Editorials Headlines Homecoming Plans Released Wake Forest Wins Satterfield to- Play Week in Review In Passing -THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOOTH- VOLUME L Bosti i: 887: Circulation: fgSC CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1941 NUMBER 29 Deacons Defeat ncoordimated Tar Heel. 1 - yy a ITT s 7T TTh 77 mflr, brreater university jjay nans vomme 13-0 Homecom ted University to Entertain Alumni, Visitors Saturday Predicted to be the largest and most lavish of the line of Great er University and Homecoming days, completed plans for the two fold celebration next Saturday were released yesterday. Band concerts, a Grail dance, national and state celebrities, special student and merchant decorations colorful in themselves, - 3wiH serve merely as a backdrop for the featured event of the day, the grid classic between the two brother schools, State college and the Univer sity. Alumni, students and visitors of the consolidated University will throng here Saturday as special invited guests of the Chapel Hill branch. Exemplifying everything from the dire fact due. the Wolfpack eleven to a hearty welcome to the returning graduates, men's and women's dormi tories, fraternities and sororities will vie in cardboard and paint for the valued prizes and still more valued honor of presenting the best decora tion of the day. In a separate contest, Chapel Hill merchants will compete for prizes and distinction for the best decoration of Franklin Street. Pre-decorations of flags and pennants will line the main street Friday evening and all-day Sat urday. - The three bands of the divisions of the Consolidated University will give concerts prior to the game. The 112 piece University band will play on the steps of the library at 1 o'clock. Rep resenting the Women's College, the all-girl band will give a pre-game con cert at Graham Memorial from 12:30 to 1:15. Earl Slocum, director of the University band, has invited the State Frosh Warned Of Political Expense Rule Five Dollar Limit Includes Primary, Run-off Elections Emphasing "the five dollar rule," the elections committee of the Student Legislature announced yesterday that to date noreshman candidate has ex ceeded the amount allowed for cam paign expenses. Those candidates, however, engaging in the runoff elec tion who have not already spent five dollars will be permitted to spend up to that amount this week, it was stated. A pledged written statement of ex penditures must be turned in to the office of the Dean of Students in 205 South building by 3 o'clock Thursday! afternoon. Ran-Off Candidates The candidates for the four fresh man offices to be voted on Thursday include three coeds. The two presiden tial candidates are Mac Lane of Macon, Georgia, and Miss Marererv Ann Snv- a f -run xt; -r,n ! College band to. give a concert in the triangle of women s dormitories ai 66 votes to her opponent's 109. Frank Reyner of Ventnor, New Jer sey, and Nick Long of Roanoke Ra pids, tied with 58 votes apiece in the race for vice-president. In the runoff for secretary of the freshman class will be Miss Mary Jane Lloyd of Chapel Hill and Ed Oles of West Hartford, Connecticut Miss Lloyd received the highest. number of votes of any candidate with 121. Treasurer Contesting for the position of treas- See FROSH .WARNED, page U Thibaut to Lead German Fascism DiscussionTuesday . John Thibaut will lea"d a discussion on "The Philosophical Background to German Fascism" at the second meet ing of the undergraduate Philosophy Club on Tuesday night, in 211 Graham Memorial, Dr. Louis Kattsof f, the club's faculty adviser announced yesterday. Thibaut who has a Kenan Fellow ship in Philosophy, has long been in terested in social problems and Social Philosophy. He took 'his undergradu ate work here and at Ohio State Uni versity. ' . - - ' Organized five years ago to discuss problems on a philosophical basis, the undergraduate Philosophy club is run entirely on an informal basis. At its last meeting Harry Symmes was elect ed chairman, the only officer of. the club. There are no minutes or records of attendance taken and everyone who' is interested may attend the meeting and automatically become a member. 11:30. . Representing the state and the Uni versity, Governor Broughton and Pres ident Graham will join with the presi dents of the student bodies of the three divisions in an official welcome to the assemblage, just prior to the kickoff from the center of the green sward of Kenan stadium. Steve Peck, president of the University club, will announce the winners of the decora- tion contest at the program presided over by Truman Hobbs, president of the University student body. Between the halves of the football battle, the three bands will engage in maneuvers and joint performances. Presided over by campus-maestro Johnny Satterfield, the Grail-Homecoming dance will begin at 9 o'clock in Woollen gymnasium. Script at the door will be $1.10. In addition to alumni, students of the Woman's college, and of State col lege, numerous soldiers from the ma neuvers area in the southern part of the state will be guests of the Univer sity for the day. Dr. Kenneth Clark To Address Hillel Speaking on the subject of "The Backgrounds of Christianity and Ju daism," Dr. Kenneth Clarke of the Duke University School of Religion will address the Hillel Foundation this morning at 11 o'clock. All students are invited to attend the Sunday Morning Hour which will be held'at the Hillel House at 513 East Rosemary Street. . 3 : : T y 1 W "J" 1" "" iimmm-.4m---- W 1 ' .. j -ywp x mm .wwn. ymw r ?vmmwmmmmwmmr-m&s m iiwhk" " '"""""" 1 J ';- X Jf i i SECOND TOUCHDOWN Johnny Perry, Wake Forest's great sophomore back, is shown here getting away from Johnny Pecora in the second quarter yesterday for the Deacons second touchdown. Perry caught a pass on the Carolina 45-yard line and ran the ball over for the score. Photo by Hugh Martin. No Drama at Wake Forest Contest; Only Deacons Repelling Invaders NC Student Legislature Votes Neutrality Act Repeal UNC Represented In Annual Assembly Voting almost unanimously for Neu trality Repeal, more than 200 delegates from 16 colleges assembled in the State Capitol in Raleigh this week-end for the fifth annual. North Carolina Stu dent Legislative Assembly sponsored by State College. Two resolutions presented by State College, one for a Short Term Foreign Policy and the other for a Long Term Foreign Policy, and a resolution intro duced by the Carolina delegation call ing for a permanent selective service act, were defeated in the House by a very narrow margin and passed by the Senate with one amendment. Highlighting yesterday's session were addresses by Governor J. M. Broughton and Secretary of State Thad Eure in a joint session of both Houses. Radio Broadcasts Friday afternoon WRAL presented from its studios a resume of the action up to the time of broadcast, and an extemporaneous discussion by repre sentatives from several colleges on an important bill under consideration. Yesterday morning WPTF broad cast direct from the Senate Chamber the actual debate on a measure involv ing United States foreign policy. Representing Carolina were: Bill Montgomery, Bob Lipton, and Nick Cruger in the Senate, and Jeter Pritch- ard, Bob Wright, and Carl Hofman in the House. Satterfield to Play for Grail Dance Saturday Campus Orchestra Engaged for Homecoming Day Dance Affair to be Held In Woollen Gym Johnny Satterfield and his band will play next Saturday night for the Grail dance climaxing Homecoming and Greater University Day, George Cox head, exchequer of the Grail, announc ed yesterday. Doors to the main floor will open at 8 o'clock in order that girls from the Woman's college, who will come down for the game en masse, will be able to get in two hours of dancing before they go back. The dance, ' like other Grail func tions, will be informal and the admis sion price will be $1.10 for either stag or couple. . . Sponsors from State and the Wo man's college will be special guests of the Grail. Saturday night's dance will mark the second Grail affair for which Sat terfield has played this fall. Other en gagements so. far this year in clude the Carolina freshman smoker and dances at WCUNC, Roanoke, Harts ville and Williamston. i Band Specializes In "Blues" Numbers The band is still playing its indi vidual blues style for-which swing critic John Hammond last spring rated them the best swing band on the cam pus. Solos by Bub Montgomery, trom bone, Frank" Justice, alto sax, and Wade Denning, trumpet, are featured. New arrangements include Satter field's version of Ellington's "I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good" and Justice's original "Meditation of a Faun." $ Coeds to Hold Training Meet Initial Meeting Slated Tomorrw Trial of a mythical honor code case by the coed honor council will open the first Junior training group meeting to be held tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Gefrard hall, Jean Hahn, presi dent of the coed senate, announced yesterday. Attendance at the training group monthly meetings is compulsory for any junior coed who wishes to be eligible for nomination .for any coed office. To Train Coed Officers The training groups were set up in the new constitution adopted by the coeds last spring. Their purpose is to acquaint the prospective coed lead ers with the responsibilities of office, and all coeds with their government. All coeds, juniors, seniors, or gradu ates are invited to attend this first meeting, the subject of which will be the work of the honor council. Attend ance will be recorded, and only those juniors who have attended all three meetings to be held between now and December, will be eligible for nomi nation in the December elections. The monthly meetings will discuss the three branches of coed govern ment, and attempt to interest a large share of the coed student body in -their government, Miss Hahn said. IRC Applications Due Tomorrow All applicants for membership in the IRC must be turned in to the YMCA office by noon tomorrow, Roger Mann president apnounced yesterday. Be tween eight and ten applicants will be accepted into membership within a week. Frat House Managers A meeting of the Interf raternity Council of House Managers will be held at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Kappa Alpha house. "Little Things" Impress Fans By Paul Komisaruk GROVES STADIUM, Wake Forest, Oct. 25 No drama here nothing fun ny. Two men named Polanski and Cochran and a Carolina line that couldn't stop them. No drama, but a long game. Sixty minutes of hope and despair ending in nothing with the ball on the Carolina one-yard line and a million miles to pay dirt. Wake Forest in its new stadium played its only game of the year at home, and won it but that's the other side of the picture. It wasn't so bad at the start. Car olina's cheering section looked good on the other side of the field. Band wait ed patiently, impressive in- their blue and white while Polanski ripped through the Tar Heel line. Carolina Moves Carolina started to move in the sec ond quarter. Across the way, the Jones-led-Tar Heels rose to their feet, started yelling, gave the team a hand that might have cracked "this new gleaming concrete. Less than two min utes later Deacon right end Cline went over on a pass from Cochran, and Per ry kicked the extra point. That was the ball game. But there were the little things that happened. Coach Wolf on the field to see an injured player, the Carolina See -NO DRAMA, page U Cline, Perry Score Points For Baptists Carolina Invades Wake Forest Ground Four Times in Game By Harry HoIIingsworth GROVES STADIUM, Wake Forest, Oct. 25 Failing to get any co-ordinated action in the line or backf ield play, the University of North Carolina lost a 13-0 de cision to a superior-nianned Wake Forest team here this af ternoon. That, simply stated, is exactly what ' happened. Wake Forest went about the job of defeating the Tar Heels as if it knew it had a hard job on its hands, but a job which it knew itself capable of doing. No Better Than Last Week Carolina looked no better than it. did last week in losing to Tulane, 52-6, and at times the play could be compared to a school team which didn't know any better. Never really threatening, the Tar Heels entered Wake Forest territory four times all afternoon and f artherest they ever penetrated was to the 32-yard line in the third quarter. The Tar Heels didn't stop Wake For est's great duo of sophomore backs Red Cochran and Johnny , Perry and therein was the ball game for the Deacons. Both men did everything all afternoon like senior veterans and it was done with such ease that folks won dered if the Tar Heels were afraid to touch- the two men. Cochran passed for both touchdowns in the second quarter one pass going to Herbert Cline, basketball star, and the second to Perry who ran 45 yards after catch ing the balk Carolina's vaunted aerial attack was See LONE DRIVE, page U Student Union Holds Scavenger Hunt Tonight Fifteen dollars in National Defense Stamps, a $5 meal ticket to the Grill, and a haircut and shampoo in the Graham Memorial barber shop are the prizes to be awarded tonight in the scavenger hunt at the community sing. Trying out a new idea for the first time, Fish Worley announced yesterday that he would post a scavenger list of the required but unusual articles in all dorms, fraternities, and sororities by 6 o'clock tonight. 1 students are eligible to compete and may enter as individuals or in groups. Entries, with the .assorted required articles, must be iii Memorial Hall by 8:30 when the community sing will get under way. Curry Jones will act as master of See SCAVENGER HUNT, page A , 7 1 1 -r,., s:-.---.-.-.-.-.-.-?o-,o; m y.-y. 'x -:: -v : .'.v.-.-.v.v.-.v.-.-.-.-a H4 'i- t 4 Lynn Fontanne Finnish Ancestry Qualifies Lunt For Sherwood Play Alfred Lunt who, with his wife Lynn Fontanne, comes to the Carolina The atre in Durham on Tuesday evening for a performance of Robert E. Sher wood's "There Shall Be No Night" is qualified for his part by his Scandina vian ancestry. The scene of this play is Finland, a country that Lunt visited often as a boy in the company of his Finnish born step-father. On their last visit there together they stopped at the Ho tel Kamp, in which one scene of Sher wood's play takes place. When Lunt awoke the next morning, he discovered that his father was dead. Upon a visit to Helsinki a few years ago, Lunt and his wife couldn't find accomoda tions in any hotel other than the old Kamp. Oddly enough, they were given the same room that Lunt had occupied years before. That room was repro duced by the scenic designer, Richard Whorf , for "There Shall Be No Night."

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