Editorials Carolina Dances In Passing Fourteen Careers End ' - ; . V; vrvrvr " f-g rr- . FDR, Lewis Clash ; THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY IN THE SOUTH - VOLUME L . bmo.:S887; amotion CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1941 mu:;Ki.:w5iiVoW" " NUMBER 49 e for Cavalier f :'-':v";: ' '' " ' ' " nxwn ty.imi ,g ,,.w w. y yewwwwowr--:"yyr?-:-',.':t . . f ::, it 1 - j -:r- , . r -tf X7 f, r ? '-' ' C ; ll ITSr - ' Li.. 4? .-.-:;v: i ' - w. - i i s - I M s i . , A IILIiIi1iIiim)i. "fl . l I t - - it "t !V - - -i ' t - n I t I :V i v I!-. - - f H v si I 1 I'" irr nTnj - - - - f ';- -T'"-Sate'T)iiT i..iiiiii iii t-awwwwK-aiiiiirawiijairrirtiiitniiiii fi vwiifi innn T . r - f x - vvvl' 'W wf "Ills I I , ! i v . x Si I f i f v V ,f,'N - I , If fL ii FOURTEEN SENIOR STARS who will play their last college football tomorrow. Top row: Dick -White, tack le; Dick Sieck, tackle; Jimmy. Crone, iidj Charlie Baker, fullback; and Horace Benton, center. Middle row: Frank O'Hare, fullback; Carl Suntheimer, co-captain and center; Harry Dunkle, co-captain and blocking back; and Bill Faircloth, guard. Bottom row: Gwynn Nowell, guard; Stu Richardson, end; Roy Connor, quarterback; Pinky Elliot, end; and Fred Stallings, end. , , . . . . . . FDR, Lewis British Army Shake-Up Brings Brooke to Fore By United Press WASHINGTON President Roose velt and John L. Lewis, head of the UMW, clashed head on tonight overJ the Chief Executive's attempt to place the', onus for the walkout in the cap tive coal pits squarely -on the Union leader. Soon after Mr. Roosevelt .had re jected as invalid Lewis', contention that granting of an open shop to the captive, mine would, menace the union shop Agreement between the union and th Appalachian operators, the mine boss challenged the President's rear spning. . ; He said that -it is "obvious" that steel companies, owners of the cap tives, regard the cpen.shoft more. fav orably than Jhe, union shop or they would agree to the latter in five min utes, "abate the controversy and re lieve the nation."- PITTSBURGH Amid increasing bitterness that prompted state, police to! intervene, UMW "pickets became y-o "norstiasive' today in closing struck captive coal mines while "un 'v," otr,-v idled 21.000 m other pits. The curtailed coal production was expected to have repercussions in the Se NEWS BRIEFS, page A Modern Language Group to Convene The 14th annual meeting of the South Atlantic Modern Language Associa tion at the joint invitation of Agnes Scott College and Emory University, wil' be held in Atlanta, November 21-. Members of the Association planning to attend this convention from the Uni versity are: Urban T. Holmes, Jr., T,.-f TO,rt will eive the Presi- ji.-.l A AAt-aca - KfnrjHs E. LeaVltt, editor of the South Atlantic Bulletin, official publication of the Association; Hugo Giduz, Secretary of the Modern Foreign Language division; E. S. Mil ler Dougald MacMillan, and Mary Claire Randolph, English Department; Alfred G. Engstrom, French Depart tW: and F. E. Coenen, German De partment, will participate in the pro gram. I Grid Tilt Clash on Mine Settlement Aides For Alexander Colby, Leslie Appointed To Dance Committee Posts By Bob Hoke Creating a dual office, the newly-formed Dance Organization Committee yesterday announced the appointment of Barry Colby and Joe Leslie to the highly favored vice-chairmanship of the group. - The committee, which was set up last spring by the University dance com mittee acts as a special aid organization for campus agencies staging dances. IDr. Davis-Dubois To Lecture Here After Week-End Dr. Rachel Davis-DuBois, major f ignre in the field of American educa tion, will visit Chapel Hill for a series : of lectures next Tuesday and Wednes day, Louis Scheinman, officer in the Religious council, announced yester day. ' - Dr. Davis-DuBois will speak under the auspices of the YMCA, the Religi ous council, and the Hillel foundation. She will address the Religious council at its regular meeting on Tuesday, the freshman class at Chapel period on Wednesday, and the Hillel home on Wednesday night. Dr. Davis-DuBois has wide and va ried experience in modern education, having been connected with Boston, New York, Columbia, Temple, and See DR. DAVIS DuBOIS, page i 'Carolina Folk Plays' Released Just off the press of Henry Holt and Co. is a new anthology, "Carolina Folk Plays." edited with an introduction by Frederick H. Kochtnd a foreword by Paul Green. In announcing the new volume the publishers say that these Carolina plays "continue to be pro duced by acting groups all over the country . . . and to have a wide reading, as classic a. .... ----- drama." The new volume contains sixteen one- act plays which originally appeared in See FOLK fL.AX2, page a Ends 14 A. Selected as apprentice for Bill Alex ander, chairman of the committee, Col by and Leslie will work with Alexander in contacting, bands, helping campus orchestras, and handling the numerous details , of dance-giving in a more ex perienced and efficient manner. In line for advancement, one of the two recently appointed will be selected to head the group next year. A resident of Aruba, Curacao, in the Dutch East Indies, Colby moved south of the equator four years v ago. , He spends his holidays in Montclair with relatives and goes home to Aruba dur ing the summer. The commerce major is the floor counselor of Mangum, and See DANCE COMMITTEE, page A Wbrley Announces Thanksgiving Plans Record players with a collection of classic and popular records, mag azines, newspapers, soft chairs, fires and everything but the turkey, will, be available to students in, Graham Memorial throughout the holidays, Richard "Fish" Worley announced today. The program outlined is : Wednes day, main lounge, 7 :30 ; fireside con cert including Mendelssohn's Con certo in E Minor, Bach's Toccata and Fugue played on the organ by Carl Weinrich, and Don Juan, a tone poem, by Strauss. Thursday, 7:30, main lounge; dancing to recorded music Friday, 8 o'clock, main lounge; free movie, "Where Buffalo Roam," starring Tex Ritter. Also selected shorts. Saturday, 8 o'clock) main lounge; bingo party. Careers Squad Sessions Drill Team For Old Rivals By Harry Hollingsworth Fourteen seniors will be play ing their final football game for the University of North Carolina tomorrow when the Tar Heels meet the University of Virginia in the annual Thanksgiving classic at 2 o'clock in Kenan stadium. The men who will bring their col lege competition to an end are Co Captains Harry Dunkle and Carl Sun theimer, Dick Sieck, Bill Faircloth, Stu Richardson, Pinky Elliot, James Crone, Fred Stallings, Horace Benton, Gwynn Nowell, Dick White, Frank O'Hare, Charlie Baker and Roy Con nor. All except Baker, Crone and Stall ings could be considered as regulars. Neither Baker, Crone or Stallings has played much since they have been on the squad, but their value to the team has been recognized from week to week by the team members. In the practice sessions they took the plays of the team to be met on the following Saturday and ran them at the var sity during the practice session. Dunkle Led Nation Dunkle broke into the lineup as a sophomore and led the nation in punt ing, with a remarkable average of 46.6 and tied for first in extra point con versions with 16 out of 18 Suntheimer alternated at center as a sophomore and broke into the start ing lineup last year. His greatest game of his three-year career was two years in Philadelphia when he inter cepted' three -passes and recovered three fumbles to lead the Tar Heels to a 30-6 victory over Pennsylvania. Most Underrated The most underrated lineman on the Carolina team best describes Dick Sieck. He broke in as a starter last year, went 60 minutes against Duke last year and figured strongly in the Tar Heels' line play against Fordham and Duke this year. Faircloth surprised everyone as a sophomore by showing up better in practice than was expected and has continued his fine play for the. past two years. He was named on the As sociated Press All-Southern team. Richardson and - Elliot were ends See DUDLEY, page S Winners Named By Village Shops In Football Quiz Prizes ranging from five gallons of gas to a sizzling steak 'were won by Carolina students last Saturday in a guessing contest sponsored by The Daily Tar Heel and Chapel Hill mer chants. The contest consisted of nam ing correctly the number of first downs, passes completed, points amassed by each of the two teams in last Satur day's classic. All ties were awarded to tbe stu dents who presented their entries first. Winners are requested to pick up prizes before Thursday. Winners Named The winners are as follows: Com munity Cleaners, $2.00 worth of clean See WINNERS, page " ! Dixie Sellers Best Publishing House Editor Praises Southern Writers By Hayden Carruth "More good literature is being pro duced in the south than in any other section of the country," so says Paul Brooks, managing editor of Houghton Mifflin company, one of the foremost publishing houses in America. Brooks was graduated from Harvard only 10 years ago, and in one decade has vaulted to one of the highest po sitions in the American literary world. A young man, looking more like a tra ditional art student than an experi enced performer in "the world's great est gambling game," he smokes a pipe w Spontaneous Outbursts Threaten Real Disorder By PAUL KOMISARUK Copyright By Daily Tar Heel November 19. 1941 Stormy and violent open forum discussions that time and again threatened to get out of hand, exploded from the Memorial hall rostrum last night, as isolationist Gerald P. Nye concluded his CPU address and faced a verbal barrage from over 2,000 people who crowded and jammed into Memorial hall. The excited audience, listening to the fiery Dakotan on tenter- ""I r Ave". " ' v v.!-: -.-- : ox-.-.-.-. x- - Gerald P. Nye The Senator Had the Floor Yesterday . . . "Senator" . . . the lady from Wash ington remarked, "111 listen to every word you say, but I won't believe a word of it."- The last of the Old Guard isolation ists had the floor yesterday afternoon in the Carolina Inn. North Dakota's Senator Gerald P. Nye, still refusing to disassociate himself from the oft termed "fascist element" of the Amer ica First committee and claiming that "our fight is not lost." In two or three sweeping state ments, Nye defended the America First position, rebutted charges that Lindbergh or Wheeler were anti Semetic, and maintained that noth ing in the record of America First would lead to indicate that it is Fascist, "It has done a remarkable job," he said. ' "If you read carefully what Lind bergh said at Des Moines" you can see that his statements do not lend themselves, to actual Anti-Semetic charges. Anyone knowing him as well as I do can realize there is not an Anti-Semetic hair in his head. " The Old Guard isolationist had the floor-and helield ii' "The Neutrality Act would not have been thrown out last week," he said; "if the House had voted on it on the preceding day." The Senator explained. "During the night, the New Deal turned on the 'pressure,' and the bill was repealed. . . Mem bers of Congress" who told me the' pre ceding evening that they were against See INTERVIEW, page 4 Holiday Cut Fines According to the new University cut-regulations, students cutting class es before of after holidays will be fined $2.50 for each class. &crusted and nicked with years of use and wears his clothes with a careless, semi-pressed air. Brooks is ending a tour through the south "to get better acquainted with southern authors, especially the young er ones who are just getting started." His visit to Chapel Hill, though not truly a talent search, was to see the writers, especially the students, who have assembled at the University of North Carolina. Writing Fresh "The south is much more of a writ See BROOKS, page 4 hooks lashed out immediately follow ing the- Senator's speech, releasing al- ternating waves of boos, cheers, and hisses. American Propoganda Concluding 50 minutes of interrupted discussion during which the Senator vigorously maintained that "propagan da of the most criminal order has been practiced and lack of frankness by American leaders and downright de ception have brought the United States to the brink of war," Nye faced ques tions on Lindbergh, Wheeler, Anti-Semitism, and post war Europe that rocked the hall. Repeatedly the Senator was accused of "dodging questions" and failing to answer as the audience flung questions at the rostrum in quick, violent suc cession. Lindbergh Not Anti-Semetic Nye was asked why he had failed to "repudiate Lindbergh's infamous Des Moines address." He replied that it "needs no defense. If Lindbergh needed a defense I would rally to his side. On the heads of Burt Wheeler and Charles Lindbergh there is not a hair of Anti-Semitism" Nye respond ed. Immediately challenged with charges that Lindbergh was "either lying or misinformed", Nye repeated his original assertion that the Lone Eagle neede no defense and refused to comment further." " , Nye, indicated in his address that his position on the League of Nations might have changed. After attempt ing to respond he was accused of "fail ing to answer the question." Nye ad mitted his failure and then continued, "We must have some organization to see that no men go mad. ... It can not be the kind of organization that the last was. It must be more interna tional, it must not be under control by some lone empire, by a group of selfish individuals." The Senator constantly alluded to the selfishnesss of the British See STORMY SESSION, page A Overalls, Straw Hats Are Grim Reminder Of Saturdays Battle Those Sadie Hawkins Day hang overs that halve swamped the cam pusoverhauled student-farmers haven't ' been dispossessed or beaten at poker or even tripped-up by a pair of loaded dice. They're Caro lina's annual reminder that the Blue Devils from Dook have 'walked over the persistent,' but weaker boys from Chapel Hill. r' ' : It's this" way: There's a standing bet between the Dook and. Carolina chapters of Pi Kappa Alpha in which the chap ter at the losing school wears over alls from game time to December 1; and, incidentally, tosses a special hayride for the winners. Fraternalism, however, is a great thing. Every boy in the Pika- house ' has already promised to send his persona equipment to book to be . used by the "gallant neighbors from down the road" next year. Thanksgiving Rules For Coeds Announced John Thorp, president of the In- terfraternity council, yesterday an nounced rules governing conduct of women students in Greek houses during the Thanksgiving holidays. 1. Women students will not be al lowed in fraternity houses after 12 o'clock midnight tonight. 2. Fraternities violating rules will lose social privileges for the winter quarter. 3. Women students living in the locale of Chapel Hill who return to x their homes, then come back to Chapel Hill before Monday, are not allowed in fraternity houses.

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