THE DAILY TAR HEEL
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1523
PAGE FOUR
YLICA HEADS GIVE
DETAILS OF MEET
McKee And Bonner
Return From Atlanta
Bill McKee, advisor, and John Bon
ner, president, of the University
TMCA have returned from Atlanta,
where they attended the Southeast
ern Regional Council meeting of the
YMCA which met there September
23-October 1. McKee acted in the
capacity of member-at-large and Bon
ner as representative from North Car
olina. The meeting, which had its head
quarters in the graduate dormitory of
the Atlanta university, was attended
by 31 people representing 10 states.
There were 10 white students and 10
Negro students, one each from the
states represented, and 11 members-at-large.
Among those present were
Rowland Elliott, executive secretary
of the national student YMCA, and
Herb King and Wiley Critz, regional
secretaries.
MEET WITH YWCA
Frid night, the group met jointly
with the Southern Regional council of
the YWCA at which Miss Eunice
King of WCUNC and Miss Wilhelm
ing Rowland, general secretary at the
Woman's college, represented North
Carolina. At that time summer work
was reported by various representa
tives, Bonner making a report on the
President's school and McKee on the
World Congress for Christian youth
which met at Amsterdam, Holland.
The meetings Saturday were taken
up with reports and discussion, and
plans for the Blue Ridge and Talle
dega conferences for next year -were
discussed.
PEACE COMMISSION
Sunday morning, reports from the
sub-committees -were given. 'The peace
commission report recommended that
the peace commission for the region be
set up on the campus of the Univer
sity, the recommendation to be ac
cepted upon ratification by the YWCA
and YMCA executive committees here.
Miss Rowland and Bonner were ap
pointed to write a. letter to each asso
ciation in the region asking them to
.aid the World Student Christian fed
eration during the crisis in Europe.
Co-chairmen for the Blue Ridge and
Talledega conferences were nominated
and elected, and, McKee. i3. to be a
member of the Blue Ridge planning
committee for the year 1939-40. The
session Sunday morning was closed
with a worship service led by Miss
Rowland.
White Moves
Continued from page three)
him into action in his familiar role
as a substitute. Sunday morning the
newspapers hailed the Carolina vic
tory, singing the praises of Lalanne,
Stirnweiss, Radman, Woodson et. al,
and calling White the outstanding
sophomore linesman in the state.
Meanwhile, Coach -Wolf sat back
and smiled, knowirJg that for another
season he had ample tackle protec
tion in White and the veteran Gates
Kimball, who will be back next season
for another year of superlative effort.
Wolf told all questioners White had
a great future and was an outstand
ing ball player, realizing that the big
boy from Cleveland, who wears a nose
guard, would be a staunch Tar Heel
front wall guardian for three bril
liant seasons.
Three brilliant seasons, and Slagle
meanwhile looked forward to another
autumn of bench-warming and another
letter.-
The Tar Heels take a final work
out today before leaving ' tomorrow
night for Norfolk . . . The team will
camp out at the Monticello hotel and
leave Norfolk immediately after the
game . . . Wolf ran the team through
a passing drill and then lined up the
first stringers against Virginia Tech
offensive and defensive formations
... George Stirnweiss took heat
treatments allafternoon and did not
get out in uniform. tS. R.
The moon revolves around the earth
in 27 days, seven hours and 43 min
utes, and its average distance from
the earth is about 238,793 miles.
LOOK YOUR BEST GET IT AT THE
GRAHAM MEMORIAL BARBER SHOP
EUBANK'S DRUG COMPANY
With three registered experienced phar
macists is prepared to take care of
your drug wants.
Dependable Druggists Since 1892
Thirty Girls Out
For Tennis Team
Coached by Co-captain Bill Rawlings
of the varsity tennis team, 30 coeds
are working to make the coed tennis
team. Duke will probably be the team's
first opponent.
Classes in coed" tennis meet every
Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday aft
ernoons from 3 to 4 o'clock on the clay
courts. In case of conflicts a class from
5 to 6 o'clock on Monday, Tuesday, and
Thursday afternoons will be held.
Miss Ann Moore is student assist
ant in tennis, with Miss Dot Coble as
manager of the sport.
Troop School Will
Meet Tonight At 7:30
The first meeting of the Field Ar
tillery Troop School to be conducted
in Chapel Hill during the school year
1939-40 will be held in ' room 10 of
Davie hall at 7:30 tonight. For this
meeting the class will be conducted by
Captain Edgar R. Rankin. Subject:
"The Firing Battery." All persons in
terested are welcome.
On The Cuff
Continued from page three)
to every picture. It seems as if a
number of the football experts have
suddenly discovered Carolina- will
have a football team this fall. This
is very amazing to the experts who
.passed, through earlier in the year
and discovered a number of rugged
gentlemen playing football at a
school 12 miles away from Chapel
Hill.
Now this school is known as Duke.
It may be remembered that Duke
had a fair football team last fall and,
managed to get an invite to the
Rose BowL The invite was prompt
ly accepted and Duke went to the
BowL Tne results were later cen
sored in North Carolina so no one
in the state would learn of the
great disgrace that befell Wallace
Wade's team.
Anyway, a iot of citizens labored
under the misapprehension that this
was still '38 so they promptly picked
Duke to win the Southern conference
championship, forgot about Carolina
and let the situation go at that.
However, sleeping dogs will not
sleep if too much noise is made. Caro
lina made the noise. The Tar Heels
have scored 86 points in two games at
latest reports. Duke had trouble mak
ing" against Davidson last Saturday.
So the experts, reading between the
lines and looking at the scores, beat a
hasty retreat to the hills and their
typewriters and promptly wrote in
big enough letters so even the fel
lows over at Duke could read, that
maybe Carolina would beat the Blue
Devils.
This is encouraging to everyone
except Mr. Wolf. Mr. Wolf refuses
to believe Carolina will beat Virginia
Tech Saturday. The suggestion that
Carolina will have a chance against
Duke will make Wolf see red, white,
green,' blue, purple and other colors
in the spectrum.
But the truth is right now that
Carolina is close to being the best
team in he country. The Tar Heels
have done everything required of
them , and done it in such an ef
' ficient fashion that ,they will prob
ably have to wait until October 21
and the game with Tulane to find
out just how good they really are.
The suspicion is that the team is
positively the best imaginable, and
even greater than Mr. Wolf's 1937
team that won the conference cham
pionship. After all this year's team
has Stirnweiss,- Radman, Lalanne,
Woodson, Severin, et aL
So it is encouraging to learn the ex
perts have discovered North Carolina.
Next thing you know they might even
find out there is a fair football team at
Chapel Hill.
Speaking of experts, or inexperts,
there is this guy Norman Sper. He
picked Wake Forest last Saturday
claiming among other things . . .
"The Deacs have more reserves . . ."
Oh yeah, well, he forgot to say where
Wake Forest was hiding its reserves.
Sper must feel as if a railroad train
hit him.
Hoping you are the same. S.R.
P. S.: Whatever did become of Maize?
Madeleine Carroll
.
1
Star in "Honeymoon in Bali," play
ing at the Carolina theater today.
Faculty Club Plans
To Entertain Oct. 14
In New Quarters
The University Faculty club will
entertain its members in the new club
house, formerly Archer House, on the
evening of October 14, it was an
nounced yesterday.
The house has been renovated and
final touches are now being applied.
When completed it will contain a
kitchen, to be used only for parties and
special occasions, a large lounge, a
small lounge and a recreation room.
GOVERNORS
The board of governors of the club
decided at a recent meeting that mem
bership will henceforth be open to as
sistant instructors provided they have
a Bachelor's degree. Members of the
board include W. A. Olsen, president
of the club, and Louis Graves, O. K.
Cornwell, L. B. Rogerson, and R. H.
Wettach.
Yanks Defeat Reds
Continued from page three)
Cincinnatians in the struggle for the
championship of the baseball universe.
COSTLESS ERROR ;
Up until the ninth, Derringer, win
ner of 25 regular season games, had
kept in 'step with Ruffing, striking
out seven of the Yankees and gen
erally tying the Wrecking gang slug
gers. But he slipped once, and as is
often the case, was fine slip too many
against the greatest team in baseball
history.
The Reds will try again tomorrow,
starting Bucky Walters, a 27 game
winner. Lefty Gomez, not as brilliant
as in previous seasons but still an
outstanding, money player, will have
the duty of making it two straight
for the Yanks.
LOSE LEAD
The Reds gained a one run lead
in the fourth and lost it in the fifth
when the Yanks scored a tally of
their own in the fifth.
A walk, stolen base and single
made up the Cincinnati offensive.
Goodman walked, stole second and
rode home as Buck McCormick un
loaded a line blow to right.
The famous New . York one-two
punch floored Walters in . the fifth.
Jumping Joe Gordon led off with a
single and scored a moment later as
Babe Dahlgren, a weak sticker but
an outstanding money player, lined
a double down the third base line.
Harriers Seek
Continued frompage three)
two-mile last year, running the dis
tance in 9:44. ' ,
Dave Morrison, a junior and a de
pendable runner, ran sixth in the con
ference race and third in the confer
ence mile last year. ,
WIMPY ALSO RUNS .
A product of the intramural depart
ment is Wimpy Lewis, who was dis
covered by Ranson when he placed
second in the cake race as a fresh
man. A junior, he ran 12th in the
conference race last year.
Clarence Fink, although only a
junior and finishing 15th in the con
ference race last year, had the honor
of heading the first Duke man. At
the end of the season he was the
eighth man on the team.
The remarkable variations in tem
perature on the surface of the moon
are due to the fact that the moon has
little or no atmosphere to obstruct the
sun's rays during daylight and to hold
the sun's heat during darkness.
COOPER TO GIVE
ORGAN CONCERT
Meredith Prof
To Play Sunday
Dr. Harry E. Cooper, noted organ
ist and head of the Meredith College
department of music, will present an
organ concert Sunday afternoon at
4:30 in Hill music hall. The program
will be varied, including renditions of
several different schools and types of
composition.
A professor of music at Meredith
and organist and choirmaster of Christ
Church, Dr. Cooper has made several
concert tours throughout the . nation.
He was particularly acclaimed in his
appearance in the mid-Western states.
Dr. Cooper's early training under
Maude V. P. Hazelton, Edward Krei
ser, and Sir Carl Busch, was continued
under other noted teachers both in this
country and abroad He is a Fellow
of the American Guild of Organists,
and in 1923 the degree of Doctor of
Music was conferred upon him by the
Bush Conservatory.
Old Scout Says
Continued from page three)
teams in years; one with an attack
which will be something new for Sleepy
James Crowley. So Fordham by a
touchdown.
AUBURN-TULANE Tulane has
the kind of ball club that warms up as
it goes along. Auburn had trouble
beating Birmingham-Howard last
week. Tulane by about 14 points.'
FLORIDA-MISSISSIPPI STATE
Mississippi State amazed a number
of people by defeating Arkansas last
week. It will be no surprise when it
beats Florida by about 20-6. y
GEORGIA TECH-NOTRE DAME
Notre Dame has this one by about
13-0. 'Nough said.
PANTS DOWN
KENTUCKY - VANDERBILT
Vandy took the pants off Rice last
week in the last seven minutes of the
game. Kentucky is improving to be
sure, but Vandy should win by a touch
down, i
LSU-HOLY: CROSS Holy Cross
has a new coach in Joe Sheeketski and
a powerful team to go along with that.
The Crusaders have year after year
been close to the best in the country.
So Holy Cross by 13-6.
Briefly . . . Tennessee murdering
Sewanee and Ole Miss clubbing South-
western.
THE EAST
COLUMBIA-YALE Greasey Neale
of the Yale coaching staff is reported
to have said in August. . . "If you
thought our team was terrible last
year wait until you see it this fall . ."
So Columbia beats the Bulldogs, 13-0.
CARNEGIE TECH-TEMPLE
The tartans by about two touchdowns
as they start another big season of
Eastern domination.
CORNELL - SYRACUSE This
game was a heart-stopper last year as
Syracuse won in the last few minutes.
But this is another year and there is
no Sidat-Singh to toss life-saving
passes for the Orange. Cornell: 19-7.
NAVY-VIRGINIA The Cavaliers
are really powerful this year, but they
still seem to lack the spark to beat
the big boys. Navy, 13-6.
In short . . . Pitt over West Virginia,
Dartmouth over Hampden-Sydney,
Harvard over Bates, Brown over Am
herst, Penn State over Bucknell,
Princeton over Williams and Army
over Centre.
THE MIDWEST
IO WA-INDIANA Iowa has a new
coach this year in Holy Cross' Dr. Ed
die Anderson. He can work no miracles
in two games." So Indiana by two touch
downs.
KANSAS-IOWA STATE Iowa
State has a superior attack and should
win about 6-0.
MICHIGAN-MICHIGAN STATE
Another renewal of the battle of Michi
gan and the Wolverines should win
this year, 14-7.
WISCONSIN - TEXAS The
Beavers are tough this year and may
very well win the Big Ten title.
Wisconsin, 19-0. -'-' '
NORTHWESTERN - OKLAHOMA
This is' a humdinger, but North
western, boasting one of the, best
teams in the country, should win if
only by a touchdown.
MINNESOTA-NEBRASKA Ne
braska is not ffhe team it used to be
The Gophers by, 20-0.
OHIO STATE-MISSOURI Ohio
State anyway they want. Approxi
mate count: 27-0.
SOUTHWEST
TCU-ARKANSAS The Horned
Frogs received a jolt from Oklahoma
last week. The same should not hap
pen Saturday. TCU by two touch
downs. .
BAYLOR-OKLAHOMA A & M
Baylor has a fast running team and a
couple of good sophomores in Wilson
and Parks. The Aggies are introduc
ing a new coach and a new system.
Baylor, 13-0.
IRC Passes Budget
The International Relations clan
passed their budget for tne year last
night according' to recommendations
by Lincoln Kan, treasurer.
Bailey And Thirjpen
Enter Washington
Secretary School
Misses Aidelaide Bailey and Cornel
ia Lee Thigpen, graduates of the Uni
versity have entered the Washington
School for Secretaries in Washington,
D. C. for the fall term. As a student
at this school they will be at the cen
ter of American affairs connected with
the war and will have an unusual op
portunity to study the actions of this
government in preserving neutrality.
Miss Bailey, daughter of R. L.
Bailey of Bluefield, West Virginia, re
ceived her A. B. degree here and was
a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Miss
Thigpen, daughter of P. L. Thigpen
of Rocky Mount, also received her A.
B. degree here and was a member of
the Glee club, the Altar guild, arid Pi
ceta 1 m sorority.
With the government service in the
national capital rapidly increasing its
staff to meet the emergency situa
tion in Europe, possibilities for trained
men and women to receive employ
ment in this field are expanding, Mrs.
Adria C. Beaver, director of studies
at the Washington school, told the fall
class.
University Band
With Mark Altvater as the new
drum major for the University
band, Director Earl Slocum has added
40 new members, transfers and fresh
men, to the blue and white band of
the University.
New men taking places this fall
are: Mark Altvater, drum major;
Jimmy Farr, Charles Young, Everett
Charles, David Fotton, Charles Pali
oco, James Watkins, Buck Marrow,
James Allran, Wilbur Spruill, Lynn
Bernhardt, Charles Moore, Henry Wil
liams, Thomas Baden, Joe Leak, James
Johnson, Wade Jordan, George Sta-
vimler, J. B. Saunders, David Arner,
Langdon Montgomery, Bob Reed, Bill
Moore, Hampton Shuping, Don Wil
son, Ernest Hill, Don Goldfarb, W. F.
Herpel, Arnold Capps, Dwight Price,
James Sandilos, Maylon Baker, Roger
Anderson, Wade Conrad, Harry Mar
tin, William Woodson, David Berstein,
John McDonald, John Satterfield, and
Sam Smith. '
Griffin Thinks
i -.. ,
(Continued from first page)
impossible to foresee the outcome of
an irrational situation."
CHANGE OF EVENTS
Whether the U. S. is drawn into the
war depends oh change of events and
the emotional balance we maintain,
Griffin believes. "There is a moral
obligation for our intervention on the
side of right. It behooves a nation to
oppose both individual and interna
tional criminals, but using force is not
the best or most effective method," he
explained.
Griffin is not in favor of the U. S.
selling arms to belligerent nations.
He believes that this would be a form
of intervention and participation. "We
can't keep out and sell arms," he
stated.
He gives two interpretations to Rus
sia's entrance into the Ukraine. ' He
feels that it was either an imperialis
tic attitude or an attempt to extend
Russia's idealogy to the White Rus
sians in the Ukraine. If Russia and
Germany combine forces in Poland,
England and France cannot win the
war, he believes.
TEXAS A & M-SANTA CLARA
Santa Clara is tops on the coast year
after year, but not being in the Paci
fic coast conference, never gets proper
recognition. Santa Clara should win
this one by two touchdowns. .
RICE-CENTENARY The. Rice fel
lows must have lost their faith in hu
man nature last week when Vandy
beat 'em in the last few minutes of
play. Rice should bounce back this
week and win, say, by 14-6.
THE WEST
CARIFORNIA-ST. MARY'S Cali
fornia, friends, had an unfortunate
experience last week-end, losing to
Pacific, 6-0. It was terrible. It should
be worse this week-end. St. Mary's,
13-0.
OREGON - STANFORD Look's
like Oregon in this one. The Webf oots
are steadier and have more offensive
power. Should win by two touchdowns.
OREGON STATE-IDAHO Oregon
State mates, and how do games like
this get. by? ' . s
ULCA-WASHINGTON Washing
ton should win this one in spite of that
Pittsburgh incident.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA -WASHINGTON
STATE Southern
Cal is after that coast title and an
other Rose Bowl shot. This game
should go for the Trojans, 19-Q:
OVER THE
-: ETHER .-
By
Rush Hamsick
9:00 Breakfast Club: WPTP
1:30 Second game of 1939 World
Series: WRVA WRAL.
300 United States Army Band
WDNCWBIG.
5:00 Jack Teagarden'3 orchestra
WPTF. "
6:30 Kaltenbom edits the news
WDNCWBIG. 7:00 Fred Waring in Pleasure
Time: WPTF WLW.
, 8:00 Ask It Basket with Jim Mc
Williams: WBT WHAS. One Man'i
Family: WLW.
8:30 Tip Top Show starring Joe
Penner: KDKA. Strange As It Seems
WBT WHAS.
9:00 Major Bowes' Amateur hour
WDNC WBT. Good News of 1S4
with Baby Snooks: WPTF WLW.
10:00 Kraft Music Hall with Bms
Crosby, Burns, and Trotter's orches
tra: WDNC WBT.
10:30 Americans at Work: WEIG
WDNC.
11:30 Hal Kemp's crew: WBT
WBIG.
They Prefer Beds
Cutting classes yesterday in faror
of 28 of the Infirmary's softest beds
were the following:
William Moore, John Wallace, Mur
doch Dunn, John Perry, John Burnette,
I. A, Ward, H. S. Hole, Clyde Cleet
wood, E. C. Richardson Wade Fox,
Junius Grimes, Chris Siewers, Charles
Laudy, William Chamberlin, Vernon
Bodenheimer, Thomas Myers, Charles
Easter, Ralph Patrick, R. W. Freeman,
Eloise Brown, Jane Connell, Mildred
Mendenhall, Benjamin Smith, Edwin
Tankersley, James Holland, James
Lee, W. L. Hand, I. J. Kellum.
Altajane Holden, who had her ap
pendix removed late Tuesday at Watts
hospital in Durham, was reported to
be "getting on all right."
Magill Says
( Continued from first page)
a possible exodus of four fraternities.
Magill's complete statement fol
lows: "There seems to be some misunder
standing on the campus about the
exact nature of the loan from Graham
Memorial to the German Club.
NO ALTERNATIVE
"The loan was made last summer
as an extreme emergency measure by
the Board of Directors of Graham
Memorial. The German Club had in
curred debts amounting to $900 which
it was unable to pay. Although the
Board is reluctant to make loans of
any kind, it saw no alternative to
making this one in consideration of
the faet that the German Club was a
related campus organization and had
no" other possible resources. The
loan was in no way an approval of
past German club olicy or manage
ment. "Being unable to offer any security
for the loan, the Club agreed to al
low a member of the Graham Me
morial , Board to sit on its executive
committee with power to veto. This
ower was obviously granted to enable
its holder' to correct any financial
policy which might endanger the loan.
It was not meant to be used as a stick
for governing the social and political
policies of the Club."
PICK THEATRE
NOW PLAYING
f z , A
mm FAIRBANKS, JR.
wODuAKy .
YOUNG
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