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The Daily Tar Heel from Chapel Hill, North Carolina • Page 1

Location:
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1" i ffl JWo (M AR If "Tj JLL JlLJJ THE OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. 1 -J 1 Vol.4, UNIVERSITY OF JSOUIH CAROLINA, CHAPEL HILL, N. KPV. 2, 1895. No.

6. AN EXCITING GAME. Moore gains 4, Butler 1: Whita AN ELOQUENT ADDRESS' The White and Blue of Carolina Prof. Alderman speaks at Atlanta ker hurt and Stanly substituted at quarter; Stephens 1 yard, Moore Triumphs Over the Crimson and on Higher Education. Black of Georg-ia.

fails to gain, Moore 5, Stephens 2, xby Saturday was almost an ideal N. C. then gets 10 yards on a fou by Ga. day for football and an eager crowd ueorgia tnen maices id yards on of over a thousand spectators gath Tered at the athletic park to witness what was to be one of the closest double pass, Morris is hurt but plays on, Morris 3 yards. Then 10 more yards on the double pass when football games ever seen in Georg-ia time for the first half is SECOND HALF.

Butler kicks off for 35 yards, Stubbs catches and runs back 5, The college colors were to be seen on all sides White and Blue as well as the Red and Black. As might be expected the wearers of Vthe Red and Black "were in a large majority but when the Carolina 3 ly Carolina off side giving 10 yards to the statesman and publicist must ponder it and the capitalist may well reckon with it amid his gold The great Columbian Fair, with its splendor and beauty, will fade away as a dream, but its neighbor, thr University, will shape life for unnumbered generations. Whenever tyrany has sought to oppress the weak, or. ignorance to rule the wise, wherever the borders of light have needed to be enlarged, or ancient and prosperous shapes of wrong to be cleansed from the land, the gray walls of the University have yielded up its spiritual batal-lions strong in the steadfast pur-, poe anr cultivated brain discoverers of thought, conservators of truth, stimulators of. mind, sowers of seed that will bear fruit in a fairer time.

Let me not beunderstoood in pleading. Jfor i the higher education as underrating the lower, for there is no essential distinction between the two. The State cannot be interested in one'and not'in thcother, for they are one and indivisible. A system of education'all 'universities would be a crime, as a system all Georgia. Morris 3, Stubbs fumbles anc loses 2 yards, Stubbs kicks to But A Tally-ho drove down the field, lowed by the carriage, of St.

Mary ler who runs back: 10, Stephens girls, numbers ceased to count- no loses 5, Moore make 5, and thenjj.0, PROF. EDWIN A. AIDERMAN. state could have been better repres the ball theu roes back to Georgfia ented no Worth Carolina team Out of the overthrow of an unique I on downs. i 1 3 and forcef ul civilization in the Southern States there is slowly emerging 'a nave ever iookcu ai uiuse wiiu so enthusiastically waved the White and Blue and failed to win, and win Georgia loses.

2 yards, Nally gains 1, and then 20, Morris loses 5 and is hurt, Nally makes they try; the double pass but fail to gain land v( they did, only after a hard strutf- a new society. Under the stern pressure of ne cesity this silent revolution has pro ceeded so quietly and has been mask' the ball goes back to Carolina. 1 Below is the detailed account of Stephens makes 4 yards and then ed so skillfully by the marvelous tne game. 5, Moore 3, Collier 5, Baird 12, The teamed lined up as follows: Stephens 4, Wright' 2, Stephens Carolina, (Cjipt.) fails to gain, Moore make 3, Morris material resurrection of a ruined and conquered people that men have not marked the clashing of old ideas and inspirations and modes of thought with the new strenuous in of Georgia hurt. Ball then goes E.

R. R. T. R. E.

Gregory Nl Hurley, Vc White, i Collier, Baird, Merrit, over to Georgia, Kent gains 2 yards, Price 5, Mor Georgia. Ferrell, (Snyder), Price, Connally, Cochran, Moore, Kent, Kelloren, Barrows, Morris, 1 Nally, Stubbs, (Capt.) primary schools' and no universities would be a farce. It is simply a fluences of modernism and innova tion. All the well known phe' ris is hurt again, Morris fails to gain twice, and ball goes over to question of sequence. The educa nomena of transition are in full l-Whitakar, (Stanly) Qj B.

Moore, R. H. B. Carolina. Stephens 4, Wright 6, tive impulse is from abovr downward and not from below upward.

1 1 1- TT Tl play in Southern life the people as a whole, incited by lack of training Stephens 5, Baird 3, Moore 2, when '8 otepnens, xy. n. F. B. and and the two impulse reinlorcc and consequent poverty, pressing the ball goes over on downs.

Nally makes 3, 9, and 2 yards, Georgia enrich each other. steadily toward a wider life, but loses 5, Nally grains 4, and Vets 10 unable to distinguish, in the general Higher education in the South yards on offside play by Carolina. clamor, the guidance of true wisdom does not exist for its own glory, for from the voice of the slave to his Georgia makes 20 yards on double pass, Nally fails to gain, Stubbs kicks to Stanley who catches and the fame of its teachers, for the pride of sect or for any subjective sect castingin stumbling blocks, or the raw enthusiast shouting pana or selfish reason. Its aims must be runs back 20 yard's, Butler fumbles ceas and prophesying milleniums. pure public aims and its service on pass for kick but regains the public service.

The great war in the mystery of ball, Moors fails to gain-Butler kicks, Georgia fumbles In a portentious era and with in historic forces, freed the white man, adequate means, it stands for the The game was called at 3:30. N. C. wins the toss and chooses the Southern goal. Stubbs kicks off ifor20 yards, Collier falls on the ball but does not advance it.

Ste- phens goes through line for 2 yards, i Moore makes 3, Collier 1, Collier 8. Stephens takes the ball on a double pass and makes a brilliant run from the center of the field for a touchdown, scattering the Georgia backs along the field as he goes. Whi taker kicks goal. Score, U. N.

C. 6, Georgia time, 4 minutes. Stubbs then kicks off for 20 yards, Whitaker catches and runs back 5, Moore gains 4 and then 5, Stephens 4, and 3. Baird fumbles the ball and Georgia gets it for the first time. Nally gains 2 yards, Price 2, Morris 5, Stubbs 2, Nally 3, Mor and Merrit gets ball and passes to rolled away his burden and enrolled Collier who takes it down field for beneficent force that must transmute the tumultuous, untrained life the South in competition with the a touchdown but is called back on charge of running in touch.

The great industrial democracies of the about it into self-jrovcrnment per world. Its problems, no longer di fected by education its material ball is carried in 15 yards but time the youth of a new life and a new is called before play is resumed. rect and primitive, are their problems intensified by the painful The game is over and Carolina procsses of social transformation. has won. Oentury, and its strong fortress the self-conscious state, no longer a synonym of rude force, but an expression of Christian spmpathy and The sentimentalists and parti- Score 6 to 0.

The playing was by no means as zans of the reconstruction period unit)' and conscience, seeking to realize and show forth the dignity of fancied that they had settled the Democracy, the beauty of popular concord and justice, and the majes ty of Republican citizenship." question which had disturbed the dreams of Jefferson, which had perplexed and affrighted the national conscience through all its history and which had just evoked the mightiest moral energies of the cen- A $EW dramatic organization i 1 i a. known as tne CrarncK uranrntie ury. But their solution was no Club has been formed at the University of Pennsylvania, In speak solution. It was solemn opera bouffe. The problem had just begun and remains the trandecendent sociologi ing of the club the U.

of Pa. Conner says: "The real object of the. Club is to draw out the dramatic talent good as the score seems to indicate. Our boys had traveled all thevnight getting hardly any sleep and this, together with the fact that several were suffering from previous injuries, must account largely for; the poor showing they made. The Georgia team was a good one, somewhat heavier than ours and in better physical condition.

For Carolina Stephens and Moore did! the best gork and for Georgia Price, Morris and Nally. No one was serionsly injured Last Saturday's Games. Princeton, 0 Orange, 0. Yale, 0 Boston, A. 0.

Harvard, 25 Cornell, 0. Pennsylvania, 30 Lafayette, 0. Brown, 22 Lehigh, 4. West Point, 6 Dartmouth, 0. U.

16 Gullaudet, 6. Uni. of 40-Lake Forest, 0. U. N.

0-U. O. ris 2. Baird is slightly hurt but resumes play. Nally gains 4 yards, Morris 4, Nally fails to gain, Stubbs 2 yards.

Gregory is hurt but resumes play in few minutes. Morris gains 6, then 1 yard, Nally 5 and Morris fails to gain, Stubbs makes 4 yards; the next rush Georgia fails to gain. Morris then gains 2, Stubbs 1 and then the ball goes over to Carolina. Moore fails to gain, Stephens then makes 5 yards. The ball then goes back to Georgia on a foul.

Morris looses 3 yards, Nally gains 4, Morris 3, Stubbs 5, Nally 2, Stubbs 3, Price 2, Nally the ball then goes back to Carolina on 4 downs; Moore gains 4, Stephens 1. Stephens 10 and 4, Moore 1. Ferrell was hurt and retired and Snyder substituted on left end for Ga. cal problem of the age. Rant will not dispose of it, nor ignorant gush, of the students, with a view to ren nor race prejudice, nor the philoso dering practical, if the -scheme is successful, the production next year phy of the sentimental and remote; but it must work itself out on South of one of the old historical Lliza- betbian dramas.

It is a project for which the University is ern soil by the wisdom of Southern men of both races. It must pass into the region of scientific study We wonder how long will be before the University of and investigation. The Southern North Carolina will be lor scholar must make it his province in the still air of the University; such an undertaking..

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About The Daily Tar Heel Archive

Pages Available:
73,248
Years Available:
1893-1992