Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 12, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1941 Page two THE DAILY TAR HEEL -! The official newspaper of the Carolina Publication Union of the Unirersitj cf North Carolina at Chapel HOI, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second, class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C under act of March 2, 1879. Subscription price, SZJOO for the college year. 1940 Mrmbrr 1941 Pbsociafed GciG&Q Press ORVILLE CAMPBELL SYLVAN MEYER WILLIAM SCHWARTZ HENRY ZAYTOUN National Advertising Service, kx. CUUtM "tAliibmJUprtmUti A2Q Maomon Ave. New YcmK. N.Y. Editor Managing Editor Btuints Manager Acting Circulation Manager Associate Editcs: Louis Harris. Euitcbial Board: Bucky Harward, Mac Norwood, Henry Moll, Bill Seeman, Bill Peete. Columnists: Elsie Lyon. FzATUBE Boakd: Marion Lippincott, Richard Adler, Billy Pearson, M. Bu chanan, III, Hilah Ruth Mayer. " Niwa Editors: Bob Hoke. Paul Komisaruk. Ernie FrankeL Assistant News: Hayden Carruth, A. D. Curne. By Th Staff Exporters: Jimmy Wallace, Billy Webb", Larry Dale, Charles Kessler, Burke Shipley, Elton Edwards, Mike Beam, Walter Klein, Westy Fenhagen, uerra amnn. Photograph eh: Hugh Morton. Assistant Photographers: Tyler Nourse, Carl Bishopric Sports Editor: Harry Hollingsworth. Night Sports Editors: Earle Hellen. Mark Garner, Horace Carter. Sports Reporters: Ben Snyder, Bill Woestendiek, Bob Jones, Jean Beeks. Advertising Managers: Jack Dube, Bill Stanback, Ditzi Buice. Durham Representattves: Msrvin Rosen, Bob Bettman. Local Advertising Staff: Jimmy Norris, Buddy Cummins, Richard .Wise berg, Betty Booker, Bill Collie, Jack Warner, Stan Legum. Office Staff: Bob Crews, Eleanor Soule, Jeanne Hermann, Bob Covington. Asst. Circulation Manager: Joe Felmet. Circulation Staff: Jules Varady, Larry Goldrich, Lois Ann Markwardt. OUT OF THE DARKNESS For Tki litue: News: HAYDEN CARRUTH Sports; HORACE CARTER 9 Duke Game Causes Violations We had the wound of that 45 cali bre bullet that was fired at us yes terday, fixed at the infirmary so here we are again. ' The best thing to do we oecidea, was to build a steel lined room in which to compose this column everyday. Then and only then will we again risk our neck in exposing "student Kane." After being shot in the shoulder just as we were about to write his name, we hope you understand our position. Soon we will be sufficiently armored to try a gain. Please wait! I ! O Arty Fisher was wandering through the Arboretum communing with na ture and picking flowers for his room mate when he over heard the following conversation. "Are you cold dear," said the boy. "Why yes, darling I am a bit cold," answered the girl. "Here take my coat." "Oh thank you." "Darling, would you mind if I kissed you?" asked the boy. "Not tonight, Bill." "0. K. then give me back my coat." (Hey Bill, nice going). - ACROSS ARBORETUM SABOTAGE S USD' t Lock (XrtilD t Derides 14 Oirr toMtm 15 Herada city Assign IT Timidly careful 3 Boundary 31 PUjIe marblaa 23 Talk tirtlaly (slant) 94 Plaa 23 The (Genua S Fish errt 2 Wild tus - 30 Uke 31 Adoleaeene (eoLI 33 Slandered (alanf) 34 Ooddea cf dawa 37 EhOWT 3 Greek letter 44 School-book 43 Glow innate) 43 Speed 44 Perform 4 That vhlea vmfts In water 44 Wire mcMor 47 Tower 49 Wireless 1 Opposite 4 mr S3 Consumer Enclosure 4 Plfbtiat flyer . 67 Barrier IS Waters 1 email ftraara 3 Girl's name By LABS UOSSXJ A.VSWES TO rEYftOli TVtZLB J ftower cweocc 4 Deny lobsoletei Fiction i castaway 4 Lcng tsh m 1 Orer-proud exsoa SMirq $HpjPgi JME Ais h-i eIr r:sl ; w: Mikl i Lit iTf jak : p py3s j s 1 I lu sfTTTg T k LfepMR TfLlyl mimmmm S EpirlU Yes iGermaai - 19 Larfe tree . y H primary 13 Papal coart'-.-?- , 13 Pe . is Goddess of rraZa it Greek poetess - . S3 Donkey's cry 37 Terminated SS Printer's bm8 31 Child ,, . - - v 33 Wiser - 34 Devour v tS Foolish 47 Penetrate 99 Undiluted . 79 In from outside 71 Recipient of money 73 Arracres 73 examination DOWN 1 Fleet of warships 3 Vassals ?r and 33 Leather btB&sg 40 Make lac 41 Unbleaened 43 Rif for small yeaaal 43 River (Spanisnl 45 Moist 44 One drop 48 Sun fod 50 Railway stations , 51 Skims alone 53 Eel-eatchlns basket 54 Falls from sky 6 Make up for 7 Bavin depth - 55 Girl's name " SO Large i life (dial) 42 Point of land -4 Scotch river :'- . 64 Feline 65 Concern int Music By Brad MeCuen M all In bui capacity as chiefs of Uni- There is a sphere of relationship that is covered by the Campus Code which is sometimes overlooked by the Carolina students on the eve of the Duke irame. It is a code of relationship that is just versity inter-relations we were flit as important as the relations between Carolina students. We live "ounbi.tDufrhs1 d Cjust let us under tm elastic system of moral,- social, and ethical standards on "VJ AnnXkwardrande bS! this campus and happily so. Rather than attemptmg to set forth chel Dalton to be in the do's and don'ts of conduct, we have accepted the criteria of gen-'.'JJJ?- IN Durham court at elev tlemanly. conduct to govern our relations with each other. But it i C0URT en o'clock on Thursday, must be remembered that this criteria apphes to our relations with 1 What happened to the car that side ii i:.:.j.4 ;. . : swipea yougiris, or is inai a aeep uuiers as wen. viiu uiexem ucs auuij. secret. We'd plead guilty if we were, you but then you were only witnesses. Special notice is given to the judge at the court where Ann and Rachel PAST RECORDS In the past, unfortunately, it has too often been the practice of students from Duke and Carolina to cover the ten miles for vandal ism. Arts nf rashness and nnthouf?htfulness are Tiernetuated in the -j. i . . , . , , . have to appear. THESE TWO GIRLS spirit of rivalry that would not be accepted m the community that . ARE WElL liked BY OUR FOOT- we as students are to compose after our college BALL team. This is iust in case , careers are completed. We can remember too well you had made any bets on Duke, fool- the paintincr episodes and the destruction of prop- ish as that was to begin with. ' . erty that have been done in the name of school spirit. But this is not the kind of spirit that we as Carolina men profess or express. It is a misguided spirit of wanton practices that tears down all the ideology of gentlemanly conduct under which we live. This is no minor thing. The repercussions from some of our actions have been felt throughout the state that lends her name to this school. And members of this institution must cherish and protect that name and honor. It has been reported to the Daily Tar Heel that a group of Caro lina students went over to Duke Monday night and did some dam age to the Duke stadium in the form of painting. Yesterday after noon we talked to several Duke leaders. The editor of the Duke We can't offer any suggestions to help national defense as do the moguls in the army, nor can we help vital sta tistics as does the stork, but we make just one little suggestion. Mr. 1 I4 I I4 I 11 I7 I3 I H l 11 V"1- " V ". w - & -,-". -:,' :- " (s T" W , " 70 II II I 111 III I II pkr. ay UaUe4 i'catars ntdicat. lac NOW FRIENDS By Jack Dube V CORRECTION: In last Sunday's column there was an oramission of the word "not. The item on Al Donahue should have read as follows: Contrary to a rumor circulating on the campus, Al Donahue has not reorganized his orchestra. The proof of this state ment is given in METRONOME in a copyrighted story. The band is not a new one by any means. HOT NOTES: Freddy Johnson and his : band played the Home-coming t William & Mary. ... Dave Mason, Bob Hartsell, Cecil McClees, Bob Hicks, Jack Eimel, and the Dixie Debs, all now with the Dean Hudson band, have been under Freddy's baton at one time or another. ... Tommy Tucker was not the lad that introduced "I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire" as he would have you believe on the air. Harlan Leonard, leader of an out-of-the-world colored band, introduced and recorded the song on Bluebird almost two years ago. . . . Bunny Berigan brought his new or chestra to State last weekend for their Inter-Fraternity dances. Personally, wej believe this band will -go places. From a jazz standpoint their music would be hard to beat. . . . Kay Kyser released the best recording of his career on Columbia. The Kyser crew do not generally click with the average college record fan, yet his work on the new tune "Lou'siana Lullaby (By-U By-O) will win him many new fans. You probaby won't believe us iso hear it yourself. ... ' O 1 SONGS YOU'LL BE SINGING: Of the newer tunes there are a few that . " stand but as potential Hit Parade ma terial. "Bells of San Raquel" is a beautiful bit that should succeed "Ma ria Elana." "I'm Thrilled" will click if it keeps on gaining popularity. "I've Got It Bad And That Ain't Good" has better theme construction than the average pop tune. "Lou'siana Lull aby" has good chances of hitting the jackpot because of it's catchy and melodic pattern. "This Time The Dream's On Me" and "Sinner Kissed An Angel" are other strong contenders. We've been attacked: and in our own Japan, the American people don't i newspaper. Therefore this column 'want any trouble in the Pacific with will not be syndicated throughout the you or any other nation. The fact is we aren't looking for trouble any where with any nation, but if it be comes necessary for us to break PEACE in the Pacific then gentle- Chronicle stated that he felt the act was done by Carolina freshmen ;ma" th,ere sha11 be no peace but rather T- 1 1 i -l ' a. " j l - f ' -i? 1 J 1 iuvjuo. cr some uuKe stuaenis wno were irymg uj create inction rjetween the two schools. The president of the Duke student body expressed the same opinion. No mention of the incident was made in yester day's Duke Chronicle, and it was stated that none would be made. Last night, Bob Fetzer, athletic director, and Coach Ray Wolf urged that Carolina students refrain from doing any damage to Duke property. Both stated thai the spirit between the two football teams was excellent, and that he would hate for it to be ruined by some foolish act. - "' " ' ' r " ' If Duke leaders and our own athletic leaders express this view, let us cooperate by acting as college students, not babies. n Our duty is to actively extend the sphere of conduct befitting a gentleman to relationships with other schools. It is not the practice of a Carolina gentleman to deface, Duke buildings or run riot through tne Duke campus before the game or after it. We gam very little through such actions. We lose a great deal. The Student Council has in the past and will redouble its efforts in the future to punish severely any student or groups of students who violate our Campus Code our Intercampus Code. Our football team can do enough damage to Duke's property. Let's leave that task to them The University has never gotten usual 450 newspapers but is special just for Chapel Hill. . . . WE've been called a name by a gal who the leedle black book informs us once told a freshman date in McKiver, "If you don't stop this silly laughter, I'm go ing upstairs and I'm going to stay there" . . . she did too, but not for over-heated because a few of us carved long enough ! We realize that our initials on some of the trees here j youth is glorious but Ted Royal is abouts, but the gentleman who carved trying to make a career out of it. . . . the following poem on the large tree j There are other ways of meeting girls Germans . . have a fairly successful season RECORD OF THE WEEK: Benny Goodman's in again, this time with a the tennis team will superb 10-inches of .."Pound -Ridge." ' Benny's clarinet, Cootie William's trumpet, and Mel Powell's piano cre ate a fine jazz feeling. Mel's piano kicks into a riff , ending that youH. surely like. (Columbia) (that's all, folks) MORE POETRY It Never Fails To Happen This is no Armistice Day sermon. It is merely a brief comment on the student discourtesy that seriously hurt the significance of yesterday's ceremony. , Attendance was fair, but too many students placed too high a premium on their 10:30 cokes. Many of those who found it worth while straggled over during the invocation and continued their con versations throughout the brief address and playing of the "Star Spangled Banner." Most flagrant misconduct was that of an unidentified student in Old West who hollered catcalls through the whole ceremony up until the minute of silence. Penalty for the exhibition is clearly the immediate job of the Interdormitory Council. Such rudeness in a student body supposedly as intelligent as ours was inexcusable. To The Editor: As the wee small hours waned so waned the festivities of a merry day a day of .tug o' wars, relay races, mud fights, and, as the climax, a gathering of some three thousand fes tive souls, and innumerable barnyard inhabitants enjoying the proceedings of the Sadie Hawkins dance. But as the saying goes all good things must come to an end, and so with sighs of immeasurable regret the good citizens of Dogpatch bade old Carolina fare well for another year, and a grey Sun day dawn found them wending their weary way homeward. Relegated once again y to the ranks of the mythical, these worthy people left an indispu table impression on even the most ca Ioused of Carolina hearts. Not that it was their initial appearance on. the campus. For three successive years the characters from Al Capp's famed comic strip have invaded the fair town of Chapel Hill. Each year the event has met with a greater degree of suc cess, with last week-end's affair com pletely o'ershadowing that of he two previous years. On this occasion the originator, none other than Mr. Capp -u: : i. i i 4- u 4.1 . i it .Mi.-.i ii c i " ' rv meu iiibiiucLui plans iu teacn me gins inner sungs inuatrauve ui companied the Dogpatch troupe, and particular dialects used in different sections of Spain. together with a LIFE photographer, In Passing: Popeye has attained academic respectability. Students at Rock ford, Illinois College are learning to sing about the exploits of the sailor man in Spanish. The tune found its way into the curriculum through the help of Professor Nicholas Percas, who first heard the song in his native Spanish home, and then found it equally popular in Venezuela, where he lived for two years before coming to this country. The Popeye jingle is part of Percas' direct method of introducing Spanish to first-year students. A fourteenth century folk song is also in the repertoire of the Spanish students and during the year in the arboretum had better take an extended vacation. The poem reads: "HERE'S TO THE PRETTY WOMEN, WITH WHOM I LOVE TO TARRY, BUT BEING SANE AND HUMAN, HERE'S TO THE GIRL I MARRY." Are we to understand, sir, that you are just dabbling here at the University. Why we under stood that all affairs of the heart that started here in Chapel Hill ended up in Bennetsville, South Carolina. God bless the coeds. . . . T. R. ValluiZditvi than printing that kind of stuff, Ted dy...'". .' . . ; ' O - -; ;v-'-; Sadie HawkinV Sashayin : "Marcelle Clark didn't have to be dressed up in. black and spangles like she was to attract attention, she would have been just as popular if she .wore nothing at all". . . . the Gingham Gallup which was a girl-break was rare but we think St. Clair Pugh's " 'joyed it, hear" the cutest one of them all. The squealing of the animals that were given away as prizes at the dance was vaguely reminiscent of a mythical debate between Elsie Lyons and the W. G. A. . . . The cider was fermenting on the way down but may be L'il Abner's folks got. better di gestions than we has. ... O , Predilictions : Duke will absolutely lose to Carolina if it snows, (we really think a tie is in the offing). . . . Tom Kendrick, erstwhile student and hus band will be a father by the spring . . . . Hitler will not drop in for Fall Chapel - Hill Chatter:- One coed at school about whom the old gag applies in a new light "she's not going to die, she's going to engage away". . . .The j classified ad advertising the loss of a gins wristwatcn at uimgnoui brought results but there was some trouble over finding the girl to iden tify it. . . . Betty Egan and Anne Blair Alderson trying to crack the juke box at Alderman early Sunday morning perty larceny ? . , . Ann Anthony, Ann Anthony's tophat and Jack Emack in Harry's, but no rabbits on the table or up Ann's sleeve. . . . Mr. Durham, the keeper of the cage down at the gymn, flipping a towel to Warren Mengel saying, "Here's a thirsty one for you." . . . ; Oh, We Heard: Dick Adler told us about the prof who came to supper at the fraternity house and looked up in horror as the beets were passed when one of his supposedly more trust worthy students murmured subconsci ously "IH take ra, stack of those reds" I effete freshmen i .10:30 Lane to address during chapel period. . 2: 00-6 Sound and Fury dance try outs. . "v-:: ' 7:30 Meeting of the undergraduate physics club in 250 Phillips. 8:30 "Crisis," a motion picture pre sented by the CPU in Gerrard hall. 8:30 Swimming pool will be opens for coeds. 9:00 Debate squad and council to- meet in room 211 Graham Memorial. All Day Non-members get German club dance bids. . . i Bill Stanback told us about the' no-f rAiintl teeth hut,UaV wu" dog who didn't have any teeth but j which he was staying away from be cause he sure could "guni you to death". . . . Something should, berdone about the telephoniacs who hog .the. lines to the women s dorms leaving heartbreak and misunderstanding k in their wake. . . , ,.. Gag? Dick (the fox) Soskin telling us about the cartoon showing two witches in the air on broomsticks . . 1 one turns to the other and says "Look no hands". . . . P. S. we did so know her name, we just wanted to see if she could talk. . . . Pp. Ss. BEAT and a professional tobacco auctioneer found themselves quite the guests of honor. - - ' Xl 43 VX BlKUlli.ailkC IAJ 111lrC LUC spirit and enthusiasm with which DUKE ! practically the entire University ac- " " cepted the occasion. Sadie Hawkins 'q pi TlnTi. TVtrviif o Day represented far more than a fewj5" : j A1OUlS hours of enjoyment It was symbolic Scheduled Today '. Squad to Meet . Carrington Gretter, president of the Debate Council, announced that the Debate Council and Squad will meet to night in Graham Memorial, room 211, at 9; o'clock. Another practice session in debating will be held. of something very definite and indis pensable it was symbolic , of Amer icanism. Mr. Capp off ers more to hu manity than a score of political gen iuses. Here is a man that can make people laugh and sing, enjoy them selves and give vent to their feelings. Such people are at -a premium these days. America and Americans have the almost extinct ability of being able to look life in the eyei unafraid, to derive joy from life itself, and to make the most of the little things. Just how long such. will be the case rests in the hands of men like Capp not Hitler and his' colleagues. " Sincerely yours, R. C. Sound and Fury dancing tryouts will be held today and tomorrow from 2 until 6 o'clock, in Graham Memorial, room 213. Contrary to the policy fol lowed in singing auditions, men and women may try out at the same time. For FORMAL WEAR VARSITY TOPCOATS Choose; From Our Large Selection of New FALL Topcoats GABARDINES COVERTS FLEECES TWEEDS $220to $35 V '".; ' . - 1 ' . Inquire About Our Student Charge Accounts DURHAM, N. C. I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1941, edition 1
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