V fAGE TW6 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Whtm aHp The pfficial student publication of the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, where it is published daily except Saturday, Monday, examination and vacation periods, and dur ing the official summer terms. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Chapel Hill, N. C, under the act of March 3, 1879. Sub scription rates mailed $4 per year, $1.50 per quarter; delivered, $6 and $2.25 per quarter. rai. WALT DEAR Managing Editor : Business Manager , Sports Editor News Ed Sub. Mgr Ass't. Sub. Mgr, Office Mgr. Bob Slough Carolyn Reichard Bill Venable Buzzy Shull Assoc. Ed-Nina Gray, Jane Carter EDITORIAL STAFF A. Z. F. Wood, Jr., John Gibson, Dorman Cordell, Dan Duke. , " NEWS STAFF John Jamison, Louis Kraar, Tom Parramore, Ellen Downs, Jennie Lynn, Jerry Reece, Sara Leek, Ben West, Jim Wilkin son, Jes Nettles, Sally Schindel, Manning Muntzing, Dave Herbert, Hu bert Breeze. SPORTS STAFF Vardy Buckalew, Paul Cheney, Melvin Lang, Everett Parker, John Hussey, Sherwood Smith, Al Long, Dick Crouch, Benny Stewart, Wilbur Jones. . ADVERTISING STAFF Charles A. Collins, Charles Haskett, Pete Adams, Bob Mason, Bob Wolfe, Eleanor Saunders, Buddy Harper, Dor man Cordell. CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Roger Williams, Richard O'Neal, George Harris, Veneta Zeller. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Cornell Wright, Ruffin Woody, Bill Stonestreet. Night Editor for this issue: Melvin Lang Infirmary Acts Fast Once again, the Infirmary has acted quickly and efficient ly to prevent a possible outbreak of disease. This time it is flu. Last time it was polio. Football activ ities were suspended in the fall quarter for two weeks and students were given worthwhile advice on how to protect themselves in some measure from polio. Now there is a fifty-fifty chance of an outbreak of influenza which would "ser iously disrupt" the University's activities, according to Dr. Ed Hegepeth. This is no scare alarm. This announcement comes after a careful watch of trends throughout the world, nation, and state, plus weekly surveys conducted by the medi cal profession. And students, 300 of them on the first day, responded quickly to the call for voluntary vaccinations. The vaccine is a good preventive, primarily because it counteracts the work of the flu virus. The important thing about a vaccination is the necessity to take advantage of it now. It has no value when the epidemic surrounds the campus Students are reminded of the value of having an infirmary and a wide awake staff. As soon as enough information had been gathered to show that a campus wide flu attack was pos sible (populated centers in Germany, France, England, Texas, and Tennessee have already been affected), vaccine was ship ped in from Detroit and Atlanta and the infirmary was ready to receive. students the next day. Action in this case as in many others indicates that the Infirmary is doing the kind of job necessary to maintain student health. The Daily Tar Heel commends the staff of the Infirmary for its continuing efforts to keep us in shape. Paper Thieves Someone's got an old get-rich-quick philosophy. He or she nets a $4 loot each day mostly at the Lenoir Hall newsstands, but manages to loot the nickels of four State dailies at the Y, too. The thief or thieves are stealing themselves right out of a job among other things. Threatened with daily losses, the students operating the paper stands may have to stop selling. ' The nickel thieves might be interested to know that once they are pinched by student law, they will be probably head ing out of Chapel Hill. The Chapel Hill recorder's court is always interested in slapping heavy penalties on such miscreants. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Rascal 6. A size of paper 3. Man's nickname 4. Biblical city 5. Half an em 6. Basket of a balloon 7. Egyptian dancing- girl 8. Bard 9. Uncooked 11. Epoch 13. Metallic rock 15. Old meas ures of length 16. Malt beverage 19. An expert 20. 21. 22. 24. 25. 26. 28. 30. 32. 33. 34. 35. 38. 9. Come back 10. Genus of the lily . Insects 12. 13. 14. , The ear shell . Court 15. Audience 17. Luzon native 18. Wooden hammer (21. Inferior parish official (Brit.) 23. 27. Warmth Sea eagles 28. Italian poet 29. Pant w r r r r w g- " yyp to u -ZZc 29 7 30 inizzzzii 33 34 35 7yy 3& 37 38 39 AO 4 1 dH 1 mA 1 fe 30. Use a pincers Republic 31. (Asia Minor) 33. Milkfish 36. Spawn of fish 37. Cry of a dove 40. Long nail 42. Arabic letter 43. Always 44. An advo cate of geometric art 46. Affirmative vote 47. Swiftly DOWN 1. City (Nev.) 2. Upholstered footrests FRIDAY, JANUARY 231953 at wztl . ROLFE NEILL . JIM SCHENCK BIFF ROBERTS Soc. Ed. Circ. Mgr. Asst. SDts. Ed. Deenie Schoeppe Donald Hogg Tom Peacock Adv. Mgrs. Charlie Collins, Charles Haskett Exch. Ed. Alice Chapman Chief of a clan (Scot.) Plead Epoch Encyclical Devoured Thrice (mus.) Levee For Footed vase Goddess of mischief (Gr.) Full of waves Toward the lee River (Fr.) . 4 1-32. Yeterdy' Answer 39. Often (poet.) 41. Openings (anat.) 42. Sleeveless gar ment (Arab.) 44. Calcium (sym.) 45. Aloft s com e r 1 oie ft AU OH TLjAfg e sTaa .fit jyg aTrM I ANrnsentfritii n FTo? SIS! H OIOIS AM B lOl 1PU e & - to g eHa rnsris n g. He UI 3HL 2 k vll "5 tT -i: A. Z. F. Wood, Jr. Utopia There has been much investi gation by congressional commit tees lately. They've investigated water-front racketeers, Commun ists, Trumanites, Dean Acheson, McCarthy, people investigating McCarthy, and tired old school teachers. Now they've just com pleted an investgiation of ob scene literature. They began with comic books and juvenile pulp magazines like "Keyhole", "Tit ter", "Foo", and "Wink", but, car ried away with their piety, they commenced to condemn at ran dom. Books by Steinbeck, James Farrell, and Erskine Caldwell were branded as obscene by some of the more upright committee men. One witness, who had in dignantly decried "pictorial pros titution on the newsstands" found that some of her own literature was not exempt from this arbi trary condemnation. Soon, however, it became evi dent that there could be no line drawn as to what was art and what was obscenity for obscen ity's sake; so the committee re frained from tightening any of the statutes which might have resulted in arresting someone for reading "East of Eden". They re commended that publishers be more discreet, and let it go at that. But there remain many staunch proponents influential propon ents for the banning of "ob scene literature". The way to fix an evil situation, say these pro tectors of American morals, is to pass a law. They did it back in 1919, too. They got the Volstead Act passed and everybody had to make their own whiskey or take the word of the boot-leggers that the stuff was more than two weeks old. Well, the American people weren't quite ready for national prohibition; so, notwithstanding much righteous exhortation, it was repealed. But give the Ftderal Govern ment a little more time to regi ment the American people, to stagnate their minds, and crush individuality, and you can be sure there'll be other attempts at prohibition (not only of alco holic beverages, either). And they're apt to be successful. Fill the courts and the Pentagon up with a few more political cronies, pass a few more guilt-by-association statutes, refuse admittance to a few more aliens, convict a few more people of crimes when they leer at other people, pass a few F.E.P.C. laws, get a few more UN lawyers to jump out of win dows, accuse a few more people of being Communists, and we'll all be robots. Well be scared to do or say anything unconvention al, and the Federal Government will lead us around on a leash. And after the last vestiges of individuality and imagination have disappeared we will have a Utopia. True, there'll be no nov els, no symphonies, no cartoons, no Dixieland, and nobody will play the violin, but, as compen sation, we wlil be protected from the evils of twelve - year - old Scotch, books like "From Here to Eternity" and "Eternity" and "Generation of Vipers, and blas phemous music like Satchmo's "When the Saints Go Marching In". For some time the United Stat es proceeded under the assumpt ion that the least government was the best government. This phil osophy was not completely prac tical as unforeseen difficulties arose; so the Federal Govern ment was given a couple of re luctant inches for modification. It took eight miles, and the original philosophy was closeted. Old Har ry locked it up for good in his steel seizure last summer, for even though the Supreme Court ruled against him, the precedent remains. The thing that scares me the most, though, is the relentless technological "progress". They are close to contriving a machine that is capable of ascertaining your thoughts. Boy, will I ever be banned for obscenity! A Problem The Daily Texan editor wasn't really complaining; but she had a problem: "Along with the press releases from railroads, manufac turers, political parties, and an occasional letter, the editor's mail includes free subscriptions and trial samples. Such a one came the other day, in a neat interesting little box. To any other editor it probably would have been welcome. But this editor is finding it difficult to create uses for a trial jar of shaving cream. Everybody Up! ' .(' '0''' 'rt, " ""u" -DREW PEARSON- THE WASHINGTON Merry - Go Washington Mamie Eisenhow er has had time to look around the White House and discover that she is mistress of a kitchen establishment which is the mod ern housewife's dream. In fact, she is the mistress of a sort of entertainment factory, with three kitchens and several dining-rooms. She also .faces the problem of feeding the presi dent's staff, her own large retinue of servants, plus White House guests. And there will be times when she will wish that congress had acted on that last request of Har ry Truman's to increase the White House 'expense allowance, bacause, unless she's extremely careful, she and the new presi dent will find themselves dipping into their own pockets to pay for White House upkeep. Another thing Mamie will find, after she gets settled, is that Sen. Kenneth McKellar, a bachelor and a parsimonious one at that, will cause her a lot of headaches. For the penny-pinching senator from Tennessee, who presided over the White House appropriations com mittee, scrimped on thermostat head regulators. Thus the White House heat is not controlled by individual thermostats in each room, as in every modern hotel, but by a main thermostat. This means that the sun-room upstairs where the Trumans liked to breakfast is ike a refrigerator in the winter and a furnace in the summer. What Mrs. Eisenhower seemed to like most when she inspected the White House with Mrs. Tru man last month was the big cedar room on the third floor. For a moth-harassed housewife, this room is Heaven. Every inch is lined with cedar, even the cabin ets and drawers; and the room is plenty big enough to hold every piece of wool around the White House, including Dee's old army uniforms which have been a mec- ca for moths at Morningside Heights. Mrs. Eisenhower didn't get a chance to inspect the White EVEJ2 SINCE I UEAKP pgujuct 1 Nonce you ie fkAugmt KJaving SPENT lOO YEARS . INU-JL-, WILD BILL. DOESNT KNOW ABOUT MOVIES. HE. THINKS WHAT HE'S SEEING IS RtLAU(7SA HSTORCAL OPtAMA. SMTTLED 'WILD &JU- , "f etiMKiVfltf --r I I t ,1 rtsrst I Rise And Shine!' - Round House kitchens when she looked over the place with Mrs. Truman, and they happen to be an intrig uing modern food factory. The main kitchen is a huge room in the equivalent of the White House basement, and con tains every imaginable modern de vice for food preparation. Most of this was installed by Mrs. Roosevelt and still is in excellent condition. A large electric range covers one side of the kitchen. There are also work tables with built-in warming trays, a large soup kettle, barbecue spit, coffee grinder, garbage disposal beneaht gigantic sinks, and overhead uten sil hangers. The whole thing is entirely air conditioned with special blowers to remove cooking odors. Mrs. Truman used .to enjoy shooing out the servants and bringing hex; Spanish class down to the kitchen to cook onions, Spanish style, amid many odors which were not always absorbed by the blowers, however. The kitchen contains no dish washing facilities. All dishes are removed to a separate room. A special refrigerator, room is on the far side of the kitchen, fea turing a special cold locker for fish, plus a walk-in storage room. Food for the first family is pre pared in the big kitchen, hoisted on an electric dumb-waiter, and served from the first floor but ler's pantry next to the presi dent's private dining-room. In addition to the main kitchen, there's a small diet kitchen on the third floor about the size of the kitchen Mamie Eisenhower used at the Wardman Park Hotel where she lived during the war years. The third-floor kitchen is used for early morning coffee or a late night snack. Kitchen No. 3 is under the west wing of the-White House, and serves the so-called "Lunch eon Club" or the president's staff. About 35 of Truman's male assist-. ants lunched here every day, get ting a bill at the end of the month for their food. Under Truman it 9 J M 1 "v- -' 11 1 r 0 --U 1 AH SENTENCES YEW. tlO I WILD BILL HICKUP-TEW J VJ7 -Alice Exchange While the Carolina campus has been guest to temperatures rang ing from late winter to the up per 60's of a mild spring day, midwest colleges have also been suffering from these rapid fluxu ations of weather. The pneumonia , weather has been living up to its name. An influenza epidemic hit the Uni versity of Minnesota affecting ap proximately 2,000 students with in 10 days. Campus police have been busy driving students out of the dorms to the Health Service since the virus began, but 40 to 50 really sick students were dis covered in a dorm check. Director of the Health Service stated that the peak of the epidemic passed last onday. He attributed the campus outbreak to the general spread of infection around the country since Christmas. The virus swept Iowa State and Kansas University this past week reducing class attendance and thining office staffs. Depauw University in Green castle, Indiana closed its doors this week when 10 percent of the student body was confined to the infirmary. Northwestern infirmary is fill ed to capacity, has issued a plea for studen tnurses, and is giving free vaccine against the virus at all office hours. Flu hit the University of Miss ouri so hard that 60 beds were moved into the ballroom of the student union to provide for the university hospital overflow. Further south Louisiana State is preparing for a possible out break of respiratory ailments. Dr. Dougherty of hte Student Health Service warned students to take all precautions. Students should avoid crowds and personal con was a strictly stag affair, with lady members of .the president's staff required to lunch in res taurants outside or else bring their lunch to work. Mamie Eisenhower will not be able to do much shopping in Washington markets, even if she has the time. All food for the first family is carefully tested in advance, and the grocery stores where the food is bought remains a security secret. Ticklers IB v SPEED 'Better slow down! They say !.L . -1 joo in xnis 1 - iree with SWLP' iwjvrvm . t into nMbr 1 nM I 5T I ! tf f tm-M IK'S?. I flV52T A Chapman - Column tact. This, he said, means no kiss ing. At least 40 elementary and sec ondary schools have been closed due to the virus infection. In addition to the germ battle our college cousins on the semes ter system are building up their defenses for final exams. The Independent Student Asso ciation at Oklahoma University announced the opening of a quiz file recently. Professors and de partments contributed old quiz zes. Five hundred old tests from past years are now available for Independent review. At Kansas University teacher evaluation sheets are passed out just before finals begin. The stu dent rates the instructor's teach ing methods and hands the sheet back but not until grades are out and on the 'cards. Northwestern, still on the quar ter system, is having difficulties now that grades are out. The stu dent handbook states that no un dergraduate on academic proba tion may hold an extracurricular office. Investigation by the dean of students revealed that 29 hold ers of major campus offices were on the winter probation list. Fourteen fraternities will lose of ficers via enforcement of the rule rule. Students themselves initiat ed the probation system to pre vent failures due to participation in extracurriculars. A student editorial again reminded the campus, "Grades, books, know ledge. They always come first in a place of learning. The titles and honors can play second fid dle." Northwestern Grades, panes, and aches went, hand-in-hand for a disappointed student recently, and they came in that order. Bill Megowen, LA '53, vented" his disappointment about grades by shoving his hand through a large plate glass window in Pear son Hall. He was taken to Evan- ston hospital for emergency treat ment. University officials are trying to decide whether the student should be charged for the window. By George ammo 1 M the cop are re airy ea.C area:" ANJiATEZ 0 yt& AJNTCCT MY lNQjeJMtfr IU. WHI&PBR IT rr'fl -ktGT IT? S flCvWLa V ! Odd A AH WONfT rv I THROUGHTHAt SHOOT HAH WAV V UUT7- 4 MI is: