PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAR HEEL BULLETINS Bridge Club Tonight at 7:30 in Parish house. Buccaneer All freshmen inter ested in trying out for the edi torial staff report' to office at 7:30 tonight. Jcnior-Senior Pictures Must be in by Friday. All not in by then will be left out. American Association of Univer sity WomenNovember meeting lonight at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. E. R. Groves, 704 Gim- ghoul :Road. Illustrated talk on "Vienna as I Knew It in 1934" by Mrs. Schinhan. .'. Jcnior-Senior "Y' Cabinet Pic tures taken at 10 :30 this morn- ing on steps of South building. Activity, Staff of Yackety Yack Important meeting in Yackety1 Yack office at 2 o'clock today. University Club Have pictures taken Thursday night. Motography Staff of Yackety Tack Meeting at 1:30 in office. Co-ed Tennis 2-3 p. m . Co-ed Archery 4 :30-5 :30 p. m. 00 - ed Bowling 8 - 9, Spencer kail, 9-10, all Other co-eds. x University Club Meeting, to night, 7 O'clock, Graham. Memo rial. ' Niebuhr's Lectures Continued from first page) gods," Niebuhr continued. "But not absolute 'goods. The state fe god to many moderns, but its ) worship does not offer the solu tion to the meaning of life." Con tinuing in an unchecked flow of thoughts expressed unhesitat ingly, the speaker cited the ba sic impulses, as a god for many romanticists. Then the mind which brings order to chaotic im pulses, Niebuhr stated, is wor shipped by some moderns as the solution to life. "But this is tod simple an explanation. Aristotle rationalized slavery and great minds today rationalize war and injustice. The speaker went on to pre sent his concept of progress. "The city of God and the city of the devil both grow. In progress there is a growth of both good PICTURE OF TRUE LOVE'S '.TRIUMPH Sell-Out , .. , I INI. , - . J I I. V- u m wmj :a w - v - . k - ' fl ' ' ' S I - . , s j : , ' ' ' " : - - ' - ' ' : ' - - ' I L LOP.AT. STUDENTS WIN SEVEN PRIZEb Four Carolina Students Figure in Nation-Wide Contest Carolina students have won a? !J seven prizes in a nauon-wiue contest sponsored by. the mar keting department of Boston University. Prizes ranging from one to five dollars are offered for the best constructive criticisms iof current advertisements ap pearing in the Saturday Even ling Post. : , . R. P. Rosser has been, award- led three prizes, R. C. Page, Jr., two, Lydia B. Daniels and R. S. McCollum, one each. In addi tion to the prize money, each i student receives an engraved certificate of "nroficiency and M. - t Tn thA tpnHprpst most elonuent love storv the screen has ever license," on which humorous il nresented. Fox's nicturization of "Wav Down East" Rochelle Hud- lustrations are drawn by John son and Henrv Fonda share starring honors. Their love, in this Bliss, well-known Boston car- L V I IJW 1.11 l IIH1.II VUUU - , I i J " i . a ii a t j i L!A4r wnnist. r,n t c,, aj. w 'jm ereai American meioarama. iriumpns over aecen, muiai wguj and scorn, now iriayinjr at the Carolina. 5 me purpose oi xne contests ia to develop the critical ability oi marketing students. home his point about the abso lute good. In brief he said there is no absolute good to be looked Sunday night with a warning for in man's progress. ' both to those purely defiant re- Nobody can find the faith Pels against tne cnaotic worm that nothing can come between anQ zo tne xragic aavocates ot him and God, until he comes to the acquiescence to evil that ap- grips with the tragedy of his- Pears today to be the mam era tory. The story of Christ on the Pnasis of traditional spiritual uross is a great tragedy." It is r"u "UA,ai wuuaci- XJiiC iUUOk in the tragedy of life that we De D?tn relaxed and tense, ne find the true meaning of life, the ured earnestly; "and it is the speaker declared. ; , , students duty to strike the me- Biit he concluded on a habnier dmm between study and active note. "The fact that we exist at Participation in the social and I 1..J. wa iall is a triumph of good over evil. morai struggle. In spite of chaos, destruction, After painting a somber pic- and war there is good." ture of the world into which the In the open forum which Nie- modern student will graduate, a buhr conducted in the afternoon, world m which the long domi- he answered questions relating nant capitalistic system is de- to the world economic and poli- caymg, a world whose . inhabi tical situation. "Will world soci- tants are reaping the terrible alism insure peace?" was the harvest of centuries of human first question put to the speak- sm, Niebuhr balanced the pessi er. "It might remove many of ttie mism of his remarks with an en- motives of war, but I don't know couragmg reminder: "Let us be that there is anything that will graterful for life; it is not at all absolutely stop war," was the re- bad. ; ply. The duty of the upper crust, Niebuhr was asked what stand the- intellectuals, he r said, is to the church should take in the give direction to the dynamic CLASS LECTURE CALENDAR 8:30 'Tyler's Contrast: The First American Comedy," Dr. G. L. Paine, Murphey 202 ( English 151). 9:30 "Writing Letters of Applica tion," A. C. Howell, Phillips 214, (English 59). J LOST (Continued front page three)' But since the entrance of Wal lace Wade on the scene the story Ms changed. Wade and Chuck Collins, who preceded Snavely, clashed four times. The best (Carolina could do was to gain a pair of scoreless ties. In 1932 and 1933 the Blue Devils won .7-0 and 21-0 respectively. Then Carl Snavely came South. He knocked out the No tre Dame system and instituted his modified Warner play. He developed his material into fine condition. The result: Carolina beat Duke 7-0 last year. This fall students of both collesres are clamoring for a win over their even of another war. "I can't for a new world order, which will "traditional rivals " say that Christians should hot come from the victims of the old Numerous individual stars participate in any war," was the system. The hunger and suffer will clash, among them a pair of speaker's thoughtful reply. "I mg of the poor will; resolve fino iiamvapW Hn TYwsnHnnArl am involved in a war every day. themselves into a rebellion widely for All-America honors, When groups organize against which, unless it has some con Don Jackson of the Tar Heels other groups, that is war. Should trol and direction from the up- ani) Ace Parker of the Blue I say Til do all the per crust, will throw the world Devils. Jackson's forte is pass- organizing against injustice until into anarchy, ingi an art at which he is rated violence steps in?' Why should Half as illustration and half among the best in the nation. I draw the line?" as practical application of the His -nun tin e-, runninsr. and defen- Niebuhr also added, however, philosophy he urged, Niebuhr sive play are superb. Parker's that he thought there should be pointed out the potential cour forte is running, but he can pass pacifists in the church to pre- ses. which America might pur- and nunt with the best. vent opportunism. He said that .Two . .great fullbacks meet, a true pacifist1 should be an as Jim Hutchins of Carolina i and cetic in order - to live without J;ack Alexander of Duke. ' 'Hut- conflict. ' - ' ' chins is mentioned widely as a "Without resorting to social leading All-America prospect, ism, could the president in the Co-Captains Harry Montgom- event of a European war main cry and Herman Snyder com- tain a complete embargo on se plete the Tar Heel backfield, condary as well as primary war while Sam McCaskill and Jule materials?" was the next ques- Ward fill in Duke's backfield. tion put to the lecturer. "This Montgomery is the brother of could not be maintained without Cliff of Columbia and Rose Bowl some sort of war collectivism," fame and is rated by many as Niebuhr answered. "People say the smartest field general in 'let's keep out by - not trading Dixie. Snyder ranks tops among with the belligerents. The trou Dixie's blockers ble is you don't just, cut off 10 Three great ends meet: Dick per cent of the whole nati0nal Buck and Sophomore Andy Ber- mcome. vou entirely wipe out shak of Carolina and ld West the incomes of certain sections. of Duke. Buck is picked as the ag for exampie of the Sotlth if ViAV- ' ." cotton were oanneu irom ex- sophomore team mate, Andy I pq' isersnaK, is raieu oy many t,, Antiirei.r a niipsfinn the solution of the race problem in the South, .Niebuhr said: "The Negroes and the poor whites havent a chance unless they or ganize together against their op pressors. In the South there is a double. decay of feudalism, the plantation system, and the cap italistic system The ultimate solution of the race question lies Cross-Country Tni5iTriiir5il (Uontinuea jrovx page inreej runners are wen experienced iuo7ihti Vu,Uv touchdowns on passes from anvone the Blue Devils may put Clark, halfback. The outstand " i n xi the course. Gammon and Piay oi tne game, was xne w;n c,it.wo pass from Clark to Carlyle for wealth of exberienced men to- the second score, the ball travel - i - I Pt Jl if 1 A dav. These men who will be g ou yaras in tne air Deiore it out there running for Carolina was received by the elusive Car- are Anderson, Daniels, Garland, lyle Goldman, Kind and Mark. Oddly enough, out of the five Frosh to Run games which the Betas have The Duke team worked over J Played, in four of them the score the five mile course in Chapel pas Deen me otner one Will Prin'nv affprriooTi. to ffpt went to 13-0. Yesterday's de- the feel of the difficult course Ueat was their first setback. which usually proves an obstacle A. T. O. Wins to inadequately prepared teams. Alpha Tau Omega ran rough- The men who were chosen to snod over a short-manned Alpha represent Duke in the race are: lEpsilon team and emerged on Morse, Naudain, George, Dator, the long end of a 30-0 score. A Pruett, Ferris, and Koop. blocked kick, an intercepted The freshman teams of both Pass by Phillips, a pass from oni will iSrt run tnriav n a Hawley to Spencer, and a run preliminary to the varsity con- b .Hawley were among test. The runners who will re Open face Waltham watch with several names engraved on back. There was a gold! football on the chain with ALLVMER- ICAN engraved on it. Theowner is James Leach, former V. Mi: captain and all-America football player. This is very valuable to v him. A good reward is offered. Finder please get in touch with Coach P. H. Quinlan. c the scoring plays. Alpha Epsilon, minus two men to fill their guard positions, did not even make a first down. Steele made four first downs to one for Lewis, but the Lewis present Carolina are: Hendrix, Christy, C. and R. Hubbard, Willis, "Williams, Underwood, Swift and Socrinty. The yearl ing TTip.pt will start at 4 o'clock. 15 minutes earlier than the var- eleven emerSed on the lo? end sitv meet, and will be run over of a 7- ecisura. The first half I J 1 1 1 ' T- I -rila d enueu in a scoreless lie. Jtsumu till 11111V WV Jm I , Hearn, Jr., saved the day for the men of Lewis by scoring on an end run in the final period. Theta Chi forfeited to S. A. Ms equal. Both are pass-snag ging experts although Buck is the star at this art. West has led the Duke line play. i - In the tenter of the line, Babe Daniel, Carolina's 210 pound star, clashes with Jack Heinne- mer, Duke's 160 pound star. Other leading linemen are Tom Evins. Carolina's 220- WmitiI farVlp TrnhaKlv thft fast est lineman on the field, and Gus in th? reorganization of our ee- onomic system ii mere is any ultimate solution." PATRONIZE OUR Still intoxicatedly dynamic ADVERTISERS Niebuhr closed his lecture series Durner, Duke guard. sue . . in r the . : ; present , European Crisis, c .:' He favored rolling up senti ment in favor of neutrality legr islation that .would insofar, as possible insure our staying out of the impending conflicts. He was uncertain whether the neu trality would be possible, but he pointed out that at least we should , have . conscientiously tried to escape being accessories o the unforgiveable sin that is war. He presented an attractive picture of a neutral America as 'an island of sanity in an insane world." This, he said, would be the escape policy, favored by the group of f utilists who regard the League of Nations as merely an imperialistic' instrument up holding an unjust status quo. We might, he stated, follow the policy of British youth in supporting the League as the one semblance of order visible in the world chads. In so Homer, nf course, we should more surely and terribly be running the risk of being drawn into the conflict. Niebuhr's own opinion was favorable to striking the medium between an almost certainly fu tile fight against the war, im plying the application of sanc tions against Italy and probably ultimate involvement and a do nothing policy that would prob ably make our entrance into the Tar-Mags (Continued from page three) 3- J- CI 4.1 T.-TU xi 1 corumgtopuuLiierxiiruuucauuns E jn - other Scheduled i linn -v ii nf AnfrntT-nm twrt itt i n I iuics, lauob iii isciiii iiic I contest ner with a big beer party and the Tar-Mags have started to fjirl Wine get m snape already, wnen (Continued from page three) Tar-Mae: Hammer, super-abs- tainind- teetotaller. heard that 0(ly & California Here We beer woud be his for winning, Come." ..And as far as all-Ame he cried 'out. "It's all vour malt! rl6as she believes that our Paere.' "Front" Paere. also ' a nrst tam should compose that Tar-Mag man, drew up the rules mythical squad. In conclusion for the contest. Miss Woodworth wished that more girls would show an inter- L-: .: .;(;:. ,'jng- conflict come a little later than est in this weekly contest. by the other way. He liked the idea of a conscien tious attempt at escape by ade quately and strictly enforced neutrality legislation. A vivid speaker and able handler of similes, Niebuhr spoke of fascism as the delirium which precedes the death of a capitalistic country. Having ex hausted all the quackeries, like high and very nationalistic tariff walls, resorted to in an attempt to cure the deadly disease which has gripped it, the country lap ses into this delirium, in which it has all the illusions of new health. Asked if he considered the present trend in America f ascis. tic or socialistic, Niebuhr replied that America is a middle-class nation and therefore opposed to the collectivism implied in socialism- In . trying to preserve . our individualism against the oncom ing collectivism, he said, we are likely to throw ourselves upon the tender mercies of a .fascist dictator. COMING NOV. 25-26 GIN&ER ROGERS 'Top Hat" CAROLINA THEATRE i Show the Duke Boys CLEAN CUT GRAHAM MEMORIAL BARBER SHOP CAROLINA THEATRE Durham, N. C. Matinee and Night FRIDAY, NOV. 15th MAIL ORDERS NOW tM 1.1 I Mk . m i ii v r i b- i s w ii FIFI On Stage in 45 Scenes Company of 75 in Person Including Clark and McCulIousK l( U'OBSAY PHICX3: (INCL. OOT. TAX) - HIQHT tovtr Floor $a.75 tiM Ken. 1st XaL ILei CoL Mezz. 11.10; 2nd BaL Us MA'l'LN XX Xsovet oor $S0 l.et tl.10 Ueix. (1-63; ut BaL lUt-Ks au eza. ana BSJ. t99 oww on mi at Box OtTiet Koa 4aj, Hot. Htn. 4 v V"r V waW - 7 BUSTER WEST and Many Others with FAMOUS EAKL CARROLL CHORUS OF LUCILLE PAGE 6 in

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