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THE ONLY COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTHEAST-
Z 525
VOLUME XLVn
EDITORIAL PHONE 4151
CHAPEL HILL, N. C; SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1938
BUSIXES9 PBOXt 4H6
NUMBER 51
ic it
Mill r
IT I'
ll (BlfS
dMDsevei 1
mtplayed- IHamnis Hold Carolim
tiray And Maronic
Are Stars Of Contest
Speaks Tonight
mm
Dr. Mildred Morgan, prominent
authority on men-women's relations,
who will begin a series of lectures
and discussion groups tonight at 7
o'clock in the Methodist church.
MRSM)RGANTO
OPEN SERIES OF
LECTURESIODAY
Men-Coed Relations
Will Form Theme
Of Discussions
Dr. Mildred Morgan, prominent
authority on men-women relations, be
gins a series of lecture and discussion
groups tonight at 7 o'clock in the
Methodist church. "Intelligent Court
ship" will be the subject of the open
ing talk. -
This afternoon the delegation to
the Blue Ridge YM-YWCA confer
ence last summer and the YM-YWCA
groups here will entertain Mrs. Mor
gan at a tea" in Graham Memorial
from 4:30 to 6 o'clock. The student
Tody is invited to attend.
Blue- Ridge representatives highly
recommend Mrs. Morgan as a charn
ing personality and capable speaker.
Both men and women delegates praise
her as a witty, entertaining, well-informed
lecturer. As one representa
tive remarked "she has a whole lot
of room to talk" as she is married
and bases her information on her own
life and . the lives of her intimate
friends.
OPEN DISCUSSIONS
Dr. Morgan's approach to the prob
lem of men-women relations is a prac
tical one unbiased by religious or
other prejudices. Her lectures usually
take the form of open forum discus
sions in which she asks the opinions
of the members of the audience and
supplements their views with her own.
The lecture series will concern the
problems and considerations of court
ship, engagement, marriage, and cam
pus life particularly as applied to this
campus. Students are requested to
ask questions. If they do not wish to
do so in assembly, they may write
them out . and drop them in the box
provided for the purpose at the YMCA
building. Also Mrs. Morgan will be
(Continued on page two)
Tar Heels On Hand;
It's Important, Too
There will be an important meet
ing of the entire staff of the
Daily Tar Heel tomorrow after
noon at 1:30 sharp. The roll will be
checked by the mast head and you
are expected to be present and on
time. 7
Fordham Attempts
Field Goals In
Effort To Score
By SHELLEY ROLFE
Special to the Daily Tar Heel)
POLO GROUNDS, New York,
Nov. 12 An underdog Univer
sity of North Carolina football
team, accorded no chance in pre
game estimates by the experts,
came out of Dixie this after
noon and completely outgamed
and outfought the Fordham
Rams here before 30,000 pay
ing customers.
Stalling the Rani attack after the
early portion of . the first quarter,
Carolina made two scoring thrusts on
its own accord one in the dying mo
ments of the second quarter when
Steve Maronic inissed fire on a fake
field goal on lhe Ram 26-yard line
and the other ran out in the last pe
riod when George Watson fumbled
after Carolina had taken the ball on
the Fordham 35.
FIELD GOALS FAIL
t After driving down to the Carolina
25 early in the game Fordahm could
never steam up its attack again. The
Rams made-two fourth period -at
tempts at field goals but both failed.
One was blocked and the other
bounced off the cross bar. Len Esh
mont, star Ram sophomore, was
stopped colder than a frozen herring.
On the first play of the quarter,
after Fordham had driven eight yards
to the Carolina 19, Wilbur Stanton,
Ram place-kicking artist who beat
St. Mary's last week on a kick from
the same spot went in to his duty.
He failed, for the entire Carolina
line rushed him, and the resulting
boot was a slow dribbler that barely
got over the line of scrimmage.
Later in the period Fordham passed
from its own 42 to the Tar Heel 18
on a five-yard penalty and along
down the middle forward from Kaz
elo to Jacunski. After a pass and a
line buck were set back, Kazlo
dropped back to kick a field goal, but
the ball bounced off the cross bar out
of the end zone.
STELLAR STIRNY '
George Stirnweiss, coming back to
play against the school he went to
for two weeks, was the4 hub of the
Carolina attack aided by Jack Kray
nick, had a 45-yard punting average
that helped the Tar Heels hold Ford
ham at bay the second half, and he
was the most consistent ground
gainer on the field.
Stirny started the second quarter
drive by cutting back and forth
through the Fordham secondary from
the Tar Heel 23 to the 34. Then
Kraynick took command to run the
ball down to the Fordham 19 in three
(Continued on page three)
YM-YWCA Begin
New Services
Worship committees of the four YM
and YWCA cabinets inaugurated this
week a familiar and generally well
liked morning service of contempla
tion and thought. Since Tuesday morn
ing small groups of students have met
at 8:15 in the assembly room upstairs
in the YMCA building for the first
of these periods of meditation.
Anyone may attend these seven min
ute meetings which will be held every
weekday during the year. There will
be no stereotyped form of worship
service. Several books adapted to the
religious problems of young people
are kept in the assembly room. Stu
dents will enter the group in silence,
read these works or books of their
own choice, and if they discover a
passage or thought whichjwould be of
interest to all, they may present it to
(Continued on page two)
. .
Accepts CPU Invitation x
v.
The nation's chief executive, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who will deliver
a nation-wide address here December
line his plans for congressional legislation for ; next .jyear. The ; speech will be
held hi connection with the third anniversary of the Carolina Political Union.
Americans Will Hold Annual
Debate With British Team
Here Tonight In Hill Hall
Moral Victory, Anyhow
Carolina Fordham
First downs 7 9
Yards gained rushing
(net) 50 143
Passes attempted 8 15
Passes completed 2 4
Passes intercepted by 1 0
Runback intercepted
passes ..; 7 0
Yards gained passing 25 66
Punting average ......... 35 31
Punt Returns . 28 35
Yards lost on
penalties . .10 20
Fumbles recovered ......1 1
IRC ROUND TABLE
ON AIR TODAY
Student To Speak
On 'Mediterranean'
, The University of North Carolina
Round Table again goes on the air
this afternoon from 3 to 3:30 over
WPTF and represents the fifth in a
series of broadcasts sponsored by
the International Relations club. The
broadcast today features students
who will discuss "The Mediterranean
Situation." Henry Nigrelli will pre
side and those participating are:
Niles Bond, Charles Lerche, and John
Busby.
Participants will attempt to pre
sent the conflicts that prevail in the
Mediterranean area, emphasizing the
Anglo-Italian collision. The Mediter
ranean, so often called the "Danger
ous Sea," has been a focal point
about which the destinies of nations
have been decided and it looms still
as an all-important keynote in inter
national politics.
The broadcast has received consid
erable interest and efforts are being
made to hook-up the broadcast on a
southern network so that the pro
. (Continued on last page)
...... JM
5. The President will probably out
Subject To Be On
What America Owes
To Great Britain .
By GENE WILLIAMS
"Resolved, That All America';
Assets She Owes to Great Britain
Her Faults Are Her Own" will be the
subject of the annual debate between
the Britishers and Tar Heels in Hi!
Music hall tonight at 8:30. The Brit
ishers, William Beers and William T,
Williams, will take the affirmative
against the Carolina men, Sam Hobbs
and Lee Wiggins.
The debate between the Americans
and Britishers has come to be regard
ed as the highlight of the University's
debating activities. The visitors are
usually clever and witty and are re
membered and noted for keeping their
audience interested and amused.
Beers, an Irishman studying for his
law degree at Dublin, Ireland, univer
sity, has been directly responsible for
(Continued on page two)
The British Are Coming
"' " 9kJ"' ' ' s 1 N 'If, '7 ' j y ' tc 'S'Y S
"At t ? -aFI ' 'r' A - K
I
William Williams and William Beers are the two members of the British
debate team which will argue with Sam Hobbs and Lee Wiggins tonight at
8 :30 in Hill hall on "Resolved, That All America's Assets She Owes to
Great Britain; Her Faults Are Her Own."
President
At CPU Anniversary
Chief Executive
May Announce New
Legislative Program
By JIM McADEN
Franklin D. Roosevelt will
visit the campus of the Univer
sity of North Carolina December
5 to make a nationwide address
in connection with the. Carolina
Political union's third anniver
sary celebration.
Presidential Secretary Marvin Mc-
Intyre called union Chairman Voit
Gilmore from the White House at 1
o'clock yesterday afternoon, making
the official announceemnt of the chief
executive's first speech of primary
importance in North Carolina since
1936.
The address, which will undoubted
ly be broadcast over a national radio
hookup, will be of national interest,
in that the President has yet to make
known his plans for congressional leg
islation for the next year. He is ex
pected to announce a proposed pro
gram for which he and his legislative
leaders will attempt to gain con
gressional approval.
RECEPTION PLANNED
Although definite details of the
speech, which is occasion for the first
visit of an incumbent United States
president to the University, have not
been decided upon, Gilmore and Uni
versity President Frank Porter Gra
ham are already making arrange
ments for the Roosevelt reception here
and contacting various persons of
state and national importance whose
presence here December 5 is antici
pated.
The scene of the address will be
decided by weather. Woollen gymna
sium will be furnished with approxi
mately 8,000 seats in case it is too cold
or rainy for an outdoor talk while
Kenan stadium, with normal capacity
of over 24,000, will be ready for use.
RESULT OF 3 YEARS WORK
The presidential visit will culmin
ate three years of constant work by
the Carolina Political union, lead suc
cessively by Frank McGlinn, Alex
Heard, and now Voit Gilmore. Last
spring Roosevelt was scheduled to
speak here, but failed to complete
plans for the trip. It was just last
month that Gilmore visited Washing
(Continued on page two)
Yackety-Yack Meeting
Yackety-Yack. All members of
the advertising staff of the Yackety-Yack
are asked to attend a
meeting in Graham Memorial to
morrow at 4 o'clock.
v"7
'
orl
To Airoear
JL JL
McNair Lecturer
Dr. Arthur v H. Compton, Nobel
prize winner and famous physicist,
who will begin the McNair lecture se
ries here tomorrow night at 8:30 in
Hill Music hall.
ARTHUR COMPTON
TO OPEN M'NAIR
SERIES TOMORROW
General Topic Is
4Man's Approach
Toward God"
Nobel prize winner and national au
thority on the study of X-rays, Dr.
Arthur Holly Compton of the Uni
versity of Chicago, will deliver the
John Calvin McNair lectures tomor
row, Tuesday, and Wednesday even
ings at 8:30 in Hill Music hall. His
general topic of "Man's Approach To
ward God" will include "Science, Re
ligion, and the Growth of Man" on
Monday, "Human Freedom and Physi
cal Law", Tuesday, and Wednesday
his subject will be "Man's Relation
to God."
Dr. Compton's brilliant work in
physical research has for many years
given him a top-ranking place in the
world of physics, especially in the field
of cosmic rays and X-rays. His no
table work has brought him many
high honors, among which are his ap
pointment as special lecturer for a
year at the Punjab university in La
hore, India, his position as president
of the American Physical Society, and
the award of the coveted Nobel prize
for physics in 1927.
WITH WESTINGHOUSE
On graduating from Princeton
where he received his M. A. and Ph. D.
degrees Dr. Compton entered the
physics department of the University
of Minnesota where he served as in
structor during the years 1916-17. As
(Continued on page two)
Art Department
Sponsors Contest
The University art department will
sponsor two contests in connection
with the exhibition of sculpture by
Anna Hyatt Huntington now on view
in the Person Hall Art Gallery. One
contest is to be in photography and
the other "in drawing.
Any University student is eligible
to enter in either competition, using
one or more of the sculptures now on
view as a subject.
Announcements stating rules and
regulations for both contests will be
issued tomorrow morning at .Person
Hall. . ,
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