:',iVau of North Carolina Chanel Hill, K. c. r WEATHER Fair and continued mild. Sports Final United Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1943 Phone F-3371 F-3361 NUMBER 33 XUSX S7 s vv V 9 T M " " u v-i w u u u u $zszj u u v i u u y u u y vcz.i j Ky n . ; y .. - zzs t ! Cheering Tar Heels Parade Through Tennessee Campus By Chuck Hauser KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 30.-A small group of lusty voiced Tar Heels let the Tennessee Volunteers know they were in town today as they made a mile-long march from the Andrew Johnson hotel in the center of town to the heart of the University of Tennessee campus. The cheering, singing Caro- : linians began the afternoon with a pep rally in front of the hotel at 12:30. Cheerleaders Norm Spcr, Lucille Arnot, and Wray Fallow led the crowd into the center of one of the main streets for a 15 minute session of warm- ' ing-up cheers before the parade ; through town the the campus, j Traffic came to a standstill as i the Tar Heels ignored red lights , jp and slow-moving automobiles, parade wound through some riffM rit v blocks hpf nrp it rnn- 1 vrrcTnrl rm tVio tX'ictincf rlrixro ir a hill into the main campus. Knoxville is the largest town in which an away-from-home game has been played this year. It seems to have been built on more hills than Chapel Hill's famed seven. The campus reflects the same geographical, conditions. In place of Carolina's tradition-filled sand Lnd brick walks are many stone steps going up and down and cur ving, Hill - and - dale drives which careen back and forth to miss familiar-looking, hap-haz-ardly placed University build ings. At the top of one of the high est campus hills is the large administration building, which shares much of its space with classrooms and faculty offices Nearby are the student center, bookstore and the campus post office, a sight which brought favorable comments from Chapel Hill visitors. JT J V i 11 CIV. 11 V C A CllilCOOt l-Ut UO VV s A. jvt stationed along all thoroughfares t(j)n the campus today soliciting contributions for a new student i u'ion building to replace the Scrambling temporary structure wnicn serves mat purpose now. One can see the stadium and even the football games by standing on the edge of the administration-building hill. Look ing in the other direction one sees an undulating array of build- ng, walkways and drives. Tar Heel feet were tired and var lleel voices were noarse iaie this afternoon as the happy visitors trudged back toward town to relax and discuss the j football game which ended hap pily for everyone except tne Volunteers of the University of Tennessee. Dance Group To Meet In GM The first program and business meeting of the newly formed University dance group will be Lrheld at 8 o'clock this evening in noiana .ranter lounge o, uiauam Memorial. J An illustrated talk on "Begin nings of Ballet" will be given With the aid of pictures and re cordings, and the activities of present-day ballet troupes will be discussed by the group. Miss Emily Pollard of Chapel Hill, a member of the group, will have command of the program. Dance practices, under the di nction of Foster Fitz-Simmons of the dramatic art department, are held three times a week from 4 to 6 Tuesday and Thurs day afternoons and from 10 ' to 12 Saturday mornings. The re cently inaugurated program meet ings will be held once a month, m a place and time to be decided tonight. All students, faculty, :md townspeople interested in working out with the group, or only in attending the program meetings are invited to do so. UNC Radio Show Featured Osi Air This Afternoon The consolidated University of North Carolina will take to the air lanes this week with the first of a series of weekly radio pro grams to be broadcast over near ly 40 stations throughout the state. The first program, which can be heard this afternoon at 4 o'clock over WDUK of Durham and 5 o'clock over WPTF of Ra leigh, will be entitled "Freedom Story" and will have the theme of the right-to-vote. The 30-minute programs, en titled the "University Hour," will be statewide public service vari ety shows using musical talent from Woman's college in Greens boro, State college in Raleigh and the University here. Expected to be both entertaining and informa tive, the programs will feature dramatizations, news roundtables,- and documentaries about vital activities concerning all three in stitutions. Each of the 26 programs to be broadcast between Oct. 31 and April 24 will be recorded at the radio studios in Swain building. The master records will be sent to RCA Victor recording com pany in New York, where they will be processed, pressed, la beled, packaged and shipped to the various North Carolina sta tions who will carry the pro grams. The series was written by Robert Schenkkan, who will work in conjunction with per sonnel from the three schools. Miss Jane Grills of the Communi cations Center is over-all produc er, with Mrs. Bess Rosa and Ed Fitzpatrick of Woman's college and Milton Gibson of State as her associates. John Young does the recording work and handles the controls. YDC to Stage Scott Banquet Reservations for the Young Democrats Club banquet for Kerr Scott may be made through O. Max Gardner in the Law school. The banquet will be at the Caro lina Inn Monday night immedi ately preceeding Scott's address to the student body. All members of the club are invited to at tend. In an effort to get all eligible voters to the polls in next week's election, the club has launched a campaign for securing absentee ballots. Those students who have not already received these bal lots are asked to contact some member of their family and have the ballot mailed to them. The University chapter of YDC will work with the town precinct chairman next Tuesday afternoon in an effort to provide rides for voters to the polls, Sandy Harris announced. Minnesota Scores Over Indiana, 30-7 MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 30 (UP) Minnesota at last found its scoring punch today as it pum meled Indiana 30-7, before a capacity crowd of 64,926 home coming fans at Memorial Stadium. The Gophers spotted the Hoosiers a first-period touchdown and then roared back with 16 points in the second quarter and "in surance" scores in the third and fourth. They were knocking on the touchdown door again when the game ended. . .... 'Mardi Gras' Play Tickets Go On Sale Tickets for Sound and Fury's production of the "Mardi Gras" will go on sale Monday from 9 o'clock until 1 o'clock inside the Y, Al Wehrhahn, business man ager, announced. The price of the tickets is 55 cents, tax included. This sale will continue through Friday. The pew show is a highly re vised version of last summer's production, including an almost completely new cast. New songs are by Fred Young and a few of the best from Tread Covington's originals. The hold-overs from the sum mer cast are Faith Adams as "Nita," Bill Sanders as "Keith," Jerry Weiss as "Murphey," and the dancing of Dusty Moore. New-comers to the show are Anita Gates as "Meg," Bob Thom as as "Beau," Bunnie Davis as "Zenobia," George Grizzard as "Dues ex Machina," Fred Young as "Charon," Jim Hammerstein as "Judge," Dan Morgan as "Pa LaFitte," Gene Hines and Nancy Norton as 'Cora and Millie," Jo Darden as "Maggie," and Colbert Leonard as the "Street Singer." A new dancer starring in the chorus will be Barbara Austin. The show was written and is being directed by Pete Strader. Pete is also the set designer. The music was composed and Is being directed by Tread Covington and Fred Young. Special lighting ef fects are designed by Colbert Leonard and the Master Electri cian is Walter Johnson. Make-up is handled by Fred Whisenhunt and Ed Fleming, and the prop mistress is Eveline Ruspini. Walker Awarded Zete Scholarship Richard Isley Walker, of Winston-Salem, has been awarded a $200-scholarship sponsored by the Zeta Psi Educational foundation, Dr. E. L. Mackie, chairman of scholarships and student awards, announced yesterday. Previously Walker received the Phi Beta Kappa award for the highest scholastic average as any rising junior. The scholarship was presented to the Scholarship committee, chairmanned by Mackie, by the foundation to be awarded to a student not a member of the Zeta Psi fraternity, to be selected at the discretion of the commit tee. The Educational foundation es tablished a number of scholar ships, one of which is a district scholarship award of $200 to the active of Zeta Psi who at the end of his sophomore or junior year shall have the highest cumulative average. The foundation also do nates $200 to the University , in which the student winner resides. November Issue of Tarnation Will Appear on Campus Soon The groans that have been emanating from the basement of Graham Memorial for the past month were made by Bob Smith and Tom Wharton, editors of Tar nation magazine. "We had about every techni cal difficulty in the book," Edi tor Smith said. Everything is all straightened out now, though, and the first edition of the hu mor magazine is due to hit the campus in the next few days. This first issue, dedicated to football, will contain features by Jim Henderson, Bill Kellum, Tookie Hodgson, Charlie Burns, Fred Burgess, and others. One of the items, a super-secret job by Bob Smith and Jack Niles, will be especially pleasing to Cartoonist Al Capp as well as Kerr Scott To Speak In Gerrard Tomorrow W. Kerr Scott, Democratic nominee for the governorship of North Carolina, will wind up his campaign tour here tomorrow night when he speaks in Gerrard hall at 8 o'clock. " : ; . Notre Dame Gets 24th Win in Row By Beating Navy BALTIMORE, Oct. 30. (UP) Notre Dame's mighty football legions, which display their wares for paying customers every grid iron Saturday, put on their week ly show before 63,314 persons in Babe Ruth Stadium today, with Navy the victim by a score of 41-7. Actually, it wasn't a ball game at any time. The Fighting Irish could have won by any margin they wished, but when they scor ed touchdowns the first two times they got possession of the ball, they more or less called it quits. They coasted from that point on. It was an easy thing to win today against a Navy team which lost its eleventh consectutive game. It was the twenty-fourth win for Notre Dame without a defeat. Emil Sitko raced 53 yards, then dove over left tackle for the first of six Notre Dame touchdowns. John Panelli took the ball over from the. 18 for the second. The third came on a five yard pass from Tripucka to halfback Gay. Bob Williams tossed a 25-yarder to Lank Smith for the final score of the first half. Pete Williams scored Navy's lone touchdown, their first in three years, against Notre Dame, on an eight-yard smash after a Notre Dame kick went out on the Irish 36. Notre Dame wound up the scoring with touchdowns by reserve backs Spaniel and Landry. Pledge Bids At Gerrard Fraternity rushing on the Caro- lina campus comes to an off icial end tomorrow with pledge bids available " at Gerrard hall for those students who are pledging a fraternity. Interfraternity Council Presi dent Jack Thompson announced last night that the bids may be obtained between the hours of 2 and 6 o'clock at Gerrard. Thompson emphasized that "all men to whom fraternities have issued an invitation to pledge should be sure to come by and pick up their pledge cars." He also urged that those stu- to local readers. Jim Henderson does a feature on football scouting and Tookie Hodgson has written some let ters of invitation to friends to see the home games. There will be a full page pin up, a page of cartoons by Jack Taylor and more and better jokes than ever before, Smith said. Another feature, by Fred Bur gess, is a fantasy based on the end of the political dynasty of the world. Bill Kellum writes four humorous stories on the foot ball coaches of the Big Four teams, very good. These are only a few of the things you can expect to see in this first issue of Tarnation for 1948-49. Watch for it at your favorite news stand Scott, who has to go through the November election merely as a formality, won the Demo cratic nomination in a primary run-off with Charles M. John son. Scott's election broke the old East-west tradition that for so many years has worked in North Carolina. He will speak here under the auspices of the Young Democrat club. Scott, born in Hawf ields, in Alamance county in 1896, enter ed state politics in 1936 when he ran for Commissioner of Agri culture. Elected, he remained in that position until February 14, 1948, when he resigned to be come a candidate for governor. The term he was serving would have expired December 14, 1948. When resigning, Scott said that he thought that no man should hold a high state office while campaigning for another one. Born and raised on a farm in Alamance county, Scott graduat ed from North Carolina State College in 1917 with honors. He served as County Agent and as Regional Director of the Farm Debt Adjustment program before being elected Commissioner of Agriculture. Speaking in Gerrard hall in stead of Hill hall, as had been formerly announced, this will be Scott's last appearance before the election on November 2. Dr. Epps To Speak Here Tuesday Night Dr. Preston H. Epps of the classics department will read a paper entitled "Greek Tragedy Mere Tragedy of Fate" Tuesday evening at 7:30 when the Philo logical club meets in the Roland Parker lounge of Graham Me morial. All members are urged to be present. Available Tomorrow dents who are in doubt as to , whether they were issued an in vitation should check by Gerrard. On. receipt of the pledge card, each student will pay a $1.00 pledge fee and have his card initialed by the IFC representa tive present to indicate he has paid. After picking up his bid at Gerrard, the student then should go to the house of the fraternity to which he has pledged. The pledge card must be given to the rushing chairman of the fra ternity at this time. Thompson stated that it is the responsibility of the rushing chairman to collect the cards and then return them to the Dean of Students office in South building. The rushing chairman should be at his fraternity house on Monday afternoon to receive the bids from the pledges, and he in turn should carry them to the Dean of Students as quick ly as possible. The fraternity rushing period at Carolina began two weeks ago today. It was composed of two formal rushing periods, separat ed by an informal period. Shake up day was last Thursday night. Original plans for rushing called for a continuation through the first part of this week. But the IFC voted last week 4o shorten the period in an effort to give both rushees and fra ternity men more time for their studies and because it was felt the rushees had had sufficient time to become acquainted with the fraternities. The list of pledges by fraterni ties will be announced later this week. Rambling Wreck Rallies To Win Over Duke, 19-7 DURHAM, Oct. 30. (UP) Georgia Tech grabbed Duke's Blue Devils by the tail today and was more than happy to come out of the threshing battle with a 19-7 victory that kept the Yellow Jacket's among the un beaten elite. A crowd of 32,000 warm fans watched the Georgians, getting the worst of the breaks and baf fled by a 'defense pattern that would have made a general jeal- Tech's famed passes were far off the target but the Jackets kept punching behind the gen eralship of Jimmy Southard and Joe Brown and got on the top end of the score in the third period. They were in full com mand at the finish to extend their record to six victories in as many games. Big Derogatis, a standout in the double-tough Duke wall, made the first break when he fell on a Georgia Tech fumble on the second play. Though, Duke got nowhere and the ball went over, Tech stalled on its own 26 and Derogatis rumbled into the Tech backfield again to block buster Humphreys' punt. Duke center Carl Perkinson pounced on the ball. One play later, tailback Fred Folger passed 14 yards to half back Tommy Hughes on the two. Fullback Paul Stephanz blasted over and end Mike Souchak kick ed the point to give Duke a 7-0 lead. Folger Intercepts Little -sub halfback Billy Queen, 155 pounds of hustling Engineer, zoomed 47 yards to put Tech in scoring position late in the first period, but Folger inter cepted a Tech pass in the end zone to end the threat. But the next time Tech got the ball, quarterback Jimmy Southard passed from the Duke 47 to end Jack Griffin. The lanky flankman nabbed the long heave on the ten and raced over. Full back Dinky Bowen missed the kick and Tech was still a long point behind. Ant-sized Jimmy Jordan, 135 pound Tech sub raced 34 yards to the Duke 27 to spark the next Tech march in the third period. Southard threw 14 yards to end George Broadnax, then Queen and fullbacks Morris Harrison and Frank Ziegler crunched to a first down on the one. Ziegler slammed over. Bowen missed the point. In the fourth period Tech's ground attack began to click against the tiring Duke squad. Running plays rolled from the Tech 35 to the Duke seven, and halfback Joe Cobb raced around end to score. Bowen kicked the point. California's Bowl Bound Bears Edge Southern California, 13-7 LOS ANGELES, Oct. 30. (UP) California's mighty Golden Bears had the closest shave of their drive towards the Rose Bowl today as they barely defeat ed an inspired University of Southern California football team, 13-7. Before the largest football crowd of the season 90,890 fans the savage charging Southern Californians scored in the last 48 seconds of play and had three possible touchdown drives halted by fumbles or pen alties. But it was the playing of Cali fornia's two great backs, Jackie Jensen and Jack Swaner that was the difference between the two great teams. Jensen's and Swaner's drives resulted in first and third-period scores as the tricky players made every opening a gain. Two Justice Passes Provide Sixth Win By Billy Carmichael III KNOXVILLE, Tenn, Oct. 26. North Carolina's chief justice Charlie and a jury of stern-faced Tar Heel foot ballers deliberated for some two and one half hours here today before handing a victorious verdict of "Nols Vols" to a tenacious Tennessee team that didn't feel quite guilty of defeat. The majority ruled by 14-7. The game, which was witnessed by some 50,000 fans, was a wild and woolly undertaking which saw the visit ing Tar Heels exact a pair of quickies in the first session ' and then sit back to watch the Vols attempt to tear down their argument. The Vols didn't spare the Late Football Scores Princeton 55, Virginia 14. Harvard 20, Holy Cross 13. Penn State 32. Colgate 13. Rochester 14. R.P.I. 7. Army 49, Virginia Tech 7. Lafayette 33, George Washington 14. Brown 20, Rutgers 6. Notre Dame 41, Navy 7. Wesleyan 53. New England College 0. Cornell 20, Columbia 13. Michigan 28. Illinois 20. Denison 7, Muskinkum 6. Georgia Tech 19, Duke 7. William & Mary 14, Richmond 6. Pennsylvania 40, Washington & Lee 7. Dartmouth 41, Yale 14. Boston U. 12, Syracuse 7. Gettysburg 27, Western Maryland 0. Amherst 14, Tufts 13. Union (N.Y.) 19. Williams 7. Johns Hopkins 22, Drexel 0. Bridgeport 25, Kings Point 20. NYU 21, Lehigh 20. West Virginia 35, South Carolina 12. Massachusetts 33, Vermont 0. Delaware 12, Muhlenberg 0. Wake Forest 34, N. C. State 13. Ohio U. 14, Duquesne 13. North Carolina 14, Tennessee 7. Virginia Military 33, Davidson 6. Nevada 79, Oklahoma City 13. Tulane 9, Mississippi State 0. Georgia 35, Alabama 0. Minnesota 30, Indiana 7. Northwestern 21, Ohio State 7. Iowa 19, Wisconsin 13. Kentucky 28. Cincinnati 7. Florida 39, Furman 14. Michigan State 46, Oregon State 21. Bosley Lecture Slated Tomorrow Dean Harold Bosley of Duke Divinity' school will deliver the first in a series of five lectures tomorrow night at 7 o'clock in Gerrard hall. Sponsored by the Young Adults 1 class of the Methodist church, the series is ' a continuation of that , begun by Dr. B. W. Anderson of the University department of re ligion. Theme of the series is "Our Faith Rests on Facts," and tomorrow night's lecture will be "We Believe in God." Birth Announcement A bulletin from the Lambda Chi Alpha house last night an nounced the arrival of 12 pups to the fraternity's dog. Black ball. Bill Rogers somewhat ex citedly reported that 11 of the new arrivals were coming along fine. All the brothers are exceedingly proud of Blackball and her family. Against those hard-charging backs, Southern California threw in the desperation tackles of their secondary, featured chiefly by the work of halfbacks Don Doll and Don Garlin and fullback Ralph Pucci. It was not enough but it gave the near-capacity crowd in Memorial coliseum its most thrill ing game of the year. The smooth-functioning Cali fornia team also had the asset of the best pair of ends seen here all year, pass catching Frank Van Derden and John Cunningham. In the last minutes of play, Southern California got the ball on California's 41 on a punt Jim Powers, until that point and goat of the game, passed to ends Dave Lloyd and Jack Nix to put them on the 13. Jack Kirby then cut over right end to the one and on the next play dived over for the score. Dean Dill converted. forces. They came back in the second half and played the Tar Heels on and off their feet as Carolina fans saw first their money and almost their untouch ed record go down the Shields Watkins drain. But the Tar Heels, it turned out, handn't rehearsed the script in that manner. They held cn with seven-point courage until the time clock came to their rescue and nipped the upset bloom slightly below the stem ming of the Tar Heels unbeaten' tide. At the end of the game, it war hard to tell who was the more unpopular the Tar Heels or 'the officials as both were being booed by the majority of the fans with equal vigor. The officials, it seems, were held to blame for the calling back of a 90-yard punt return in the second quarter by Vol Hal Little ford, who ran around, by, and through the majority of the Tar Heels for a psuedo-touchdown. A clip back on the Tennessee 20 which took Carolina fullback Hosea Rodgers to the turf unex pectedly, cost the Vols the score that would have later tied the ball game. At this point in the campaign the Tar Heels were leading by 14-points and looked all but ready to score a third, fourth, and fifth touchdown and send ing the home boys fleeting for the hills. In the end, those 14 points were the Tar Heels' money for the day. The scores both came early jn the game. Tennessee won the toss their rjhvsical consolation for the day and elected to re ceive. After doing so and run ning two plays from the 21 the Vols' Littleford kicked to Justice weakly on the Carolina 45 where the lithe-legged lad from the Land of the Sky fair caught the ball amid the boos of the Tennessee stands. Hosea Takes Over Here Hosea Rodgers personally took over and over the local line for 13 yards in two plays and a first down on the Ten nessee 42. After two more plays had netted but three yards, Justice flung up the middle to Cox on the 23, who grazed on down to the 23 before being tackled. Then another running play failed the Vol blockade, but Justice again passed, this time to Johnny Clements on the 14. Rodgers bammed the middle for a first down and then carried on a team surge to the 5. The Vols here stiffened. But with third down and a touchdown to go, Justice with arm cocked passed into the arms of Bill Flamisch in th--: deep left end zone. The Vols merely stood and waved as the ball passed over head. Cox came through to pass his bar examinations and the Tar Heels led, 7-0, after almost seven minutes. Clincher The Tar Heels' clincher came a wee bit later in the opening period. After an exchange of j punts following the kickoff, the Vols found themselves backed down in a hole on their own 8, the consequence of a clipping penalty on a Littleford punt re Tennessee kicked out on the first play with said Mr. Littleford See EARLY SCORES, Page T