Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 10, 1949, edition 1 / Page 2
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5rf)e33aararltee( lh University by t!.c Colonial Pres.. Inc.. eiept Monda5 aJna?fo? and ss'sx sssvaus sirs' .??& BssrSHj1 m- for republication of all news and features published herein, - Kttn;nwino7? k " - - Manager Murxagmq Editor Sports r.Aittrr S.itfolf,i St?!l: 9hari Gibson. Tom Wvuj St Newell Jone. .CnIf C'P'. 1- " H ." Biff Roberts. John Sherill. Bebe Smith. vnrien. business Slatt: Oliver WatVtr,. u.n: il!i'?"Ir. J'imy itumerforl. Jolin Stumn Vt1 -rwl. ' ui d atiies 01 Daa DreaKS. af: Hay Parker. Jr . Zann n,.t,,.,. n,n t. -i ! V" ' '.i .' Anrl if tirai'rn i,- ...;u Glenn HU' NeJU' Carollne Bob Hennessee. Graham his Story, here's a . auick mr,- c. : "'"aiii, iieai .aaieu. June t:rnirtf i(iJT fiotograhrr TTTT ! About This New York Trip s loday will bo a big day for more than 2,000 Carolina students who move northward to New York City and the Carol ina-Notre Dame game Saturday. All dav lon-r wp mav expect to see a rarnvar. rf i . somewhat irr1nr u somewhat similar to the mass 1,lbtu" -f laSl year lor dents have been making their plans since way back this sum mer for this weekend in New York. Many -who originally planned to make the trip will not be able to attpnrl. still fnstknll -n t i i lootoail team will be able to itabi oi a large contingent of to thousands of Tar Heel alumni and friends. All told, the Athletic Association of the University of North Carolina sold 34,000 tickets to alumni, students, and friends of the Univer sity. The Old North Slate will be well-represented in New York. The weekend looks like a great one, and the game Satur day will afford the cheering section with an opportunity to et New Yorkers and Notre Dame followers in on that well known Carolina spirit which we are prone to boast about At any rate, all the Carolina students should give head cheerleader Norm Sper 100 per cent cooperation in all his endeavors at the game. The most important thing the stu dents can do to help the team is by cooperating with Sper in his cheers at the game. Also cooperation will bs necessary if the card stunts are to go off successfully. Pep rallies are also scheduled in New York. If all of Sper's and the Univer sity Club s plans are successful, this school's northern repu tation will receive a big boost. v. Vandalism In Hotels Should Go tinnoH on anyone s wnc Aa r d;struction of Property in hotels, as Carolina-Maryland game. Personally, we can't understand why anyone would drive 500 miles to New York just to be come so drunk he wrecks a hotel. But aside from this view point drunken brawls in hotel rooms can do more to give the Universuy a black eye than anything we can think of. kJ;: :ZZ :, , 1 licking this much-talked about wu SWri oai witn a spirit of "tearing the town ap can ruin the favorable impression the team may make In Print The Eyes By "Wink" uur nrst recollection of this optical delusion was in Billy v-armicnaeis The Sporting Pic ture on Sunday morning, Octo ber 2. He was writing about the Carolina-Universi t Georgia game, and his first sentence was What shouldn't happen to a dog. happened to the Bulldogs in Kenan Stadium yesterday af ternoon before the 83.000 eyes of some 44.000 people who sar dined their way into thai con create edifice." Two weeks later, in one of the Winston-Salrm pnpers, a reference was made to the num ber of people "eycirg" a loeel high school game. And this past weekend, visual stimulation was tossed around again. Mr. Smith Barrier of The Grensboro Daily News covered the Duke Wake Forest rame at Durham and his second pararach bean "It was the power of Bill Gregus and Bill Miller who stood out for the 35.000 pairs of eyes." That same Sunday morning in a color story on the front page of The Paleigh News and Ob server. Simmon3 Fentross talk ing about the came at Duke Stadium remarked. "For good measure, there were the dogs: the little white on that strolled out about midfipld and held up the game as he peered into a Deacon huddle, then was chased off the end of the field as 70,000 eyes looked on." We would not care to say that the State's sports writers are taking a cue from Mr. Car michael, although his words are highly regarded by a good many scribes around here. No doubt the idea is older than Eilly him self. But it is obviously enjoying wide circulation just the same. Inventivenesses a great asset to any newspaperman, partic ularly the sports writer or color story reporter. A performance - a- DIK ilRETTB , r. JWE.INJUe.IV WALL CHUCK HAUSER BILLY CARMICHAEL. Ill Wharton -II N Andy Taylor. Ronald fiUey" Buddy r.. . : - ttutn Jjeinis. Evalyn Harri Jney Taylor. Marie Withers. Jarneg A. Mills v o " J n; TT.- , 5 v.n.pei xiui, exodus of students to Wash- the ame with Maryland. Stu- count on the vocal backing at Carolina students in arirlitinn ui Lauuua snoum oe men- tvt ......L... . . . waning to put a dent spirit or enjoyment of the . V U1K LOCK lair. Kill Klla.-n - : . 'L.j v i weekend, the Daily Tar Heel sincerely hopes that there will be no vandalism me university great glory by Notre Dame team, but st J Have It Locklalr on the stage or on the playing field has to be described in more glowing terms than "excellent," "adequate," or "outstanding." it 7711" ioh is nnt .w " t,e - - - " " "j o outtcbsiui or easy. Any time a reporter covers an athletic event, a play opening, a concert, or any gathering where some mentionof audience reaction seems necessary, the reporter frequently attempts to fpring scn: new adjective cr combination of descriptive words on the reader. From all indications, the foot am I ball coason. now bf-ttr thn it .? iiau J Sone, has not produced a great a many thoroughly original utter- o arces. A routine inspection of North Carolina's sports pages, reveals that the "crowds," "hore-comers," "fans," "parti- M sans," "loyal rooters," "shivering mob," "drenched enthusiasts," "anxious hopefuls," "victory-hungry-supporters," "astonished c o bo usual, maue r their way into our stadia sino the middle of September. And what have all these neo- pie come to see? They've come to see '"unbeaten fnvnriw "winlcss wonders," "loaded le sions." "rot-tn.'hp-dpnm bailers," "red-jerseyed squa- ft drons," "underrated charges." n "hapless players," "slippery elevens," and "over-confident invaders," who "protect an un blemished record," "triumph," "strike for goal," "rapidly re cover lost ground," "snap a los ing streak," "pour it on," "have a rugged afternoon," "'remain cooped up," "run riot," "blast the opposition," "upset the vis tcrs hopes for a bowl bid," and "demoralize the local eleven." All of which, in so many words, is required to give the (See IN PRINT, page 4) Pitching Horseshoes by " Billy Rose Next time the world deals you a deuce, it -might, not be a bad idea to consider the case of Jimmy Savo, the little man who became a Broadway star be- quick through of his cloud-cluttered career. . . . First of all, Jimmy got off to a botched -up start by get ting himself born into a family of nine which was living in a one-roam shanty in the Bronx. His father, a catch-as-catch-can four cents a quart that Grade B cost in those days, and the bambino was weaned on heavily ' condensed milk. But this diet- MArA ary misdeal undoubtedly saved the infant's life, for shortly after he was bom a typhoid epidemic hit the Bronx and killed 'dozens, of kids in better-off families. When the Board of Health in vestigated it was, found that vnugaicu ll was, lOUHQ mat the epidemic had been caused bv contaminated milk. At the age of six. beside? being the poorest kid on the block, Jimmy was also the puniest. But it was this piece of bad luck which boomer anged him. into a stage ca eer. To defend himself against his bigger and burlier playmates he spent several hours each day at the school gym. and by the time he was eleven he was known as the Postage-Stamp Sampson. At an amateur performance one tonight. his weight-lifting "stunts won first prize, and a vaudeville agent who hap pened to be in the house booked him to play one of the minor variety circuits. Professional strong men rare ly get top billing or money, but hard luck again came to Jimmy's u.ii;. omce ine pint-size assistance. c: j i . strong man couldn't afford a costume, his grandmother made him one out of bits and pieces of cloth and, fortunately for the American stage, there wasn't enought left over for pockets. When Savo got his first week's pay, he had no place to- stash it but his shoe, and at the next performance a half-dollar be gan tickling his instep. To get relief, he went into a funny legged walk, and after the show the house manager compliment ed him on being a pretty funny fellpw. And thus, as the sayjng goes, a star was born. In 1933, I hired Savo to hold down the important comedy spot at an overgrown bistro I was operating, and for an entire season the little clown with the sad eyes got the biggest yoks I've ever heard in a night club. Following this success, however, Jimmy coasted and continued using his old routines instead of digging for new ma teral. What his career needed, of course, was another shot of disaster. And it ot it a few years later when the comedi an made the mistake of thinking he was a business man and invested his dough in a daffy enterprise. When he needed eating money, he dreamed up a couple of new routines, on the strength of which he landed the leading HC 4 mew F Sif clwuw. i W? WILL PE c o 9 p (f eti I ll 1R ' .. fey' ' " C-.-Jfry f S-'S-ve nvtr- 1 - Hi I THfc PIRT; l NAW-IT' IIKT r ucv tTcir I T t EriT . . . ' . M l&SZZFi SSSfcv V m&Z2A feH W l'IL- ja E ,JVrjfeV4glanWlk. II m-HfS IIV - o..e sance: DOWN S I LI?1- ic- HAWKINS DAV FACE. AM TlTiFO iivni it- M LTuAm, . X'l " . '"1"" ' " " 1L,,A V&ZA VZm l-i ii- -.- M - - iwi-www I I r 1 I Vlmim I rML. C JLJ T M A t I a. TA Irf t- TU' N C niLI WW -rt .f jaw, v , Arvc I I I VsS. I I VS.sSsA I I I KAtt, NOVEMBER 19th'.''- IM AL1 TU' Z-A iuVrwTru IXrT O w , '&uc-'- WK' to UNFAIR T'THE5E-V3.w-- WmfZt 2 2 J- )., FABULOUS OONS STW' ) wS7rTii- Tf SL DSSFVTCH CHASE TH -AN', 1ST DOGPATCH. GALSr- SO, AH ORDEP O WWy 26 - MMftZM -.Mkr 0r rAHHAs "mfi- - THE DAILY Distributed by Ring Features Syndicate by u-ranirement with Th Washington Star University Club Plaudits !MHllX!liJkihlLL.:iU 8 '. By BUI Buchaa .AW If you're going, you're proba bly all set to go by now, and if you aren't going, don't worry too much about it, because you cer tainly aren't by yourself. As the "Beat Notre Dame" fever works itself into an almost hysterical pitch at times, folks on one hand are begging tickets and riders to New York and on the other extreme, folks are talking about having too many, tickets and too many rides. In the back of all this noise about going to New York, there is one organization which has really done everything but buy the Brooklyn Bridge in order to make the weekend successful. ; (One organization in addition to the football team, we should say.) That organization is the Uni versity Club and you shouldn't have to be told. For over two months, you've seen their mem bers sitting patiently at the booth inside the "Y" answering questions, selling tickets of all kinds, making hotel reserva- role in "The Boys From Syracuse" where he scored the biggest hit of his cock eyed career. Three years ago, an infection set in and one of Savo's legs had to be amputated. Broadway managers and agents figured he was through, but Misfortune's Favorite paid no attention to their sepulchral solicitudes. While in the hospital he wrote a gay little book about hmself, and as soon as he was out he learned how to manipulate an artificial leg and went back 'to pantomiming his way into people's hearls and tunnybones. (See PITCHING, vage 4) - 47'4 J U enrtLtt I APOVE I HAVEN T tess mr-yf ua am -1 Mi f r r ' ''My r Buy a Meal Ticket & Sov 10 . . uaddvc PTT iH3 H Y-mrA I TAR HEEL No Easy Job for a Political -This 'n That-' tions, arranging a "student di rectory in New York," arranging for a parking system in Durham, selling the blue hats and now, " the "Beat Notre Dame"1 buttons. . And now. as the big date fast approaches on the hori zon, they've worked out a terrific schedule , of entertain ment and pep rallies in the big city in order that we can let the Gothamites know Carolina is represented. The schedule, which started yesterday afternoon at Navy Field, continues tonight at 6: ! 30 at the Monogram Club where . students, especially . those not going to NY. will assemble to cheer the team to Yankeeland. Then, we move over . to Durham for a huge sendoff, complete with 100 torches, much noise and much Carolina Sperit. ' Ir! the big city, the early ar rivals will gather "informally" for an "impromtu" pep rally at Times Square and brother, the good times sho should roll there. When the cops intervene, and traffic is thoroughly snarled, the guys and gals will take over the subway system and move out to the Village where "Nick's" has been reserved for the evening. With 2,152 students expected in town, Nick might be a little ' crowded and if he is, you can move to Joe King's place, where the pianist knows all the music to "Hark the Sound." Saturday morning, Kay Kyser and wife, Georiga, will judge the posterparade contest and will award the cup to the win ning display. The award will be made just before game time, and the parade is scheduled to W S- m m$7&imxfK' :f g- I VIP "ERE THEY JQOB EEPWOOD WHAT HFAD p-,p uaac uuu-h r:X ; feT COME -TIMTHF JWIKTAMA UADDcmcn 7 J ti oi r- VTi I David start at 12 noon. After the game, when we're through tearing down the goal posts in the excitement of vic tory, you're gonna be on your own to wander back and forth here and there. However, the purpose of repeating here, for the impth lime, the University Club's terrific schedule is to firmly fix the various times in your mind. There will be plenty of time for partying , and general hell raising, if that is what you're going north for, so do your best to get around to the planned get-togethers. You never can tell, you might meet that room mate of yours that you never see in Chapel Hill. '. ' And while you're reading, and hearing, about all the swell show that is being presented for you, remember just for the heck of it that the whole she bang was planned by the Uni versity Club. (And the UC, in cidentally, is made up of your own representative because its membership is composed of a member from each dormitory, fraternity, and sorority on cam pus.) There're going to be quite a few of us back here in Chapel Hill who're going to be listening and reading about your exploits. Here's hoping there'll be good news and not too many arrests for drunkenness,- disturbing the peace, etc. And by the by, above every thing else, remember that you're going to New York to see OUR team BEAT NOTRE DAME. r This corner happens to believe that if can be done and that it will be done. The road won't be easy and that : : tmmmmgmimim m i MERRY-GO WASHINGTON Mum is sup- mony reached its climax, FTC posed to be the word, but a Chairman Lowell Mason an secret resolution has been drawn- nounced solemnly: "Ladies and up authorizing impeachment gentlemen, Mr. Carson will now proceedings against President . take the oath, administered bv Truman in case he lets the Mr. Justice Jackson." - coal strike continue to a Na tional danger point. The resolution was drafted by a handful of Republicans and . Dixiecrats just before ( Congress adjourned and then locked in a safe deposit box. They plan to introduce it next January if the National Econ omy is seriously jeopardized by , strikes. Ringleader of - the impeachment move is Con gressman. Ralph Gwinn, New York Republican, with an as sist from Gene Cox, the Geor gia Dixiecrat. Specifically, the secret reso lution charges President Tru man with "nonfeasance" of of fice. It is alleged that he neglect ed the economic welfare of all the people in order to help a tightly organized minority the Labor Unions. . The resolution further points out that the President could have prevented "economic dis aster" by invoking the Taft Hartley act. This constitutes neglect of duty, the resolution charges. Now that the steel strike is being settled, the wind has been taken out of the impeachmnt plan, but it may still be re vived in case John L. Lewis's - coal strike gets worse. Note 1 Should the reso . lution ever reach the floor of the House of Representa tives, it would stand almost no chance of approval. Note 2 Gwinn is the Con gressman who mailed out 900, 000 franked letters last year containing 2,250,000 copies of speeches against Public Hous ing, Federal Aid to Educa tion and Rent Control. He has been the chief Congressional megaphone for the Foundation for Economic Education, fi- 1 nanced by some of the nation's largest corporations. . .11 In Washington, where hos tesses keep careful tab on who's feuding with whom, it would be an unforgivable boner to con fuse the identity of the Supreme Court's two feuding Justices, the honorables Hugo Black and Robert Jackson. Yet that's exactly what hap pened the other day at no less an occasion than official swearing-in. Justice Black got. the assignment of administering the oath to Federal Trade Commis sioner John Carson. As the cere- 100 yards on the field may seem like a 1000 at times, but if we show those gUys in blue and while that we're behind them, Ihey've got every chance in the world of win ning. So take off, you lucky people, drive carefully, have a lot of fun, but behave yourselves and make sure that New York re members us as a group of Caro lina Gentlemen. ACROSS L Ancient. hammering form 4. Pleasant smell 9. In what way 12. Mingle 13. Shaving implem-nt 14. Self 15. l.'ntuuchcd 17. R:ink oflUer 19. Willi animal 20. Kxcla mat foil 22 Araliian euif 23. Puiilit- carrtfi 2G. Sea eagle 21 Xuml.er 2D. Cut at ra i.ilora 33 A pr'"nche(1 33. Coin 36. Oriental - ooeisance: variant t lli-....e. nut tio :;.( V;pi 3'J Ai-t nt srivins out 42. Kaii-ert platform 45. Make a mistake 46 Imitated 49. Verllv SI. Deiicie 53. Oevourerl r4. Horse of a certain gait .W-4-M-4-JlLMr THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10; 1949 DREW PEARSON e WASHINGTON ROUND The assembled . dignitaries howled at the mistake." Chair man Mason turned a sunset crimson. . Later, Ex-Senator Jim Mead was appointed to another va cancy in the Federal Trade Com mission. Mason got on the phone to arrange the ceremony, in vited Justice Jackson to give the oath. Jackson agreed, then added: ' "By the way, this will give you a chance to call me Mr. Justice Black." A $250,000 suit has been filed by the widow of an air-crash victim that may pave the way for sujts against the Bolivian Government for the mid-air collision of a Bolivian P-38 and an Easlern Airliner. This is the tragedy that killed 55 victims when the head of Bo livia's Civil Aviation rammed an Easlern airliner over Wash ington's National Airport. The test case will be a $250, 000 suit under the Tort Claims Act against the United States for the death of Howard S. Le Roy, killed in the crash of an Eastern Airliner with a Navy Hellcat fighter over Chesterton, N. J., last July 30. The action has been brought by the widow, Mrs. Emily Le Roy, and will set a precedent for air-traffic accidents. Here are some interesting quotes from the life and works of John Foster Dulles, famed internationalist: Speech Before Detroit Ec onomics Club, March, 1939 "Only hysteria entertains the idea that Germany, Italy or Japan contemplates war on us." War" started five month later. Stalement, Oct. 21. 1930 "Germany, .has made great progress under the Dawes plan. Her national income and government income have grown to a point where the reparations charge constitutes a readily bearable percent age." One year later Dulles ..was retained by Brown Broth-ers-Harriman to salvage some thing out of the German bond wreckage. He could salvage nothing. Statement About Gerhard Westrick, the Hitler agent who came to New York in 1940 after the war started: "I don't be lieve he has done anything wrong. I knew him in the old days and I had a high regard for his integrity." Page " 690 Of Who's Who In America states in Dulles' self penned biography that he was "Secretary of the Hague Peace Conference in 1907." The records of the Hague Conference list 20 secretaries, but Dulles' name is not among, them. He was then only 19 years old. h- 7". " ' ' T . V I A S E I S O uteri T ' E i L I K i s El b! Elc iTf OTrk?. i IfcliflLIEjNi RiOlA NBS f&3i A I Sj Tj E J R R B ; aTe i A SfM lR!OiN!C!liiorrT !MiJlMilklsiEeYjEis Solution of Yesterday's P 2. His from the earth i. Outer 4. Part ot a curvt b II-M-oncerted 6 C,ni:- u,.,4 'oiiritry Maxim 8. KxiM 9. Cotitainen 10- S-shape.l ii. fUoMlriB Impaired by use 16. Southern IS. Cupiike 8po '1- Vase retails If- fein?. ot. tree 2C. Kngl,sh letter.. Ik Iurmeric U. l ook 31. Title or ... address 34. Lift up a. Lc-ss thickly settled 37. Belonging to 0 Type of 41. Fe!in. 42. Circular Irwl iri t a i?- f,oker term 44. Mental Image i. Patron saint of sailors 48. Legal BO. Spire orna- 52. Before 55. Symbol for copper
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 10, 1949, edition 1
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