Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 3, 1927, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE TAR HEEL Thursday, March 3, t927 HDijt tat 2?tcl Leading Southern College Tii Wkhbxy Newspaper Member of North. Carolina Collegiate tress Association Published three times every week of the college year, and is the official newspaper of the Publications Un ion ol the University or wortn jar olina. Chapel Hill. N. C. Subscrip tion price, $2.00 local fend $3.00 out ol town, lor the college year. Offices in the basement of Alumni Building. Telephone 403. , J. T. MadrY- :.l.l..:...Editor F. P. Simon.........!. Business Mgr. Editorial Department Managing Editors F, Ashby... ...Tuesday Issue Bybon White..... L. H. McPhersom.. . Thursday Issue Saturday Issue D. D. CarrolL..jl8fstont Editor 3. R. Bobbitt, 3r...-Assignment Editor . Siaff 3. H. Anderson J. M. Block Walter Creech J. R. DeJournette E. J. Evans D. S. Gardner Glen P. Holder J. 0. Marshall H. Li Merritt T. W. Johnson fourth straight Southern Cham pionship. Just between the proverbial fence post and our selves, we were just a tiny bit pessimistic before the tourney, but after the Tar Heels had got off to such a splendid start we were all ambitious again. They say the zest of life is disappoint ment. Must be about two thous- and or more zestful students in this man's University. In spite of the Georgia win which by the way was 23 to 20 and not 25 to 20 as the Tar Heel announced we have a great deal of which to be proud. But we won't boast of that here Suffice it to say that any insti tution that can send a couple of veterans and a bunch of new comers down to a tournamen and be recognized as the class of the tournament i3 worthy of the hierhest admiration. Favorites always find a bit of consolation in the fact that they were favor ites and no two ways about it. W. P. Pery J.P. Pretlow T. M. Reece s. B. Shephard, Jr. the Tar Heels were the favor- J. Shohan ilea, F. L. Smith W. S. Spearman Wm. H. Windley Henry Lay Business Department W. W. Neal, Jr.. Charles Brown G. W. Ray. .Asst. to Bus. Mgr. .Collection Mgr. Accountant Managers of Issues. . Tuesday Issna W. R. Hill . Thursday Issue Saturday Issue... James Styles .Edward Smith Advertising Department Kenneth R. 3onesLAdvertising Mgr. Young M. Smith Asst. Adv. Mgr. M. W. Breman Local Adv. Mgr. William K.' Wiley Ben Schwartz G. W. Bradham C. J. Shannon Oates McCullen Edwin V. Durham J. H.' Mebane M. Y. Feimster Walter McConneH A. J. McNeill . Circulation Department Henry C. Harper- Circulation Mar. R. C. Mulder.. Filer of Issue C. W. Colwell Tom Ranev Douglas Boyce W. W. Turner You can purchase any article adver tised in the Tab Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver tises is guaranteed to be as repre- seniea. i ne TAR HEEL solicits ad vertising from reputable concerns . only. . Entered as second-class mail matter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. Thursday, March 3, 1927 PARAGRAPHICS Slipped down yet? Jupiter Snovius Falling all over us The pretty white snow Oh, how it does glow ! t We expect that Governor Mc Lean will make us Poet Laure ate of this State for composing the above. Slippery spot Then a slip Feet up Take a flip. , As a poet, ourselves. we congratulate And then there s next year, Every man will probably be back except Captain Bunn Hackney The stage will be all set for the Tar Heels to walk into three more straight championships. Who said we are pessimistic? And just think what might have happened . if we had won the thing? Why they were al ready threatening to discontinue the event and shift the scene of festivities from, Atlanta to Chapel Hill. We've had the can dylong enough and there's no harm in letting Vanderbilt lick it for a while. They will be able to appreciate it mdrewhen we take it away from them next year. Also, statistics show that the Tar Heels walloped Georgia several weeks ago, ,34 to 27. The discontented may find some condolence in that. The kind - is dead no not dead merely resting, and the spirit still lives. TRESPASSERS ' The Davidsonian says a tomb stone is the only thing that flat ters a man more than 'a college .v annual. Seniors here will disagree. The University of North Car olina falls behind on the path of progress. It has as yet not re corded a student suicide. A week ago it could be said that the traditional groundhog -was batting a huge zero in the weathek league, that he had fail ed to get even a scratch hit. But, begora, he sallies orth now hitting on all six and has bolster ed his batting average to one Sthousand. THE LOST CROWN , , Now the right attitude, of eourse, is thatv it had to happen sometime and that sometime might as well be now. But all the same we would have enjoyed seeing the Flying Phantoms eome through and slap the 'crit ics on the face by winning their When little boys go bird nest hunting they very often come upon ' a sign, usually tacked in a lop-sided fashion of a tree, say ing "NO TRESPASSING" in, habitually, badly sprawled let ters. These signs are erected for little boys, hoboes, and gen erally disreputable characters. And it looks like many of the long patient citizens of Chapel Hill will be f orced to raise simi- ar warnings and guard over them with repeating shotguns. But the signs, will not be put tip to "shoo off" little boys, hoboes, and generally disreputable char actersthey will be for the in struction of University of North Carolina students. Why the above? Quite sim ple. One lady who owned a large corner house has had the beauty of her yard totally destroyed by trespassing students. The short- distance Carolina men, too lazy- to respect property rights of others, used this woman's front yard plot to facilitate their pass age to f raternity and rooming houses. Repeated NO TRES PASSING signs were torn up and the pieces scattered over the yard or else in retaliation near insults in highly improper language were written on ; the reverse side of the X placards. This lady, unable to bear such treatment longer, has recently advertised her house for sale. Another example of the need for barb-wired fences around private property in this intellec tual center is the Gimghoul Cas tle. The Gimghoul Castle, the property of a social organiza tion, is supposed to be locked, always, except to members or persons accompanied by mem bers. Yet several adventurers have entered and explored the insides of the valuable edifice honest method of knocking out the panes of the leaded glass windows and reaching for the latch. We don't, know if it does, but even if the Castle has a cellar such unlawful entrance methods are not excusable. All of the noxious odors emanating from the stable dung spread over the campus are due in the largest part to the muti lations of thoughtless trespass ers.' The snow may stifle the smell, but it may also injure the efficacy of the manure -we are not sure of this. University authorities have had to erect wire and lead pipe barriers to hinder the passage of weary- footed college students. Per haps, and likely, in fact, Chapel Hill residents and the Gimghoul Castle folks will soon have to do likewise. Re-enforcing the obstacles with the currents from a storage battery would be ef fective. - - , Women Voters Will Meet Here March 10 University's School of Citizenship Will Convene Then, Also. The annual convention of the North Carolina League of Wo men Voters, March 10-12, will be held here concurrently with a Scnool of (Jitizensmp, spon sored by the League and by the University Extension Division, Then general . theme . of the meetings will be "Legislative Review and Forecast." The School of Citizenship will be held throughout the meeting of the League and will consist of-addresses and roundtable discus sions. Among the subjects that will be discussed are "What Hap pened at the Legislature," "How North CarolinasVotes," 'lAdmin- istrative Boards and Commis sions," "Government and Edu cation," and "Forecast and Re sume." A number of prominent men and women will speak during the convention and the conven tion and the School of Citizen ship. Robert B. House, Execu tive Secretary of .the Universi ty, will deliver the address of welcome on Thursday, March 10. On Friday Miss Belle Sherwin will be the luncheon . speaker ; and Friday night E.sJ..- Wood- house, of the University, will preside over a public meeting on the general subject of "Politi cal Aspects "of Economic Groups." Saturday, March 12, resident H. W. Chase will de- iver an address on "Government and Education."" Grant Visits Alumni Mr. Dan Grant, Alumni Sec retary, is spending a part of this week in visits to Winston-Salem, High Point, Charlotte, and Ashe- ville on business pertaining to the alumni work. Phi Talks About Contra ceptive Legislative Bill Continued from page on) application of 12 days prior to issuing the licenses fori mar riages. Warm discussion on both sides featured this question with the idea predominating that to harness the human emo- ions is futile and that no amount of legislation could prove effective when the sentiment and mood for a hasty marriage pre sents itself. The election of officers for the ensuing quarter were held with the following results: Speaker pro-tem, J. B. Lewis; Reading Clerk, G. W. Ray; Sergeant-at-Arms, Tom Capel; Assistant reasurer, C. W. Taylor; Ways and Means Committee, Norwood Carroll, Chairman, Walter Creech, and Nash Johnson ; Chairman of the Appellate Com mittee, Stanley Garriss. J. H. Harrell had been elected Speak- by the relatively simple and dis- er at a previous meeting. OPEN FORUM ...-...a. .a.. ....a-.- a WIN OR LOSE Editor of Tar Heel: The Flying Phantoms were defeated 1 Yet in losing they quitted themselves like men and proved themselves worthy to be classed as The Fighting Tar Heels. Their pfaying in the tournament this year made the South sit up and take notice no less than in former years. The least thing that the stu dent body can do is to share the loss of Captain Hackney's men in a sportsmanlike manner. We all gloried in the report of our first two games in the ..tourna ment and prided ourselves in.the victories of our team. Yet no sooner than we were eliminated it was the team that lost and not our team. The same great stars whom we heard praised so high' ly Saturday evening have gone unmentioried except in a criti cal way since our elimination Atheltics must be conducted dif ferently. It cannot be our team in victory and the team in de feat. We have had our share of victories, and must realize that we must have our defeats tha we may more highly appreciate our victories. When we consider the fact that Coach Ashemore faced the problem of building a great team around a nucleus of only two veterans, we must agree that his .success has been remarkable. - v UYETII RAY Social, Race, Economic Experts Here for the MY" Institute (Continued from page one) Dr. W. L. Poteat and Jose- phus Daniels will be among the speakers on interracial' and in ternational relations, respective ly. Arthur Pugh, for twenty- three years in China with the foreign department of the Y. M. C. A., now the Foreign Nation al Secretary of the organiation, will speak on the present Chi nese situation., J. J. Cornelius, an ortho Hindu? and Professor of Philosophy at Lucknow Uni versity, Lucknow, India, will deal with International and In terracial Relations. He has for years made a study of asiatic Relations, and his special effort will be that of answering Lath rop Stoddard's view of race, for example, as that expressed in his The Rising Tide of Color. Professor Cornelius will come to Carolina from a lecture tour of colleges from Harvard to California. In the division on industrial Relations will be : Dr. James Myers, . Executive Secretary of ndustrial Research Department of the Federal Council of Churches, and Dr. E. M. Pat terson, Professor in the Whar ton School of Finance and Com- lave your Kodak handy At home or at college -anywhere at all you'll find Kodak chances waiting for you. :. . ; ; We're Kodak specialists ' here come in and let us demonstrate , the various models to you. Brownies $2 up FOISTER'S Chapel Hill, N. C. merce, University of Pennsyl vania, who has specialized in the study, of international debts and the economic forces which must be reckoned with in dealing with international issues; and Fred Ringe, Industrial Secretary for the National Council of the Y. M. C. A. v,--: .( ' James W. Johnson, Also James W. Johnson will come to the University as the Execu tive Secretary of the National Association for the Promotion of Colored People. He has been selected on the recommendation of a number of prominent south ern men as the most level headed constructive thinker and worker dealing with race' and ' negro questions. The campus will have the opportunity to hear the ne gro's own story and interpre tation of the race situation. In addition to the above lead ers, a number of platform speak ers have been invited to be on the program of the Institute. : The program will begin Sun day, March 20th, with an ad dress by a visiting speaker ,in the five local churches. For the next five days, there will be daily mass meetings of one hour at the chapel period, seminars in the classrooms throughout the day, and mass meeting at 8:30 p. m. ; Complete bibliographies on race, industry and internation al relations are being compiled by the "Y" Cabinet to supple ment the shipments of literature sent from the headquarters of the three major divisions of the program' and the , Associated Press. The books and pam phlets will be kept at the Uni versity during theJnstitute and for a short time following. The main poster exhibit will be that of the State Department of Edu cation on negro education in North Carolina. WRESTLERS DOWN . DAVIDSON TEAM Final Score Is 20-3; Gardner and Motsinger Are the Stars. On Monday night the Uniyer sity grapplers met the strew Davidson team in one of tho fastest and most .... aggressive bouts held on the home lot this season. The Tar Heels came uuuu6" vv" w.w-r some splendid wrestling by the whole team, especially that of Gardner in the 145-pound class, and Motsinger in the 125. WHAT'S HAPPENING THURSDAY, MARCH 3 8:30 p. m. Phillips Hall. Lecture by Edgar Wind on "Styles of Archi. tecture from the Egyptian to' the Gothic Period." , SATURDAY, MARCH 5 8:00 p. m Tin Can. High School basketball finals. You. can rely on merchandise advertised in the Tar Heel. Buy from Tar Heel adver tisers. V. me Wad m.iu. mx. an. Permanent Display STETSON "D" Eluttz Building $7 eKs -Shoes Htu.on, Scam In New York. Brooklyn. Nmrk ud Philadelphia Addrra, for Mail Oadan. ay HwaMW rt, New York Clrjr - f X l-l Shi That's one i . I i i Not a chance of that lead-like, loggy feeling even during early Spring if you make a daily habit of Shredded Wheat. reason why -this prince of whole wheat cereals graces the training tables of so many colleges and schools. Carefully separated, com pletely cleaned, perfecdy 6hredded, and thoroughly cooked whole wheat grains that's all there is to J Except its convenient biscuit form, its taste -inviting crispness, its Nature given, refreshing, tonic benefits. i i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 3, 1927, edition 1
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