FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 15 PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAK HEEL. - J-, s v 'ft The official newspaper of the Publi cations Board of the University of Worth Carolina at Chapel rail where it is published daily at the Colonial Press, Inc., except Monday's examina tion and vacation periods and during the official summer terms. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under the act o 2-Iarcb 3, 1879- - Subscription rates: mailed $4JX per year, $1.50 per quar ter: delivered $6.00 per year and $2.25 per quarter. Not Guilty by Barry Farber etters Editor ..,,'. . Managing Editor t Busiaess Manager Glenn Harden . Bruce Melton Oliver Watkins Business Office Manager -Jim Schenck Society Editor . Mary Nell Boddie Sports Editor . Billy Peacock Subscription Manager Chase Ambler Associate Editors Feature -Editor " Advertising Manager Staff Photographers - Circulation Manager,. Al Perry, Beverly Baylor Walt Dear Marie Costello Ruffin Woody, -Hal Miller Neil Cadieu &oed Senate Coed Senate is dying and its decease, should be viewed with respect but with no remorse. Let the Senate die die 2He death of an organization which has served its purpose in the past but which has long out lived its time. Let the Women's IDC be free to make and ad minister those rules belonging peculiarly to coeds as the Men's IDC deals with those problems belonging particularly to the men students. Most important let us have one ef f i iiient, progressive, representative student government. In 1948 the dollar per term coed fee was legally abolished, and, though the Senate continued to illegally collect that tax until last spring, it exists no longer. Thus the Senate no longer has funds to administer. Its. function as benefactor for a sheaf of non-self-supporting women's organizations is ended. Since the passage of the revised Student Constitution the membership of the Senate is ten at large members plus the presidents of each women's dormitory and sorority house. The present Coed Senate is a glorified IDC, nothing more. Coed Senate has no reason for existence. More important, it has become a dead weight, an organization without real function, funds or support. It is in the province of the Senate to make those laws which relate to coeds alone. With the exception of social rules, no such all-coed laws exists. Those social rules are the province of the Women's IDC. Thus Coed Senate exists as a formality, a rather worn satin cushion for the IDC the IDC which constitutes a maj ority of the Senate. The IDC is an active," effectively workable group yet its technical status is established as that of a committee of Sen ate, it is tied to Senate, the funds allocated to it by Student" Legislature must be doled out through Senate channels. The time has come for this symbol of a day wheiv coeds were a new quantity at the University to disappear. The governmental system at Carolina is one of student govern ment -one government for and of all students. This is the' medium through which effective action may be taken. Sure ly, there is great need for effective coed work and action in Student Government. Shall the efforts of coed leaders con tinue to be diverted into the ineffectual eddies of a dying Senate? Coeds have equal representation in the Student Legisla ture where ' campus laws arb made. Women students have taken leading campus roles in all branches of Student Gov ernment. To deny the duties and opportunities of one govern ment, to cling to a dead tradition is not only foolish but a denial of the responsibilities of campus citizenship. by David Alexander Reviews And Previews - Time to go to Washington again. How many of you re member the last Tar Heel trek to the nation's capital back in 48? It was a sunny autumn after noon when twenty-eight thou sand Carolina fans waving the Stars and Bars stormed across the Potomac and proceeded to dance in. the streets, turn .over taxis, "redecorate' three hotels, and shoot roman candles at the Russian Embassy. The South never showed so much moxie since "Fort Sumter was fired up on. Maybe we were a littfe too rowdy, ' but we had more fun than a pigeon with a Norden bombsight. , The Tar Heel legends that were born that weekend would stretch from here to -Valhalla, but my , favorite concerns the Carolina Gentleman who went to meet his lady friend at four o'clock in the morning in the corner room on the second floor " of the Ambassador - HoteL He knocked. No answer. He kicked. Again no answer. He shouted a galaxy of four letter words. Still the room remained black and silent. But this worthy Tar Heel was not to be stood up so easily. With a single lunge he knocked the door clean off its hinges. Now, it seems our friend had misunderstood a few minor de tails. In the first place his date .was waiting, not in the corner room, but in the room next to : the elevator. In . the , second place, it was on the eighth floor and not the second, and in the third place it was the Williard Hotel and not the Ambassador. Furthermore, it so happens our Gentleman had disturbed the beauty sleep of a somewhat high strung Mexican woman, who, for some reason, got sore and called the manager. The manager dashed up the hall in a night shirt and started spitting out legal terms while our hero was placidly offering the snarl ing senorita a martini. The manager finally simmer " ed down and graciously offered to settle out of court for a flat sum of $29 to pay for the door. Our cocktail Casanova swung around and, after showering the rr - -er with a volley of lusty 2:d pertaining to his ances tory and sex habits, he reached into his pocket, shelled out twenty-nine ; bucks, hoisted the door onto his shoulders, and very quietly disappeared into the night. Before you go, please listen to an 0I4 timer with a little advice. .Watch that Yankee traffic. It's treacherous. Be as careful as a nudist crossing a . barbed wire fence. Better to step on brakes and be, laughed at than to step ; on the gas and be cried over. As you wander through the twisted alleys of the twilight world you're liable to be tempt ed by hard drink. Don't drink ;on an empty head ! A little wat er, taken in moderation, will never hurt anybody. Make love to every woman you meet. Even if you get a re turn of only five per cent on your outlay, it's a good invest - ment. En jo y ; yourself. Eat, drink, and be merry. Tomorrow we may all be radioactive. : Madam Editor: .-. 4 I have always been very tim: and diffident . around peop They scare hell out of me. T. not very large and I can si around . unnoticed most of tl time. Well, Saturday, I sneaked cv to Kenan Stadium to see wh; all the" noise was about and was about this fellow Green trj ing to get people to hold v cards for the Collier's man 1 take . pictures of. His entreai fazed me. I was sitting in tfc top of a pine, trying hard n to get in the way, but I cam down to help him out. It too guts. It .was the only decer thing I ever did for U.N.C. had to hold up cards for tv people but, no kidding I ws glad to do it. I did somethin wrong, I guess. Everybody hate me, I know that. They thre these funny looking cards wit' sharp corners up in the air ant they fell all over me, makin painful and wavy bumps all ove my face and pate. I ran all thi way home and by the time got there I was so mad, Ipincbe my grandmother. Twice. You see why I hate people You're a great bunch of profii gate, depraved, vitiated, non descript derelicts, a species o atavistic degenerates. And what more you're just plain mean. Eddia Slyer: DAILY CROSSWORD 20. Begin ' 21. Befall 22. Malt beverage 23. Falsehood 25. Shade of 9 color - Ever since Dore Senary re signed as production head at R.K.O. to become a rather big wheel at Metro, Howard Hughes has tried to put his studio back into shape. The first attempts proved to be failures, but with names like Jerry Wald, Norman Krasna, Edmond Grainger, and John Farrow, and stars like Mitchum, Domergue, Russell, and Wayne, R.K.O. seems to be going great guns. One of their biggest drawing cards right now is a good film called "His Kind of Woman', which will play the late show to night at the Varsity Theater and . also starts a run at that theater . on Sunday. If someone offered you $50, 000 just to vacation in a remote Mexican resort, would you take it? Probably so, but you would have to know about the strings attached first. Robert Mitchum accepts and finds things some what hot south of the border. It seems an exiled American wants to re-enter the country, and Mitchum would like to f or get all about the whole affair, especially since federal- agent Tim Holt has been murdered. ; Even though I am personally 'prejudiced against Mr. Mitchum, and haven't wasted any time see ing Jane Russell on the screen, Nthis film does interest; me, as I know it will the average movie goer. Miss RusseU, who pressed several platters with Kay Kyser on Columbia Records, manages to deliver several catchy tunes, and looks good in general. Acting laurels however, must certainly go to Vincent Price, who is Mark Cardigan, ham Hollywood actor, who likes to hit the bottle and play with guns. 'Mr. Price emerges from this film, a fair comedian. Mar jorie Reynolds, again in blonde . tresse, is on hand to add gla mour, and Carleton Young, cur rently in "Hard, Fast , and v Beautiful", is along for the ride. The film originally ran two hours, but has, been, and quite wisely too, cut down to run an even ninety minutes of well blended comedy and rather se rious drama. On Campus The Graham Memorial Travel Agency will be closed Friday and . Monday because Frank Allston, Director, has been call ed out of town unexpectedly. The travel agency has been doing a heavy amount of busi ness fpr the past week due to the large number of students making railway and airline re servations to Washington. Canierberry Club There wjll be a meeting of the Canterbury Club Sunday night at 6:00 for supper and a movie on the church. " . ACROSS 1. City (Mass.) 6. Entitled. 11. Harden, (var. 12. A daisy 13. Garret 14. Scorches 15. Sheltered side 16. Feline . 1$. East-Indian inland mail ' 19. Exhibition 21. Corridor 24. Distracted state - (colloq.) 28. 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