ,. Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. Tuesday, January' 25, 1927 PARAGRAPHICS The sixth major row of the campus during the current year is due to be settled tonight. H We hear that the Yackety Yack staff is going to petition Beta Chi Alpha,' national organ ization. The B. C. A; boys put We also hear that "Al" Moore and "Ken" Smith want it under stood that the two personals in this paper stating that said Edi tor and Business Manager spent the Christmas holidays in New York and Canada, respectively, has nothing to do with the pro posal to put four senior pictures on one page in the annual. "Dula writes still another." R. L. D. says there is nothing most unanimously for,: allowing 4ti run -Prw fVia aAi ffaVii-r Vi- Tar.. Heel. . Dula says it is a malicious concoction. The meeting of the senior class tonight to try to come to some agreeable terms with the edito rial and business staffs of the year book is calculated to cause no little enmity between, differ ent factions. At a meeting of the class before Christmas the editor of the , annual, with the best of intentions, made known the fact that he had planned to inaugurate a new policy for "the Yackety Yack this year. The most radical change was the plan to leave the write-ups but of the book, and the editor wish ed to know, the opinion of the class regarding this proposed change. The seniors voted al most unanimously for. following the beaten path of carrying flat tery mementos. Since the holidays members of the class have got wind of the news that the editor was still planning to carry out" his original plans. Then the bub ble bursted. Tonight the ques. tions will be : Can the editor rec oncile himself td the write-ups, or will the seniors submit to the policy of the editor.' - Since the last meeting of the class, it is said that many of the fourth year men have changed their attitudes toward the write- ups. Practically all of the men admitted that the write-ups are inaccurate bits of quibbling, pre varication and equivocation, but they showed that they wanted them in the annual. Editor Moore has said that the proposed change is jn keeping step with his desire to produce a ' better year book, and that he will not be benefitted financially by it. Some members of the class think the issue has shifted from the matter of write-ups to the principle of accepting money with the implied idea that as much space will be given to" each senior this year as formerly, id est, one-half page. The contract for the hook was "made last spring1 before any policy .. had been determined by the editor and business manager. With or without the. write-ups the, basic price will be paid for the book this year. It isn't a matter of dollars. ' If the editor can sacrifice his desire to make the Yackety Yack a better book without the write ups in order to pacify the sen ior class, we would advise him to do it. Perhaps ' a compro mise can be effected. PITT COUNTY MEN TO MEET TONIGHT Will Elect Officer for Booster Edition of Newspaper. ' "K. O." Warren lived up to his name Saturday night in the frigidaire; , Three men went out by the k, o. route. , Speaking of the word frigid aire makes us think of the cog nomens that have been applied to the building on the south side of the athletic field. The Tin Can seemed appropriate, but the Tin Ice Box is better, An ath lete tells us that' it is even cold er to the basketeers than to the spectators. . -Carolina athletes are gener ally, called Tar Heels, but last year a sport writer dubbed the members of the basketball team White Phantoms. This year an other sport writer is calling them the Flying Phantoms. Page Bill Shakspere ! ; ". . ' ' . The regular meeting of the Pitt County Club will be held tonight instead of Thursday night, because of the conflict with the basketball game with Wake Forest Thursday night. The managing editor and busi ness manager of the paper which the club will issue this spring will be elected at the meeting tonight. The paper will carry stories of interest to Car olina alumni ' and will attempt to put before the county seniors the advantages of the Univer sity for college education. . , All men from the county are urged to be present for the Yackety Yack picture which will be made Wednesday at chapel period at a place to be decided tonight, the- club president states."--,v . ' ; ' ; ' ".;;:. The following officers were elected ; at the last meeting of the club to 1 serve during this quarter: president; John Lewis; vice-president, Clifton Stokes ; secretary treasurer, Durward Hart. 1 ' ' '-:. - OPEN FORUM Setting Mr. Shohan Aright Editor of Tar Heel : The article in the Saturday issue of the Tar Heel concern ing the Yackety Yack write-ups, had for one of the cross lines, "Al Moore is denounced." After quoting an interview at some length with one of the members of the classi Mr. Shohan, to use his own words, "'have ear to a well-known campus cynic, and old political war horse." Such was not the case. The politician was present at the interview with the barrister, and in walk ing up the campus .with Mr. Shohan reviewed a past; bit of political history, not exactly as Mr. Shohan alleges, but merely j by way of conversation, having no idea that it would be used to put in the Tar Heel, Mr. ShO' han not giving the slightest hint that such would- be done. , The article is written as if it were an interview, directly quot ed, in the speaker's words. The words and part of the sentiment are the reporter's. ' The politi cian is neither a member of the class' of '27; nor on the Yackety Yack staff, and has no interest in the controversy at all. Mr. Moore is a personal friend of his, of long standing, and he does'not think that any past elec tion should influence the pres. ent state of affairs. Further more, he is heartily in favor of th6 wisdom ' of eliminating the write-ups, a fact which Mr. Sho han passed over as lightly as possible. " In the opinion of the politi cian the affair should be con sidered solely from the stand point of the Senior Class and the officials of the Yackety Yack. His opinion on politics should not intrude, and he sincerely hopes that the campus will for get that which should never have been published. AN OLD POLITICIAN JANUARY ISSUE ALUMNI REVIEW JUST OFF PRESS Contains Articles of Interest Td Student Readers Supple ment Also Appears. INTERVIEW WITH. KENAN Williams Discusses "Miracles" In Talk To The Epworth League In a talk on "Miracles," giv en Sunday night before the larg est crowd attending the Epworth League this year, Dr.! H. H. Wil liams said that because of its inexplicable quality, the phrase "Do you believe in miracles" was one which he would abolish if he had the power. ; Dr.- Williams said that dur ing 1000 years of religious his tory the word "miracle" was not mentioned, and for 1000 years after it appeared in the history of Jesus, even in the acts of the 12 apostles was the power of performing with individual pow er-carried on. He explained that the inconsistency, to him was based on the interpretation of ife. in the light of constant change in ideas, and the inter pretation of mathematical laws as constant and unchanging. In relation to this explanation he said that he wanted to know the ruth . for "I mean to play the man. I would like to be popular but1 I must know that I am right." ' The physical miracles he con sidered as insignificant to man and that the big issue and the real miracle of Christ was his phrase, "I am the truth." "When you make that understanding, that will be the miracle." The January issue of the Ai umni Review, accompanied by a thirty-two page supplement, is one of more ,than average in terest to the student reader. Probably the article holding the greatest interest for the stu dent,. "Getting Next to a Great Man Easy Proposition," an in terview . by Florence W. Steph ens, of the Raleigh News and Observer with William Rand Kenan. As no doubt everyone knows, Mr. Kenan is the donor of the new memorial stadium on which work is being pushed to completion day and night. The subject isv full of interest for every Carolina man, and is hand led in a capable manner. How ever,' the male reader cannot but be offended by the manner in which Miss Stephens waxes femininely ecstatic. The rest of the issue is full of its . usual meaty, articles of particular.. interest to. Carolina men. It is cloaked in its new format, which has been used since the October issue. The present cover is one of extreme dignity and simplicity. It is much more restful on the eye than the old cover, and adds tremendously to the impression of the entire issue. ; It is in the supplement that one finds the striking features of the issue; The following fore word at the beginning of the supplement amply explains its purposes : The Alumni- Keview is en gaged in interpreting and dis cussing the University and its alumni, but its treatment is nec essarily simple and abbreviated Its content consists of fragments of information suggesting the events and ideas important to alumni work. Its method is to reduce the corporeity to such of its elements as to enable a busy man 'to read as he runs.' ; "But ,-an alumni association worthy the name cannot de velop around such scattered bits It must have a controlling theme, a purpose and a definite idea as to organization and method, LOST! LOST! LOST! Beta Theta Pi Fraternity Pin. If found please1 return to K. R. Jones, Beta house. "Well Pressed is Well Dressed" ! SWAIN TAILORING CO. i Pressed while you wait, we won't: ...... . make you late. fader Sutton-Alderman Drugstore: Phone No. 295' Chapel Hill : Wheeler Entertains at Informal ' Dinner Party A S. Wheeler entertained the members of the chemistry staff and the graduates in - that de partment at an informal dinner party on last Thursday night at his home on E. Franklin street. There were about 30 present at the party and they enjoyed many games' after-the dinner. , , . Use Kodak Film and Our Finishing Take a good supply of Kodak Film home for the week-end. : Bring it back to us for- fine finishing. ! Stock up today - your size is here, and it's fresh. Foister Chapel Hill; N C.' -' all of which must be understood by our alumni leaders every where. Completer statement, fuller definition and interpreta tion are required to meet this need. Moreover, the purposes and ideas of today must be left extant as an intelligible back ground for growth, for the building of the association is a growth. -Each step through which we advance must be sys tematically -interpreted and de fined. - All this wprk, in turn, is parallel to, and influenced by, similar treatments of the Uni versity, and this hour in our life. "Hitherto, these mature, con nected analyses and interpreta tions have been left unpublished, and consequently lost from our distant and absent alumni. To carry such material to all those for whom it was intended, and to whom it is important, this sup plement of the Alumni Review is issued.; The frequency with which it will appear, and the constancy, of this format, must depend alike on the success of this effort and the requirements j of tomorrow. Editor." I The first three articles are re prints of, the speeches' made by President Chase, Alfred M. Scales, president of the General Alumni Association, and Daniel L. Grant, Executive Secretary of the Alumni Association, be fore the Alumni Convention held here in November.-, It was orig inally planned to include Mr. Penniman's speech, but unfor seen circumstances prevented its inclusion. Then comes a sort of "Alumni Catechism" by Tyre C. Taylor, Field Secretry of the Alumni Association. This is a series of questions and answers on subjects Of alumni 'which had been asked the writer during meetings throughout the state. The last article is a reprint of a speech by R. D. Douglas, vice president of the Greensboro Bank and Trust Company before the Greensboro Alumni Associa tion, treating of the necessity of continued work for the Univer sity at this time. Liquor death figures will take a drop as soon as the people re fuse to. El Paso Times. vL9 -4 t HiATS, SHOeS, Sf3SCT STOTSWafli DEVELOPED BY FINCHLEY FOR . i. . ..... .... . .,'' COLLEGIAN USAGE FOR SPRING WILL EE EXHIBITED BY A REP . RESENTATIVE FROM NEW YORK At ' CAROLINA DRY CLEANERS WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY JANUARY 26th AND 27th Bill Hollenbeck, Rep. SUITS ATD TOTCOvilS FORTY-FIVE DOLLARS AND MORS -TAILORED TO MEASURE FIFTH AVENUE AT FORTY-SIXTH STROT wtM Cunard kbv College Specials to Europe and Return TO Round Trip' l!', Tourist Third, Cabin IITTtMIIIIIH The Best Time 'To Qo-v : . . . ; Before Mid. June ; , or after Mid-July , Does your sister go to Smith, sir 1 " "No, sir." Where, siri " "Vassar". (75ILLY ha9 discovered that a fellow JJ passenger is traveling with an adorable female relative (word of six letters). Amenities are now being opened, and soon their conversation will be sparkling like the dancing sun rays on ; the deep Atlantic. That's the thing about these CunarJ College Specials birds of a feather flock to gether, and a good time is had by all. See your local ' Cunard College Representative ; SHIPP SANDERS 1 , or write " CUNARD & ANCHOR LINES SO WALTON ST4 ATLANTA
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 25, 1927, edition 1
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