PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAB SEE TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1946 Students Ask Resignation of PU Board wh mi The official newspaper of the Publication Union of the Unirenfty of North CmoGbs at Chape! HfH, where it is printed daily, except Mondays, examinations and vacation periods. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel KiTl. K. C, under the act of H&reh 3, 1879. Subscription price is $5.00 for the college year. Complete Leased Wire Service cf United Press BOBERT M0EEIS0N WE STY FENHAGEN . BILL HIGHT BETTIE GAITHER Editor ..Managing Editor Associate Editor -Business Manager It DTH CireMatton.-Boes Not Improve 4 1 CLIFFORD HEMINGWAY Circulation Manager ASSISTANT EDITOBS : Fred Jacobaon, Bay Conner. EDITORIAL STAFF: Dick Koral, Dick Stern, Dorothy Marshall, Gloria Gautier, Corinne Ossinaky. NEWS EDITOBS: Bob Levin, Jack Lackey. COPY EDITOR: Bill Lamkin. REPORTERS: Betty Green, Jo Push, Frances Habey. Janet Johnston, Mary HiH Gaston. Bettie Washburn. Gloria Bobbins. Sam Sommeriin, Elaine Patton. Miciie Derienx, Gene Aenchbaeher, John Giles, Boland Gidnz, Darley Lochner, Posey Emerson, Elizabeth Barnes. SPOBTS EDITOR: Carroll Poplin. SPORTS STAFF: Howard Merry, Frank Miller, Clark StaQworth, Mel Cohen, Bob Fried lander, Baddy Gotterman, Jo Farria, Jim Khrtt. FOB THIS ISSUE: ROLAND GIDUZ FRED JAC0BS0N CARROLL POPLIN Night Editor ..Assistant Editor Former Student Pays For UndeliveredDTH Night Sports Editor a REVISE ZONING LAWS QUICKLY The action of the residents of Chapel Hill in that little "A" zone island between Saunders and Rosemary, Columbia and Church, and of the Zoning Committee of the Board of Alder men reminds one of the good citizens of a little Mid-west town in the last century who refused permission for a right-of-way for the railroads because, they said, nothing in the Biblejusti fies the assumption- that men were destined to ride at the un earthly speed of fifteen miles an hour ! , ' The gentlemen of the committee are good men. They were ex plicit in their regret that the zoning laws and the needs of the veterans clashed at this point. They pointed out that they were merely following out the will of the residents in the disputed area. The residents are not entirely selfish. They claim that the whole tone of their neighborhood, converted to "A" zone status in 1938 to keep out the fraternities, would be ruined by an apartment house on the street, and that children running around the streets are surely an inconvenience. And when the veterans leave, they say, undesirable elements will infest the apartments. The railroads were built, and great metropolises rose from -prairie villages. The University is growing. Chapel Hill al ready has a bus line. Apartment house construction on a wide scale awaits only the release of building materials. In ten years Chapel Hill will.be a very different place. And real estate values will go up, and the resolution of the good folk and their "A" zone island will be history. D. K. Editor arid Managing Editor Offer to Circulate the DTH Tar Heel Editors Say Publications Union Board Should Guarantee Delivery or Quit To the Student Body and the Publications Union Board: Realizing that the circulation of this newspaper is character ized by inefficiency and incompetence, disgusted that the PU Board has promised action and remains in a state of lethargy, believing that the student body is being cheated by having to pay fdr a paper it never receives, we, the Editor and Managing Editor of the Daily Tar Heel, petition the PU Boardf to take one of three courses: (1) Immediately inaugurate door-to- door circulation, guaranteeing every student and subscriber personal copy every issue, (2) Appoint us co-circulation man agers with a $50 budget which we may or may not use, or (3) Resign immediately, and allow the student legislature to ap point responsible individuals. TTT T J 1 J we nave Deen roia tnat we should follow a budget, a copy of which the PU Board has never prepared for us; we have been told that the PU Board desires to save student money, while thousands of copies are wasted every week, the student body pays for publications it doesn't receive, the PU Board violates its constitution by not publish ing its .budgets, many student dollars have been wasted by fool ish speculation in "common stocks, the advertising rates have been stupidly low because the PU Board has; continually procrastinated, and funds are ill used in other ways. Complaints about circulation are pouring into our office every oiUCi uwiuiumg w nat is nome witnout ai to us to spend many hours every mother ?"" asked the good-look ing young man. Neglect and Inefficiency" Charged; Deliveries Irregular; Board Reluctant tfo the Editor of the Tar Heel : No Tar Heels were delivered to Steele Dormitory on Tuesday of this week. In view of the fact that ajl students pay for the pub lication of the Tar Heel and other publications whether they like it or not, it seems only fair that the publications should be deliv ered to the students. We realize that the Editor offend. Indeed, the salary now paid the Tar Heel has no direct con trol over the circulation of same. However, we advocate an editor ial a day on the poor state of cir culation until the Publications Union Board does something about it. The Circulation Manager re ceives $40 a week for allegedly circulating the Tar Heel. We suggest that the PU Board either Dear Bob, Several weeks ago I sent letter to the circulation manager I demand that he improve the cir with a request to have my name culation, or fire him and get an added to the list of subscribers otner circulation manager. If who receive their Tar Heels by the PU Board is not disposed to mail. I enclosed enough money do anything about the situation, to pay for the subscription but then we suggest that the PU as yet I haven't received a copy. Board resign, and perhaps, I know your staff is busy but I through some lucky break, wonder if something could be new group can be elected which done so I'll start getting1 the will do its duty. It is understandable that occa sionally someone living off-cam- paper soon. Sincerely, Natalie Harrison. Editors Note : This former I pus will be overlooked in the de livery of Tar Heels, but it is not understandable when dormi btudent is one of the thousands tories in the center of the cum- ' t j i wnoarenoi; receiving proper pus are overlooked. The matter circulation. We wrote her a form lhe-n cppq n able oversight and becomes one tions, but little more could be nf nefrWt. smA momr done under present conditions. Dementia Domain Edited by Ray Conner The PU Board is the duly con stituted agent of the student body and by its constitution it is bound to provide circulation for the publications. It has suf ficient money to accomplish this the Circulation Manager of the Tar Heel is certainly sufficient to accomplish excellent circulation of the paper. The only obstacles to good circulation appear to be unpredictable deliveries on the part of the present Circulation Manager and reluctance on the part of the PU Board. Such ob stacles are inexcusable. Sincerely yours, Claude Hinton Carl Worsley Tom Tilghman Stan Marczyk George Munford Gerald Allen Sid Varney Bob Whitten Bobby Reynolds G. T. White Lester Hill Joe Bitting Jim Patterson , Al Starling Jimmy Wallace Ed Kornegay Tom Bryan Bill Askew Oscar Webster Frank Warren Larry McKirdy Lee Gliarmis Jut Strickland Jack McDaniel Harold Suits. day editing, a paper which the students are not receiving. We hope that you will take immediate action. Westy Fenhagen, Bob Morrison. The Ram Sees By An Old Goat "Well," replied the ( sweet young town girl, "I am, tonight." Clipped. From the Press Miss Brown has been engaged as stewardess and social hostess aboard the S. S. Alexandria, which sails tomorrow. . Before leaving port she will have her barnacles scraped. As listed in the catalogue the course in campus coedology, Bill ".Lil Doc" Williams major! Co hort Bobbie Stockton, coaching privately from the inside lines, has nainfullv announced that Bill, a pupil geared to slowness, is flimloncr hrvKh mnidlv and flat- o ly. Shift into high speed, Mister! From One P to Another Sunday last found Pepsi-Cola poured across the blue. As Caro lina's "angels in disguise" gazed skyward an airplane dipped and curved forming the letter P fol lowed by the first long streak of an E-in-the-making. From Pi Phi to Pepsi-Cola! Said angels, winging landward in their thoughts again, hit a spot on earth with a resounding thud. T TTT1 "U jvameses says, vvtiuume nuiiic Safety Pins It happened in the midst of an evening of glitter and elegance at the Hotel' Shoreham. It was there that Gene Nash yielded to the wooing of Baxter Sapp. A crested sword and shield is the token of his love which now stanus guara near ner nean, . . . Leatherneck Maclntyre not only succeeded in placing the affec tions of lovely Dell Tindel be neath a safety lock, but he's thrown away the key. A DKE serenade will sound Mac and Dell ' along their merry pinned up way . . . Chris Bruch, Pi Phi treasurer, has hit a jackpot from which no coins flow, only love. She has stars in her eyes to match the five pointed emblem of Sigma Nu, which she is wearing proudly on parade. Its owner is J. B. Smathers by name. Dabblings Rameses wonders: Does June n . a seem a minion montns away u According to Herman Ashlaw 'tis but sixty-nine and one-half days until graduation . . . Pro saically speaking, spring has sprung and all good Kappa Sigs have evolved a program befitting the season. Their aim is reputed ly one pin-up per month, no more no less . . . Tom Odom's snow job is reported to wear the earmarks of practiced perfection, Each coed whom he meets, whether she hails from Kam cnatKa or Kalamazoo, is one whom he has seen somewhere before, one whom he has been impatiently waiting to meet again . . . Jenks Tripp is chief projection man on Sunday eve nings at the Sigma Nu House when home movies hold sway. A round of applause-is the order of the day . . . The three D's house bulged with week-end visitors. To be specific: Markey Parsons, Whit Parrish, Weeze Thompson, Mac McCulley and Connie bnce-upon-a-time Griffin with hus band Bill Sharkey in tow. A generous sprinkling of hand shakes and squeezes were sub stitute sufficient for the usual welcome mat. Import with a little i For the girls who wear the x and horseshoe the Chi week-end will always Omega Wanted: A salesgirl; must be be as respectable til after Christmas. memorable as the thumbed pages of a yellowed scrap book. Fri- Wanted : A showplace to show day, Saturday, and Sunday, three her wares by an antique lady days packaged in shiny cello- with a Spanish chest and other phane, were play days for Chi odd things. Clipped. umega trom before high noon until long past midnight. - Al- And there was the Scotchman though nucleus plans had the who bought only one spur be- week-end catalogued a la im- cause he figured that if one side port, cardinal and straw host- of the horse went, the other side esses showed their'decided pref- would be sure to follow. Clip erence for local swains. Only ped. , four Beau Brummels, the special There was the man who called property of DuVall, Capt, Wood- his secretary "Baseball" because she wouldn't play without a dia mond. Clipped. Veterans Social Program Proves Very Big Success Last week the UVA began a social program which seems to be going over with great success. Large crowds were present for the sports movies at the clubhouse, open houses for various wom en's dorms at the clubhouse, and the big vets' dance in the Naval Armory. Special mention must be made of the outstanding acs of 'the son, ana Satterheld, were im ported from afar. In Step, In Tune Wedding bells, ringing in eu phony, are making golden music. Jane Cromartie, last year's Al pha Gam president, is a bride whose husband wears the khaki of Uncle Sam. Jenny Freeman was maid of honor while Travis Hunt was gowned as a brides maid for the Saturday wedding of Maggie Freeman, ADPi . Had there been a guest book at the wedding of Denmond Ham mond and Florence Williams in Washington its roll would have swelled with the names of many Chapel Hillians. Among those present were Noland Ryan, Pete Lindsay, Jack Davies, Jim Todd, Tommy Petterson, Benson Mc Cutcheon, Wiley Long, "D. Z." Zintek, Dave Nichols, Turk New some, Roy Rowe, Phyllis Gainey, and Mary Ann White. various activities. For the open houses there were several good performers. Tip Summers, who sang "Embraceable You," was received by the audience with great enthusiasm. Moffett Sher- ard began his program with "If You Are but a Dream" which, with his dreamy voice, sent the audience bursting with applause and raising the clubhouse roof every bit of ten inches. Moffett following with an encore, gave his imitation of the "Ink Spots." Rex Cost'on. a very talented singer, had shorter notice than it took to sing his song, "Some body Loves Me," but was re ceived by the audience very favorablv. Honorable mention goes to Marie Holman, pianist, OFFICIAL COMPLAINT (Clip, fill out, and mail. Postal card will be all right.) PU Board Complaint Department co Daily Tar Heel Editor Drawer 1080 , - Dear Bob: I am not receiving proper delivery of the Daily Tar Heel. As a student or subscriber I am lawfully entitled to receive this paper, and I demand immediate action by the PU Board. My address is : ft- Sincerely, who made a grand impression on all present by volunteering to ac company two of the singers with out any previous preparations. Ben Kistler, one of the best M. C.'s on the campus, held one of the open house audiences in a spell of laughter for more than twenty minutes. The vets' association was able to withstand all handicaps and present the vets with their first successful dance of the vear. Comments are flying thick and fast in regard to when there will be another one like this one. Spe cial performers were able to en tertain the group at the dance for half an hour with outstand ing success. Lyn Leonard, as usual, was accepted by the peo ple with great enthusiasm while going through several of her routines. By far the funniest performer oh the program was lyn who was congratulated many times on her fine perform ance. Marion Gurney and Rex Coston sang several songs which' were appreciated by all present. Don Shields imitations were suc cessful, however; he was work ing against a terrific handicap. i-ast, but lar from least, to be mentioned is Mary J0 Cain, whose tap dancing stunned the crowd for a full five minutes. As the dance proceeded on its nor mal merry way, Mary Jo made a hit with the crowd not only as a tap dancer but also as a jitter bug dancer. The social committee believes that it has found the best dance 4 band in this section. A band which has just begun its sue- See VETERANS, page 4.