m DITORIALS: EOpen Season Today TTTEATHER: Jf Continutd fair end V W tligh tig cp&U r -77 OiVZ.' COLLEGE DA ILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- Z 525 VOLUME XLVm CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1939 "toriJLlLSSiN!LLsJt N",bt: 6905 - NUMBER 50 Busiaesi: 9886 Qroiliuoa: 9SS1 COUN -A- TCT" 1 G d iO Stop . r r Heels . day CAROLINA OUTFIT HEAVILY FAVORED TO TARE DAVIDSON Game Begins At 2 O'clock In Winston-Salem By SHELLEY ROLFE With the eyes of most of its rap porters rivited ahead towards the Duke game, the undefeated University of North Carolina football team steps Jown from major competition to bat ' tie Davidson at Bowman Gray stadium Winston-Salem this afternoon at 2 o'clock- . Winners of six games and tied by Tulane in one of the most thriling bat tles of a hectic gridiron autumn, the Tar Heels will rate almost prohibitive favorites to crush the Wildcats and march up to Duke still rated among the top ten teams in the nation. David son won its first game of the year last week against The Citadel after hav ing dropped five in a row. But if everyone is rushing around giving the game to the Tar Heels, Ray Wolf, who pulls the strings for the big boys in blue and silver, is not too sure of the final results. "Were expecting anything," he said yester day, "Davidson has a good passing attack and it might bother us." BREEZY EXPERTS The Wildcat aerial fame is one of the finest in the conference. Gran ville Sharpe can toss football through the air with the lest of them, and he (Continued on page S, column 6) -T-" - ' ' " ' IflBBS TO SING WITH FARR BAND FOR PHI DANCE Assemblyites Plan Elaborate Figure At Ball Tonight Jimmy Farr and his orchestra, fea turing the singing of Bud Hibbs, will perform in Graham Memorial tonight for the annual Phi assembly formal dance. The affair will last from 8:30 to 12 o'clock. Before intermission a grand march, forming the Phi assembly symbol, will be presented by officers and members of the debating organization and their sponsors. Rehearsal for the figure will be held in the student union main ballroom at 5 o'clock this after noon. CAN GET BIDS TODAY Extra time to obtain bids has been extended members of the Phi. They may secure invitations from Bob Far ;ris at 201 "H" dormitory and Ott Bur ton at 209 "K" dormitory until 4 o'clock this afternoon.' Dress for the dance will be formal. Smoking will not be allowed on the ballroom floor. Refreshments may be purchased from the Grill in the base ment 'at intermission. Chaperones, who will attend the dance, are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Arm strong and Mr. and Mrs. D. R. McMillan. Students To Observe Silence Period s At the suggestion of the World Affairs committee of the YWCA, and in the spirit of past observances of Armistice Day, all students, members of the instructional staff of and of the non-instructional staff of the University are requested to ob serve the period of two minutes silence at 11 o'clock, Armistice Day, November 11, 1939. The signal will be the bell which will ring on the hour of 11. Immediately after the bell ceases to ring, please observe the two-minute period of silence wherever you happen to be. Signed: R. B. House, Dean of Administration. To Participate In Assembly Dance Figure Tonight mi m m "" t.....rwnw.Mmmy.!jrmi' 1 ' 11 V f -" " " fr "" i y '- -' I. I i ' 4" ' if ' j . ' ' J f: ' I ' '" 111 ' 5 ' ' I : t f . '1 I ::, A m ..jmur ' t f I II j ; ' vr I 1 ' : : '. S N - - - ,,-iir.i i--rff L j 1 I , Wr"Tt f It' v r -V , ' , ' I r -- 1 if - - "J ' I 'J I 1J',- V&x . ll ' T x:" ' '"II - - : ' ' f M- , . iiiif-iirirfririr i;xe&iiSMei In iii-iiiiiimiinniiiiiinrrirmiiiiiiiiriinliir'iMniW'Hf,ill Top row: Shirley H bs with Joe Dawson; Virginia Cates with Bob Farris; Frances Gibson with Harold Josephine Austin with Oi, Burton. Second row: Marian Igo with Phil Ellis; Eloise Brown with Jimmy Elizabeth Orton With Bob Sloan. Jimmy Farr and his orchestra will play for the dance which begins at 8:30 in Graham Memorial. Padgett; Pittman; i . . - . -s ' . ; : ; . . $ ftie Unknown Soldier . . . i Another Issue To Be Printed This Month The Student council last night directed the Publications Union hoard, to destroy all copies of the present November issue of Buc caneer magazine. Meeting to make a study of the present issue of the Buccaneer to consider its possible effects on the student body, administra tion, alumni, and the prestige of the University at large, council members passed the above resolution and added that the material will be returned to the editor for revision and change for another November issue, to be printed as soon as possible. Jimmy Davis, president of the student body, said last night, "This action was taken with a realization that the Buccaneer is read throughout the state by persons from all walks of life, and it was judged that such an issue would seriously and permanently damage the reputation and lessen the prestige of the University in general." "The council also realized the great expense involved in the print ing of another issue of the magazine," Davis continued, "but thought that this was justified by the circumstances surrounding the case. This step was not taken as a means of setting up a cen sorship of student publications or of student expression, but as a protective measure for the welfare of the student body. It was thought that such an issue did not represent the true humor of the campus and that the majority of students, and the parents of stu dents, would not want the issue circulated over the campus and over the state as representative of the University of North Caro lina," Davis concluded- , . OXFORD DEBATERS MEET CAROLINA IN PANEL DISCUSSION Teams To Speak In Gerrard Hall Tonight At 8 Representing Oxford university, Peter Street of London and Edward R. G. Heath of Broadstairs, Kent, will meet in a panel discussion tonight with Phil Ellis and Carroll McGaughey, Carolina debate representatives, on the position of the United States in the present World War. The panel will be held at 8 o'clock in Gerrard hall. "Isolation, Neutrality, or Active Participation in the War What Part Should the United States Play?" is the panel topic. The event, originally scheduled as a debate, was changed to a panel discussion because of the com plexity of the question. Four dif ferent viewpoints were presented in the recent try-outs for the Carolina team. OPEN FORUM Professor W. A. Olsen, faculty mem ber of the Carolina debate council said last night that the general public is invited to take part in the discussion which will follow the thirty-minute panel. Each speaker from the floor will be limited to three minutes. On arrival here last night, the Eng lish debaters were entertained at a tea at Professor Olsen's home. They plan to attend the Carolina-Davidson game in Winston-Salem today. The Oxford team appeared in a de bate Thursday at West Virginia col lege in Institute. Leaving here to morrow the team will go to Bristol, Virginia, where they will debate with a team from Virginia Intermont col lege. s Students To Report For Air Corps Exam All students who are interested in applying for entrance in the United States Army Air corps are asked to come to Raleigh any afternoon be tween Monday, November 13 and Sat urday, November 18, for an examina tion by air corps officers in State col lege infirmary. Positions are open to any male between twenty and twenty six with two years of college training.