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d A "V.., t
PAGE TWO
THE DAILY TAB HEEL
TUESDAY, MAY 21,
o
mitt of
1940
imiroip9 War
A1D
A
O
E
bt Batlj tar Heel
The official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays,
and the Thanksgiving:, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Lntered as second
class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3,
1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year.
1939 Member 1940
Phsocided Golle6ciIe Press
MniilNTIO WO! NATIONAL ADVMTIWNa Wt
National Advertising Service, lac
College Publishers RepresenUth
420) Madison Ave New York. N. Y.
Ckicmo Bocroa lot Mmus turn Fmukmco
Don Bishop
Charles F. Barrett
William Ogburn
Larry Ferling
.Editor
.Managing Editor
Business Manager
..Circulation Manager
EditorialJJoard: Carroll McGaughey, Bill Snider, Louis Harris, Simons Roof,
Campbell Irving.
Columnists: Adrian Spies, Bill Stauber, Ben Roebuck, Walt Kleeman, Martha
Clampitt. f
' News Staff
News Editobs: Rush Hamrick, Orville Campbell, Fred Cazel
Assistant News Editors: Sylvan Meyer, Philip Carden, Dick Young.
Reporters: Ransom Austin. Bucky Harward. Grady Reagan, Martha Le-
Fevre, Zoe Young,' Vivian Gillespie, G. C McClure, Frank L, Johnson,!
r i J Til T7 T - J 1 T A TK TTnL- I
JOSepuine AHUOt J UlUl su. Xjiiiusxy, -l acvi xjxvaiu, uuu uuac.
Staff Photographer: Jack Mitchell.'
Sports Staff
Sports Editor: Bill Beerman.
Associate Sports Editor: Leonard Lobred.
Mtp.ttt Sports Editors: Harrv Hollinsrsworth. Ed Prizer.
Sports Reporters: Richard Morris, Jack Saunders, Yates Poteat, Earle
Hellen.
Circulation Staff
Assistant Manager: Jack Holland.
Office: Bradford McCuen, Larry Dale, D. T. Hall.
WAR PRESIDENT
Three Points for Peace
Business Staff
Assistant Business Manager: Bill Bruner.
LOCAL ADVERTISING Staff: Sinclair Jacobs, Bill Stanback, Jack Dube, Steve
Reiss, C. C. Brewer, Rufus Shelkoff, Morty Ulman, Bill Schwartz.
Durham Advertising Managers: Buck Osborne, Landon Roberts.
Collections Manacer: Phil Haigh.
Asst. Collections Manager: Leigh Wilson.
Collections Staff: Morty Golby, Mary Susan Robertson, Mary Ann Koonce.
Elinor Elliott, Millicent McKendry, Parke Staley, Grady Stevens.
Office Staff: Grace Rutledge, Sarah Nathan, Oren Oliver.
News: RUSH HAMRICK
For This Jssue:
Sports: HARRY HOLLINGSWORTH
WHAT I CAN DO TO KEEP VS OUT OF WAR
1. " Start chain letters to my friends and others I know.
2. Write my Congressman and Senator immediately a personal
letter expressing my desire for peace.
3. Write a letter to my newspaper explaining why I am for
peace.
4. Talk to my parents, family, and friends about peace.
5. Distribute peace literature, pamphlets, books, etc.
6. Study and read about the causes of war, costs of war, and who
wins a war.
7. Organize peace discussion groups.
8. Support the U. N. C. peace drive whole-heartedly.
HORIZONTAL
1 Pictured
U. S. A.
. president. .
12 To ward off.
13 Den.
14 Land right.'
'16 Bishop's scarf.
117 Irish.
! 18 Kind of bean.
; 19 Mexican
i dollar.
.20 Rubber wheel
j pad.
j21 Tendon.
,22 You and me.
23 Prong.
24 Pea sac.
25 To lade.
27Brad.
29 One in cards.
31 To entertain.
33 To slumber.
'34 Prevaricator.
35 Coarse file.
36 Murmurs as
a cat.
37 Markets.
33 Within.
39 To harden.
40 Fish.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
HaRDI anr - ISjHI
I'tmP Hi tT" . IKll UN I
Mgppr jNp a a :iqo v br
IHosc o p ml mt eqI
Eg op iPf e eRfIe dE
-JA P AL'CIR E N Arnt J P fl
1DfPIAIMlAlTtlsh-nPl
42 Large
continent.
44 Seaweed. x
45 To submit
47 To annihilate.
43 Spoken.
49 Pierces with
a knife.
50 He was a
3 Shaft part.
4 Coloring
; matter.
5 Liquid part
of fat
6 Gamekeeper.
7 Sage.
8 Wrath.
9Jirm.
professor and 10 God, Woden,
president. 11 Cognomen.
12 His great
or esteem de
creased at the 46 Electrified
close of his particle,
career. 47 Onager.
VERTICAL
1 Merchandise.
2 English
money.
15 He was a
Agj by training
I loi 20 Sesame.
21 Sun.
23 Cravat. -
24 Hole. i
25 Omnibus.
26 Snake.
28 Currency ,
bond.
29 Ozone. .
30Pussv.
I iSNl 32 Adult male.
uia wagon
track.
34 Musical note.
36 Garden
vegetable. ?
37 Blackbirds.
39 To move
sidewise.
41 Smeary.
42 Pertaining
to air.
43 Slovak..
44 Person J
opposed.
(Continued from first page)
the crushing peace of Vers
armpasPTYiAntT- mnt.ivat.PYt hxr fpnr rrf flip errmxrKh nf from a .
-rr rf - o fcxuc ueiuucracies in P,.
crush forever
created fascism through the crushing peace of Versailles and th
PS in T
and especially in view of the present British and French nlno "roP
- X" W
12 ; ZjILZZZ t"" ls
b p g" :
rr i7 v
m I I 1 1 1 I I Jn2Jru
ZMIOLWXYZMU
Don't Pronounce It . . .
Read It ... .
By ORVILLE CAMPBELL
Mr. Carolina and his girl
If you're startled out of your wits in
the grill by hearing a girl hoarsely
yell, "Timber!" There's no doubt
about it. She's Jane Moody . . . If
he's what some call the University
problem child yet he outshines all
those who talk about him, he's Bill
Stauber. . . If you pull in a certain
service station in Chapel Hill, see a
nice young chap come toward your
car, he's the ace football center Bob
Don't Let This Thing Happen!
All over the country the student peace movement is growing. A
letter from Dartmouth tells us that over a thousand students there
wrote a letter to President Roosevelt protesting against the im
plication in his speech to the Pan-American Scientific Congress that
American entrance into the war may be necessary to preserve "our
" culture, our freedom, and our civilization." The letter says, "We
do not believe that the present European war can be simplified into
a conflict between good and evil, construction and destruction, as smith. . . if he suddenly pulls a har-
you have indicated. We realize that during the war America must
be 'the guardian of Western culture, the protector of Christian
cilization.' However, we do not feel that American intervention in
the European war will aid in any way the preservation of Western
culture and democracy. We feel, on the contrary, that our duty
today is to preserve and construct at home those liberties and cul
tural values which would undoubtedly be lost if we too went to
war. We believe that the students of America want peace and de
mocracy here, if it cannot be kept abroad."
Other schools California, Harvard, Chicago, New York Uni
versity, and many of the religious denominational schools re
putting on drives to keep us out of war. These students who fight
against war will be praised as heroes twenty-five years hence, when
the next war may be blowing up, just as those who fought against
the last war are praised today. Already the peace advocates are
running into the unreasoned sadism and fury of bloodthirsty mob
and war spirit. The brutal and unreasoning element in man, is
beginning to show itself even on this campus. Many of the posters
put up by the peace group have been torn down. But the peace
groups know that they are many times more powerful than they
were 20 years ago, and they know that the vast majority of Ameri
can people sincerely want peace.
Ihere is nothing innately bad about man. Reared in a culture
of boredom and apathy, those students who thirst for war are an
element who should be pitied and treated reasonably. Life is not
interesting enough to them ; they must turn to war and death. But
for those who believe that the struggle to create a better world,
and even to maintain the good that we already have, is sufficient
to make life worth living, peace is the only goal possible. . These
"have fought evil, and they know that the evil today is on the side
of war.
Meanwhile that in man which rebels against the useless horror
and waste of war holds firm. The pathetic thing about those stu
dents who are beating their chests and thinking of themselves in
glory is the thing that will happen when they learn the cold me
chanics pf war, when their lives are measured up against so many
communications wires, so many guns, so much ammunition ; when
they are dropped behind enemy lines without a chance of survival ;
when they fall screaming under a monster tank, or feel the horror
of mustard gas filling their lungs' with blood Those who return,
perhaps sixty per cent, perhaps less, with no eyes, no jaws, noses
shot off, genitals blown off by sharpnel, without arms and legs,
and with their whole outlook on life warped forever by a hontor
which cannot be repeated those will not want war any more. But
monica out of his pocket during a
lull at a party and starts playing it,
he's Dean House. . . If she greets you
with a smile and always says hello
as if she means it, it's not "Little
Lady Make Believe." There is such
a person in Marjorie Johnston.
If he possesses a most unassuming
attitude yet when you meet him it's
hard to believe, because he is really
one of the finest fellows in the world,
he's Andy Gennett, Co-Captain of the
boxing team. . . If he's one of the
nicest young fellows in school, al
ways makes the honor roll, yet never
dates, more than likely he's Herman
Lawson ... If he's fiv efeet eight, is
seen with Bill Ogburn quite a bit, and
dates a cute girl (and how) at WC,
he's Carl Young Dodge and all. . .
If she asks the head waitress for
some mustard for her ham sandwich,
she's Alice Murdock. . . If she has the
most sex appeal of any girl on the
campus, she's Frances ' Gibson.
If he is jitterbugginor on the dance I
floor and looks grown up enough to
know better, he's Bucky Harward. . .
If you never see one without the other,
yet both are plenty cute, could be
Chuck Hines and Jane Putnam. . .
If she 'never misses a Carolina dance,
knows boys from Maine to California,
and has personality plus, she's Ellen
Self of Asheville. . . If you ask him
what his favorite joke is and he
shocks you out of your shoes with
his .answer, he's Mack Hobson. . . If
he's tall, has a good line and gets
along with everybody, t he's Morris
Rosenberg-, former managing editor of
his rag.
Thingamabobs: Another
Senior is gone . . . the orchestra was
swell . . . that is, when they decided
to play . . . there were new faces . . .
new smiles . . . everyone was in a
happy spirit ... old imports were
back greeting old friends ... new im
ports tried their best to make a hit.
. . . and most of them did. . . Ashe
ville evidently had the cutest imports,
maybe ... it was wonderful . . . while
twiddling my thumbs between classes,
I had a long talk with Jack Lynch . . .
he's all aglow over the yearbook this
year . . . says he's glad it's over . . .
hopes the students will like it . . .
have you ever noticed the friently at
titude of some people and the unfriend.
ly attitude of others . . . what a dif
ference a few weeks make ... it
seems only yesterday that the quarter
started! . . . yet in a couple of weeks
another year will be gone . . . hard
to believe don't you think, or do you
. . life at Carolina . . . just one beer
party after another.
Quotable quotes: Said Kat Line-
back: "Freddie' must be a sureeon.
He keeps cutting so many classes."
He's not the only one. Seems to me
they are about 3,000 surgeons on our
campus. . .
After four years of stag life Bill
Stauber finally had a date for the Se
nior dance figure last night. From
the looks of the girls it was well worth
waiting for. Evidently Mr. Stauber
will no longer use the phrase, "Stag
the trerman people if the Allies are victorious. Lord Lothian c,m r
that "The basic conditions of the post-war world will be settled by the
tion of power, by the fact of where the preponderant power will lie6 T'
time when the cease-fire sounds." Lord Duff Cooper has said, "We
ing the German people." Such plans make inevitable a recurrence f'
present catastrophe a generation hence. Have we learned nothing
history? rom
Certainly we must regard England's claim to a "moral" struffele
unblushing in view of the fact that today they are using indentured lab
Africa to mine gold for the war; today they are bombing innocent civil1"
in Indian towns; today they are denying democracy to the -370.000 nnn rJ3?
of India, or even dominion status; today they are pursuing with incr
vigor their persecution of the Irish. France's claim is equally dubious Am
other things she has expelled over 70 deputies from the Chamber of n.,??
avi vvoi6 vue wax. umcwiae iue ciaim uj aeiense oi tne small nation-
IS
absurd coming from the countries which refused
Austria, Czechoslovakia, or Albania. Never mistake it, the Real Issu
Europe Is Imperialism! & - m
III. This Is How America Can Stay at Home
-How can we stay out of war? Only by opposing any and every step which
will lead to war. Since the Senate's Nye committee discovered that financial
involvement was the sure road to military involvement, we must prevent the
dynamism wfcich operated in the World war from repeating itself. This means
that we must oppose repeal of the Johnson Act, sale of government planes to
belligerents, public or private loans or credits to belligerents, sendin? And
ean ships to belligerent waters, and aid of any kind to either bellipprpnf t
we yield on any of these points, we are on the road to war. A man
says, "I'm for peace but I want to aid the Allies" is not for peace. That an
regardless of his intentions, is for war, because if history shows anvthw d
shows that this policy leads straight to war. We must also oppose unreason
able "defense" appropriations. The production of vast armaments has i
ways led to their use. Military and naval experts, who are not in servi
are therefore impartial, tell us that we already have a sufficient naw
other defense adequately to protect our shores against any feasible combina
tion ot powers. Why, then, are we increasing our armaments ? Blind faith
in the President is not a sufficient answer, for his desire to aid the A Hip, ,-c
generally suspected, and his proposal is not, as he calls it, a "defense" pro
gram. He is merely seizing public alarms to boost his pet project, big arms
and the desire to save the world.
There is no reason for us to be excited. What has happened in Europe could
have been foreseen six months ago. It is not hysterical fears and naniV tW
will enable us to solve our problems, but unexcited, level-headed analysis. Let
students, who must bear the chief brunt of war if it comes, fleht in the mrw
noble cause of building democracy where we can really do some good, here at
home!
New Regime
(Continued from first page)
that I am."
Pet peeve: People who attend vari
ous programs on the campus, know
ing before they go what type of pro
gram is being held. . Yet, when the
program starts they get up and leave
just to attract attention. . . More could
follow, but I doubt if you've read this
far.
Motorcade
(Continued from first page)
ment" which are a challenge to new
officers.
Jane McMaster, new Woman's As
sociation head, was introduced by
Melville Corbett, retiring. "There is
strength, numbers and concentrated
power for coeds in the Woman's As
sociation," Miss McMaster declared,
outlining the nature of problems en
countered by coeds at the University.
She added students must continue to
develop and enlarge self-government
responsibilities.
Zeta Psi fraternity for the second
successive time received the DKE
trophy for excellence in fraternity
scholarship and athletics. Presented
annually, the award was given by
Ken Royal, former chapter president.
Don Nicholson, who has combined
swimming, football and baseball with
a y4.5 scholastic average, won the
Grail cup for the outstanding fresh
man in scholarship and athletics.
Eleven Grail Awards, given by dele
gata Bill Dees, were presented to ath
letes 'with the highest scholastic
average in each respective sport. They
were as follows: Frank Cuneo, basket
ball; Charles Tillett, wrestling;
Charlie Rider, tennis; Dave Morrison,
track; Holt Allen, cross country; Neil
Herring, golf; Lamar Gudger, swim
ming; Ed Dickerson, boxing;- and
George, Kalston took the award for
both baseball and football. This is the
second year Dickerson has taken the
trophy in boxing.
r..vi:r tt
jruuncauons union awards were
given the following workers for serv
ice on publications: Bill Allen, Charles
Barrett, J. N. Callahan, Fred Cazel,
John Diffendal, Doris Goerch, Phil
Heigh, Martin Harmon. Gip Kimball,
today
bathing at the beach, golf, games,
swimming, badminton, horseback rid
ing, dancing, all forms of resort
recreation.
Celebrities Select "Myrtle Mermaid"
A "Myrtle Mermaid" will be chosen
from among the girls attending the
affair who will be judged by the many
celebrities invited as special guests.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank P. Graham, Gov
ernor and Mrs. Clyde R. Hoey, and
Junior-1 Governor and Mrs. Burnett R. May-
by then, a young and handsome generation, like ours, will have
grown up.
IF YOU DON'T WANT THIS TO HAPPEN, SUPPORT THE
PEACE DRIVE. STUDENTS CAN BE HEARD. LET'S LIFT
OUR VOICES TO WASHINGTON! LET'S KEEP OUT OF EU
ROPE'S WAR!
bank of South Carolina head the list
of outstanding persons journeying to
the low country for the weekend.
Nights will be occupied with roll
ing waves in the moonlight, dancing
and a banquet at the beautiful Ocean
Forest hotel, which will act as host,
for the visitors. Charlie Wood's band
will supply jnusic for the dances.
The entire weekend will be based on
the "dutch" system with the girls up
holding their share of the expenses.
All students who are planning to
drive cars in the motorcade will be
paid two dollars for each passenger,
including himself, that he transports
to the beach. The blanket' price of
$8.50 includes transportation, banquet,
picnic, sightseeing tours, and entitles
the holder to half price tickets into all
the amusements on the boardwalk.
Tickets may be obtained at Ledbet-ter-Pickard's,
the YMCA office, all
dorm presidents and fraternity presi-i
dents. '
1:30 DTH sports staff meets in of
fice. 2:00 Coed baseball. "
Coed archery.
3:00 Coed badminton.
4:00 Coed baseball.
Cheerleaders work out on
Emerson field. Squad will be
chosen by Friday.
5:00 Coed golf.
7:00 Vespers in Gerrard hall.
DeMolays meet in 211 Graham
Memorial.
7:15 Special Hillel cabinet meeting
in Grail room of Graham Me
morial. 7:30 Town Boys Association meets
in Gerrard hall.
Sophomore class executive com
mittee meets.
8:30 CPU presents Lloyd C. Stark.
Leonard Lobred, Steve Langfeld, T.
Nash, Ed Rankin, Ben Roebuck, Bill
Snider, Rufus Shellkoff, Bill Schwartz,
W. G. Stevens, Norman Stockton,
John Thorpe, Charlie Tillett, N. B.
Ullman, Mickey Warren, Gene Wil
liams, Mary Jane Yeatman, Rush Ham
rick, Lou Harris, Harry Hollings
worth, Mary Anne Koonce and Bill
Karesh.
Following members of the PU board
will recpivp. Icpvs fnr thpir work: E"
Rankin, president; Don Bishop, treas
urer; Ed Megson, secretary; and G. P-
Horner, faculty adviser.
Send the Daily Tar Heel home-
ii ii
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