Vol. 11. No. 37., RIVALS TO CUSH AT 2 TOMORROW LN DUKE STADIUM Improvement in Team Here Has Raised the Hopes of the Carolina Followers A BIG CROWD IS EXPECTED The football game between the University of North Caro lina and Duke University will be played tomorrow (Saturday) afternoon in the Duke stadium. The opening whistle will blow at 2 o’clock. This match has aroused great excitement, and undoubtedly, if the weather is fair, it will draw a much larger crowd than has witnessed any game this year in North Carolina. Duke has an unbroken record of victories this season, while Carolina has lost to Vanderbilt, Georgia, Florida, and Georgia Tech. So of course the chances are regarded as being heavily in favor of Duke's winning to morrow. Yet the decided im provement shown by Coach Col -15 ns’ team in the last three weeks has given the Carolina adherents a glimmer of hope. Carolina came within a hair of beating Georgia Tech, beat State College two weeks ago, ami last Saturday beat Wake Forest 2G to 0. "While Duke still rules as a favorite,” writes the Ncu'h and Obaeri < r sports commentator, "‘the Carolina stock has vastly improved in the last three weeks, because of the good allowing made against Georgia Toll and the victories over Stab* and Wake Forest The Raleigh correspondent of the Greensboro N»ux writes: "Football followers who scouted the Carolina Wake Forest game to determine whether it. will be possible to get it real game be tween Carolina'and Duke agree (< on tinned on loet page) Ivey F. Lewis's Lecture Ivey L Lewis, prote.sor of biology in the University of Virginia, lectured on "Adapts lion: the Fourth Property of Protoplasm” Tuesday evening at the celebration of the both anniversary of the Elisha Mit chell Scientific Society. Archi bald Henderson presented ”A Sketch of t tie History and Achievements of the Society,” and W r . C. tinker’s topic was ‘‘Publications and Exchanges of the Society.” “The Yeomen of the ftuard” This Bvenintf "The Yeomen of the Guard,” thought by many Gilbert and Sullivan devotees to lx* the peak of perfection attained by the celebrated collaborators in com ic opera, will be presented by the J’layreaders at B:.’io this (Friday) evening in the .school auditorium. Urban T. Holmes is the director. 'Hu* best sing ing and acting talent in Chapel Hill has been assembled for the performance. The opera had its lirst pro duction in October, 18HH, in the .Savoy theatre in l/ondon. Since then it has been put on thou sands of times in England and America. The scene of the ojx*ra is the Green of the Tower of I/mdon, and the time Is the 16th Century. A prisoner of state, Colonel Fairfax, is sentenced to be executed. Among the lead ing characters are the lieuten The Chapel Hill Weekly LOUIS GRAVES Editor Idea of Scrambling Circles Raises Row in Women’s Missionary Society The peace and harmony that used to prevail in the Women’s Missionary Society of the Chap el Hill Methodist church have been torn to tatters within the last few- days! The storm of disputation arose last week when the proposal was made that the component units of the organization, known as circles, be scrambled. That is, that they be broken up and re formed, so that the personnel in each one would bq changed. Some of the society’s members approved the proposal; others, who did not want to have their old congenial associations inter fered with, vigorously disap proved it. A row ensiled. As a topic of conversation, this row has had for the women of tin 1 village all the absorbing interest that the Carolina-Duke football game has for the men. It has been discussed wherever matrons have met at bridge and tea parties, in tin stores, and on the streets. In an exact and technical sense, the argu ment belongs to the Methodists, but for conversational purposes it has no denominational limits. If the coca cola cups on the tables m the Eubanks drugstore Dachshund in Satchel The A, one week from to morrow, h will be over a 2 mile course. ant of the Tower, the sergeant of the guard and his son and daughter, .the head jailer, the Tower housekeeper and her niece, a strolling jester, and a strolling singer. The celebrat ed Beef-eaters make up the chorus. The prisoner, taking the place of the sergeant’s son, is enrolled in the guard as a recruit; the head jailer is flout ed by I'hoebe, the sergeant's daughter; there is a prison mar riage; and in the end all are happy. Kev. Alfred S. Lawrence will appear as Sir Richard Chol mondeley, the ruler of the Tow er, C. S. Templeton as Colonel Fairfax, and Urban T. Holmes as the sergeant. The role of Jack Point, the jester, which was taken in the original pro duction by George Grossmlth, (Continued on page two) CHAPEL HILL, N. C., FR had ears and could tell what they have heard since the middle of last week! To this important social centre come women from all corners of the village. They exchange greetings, they sit down at the tables, and they talk. Not in a long time have they had a subject so enthrall ing as this one. "You can’t make a success of it." an Episcopalian, a frank op ponent of the scrambling plan, was heard to say to one of her Methodist friends. “We tried it in our church, and it wouldn’t work out. People who haVe form ed a circle, and hate got used to one another and become friends, don't want to change." One member of the missionary society, Mrs. Harry F. Comer, has withdrawn from the church as a result ot the row. She has returned to her former fold—the Presbyterians. There appears, to be some doubt as to what was the chief reason behind the proposal to re form the circles. It is said that some of the officers of the mis sionary society thought it was becoming, perhaps, too clique y, and that a redistribution of the /Continued on hint pnget The Black ttatfle Here Fanioun Negro Flyer Props limvn on the ( hapel Hill Airport Lieutenant Hubert Julian, the Negro aviator known us the Black Eagle, who is planning a (light from New York to Arabia, dropped down upon the Cha|H*l Hill airport m his Bellanea cab m plane Sunday afternoon. The plane, with a wing-spread of lf> feet, would barely go into the hangar. The llyei came from New York in three hours His destin ation wa Durham. He circled over the city m search of a place to land, but be couldn't find one and to cum* her* Ihe < hspel II ill airport appear on t lie *>l lirial national maps, while Dur ham has no pol l 1 .ieuteiianl Julian wa taken to I )in ham in an a' ltomolnl* by Charles Mart indale and there consulted some <*l the Negro citizens who are helping him finance his protected flight to Arabia Next day lie left here in Ids plane and came to earth in a field in East Durham. A native of Abyssinia, Lieu tenant. Julian was air minister of the Abyssinian emperot in 11).*f<) and IT'D He attempted a Might, from New York to I’aris four years ago, but bis plane was forced down into the East River and demolished. 11 * • was educated in England arid learn ed to fly there in HH7. Invited to Bonfire The people of Chapel Hill are invited Gy the University stu dents to come to the bonfire at. H o’clock this (Friday) evening on Emerson field. This will be a celebration in anticipation of the football game with Duke to morrow'. Coach Collins and Judge Rives (celebrated here as Scrubby Riven) will address the throng. From Emerson field the band will lead a parade to the Well, where will be performed a ceremony* called “burying Duke.” Henderson to Address Alumni Archibald Henderson will ad dress University alumni in Nor folk and Richmond next week. DAY, NOVEMBER 17. 1933 Chapel Hill Chaff Os course Mr. Crittenden, the history professor, was deeply interested in the birth of his child last Saturday; but he was also interested in football, espe cially since the University was playing his alma mater. Wake Forest. Was it a fair deal by Fate to bring these two import ant events on the same day? Decidedly not, in the opinion of Mr. Crittenden. But there was nothing he could do about it. While the game was in progress in the Kenan stadium, and the bands were playing and the crowd shouting, Mr. Crittenden sat in Duke hospital in the room for fathers, familiarly known as the paternity ward. * ♦ * Hooge, the Bookers’ Scotch terrier, is high-spirited and sometimes is maybe a trifle over-fond of attention, but or dinarily he is well-behaved. Hence his master was surprised, and shocked, at his performance on Thursday evening of last week. There was a small stag party at the Booker home for Prince Troubetzkoy Soon after the I’rince and the other guests had settled down for a chat, Booge romped int*» the living room. Some dead animal or part of one, the trophy of a hunt, was in his mouth, and he deposited it in the middle of the floor. R. L. McClamroch moved forward quickly and removed both the trophy and the hunter from the room. The conversation was resum ed Presently while Archibald Henderson was engaged in toll ing one of his humorous stories, (Continued on pay* three) A 42-Inch Hawk Kaiilt'*, will) t Pound lli'ii in < lawn, Slml by Jams'?* Wills (lurence Wills, .1 r., came in I** I In- print-shop Monday bear mg proudly a chicken hawk that had been slain a little while before by his I Jnrle J im. 11 la■ of Ihe printer applied t lie yardstick and found that the bird mea un d 12 inch*-, from tip to tip of it , wings. For several weeks the hawk had been raiding the poultry yard on the Wills farm about three miles south of Chapel Hill on Ihe M t < 'arrnel road. "It. took off a lot of the little chicks," said young Clarence to the admiring audience that clustered around him among the h truly pe machines and presses, “and it could fly away fast with them. But today it grubbed a four pound hen Unde Jim enrno running out with bis gun The hawk might have gok away if it had dropped the hen; but it kept the hen in its claws. Tin* weight was too much for it. It couldn’t fly fast. It was only a few feet from the ground when Uncle Jim shot it.” The citizens to whom Clarence showed the hawk said it was the largest one they had ever seen. Elisha Kent Kane Married Elisha Kent Kane, formerly a member of the University facul ty in the department, of romance languages, was married to Miss Gladys Shuler last week in Kane, Pa. Mr. Kane has recently pub lished the book upon which he worked for many years, a translation from the Spanish of Juan Ruiz, the 14th Century poet. It is called “The Book of Good Love.” Hospital Care Plan on A Regular Fee Basis to Be Laid before Faculty HEATH LOOKS LIKE DICTATOR HITLER Two persons in Chapel Hill, one of them a mem ber of the University fac ulty, have remarked to me within the last twenty-four hours: “Milton Heath looks like Hitler." And it's so— even though the professor is light and the dictator is dark. If you don't believe if, walk up to Mr. Heath with a copy of the New York Herald Tribune mag azine of October 29 in your hand, look at him carefully, and then look at Hitler’s picture on page 1. The re semblance is unmistakable. Maier’s 2 I'erforniances Child’M < oiuert Monday Afternoon; Evening Hecital with Lattison Guy Maier. the pianist, will give a one-hour program for children at 3 o'clock Monday afternoon in the Hill music hall, and at 8:30 that evening in Me morial hall he and his partnei pianist, Lee Pattison, will ap pear in a recital. The evening event is in the student enter tainment series; the general ad mission fee (for persons not having season tickets) is sl. A musical travelogue, with lantern slides of Bavaria atm Austria, will be a feature of the afternoon performance. This will be followed by a short group of piano compositions. Last w ill come the Krazy Kat Ballet, in which Mr. Maier, in music and words, will present Krazy Kat, lgnatz Mouse, and Other charac ters in their extravagant antics. Children in the Chapel Hill and ( arrboro schools will re ceive free tickets. The concert has been made possible by the sale of guarantor tickets to ad ills. The few remaining seats are now on sale (price, 50 cents) at Hie office of Ihe University music department (telephone 3225) (’. ('. Crittenden, Jr. A i*on was born to Mr. and Mrs. ('. ('. Crittenden last Sat urday, November 11, in Duke hospital He is named Charles Christopher for his father. Post-Mortems on Last Week’s Lleetion Explaining the election lias been an absorbing pastime for Norlh Carolinians in the last ten days. The post rnortems vary wide ly in the analysis of causes, but there is one thing that all com mentators are agreed on: that both the wets and drys were as founded by the huge anti-repeal majority. It was evident in the Inst days of the campaign that the drys were gaining strength, and their victory was predicted by a political observer here and there; Gut nobody thought that, if they won at all, it would be by a large margin. Carl Goerch, who gets about the state and sees a great many people, and who has a wide ac quaintance among politicians of all shades of opinion, among wets and drys, ventured a pre diction in his magazine the week $1.50 a Year in Advance. 5c a Copy Services at Low Cost for AII Who Enroll in a Mutual Benefit Association To the University faculty, at its meeting next Tuesday, will be presented a plan whereby all the institution's employees may receive hospital care, whenever needed, at small cost. The plan is based upon the insurance principle. The pay ment of a regular fee entitles the participant, or any member of his family, to 30 days of hos pital care in a year. The ser vice includes a $5 a day room, meals, tin 1 use of the operating or'delivery room, necessary an esthetics, surgical dressings, routine laboratory work, gener al nursing care, \ rays, and ordinary drugs and medicines. It does not include the fees of 1 physicians and surgeons. A group of faculty members, assembled in tin* South build ing Wednesday afternoon, heard Watts Hill and Dwight Snyder, Secretary of the recently organ ized Hospital Care Association, explain the plan. In the absence of President Graham. Executive Secretary Robert B. House agreed to distribute, at the meet ing next Tuesday, a mime ographed statement setting forth the details. Having read this statement, the faculty will have the opportunity, at a later meeting, to ask Mr. Snyder ques tions about any points not fully understood. At the gathering Wednesday ' afternoon Mr. Hill, who is a ill reeling trustee of Watts hospit al, said that he and Dr. Davison, director of the Duke hospital, had been engaged for live years in working out a plan for hospit al care for groups of citizens on (Continuinl on hint pape) McCall Breaks Ankle Fred Met all, the law profes sor. broke his ankle one evening Lit, week. The accident oc curred when he stepped into a ditch near the Hill music hall after he had taken part in a re hearsal of the University or chest.ru. At the command of Dr. Shands, the orthopedic ex I pert at Duke hospital, he has been keeping off bis feet as • much as possible, but with the i aid of crutches he has been able to attend his classes. before election. It was that the wets would elect 70 delegates, the drys f>o. What happened was that the drys elected 104 and the wets 16. The dry majority appears to have been about 170,000. The 'newspapers quit publishing the election returns when several hundred election pro ducts were still missing, and so the final . figures are not known; but call it 170,000 that is near enough. * * ♦ “Instruments of God” In a statement issued after ■ the election Cule K. Burgess, the drys’ campaign director said: “All of us who worked in this campaign in behalf of temper ance and righteousness were merely instruments of God.” Then all who advocated re peal must have been instruments (Continued on page two)