Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 19, 1940, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAB TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, im PTFTKl Batlp tar Z)tti The ofScial newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, -where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanks giving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post cfke at Chapel HiIT,N. C, under act of March 3, 1S79. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. 1939 Member 1940 Phsocided GoUe&cde Press SPEED FLYER 1 Gxoocl Mlornin By Orrille Campbell Don Bishop : Chjleixs Baszztt WM. W. ESUKES j Joseph E. Zattoun Associate Ecrros: BUI Snider. Editorial Board: Louis 4 Harris, National Adverfrrir Service, Ice 420 Maomom Ave . NXWYCMUC.N.Y. Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Back Simons Roof, George Simpson, . Timberlake, Orville Campbell. - -Columnists: Adrian Spies,' Martha Clampitt, Ralph Bowman. Feature Board: Campbell Irving, Jim McEwen, Lee Roy Thompson, Shir ley Hobbs, Marion Lippincott, Faye Riley, Constance Mason. Cmr Editors: Fred Cazel. Rush Hamrick. Night Editors: Philip Carden, Sylvan Meyer, Dick Young. -Assistant;-Bob Hoke. ' - Wire Editor: Mary CaldwelL , Reporters: Ransom Austin, Bucky Harward, Grady Reagan, Vivian Gil lespie, Josephine Andoe, Sara . Sheppard, Paul Komisaruk, Dixon Richardson, Ernest Frankel, Baxter McNeer, Elsie Lyon. Staff Photographer: Jack MitcheU. Sports Editor: Leonard Lobred. Night Sports Editors: Harry HoUingsworth, Ed Prizer, G. C. McClure. Sports Reporters: Jack Saunders, Ben Snyder, Steve Reiss, Mark Garner, Fred McCoy, Bob Weinberg. Local advertising Managers: Bill Schwartz, . Morty Ulman. Durham Representatives: Sinclair Jacobs, Landon Roberts. Local Assistants: Bill Stanback, Jack Dube, Jim Loeb, Ditzi Buice, John Neal,' Isidore Mininsohn, Jimmy Norris, Marvin Rosen. x Collections Manager: Leigh Wilson. Collections: Morty Golby, Mary Bowen, Elinor Elliott, Millicent Mc- Kendry, Rose Lefkowitz, Zena Schwartz. . Office Manager: Jack Holland. Office Assistants: Grace Rutledge, Sarah Nathan. Circulation Office Staff: Brad McCuen, Henry Zaytoun, Stephen Piller, Richard Baron, Cornelia Bass. HORIZONTAL, 1,7 Pictured aviator racer. 12 Largest toad. 13 Star-shaped flower. IS Having the form of oars. . 17 To rot flax. 18 Hand cover. 19 Toupee. 20 Wagers. 21 Flaxen fabric. 22 Coin slit. t 24 While. 25 Relies. 3 27 Toward. 28 Chinese people.. 30 Garment set. 33 Ring catches. 34 He started Answer lo Previous Puzzle ,UAjX W jNfY JTjQNfS RErNrrtS rr NUV, Ik OR R H LfO;NEUB-AjKfE AJN'G'BSi PlEIA SlaSrM ill 44 Printer's measure. 45 Mine shaft . hut.- 4SHalf barrels. 43 Blood money. as 51 To sketch. a flyer. 35 Not bright. 36 Barracudo. 37 Either. . 39 Tone B. 40 Skirt edge. 41 Doctor. 42 To seize in arrest. 53 Fodder pit 54 Ethical. 58 Indian - buffalo. 58 His honorary military title. 11 Railway 59 He is the 14 To slide. of present day 15 Opposed to air racers. odd. VESTICAL, lSon gooV 2 Monsters. 3 Tallow fat. 4 Feline animals. 5 Bird of prey. 6 Rock. 7 Inclinations. 8 Lines. 9 Brad. 10 Rye fungus. 20 He was a ' observer in France. 23 Agony. 25 To send away. 26 To hang. 28 Thick shrub. 29 Genus of bees. 31 Newspaper . paragraph. 32 Hush! 38 Pronoun. 38 Proportion. 41 Football play periods. 43 Blunder. 45 Anxiety. 47 To hoot. 48 Mountain pass. 49 Railroad. 50 Simpleton. 52 Rodent. 53 South Carolina. 54 Myself 55 Note in scale. 57 And. For This Issue: News: DICK YOUNG Sports: ED PRIZER 1 2 -pvft t 15 I ET1 17 j 18 9 1Q II YT " 1514 . 15 17 " 18 19" 20 2T " 22 "25 - - It X. Ta - rssr, - ;5 .... H? P SI 52; ""t, 53 51 ' 55 W p f I 1 11 1 I S9 1 1 1 1 Post mortems of a happy week end: Bear Wolf and the University of North Carolina Tar Heels went Wading Saturday afternoon in Ke- nan stadium. From Monday until Thursday the entire stu dent body and people - through out the state were willing to bet money and give odds it would bf a Wading game. But not the type they say. The field was dry. Only one team was Wading. The Tar Heels ... some one remarked after the game that: V As Fans poured into Kenan Stadium it was possible to buy tickets for 10 cents.' As fans If te the game, those who'd paid the regular price of $2.75 were feeling guilty of having cheated the athletic officials of Carolina and Duke. . . . Carolina students showed the finest spirit ever to be seen in Kenan stad ium. It made old grads want to re-enter school here, as freshmen. There was an old gentleman on the campus after the game who said he was 80 years old. Said that he had experienced many happy mo ments in the past, but none eampar ed with the two hours he had spent watching the game.' . . . After the game we were in the Carolina dress ing room. Lalanne was smiling as if he had fulfilled a life long ambi tion. The coaches were all smiles too. The scrubs were pounding the varsity players on the .backs, fath ers of many of the Carolina players were there. They too felt the vic tory, were proud of their sons, and knew they were the finest bunch of boys in the land. . . . Then there was the drunk who was telling "every "12th Man" Was There On Saturday afternoon, a crowd of over 40,000 specta- .... t tors in Kenan stadium wit - nessed one of tHe greatest demonstrations of school spirit in the .history 'of southern football. Underdog from the'. start, the Carolina football team played a superior brand of football from the start. Yet, what gave the team that extra push onward to victory was the high emotional will" to win. In the stands, the student body refused to see the team lose. During the first quarter, when one bad break after an other came, to the Tar Heels, the cry of an underdog un willing to go down to defeat was raised. Gradually, as the complexion of the game changed, the steady surge of cheers and determination swept forward. At half time, when the Dukes had a three-point lead, the students still felt that the. worst was over and the best was yet to come. After an ex change of luck, Carolina stopped Duke on its own 25 yard line, and the home-team stands began to mount to a pitch of frenzy. As first down after first down was rolled up, and as Lalanne led the club by air and ground to pay dirt ter ritory, the twelfth man was ' giving his all. Cries of "Go, go, go !", "Our team is red hot beat Duke" beat a steady tempo for the team to follow. Even when Duke took time out when we were on their 10 yard line, the deafening tu mult carried on. When the score was made, the students knew that it was to be a Care lina victory. , Feeling ran high last Satur day in Kenan stadium,-driving in back of the players on the field. It was Carolina spirit sincere and pure. Tfiey didn't need cheerleaders to whip up a yell for the team last Satur day. But with Nelson, Rumsey: and Company leading the en thusiasm, Carolina - cheering body that the last time he saw Dake get dunked he had to travel sgi miles. This time he came only 12. but he would have come 12,000. A Carolina coed who lost $5.00 beJ ting on Duke paid off all her bets b pennies. ... The amazed looks on the faces of the Duke students as they left the game. . , - The victory was much sweeter than it would have been last year. The Grail dance Saturday night was much different from the dance after the last Duke-Carolina game. It was much better, and in case you've for gotten Larry Clinton was playing at last year's dances. . . . Something else was noticeable. People who had not spoken for years broke down down and hugged one another. It was a day for the suckers. You know, suckers always bet on the underdog. Carohna was the under dog and the sucker won. Suckers always have to pay big prices for tickets. They got them for practical ly nothing Saturday. Clipped: "What happened during the closing minutes of the game more than made up for the game of drop-the-hankerchief the officials played during the first quarter. For a time it looked like a meeting of the Orange County Hiking and Debating Club, as the officials would rule on way and trot daintily down the field with the ball only to get where they were going, have a bit of debate and then trot somewhere else with the balL All the trotting was very tiring on the players". ... At;the start of the season Wallace Wae told reporters this was the finest Duke team that he had ever coached. Friday night at the Duke pep rally he repeated the same statement, and added his team was among the best in the nation this year. I agree with him. was invincible. It was a victory-starved student body that didn't know whatitwas to say iose that fought shoulder to shoul der with the team down . on the field. L. H. Eend Ail Ear By Louis Harris Letters To The Editor Scalpers Scalped Next to our delight at see , ing Duke's football team take its beating- comes our , ex treme pleasure on learning that ticket scalpers suffered an even worse shellacking. It was heartening to see them tearfully selling the usually valuable pasteboards at 50 cents725 cents, even a nicked each. - The demand for Duke-Carolina tickets far exceeds the supply each year, whether the game is held in the Duke stad iumcapacity 50,000 or in Kenan stadium capacity 41,000i The athletic' associa tions of the universities make every effort to sell the tickets to legitimate purchasers only. Despite their endeavors, how ever, scalpers invariably ob tain tickets at face value $2.75 . this year and sell them for prices ranging up to $15 or more. It's too bad that many an otherwise innocent young stu dent intent upon picking up a little pocket change- by scalping a half dozen or so tickets had to be stung just like his professional brethren. But when the gods rain justice they don't respect youth. There were too many North Carolina citizens who a few weeks ago wanted to purchase tickets at regular rates for any pity to be wast ed on the scalpers who, while denying these, persons the tickets they sought, robbed themselves of any'profit at all. Good Lack to "H" "H" dormitory has made a significant step forward in ar ranging a dormitory house party dance for Friday night, and banquet, movie and party in Graham Memorial on Sat- day night, December 6 and 7. Any such move taken to equalize social opportunities " NIPPED IN THE BUD (Part II) Last Friday this column deplored the fact that neither the CPU nor the IRC had learned the real lesson from their recent-falling out and their subsequent falling back in line. We said that the mission of both or ganizations was to help acquaint the campus with state, national, and international problems through as many channels as are possible. What we were driving at in Nip ped in the' Bud (Part I) was that both the IRC and the CPU failed to see that there are worlds of oppor tunities for moving forward in their purpose of bringing world affairs to light on the campus. Booking up our conviction that to criticize anything without offering a better alternative is a poor excuse for even lip service, today we came forth with some con crete suggestions for both organi zations. We must first concede that both organizations have attempted to scratch the surface of this matter of keeping the campus on its toes as far as national events are concerned. The CPU held a poll early in the year, and the IRC has announced that it would have quiz programs during the winter quarter. These are encouraging. Here are a few suggestions that might make both organizations real working bodies, and not merely glamour-courting outfit The main new idea we have to put forth this morning is that a bulletin, attractive and invigorating, be printed every week showing the students how events in Washington, Raleigh, and on the foreign scene affect the stu dents here on the campus. It would not be editorial irPnature, but would merely point out that as students about to be responsible citizens in our communities after graduation we must find out how our governments are being run. This news-analysis sheet would be' dis tributed to all the students in what ever way the organization felt would be most effective. A second suggestion we have to make is that forums or clinics be held, at which some vital current is sue is raised or some agency or part of our government under fire is dealt with. These could be supplemented by March of Time films, and many other motion pictures thatare made daily on current affairs. ' These' fourms might be led by guest speakers, professors, or even students themselves. The leaders would first put forth the factual data on the subject, and then would ask for opinion. To liven these pro grams up, a radio hook-up could be arranged to broadcast the students' views as they express them, .f We have thrown out just two sug . gestions for the CPU and the IRC to think about. There are many others are members of both organi zations can come across upon the application of a little brain tissue. ? Our main plea to these two clubs is that they should not stop at mere-, ly presenting speakers. They must realize that the field of educating the campus to current events is end less. . And we might add, that when we see the foundation of what we call our way of life being shaken in its cracked granite bed, we can see that the only way we can patch up the splits is to. become aware of every move that we as a people make, both individually and collectively. We've got to watch the Washing- ' ton merry-go-round today, or we are liable to wake up some fine morning and discover that it has all whirled away from under our nice, soft beds. LEGISLATURE (Continued from first page) vestigating last year's records they had discovered the following: tipping reported amounted to $24.75; 92 meals had cost $90.49; a valet service item of $9.33 was included; and the total cost amounted to more than $435. Long said that he had been elected to the council purely on politics, since he had never attended a debate at Carolina, and he intimated that his nomination by the University party Approves Editorial Campaign 1 November 14, 1940. To the Editor, Dear Sir: Your leading editorial this -morning gave hope that at last: the Daily. Tar Heel may become a definite and strong influence on the campus. I believe that the Daily Tab Heel has low-rated itself and consequently; has been of little in fluence because it has not taken a definite stand against those forces that disgrace and undermine the University. It has treated rowdyism and even theft as if they were harm less, boyish pranks, to be mildly re proved with, perhaps, a slap on the wrist. The outbreak of muckerism which rightly met your disapproval was mild compared to other orgies that have occurred during the past two t years. It lasted perhaps fifteen minutes; one that I remember last ed for over an hour and involved four times as many students as the one on, Tuesday night. Yet the Daily Tar Heel had no strong, if any, condemnation for it. Nor is the rottenness confined 'to the lower quadrangle. Only a few days ago a window of a dormitory in the west ern part of the campus spewed a stream of profane obscenity that, except for the fact that only five students were in the room, rivaled anything that the lower quadrangle could produce. One of the students was a senior. Well, I think the point is clear. Thanks for this morning. Yours sincerely, " George McKie. Worth Mepeatin WORTH REPEATING Thus for minute after minute these boys stood on their ground against avalanches of fresh talent so abundant on "the Duke bench, struggling on to sheer exhaustion, refusing to taste the ashes of de feat, manfully giving blow for blow and, at the dramatic and phenome nal end of this grimly bitter and colossal contest, emerging with the aureole of clean, sure, unquestion ed victory wreathing their brows. They are the talk and toast of this town, and the State these stur dy and stalwart veterans of the 1940 register of the Tar Heels! They have written into the long, and proudful traditions of Carolina an unexampled display of whatever it is in mortal man"that can change the promise, of defeat into the real ity of victory and convert the ordi nary into the invincible under the aura of inspiration. Charlotte Observer. speaking time be limited in all future resentatives of the organization p sessionsi that roll call votes be made-posing the budget explained the items; by saying yes and no, rather than yea when records in Student Activities and nay "to avoid confusion," and Auditor Clyde Shaw's office were ex that written excuses be required of s : steering committee, which he termed .f. order a hearing w., Md. a group of "empire, builders," travel expense item, the V THIS WEEK'S BOOK SPECIAL: "The World's Great Letters" BULL'S HEAD BOOKSHOP for all students of the Univer sity should be , encouraged. Success' to "H" in its pioneer houseparty. i.. a The time binit proposal was killed -iT- ... TV been a nolitical exnerimpnt utners were adopted. . He brought this out to emphasize Bef(re reporting the budgets last PP"01 for printing and adver that his judgment of the value of the Sbt, Garland explained the finance for subsidizing related ac- council's work was more detached conMittee's procedure in making its tivities came in for most of the dis- than that of the average coundl mem- recommenaations. First, he said, rep- cuss ion last niht i uer. xie saiu mat aiinougn last years expenses were out of proportion to the value derived by the student body, debating "holds a definite place of value" at Carolina, and the council's program this year was designed to give the student more nearly "his forty cents worth." He said ha approved the proposed bill to reduce the council's fee from 50 cents to 40 cents. (This bill was tabled after argument on the budget had drawn out the session for two and a half hours). The amended budget - was" passed unanimously by the 36 members pres ent. The student government and Yackety Yack budgets were also passed unanimously without revision after short periods of discussion. " Sam Leager, reporting as chairman of the rules committee, proposed that V Lloyd Owner Carolina PHARMACY The Rexall Drag Store Phone 6141 155 E. Franklin St.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 19, 1940, edition 1
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