THE TAR HEEL
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1945
Homemade Chocolate Candy In Christmas Boxes at DANZIGER'S
Page Four
Campus Shorts
ATO Initiates
' Seven new ATO's, initiated Friday
night, are Lloyd Joyner, Eocky Mount;
Phil Randolph, Chapel Hill; George
Stenhouse, Goldsboro; Bob Plumb,
Washington, D. C; Ferman Riddle,
Fayetteville; Ed Edgerton, Fayette-
ville; and Jim ArnalL Senoia, Ga.
World Friendship Bazaar
The Presbyterian Intermediates
will sponsor a World Fellowship
Bazaar Saturday from 3 to 7 in the
church basement. All who attend are
requested to bring some piece of
clothing for European relief and any
one wishing to make independent con
tributions can do so through Jane
BerryhilL 216 W. Franklin St.
Former Coach Gets Release '
Lt. James M. Tatum, former head
football coach at UNC, was released
- to inactive duty December 5 and is
now accepting bids, for a peacetime
coaching job. Lt. Tatum has just
completed a successful season as head
coach of the Jacksonville, Fla., Naval
Air Station "Flyers."
Scientific Society
At the next meeting of the Elisha
Mitchell Scientific Society, J. B. Miale
of the pathology department will
speak on "The Possible ole of the
Lymphatic System in the - Production
of Immune Bodies" and C. K!. Rice of
the chemistry department will discuss
"Photochemistry with Intermittent
Light." The meeting will be held at
7:30 tonight in 206 Phillips.
Alpha Kappa Delta Meeting
Alpha Kappa Delta will hold its
December meeting tonight at 7 in
407 Alumni. Professor H. D. Wolf of
the economics department will discuss
"Current Developments in Labor Re
lations." The public is invited.
KA-ADPi Party
Upsilon Chapter of Kappa Alpha
was host Sunday afternoon to the Al
pha Delta Pi sorority at a Christmas
tea. The party honored three new
KA's and 21 new ADPi's who were
initiated Sunday morning. t
Sadie Hawkins
Prizes Given
Entry By Jennings
Takes First Place
YWCA Christmas Party
The traditional YWCA Christmas
party will be held at 7:30 p. m. Thurs
day in Spencer Dormitory, Kay Fer
rell, Y secretary, announced. This
Judges for the Sadie Hawkins Day
picture contest Sunday night award
ed the first prize blue ribbon to Com
er Jennings' entry. "The award was
made on a basis of good photography
and human interest," said Joe Denker,
chief judge.
Prizes also were awarded to three
other pictures chosen from a field of
more than 60 entries, which have been
on display in Horace Williams lounge
and Graham Memorial pffice for the
past two weeks.
Action Theme
"Action" was' the theme of Jennings'
entry, taken at the termination of the
wedding ceremony during, the day's
festivities. The second prize of a
similar handpainted red ribbon was
given for a "bird's-eye view" of the
festivities, taken by Pvt. David Wheel
er, USMC.
Bill Lamkin won the yellow ribbon
third prize for a scene depicting cam
eraman Joe Denker in action. The
duo of "Marryin' Sam" Kai Jurgensen
and "Mayor" Paul Young netted
fourth prize for Carl Wohlberg.
Honorable mention was given to
photos by Charles Borton and Jean
Benjamin. Judges for the contest,
Joe Denker, William Colepaugh and
Nancy Greenwall, announced that the
photos will remain on display for sev
eral days in the student union office.
GRAHAM
(Continued from page two)
more generally accepted meaning of
the word you used and as a matter
of fairness and a decent sense of
responsibility in the use of words,
I am sure you will join me in ex
pressing deep regret for the use of
a word capable of such unworthy
construction.
With appreciation, I am
FRANK P. GRAHAM.
Summer Jobs
Women students interested in sum
mer jobs as camp workers and counsel
ors are also asked to apply at the vo
cational office as soon as possible. The
vocational office has received quite a
party is held annually at Christmas number of requests for summer work
time, and there will be a Santa Claus, ers from camps located along the en
refreshments, and a Christmas play, tire east coast. Applications are ac
ceptable from all coeds interested in
camp life and capable of 'directing
All women students are invited.
Correction
1 A statement in Saturday's Tar Heel,
which read, "Fifty per cent of the
present Freshman class are over 25
years old," should have read, "Fifty
of the freshman class are over 25
years old."
Calvert Employees
Frank Luther, educational director
of the Calvert Distilling Company,
will be here Thursday to interview
prospective employees of the Calvert
Company. Both men and women stu
dents majoring in chemistry or bac
teriology and interested in talking
with Mr. Luther are urged to make an
appointment in the vocational office,
209 South Building.
Pin-Ups
Tom Green, KA, has pinned Vir
ginia Pearson. Cecil Garrett, Kappa
Sig, pinned Grace Irby, Chi Omega.
any of the activities connected with
it.
Alpha Delta Pi's
And Chi 0 Group
Initiate Pledges
Last week the Chi Omega and Alpha
Delta Pi sororities initiated new
pledges. The twenty-six girls ini
tiated into Chi Omega on Wednesday
and Thursday are as follows: Mildred
Schlater, JeanReddy, Frances Dlenen,
Frances Avera, Nancy Saunders, Sally
Robertson, Virginia Smith, Hilda Ta
bor, Anne Morris, Maggie Brown,
Frances Satterfield, Jane Ellen Gilam,
Helen Davis, Jean Boyle, Helen Bur-
well, Mildred Parker, Jeannette Chi
Chester, Patricia O'Daniel, Jane Bent-
ley, Harriet Clark, Marie Holman,
Gene Heafner, Anne Dickinson, Gwen
Hughes, Mary Tom Gilman, Cather
ine Lane. Margaret Whitney and
Moma Bensel were also to be initiated
but were in the infirmary at the time
Twenty-one pledges were initiated
into Alpha Delta Pi Sunday morning:
Edith Lee Burgehs, Ann Martin, Eve
lyn Shields, Penny Durham, Katherine
Norvell, Jean White, Virginia Peel,
Ruth Minton, Anne Trimble, Florrie
Trimble, Catherine Freeman, Jane
Carrington, Dot Dashiell, Caroline
Warren, Mickie Derieux, Jean Miller,
Peggy Cates, Frances Law, Babs Bix
ler, Virginia Wilson, Carolyn Disboro.
Old Clothes Drive
YMCA and YWCA are sponsoring
an old clothes drive to be held in Jan
uary. Students are asked to bring old
clothes from home after Christmas
and turn them in at the Y. j
COGS
(Continued from page ttcoj
and for that reason if no other,
ALL of us should read it carefully
and offer any and every .criticism,
constructive or otherwise! If we
cleave it to others to decide upon,
possibly a select few, we can have
no argument when it turns out to
be a bad document. Think about it,
students, and sound off with your
opinions !
Without a doubt:
. Coach Ben Carnevale has really
gotten those cagers of his in 2
point shape! With the second win
of the season tucked away, and
from Camp Pickett at that, the boys
are ready, willing, and to my way
of thinking, able to roll up an un
defeated season. Go to it, men!
Also in the conqueror's box sit
the Blue Dolphins, who topped the
Lejeune Leathernecks by a watery
score of 34-32! Not a bad start,
fishmen, keep it up.
" We welcome George Stirnweiss,
. alumnus and national sporting fig
ure, to the athletic staff of Caro
lina. Where Georgie goes--results
ride rampant!!
And wavering never in its course,
the wheel marks deeply this mud
we call life.
Beauty Ball Photographs
Photographs which were sent to
Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall
for the Yack beauty contest have been
returned to the Yack office. Owners
may get these pictures any afternoon
between 2 and 5 at the office in Gra
ham Memorial.
Nisei Sociology Graduate
First Since War Started
By Sarah Spratt
The University is opening its doors to foreign students for the first time
since the beginning of World War II. Initiating the influx of students of
Japanese ancestry is Shrzuko Hayaski, an American-born coed, of Wapako,
Washington.
A graduate student in the schoolSremember much of the country or my
of sociology here, Miss Hayaski may
be found daily studying diligently in
the library. Previously, she attended
the University of Washington in Se
attle and Sterling College, Kansas.
"My associates at Sterling College
recommended this university to me.
The excellent work of the school of
sociology here is known in Kansas
and even in Wapako," Miss Hayaski
declared.
"I made my debut in the South
when I began summer school here,"
she continued. "The significance of
Chapel Hill as one of the cultural
centers of the South has influenced
me to take advantage of its library,
its instructors, the courses, and the
warm hospitality and friendliness that
pervades the campus."
Miss Hayaski is rather small in sta-
Rabbi Budick Named Head
Carolina Hillel Foundation
Crossword Puzzlq
ACROSS
1 Approval
7 Wide dominion
13 Skin marking
14 Day-dreamed
15 Free meal
16 Old from disuse
17 Western Indian
1 & Skillful
22 Japanese dramas
23 Knob
25 Go astray
26 Theresa
27 Comparative
ending
28 Rather lengthy
31 Tantalum
(symb.)
32 Take food
33 Girl's name
34 Part of "to be"
36 Those who
criticize
38 Indefinite article
40 Turn to liquid
42 Oriental coin
43 Border
45 Prefix: before
46 Deer
48 Sooner than
49 Raise the spirits
61 Concerned
53 Regain
possession
65 Mountain in
Palestine
66 Hebrew esthetic
57 Enclose
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11 Misplaced again
12 Ancient city In
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19 Repairer of teetb
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21 Prepare to fire
24 Choose by vote
26 Pronoun
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30 Pouch
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Students Faculty Townspeople
CJ)e Car Heel
MAKES A GJRAND GJFT
Mail in your subscriptions now. Call 8641, or drop by
Graham Memorial and see Harrison Tenney, Circulation
Manager.
Subscription Rates:
. 75c from January to iMarch
?2.00 from March to June (daily)
Town students that are not receiving the TAR HEEL may
'"r- rp. them"' up at the Y or GM.
$ An inmnrr.flnf niAtl
x vviviwAi w tuc vai w
lina campus this fall was Rabbi Bu
dick, who in September became the
new head of the Hillel Foundation
He came here from the University of
Oklahoma, where he organized a Hille!
foundation in 1943 and acted as asso
ciate professor of Jewish history and
oemitics.
He has held a pulpit in Millville
New Jersey; has been civilian chap-
Iain of Bellevue hospital in New York
City; and was director of the YMCA
in Philadelphia.
He was educated at City College,
New York, where he received his
B.S.S. and his M.A., and the Jewish
Institute of Religion in New York,
where he received his M.H.L. and
Rabinical degree. He has done grad-
uatework at Fordham University
and N.Y.U. and is a candidate for
Ph.D.
The Hillel Foundation is a social,
religious and cultural organization
bridging the gap between Jewish stu
dent youth and the group's heritage.
The first chapter of the foundation
was established 24 years ago at the
University of Illinois. A group was
started seven years ago on the Caro-
ina campus. Growing by leaps and
bounds, the organization has expand
ed until there are now 150 chapters
in the United States, Canada and
Cuba. It is expected to expand internationally.
ture, having a height of about five
feet four inches. She has a quiet
calmness about her as she speaks in a
cheerful manner. The oldest member
of a family of three, Miss Hayaski
spent nine months in Heart Mountain,
Wyoming, a relocation center, during
the early part of the war. Her fam
ily was released from the center this
fall.
The young coed has a scholarship
from the Fellowship of Southern
Churchmen
Miss Hayaski mentioned that she
had never known many Japanese un
til she was sent to a relocation cen
ter. "The greater part of my life has
been spent in Wapako, which is an In
dian reservation. , Some of the Indians
still live rather primitively. They still
practice some of their dances, have
ceremonies in their worshipping and
build fenced cemeteries, which are
locked securely."
"Never let it be said that the In
dians there aren't intelligent," she
continued. "They weave baskets and
fish a great deal. During huckleberry
season, they gather in carayans and
search for the berries. The Indians
have their own churches and hospitals,
and take part in the government,
which is a part of the state and na
tional government.
Industry is developing rapidly in
her native town, according to Miss
Hayaski. An aluminum industry is
emerging, with power originating
from the Grand Coulee and Bonne
ville dams, nearby,
Miss Hayaski asserted that neither
she, nor any member of her. family
had suffered anv means of nersern-
I A J.ui!fl-.B a. 1 t
fi U TT i nureiuKOieun mini ne pHl lor IB HTHM
w uuxtllK blJC UttSt VYai. IlCdl L and t-limori in f th. Tad Hen K. .,!. r!.
Oraham Memorial, by 1 o clock the day preced
ing publication. Fifty cents l .50c) each inch
and fraction.
experiences. At the time I visited
my grandmother."
"The only thing I don't like about
the University campus is its dirt
walks," Miss Hayaski said. "The sand
gets into my shoes and irritates my
feet. Other than that, I am amazed
by the beauty of the campus. I have
no desire to rave about the beauties
of my native state, Washington, as I
did at Sterling College," she laughed.
CRIL Endorses
Negro Delegates
The Council for Religion in Life
voted Saturday to endorse the action
taken by the Student Legislative As
sembly in inviting Negroes to the
1946 session, announced John Line
weaver, president of the CRIL.
In an official statement released for
publication, the CRIL declared,
"With the conviction that no as
sembly which is not truly representa
tive of all North Carolina students
can call itself the North Carolina Stu
dent Legislature; that to invite rep
resentation of all students at such an
assembly is the natural next step in
our progress, as students, toward dem
ocracy; that the students of this state
assembled at Raleigh conducted them
selves with dignity and intelligence,
and in the interest of justice and dem
ocracy, "We heartily concur in the action
taken by the Student Legislative As
sembly December 1 at Raleigh to in
vite Negro college representation at
next year's Assembly."
Playmakers Tryouts
All who are interested are invited
to try out for the Carolina Playmak
ers third major production in colla
boration with the music department,
The Chimes of Normandy." Tryouts
will be held in the Choral Room of Hill
Hall Wednesday at 4 and 7:30 p. m.
CICA
A short business meeting will pre
cede the Christmas party which is to
be given Wednesday night at 7 in
Graham Memorial by CICA. Yack
pictures will be taken at that time.
CLASSIFIED
Mountain, a center having around
10,000 Japanese and American born
Japanese, became a little town within
itself, with the residents busily con-
ributing to the war effort, she re-
ated.
When asked if she would like to go
to Japaa, Miss Hayaski said thought
fully, "Of course I would like to go
there. I visited in Japan once when
was a child, but naturally I don't
LOST Brown suede jacket, about a
week ago, probably in Lenoir.
Finder please notify H. Schlichter,
101 Everett.
m0i .w w;V
W00TTEN-M0ULT0N
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Serving North Carolina for 37 Years.
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