u . , . . . . ... k u Saturday, .November 5, 1966 THE DAILY TAR KEEL Page 3 i i A rrogan Is Now Dodd By JOSEPH FLEMING BERLIN (UPI) - Once he was an arrogant Nazi symbol, resplendent in his borwn storm uuupers unuorm. He was Adolf Hitlers right hand man tu uiium, one ot tne mad- sent to Spandau with him by dest of the gang of madmen the Nuernberg military tri who plunged the world into bunal all have been released? waJ- . It is expected that a move- x Even m wartime captivity - ment already in being to grant he threatened the British with clemency to Hess will grow cuiiwmrauon camps and star- vation if they continued to re sist. Now "Prisoner No. 7" is aged and haggard, a stooped, bony scarecrow. Even the Al lied warders in four - power Spandau Prison are sorry for if krri mi i BALL lte''Sl li , i a ?l mi a ai lit To most students football is' just a game. But to the play ers it's a grueling, unfair, full-time way of life.Saysone, "You end up after four years with a bum knee, talking like a clod, fit for nothing." Now a Florida State professor in "Speaks Out" charges that football makes coaches liars and the rest of us hypocrites. Read about his plan to pay the players. And about the sly ways coaches force in jured players to give up their scholarships. Don't miss this story and another on F. Lee Bailey, Boston's sensational lawyer with a mind for mur der. Both are in the Novem ber 5 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. Get your copy - today i.'j.' i'- i A- . mm JtCUttTISHMUmC ON SALE NOW DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS l.Dip out 5. Hew 9. Certain horse 10. Wished (for) 12. Oil of rose petals 13. Come in 14. Asterisk 15. Letter 16. Burmese language 17. Pronoun 18. Audience 19. Wooden pin 20. Arsenal 23. Hastens 24. Feigns 3. Costly . 23. Border 4. Blunder of 5. Applaud a 6. Sharpen skirt 7. Make choice 25. En- 8. Nickname coun for a small tered fry 9. Turkish title 11. Hauls 15. Iroquoian Indians 18. Bitter vetch 19. "Leaning Tower" city 21. Hair on lion's neck .22. Baking chamber 26. Gasp 28. Second part of the Talmud 31. Am. humorist 32. Cushion 33. Part of "to be" 34. Ship's crew: abbr. 35. Poetic contraction 36. Food fish 38. Woody perennials 40. Parade 41. Vend3 42. Brightly colored fish 43. Kill 44. Capital of Norway DOWN 1. More recent 2. Recorded proceedings TW i'1:,! : U V f 3I)CTEEN ACROSS S - 'MAN'S BEST FRlENtO jJjLtm-trtimmmmtmmmmt ' ' """"" " """ "n4 Pily Mirror. Lo TU S Deputy Fuehrer Hess azi erin; lifer Rudolf Hess, 72 - year -old Deputy Fuehrer, the only inmate in a. prison with room for 660. , What will happen to him now that the other six top Nazis not so much in Germany but in Britain, the United States and France, if not in Russia. "He now has been in jail for 25 years," one Western Al lied officials said. "That is punishment enough, and as Nazis go he was not one of the worst. "He was convicted at Nuernberg of helping to plan and start the war, yes, but not of war crimes or crimes against humanity. "As Churchill said, be mag nanimous in victory, particu larly 21 years after the war." ivcn me rvussians wno tOOK firmest stand of all the victors nn Hpss Pvnrocc H7ill. Even the Russians who took ingness to discuss easing his lot in prison. Hess worried all the four powers that run Spandau be- cause in effect after 0ct- 1 he wciii mtu suiiiarv coniine- ment. At 10 seconds after midnight on Oct. 1 Hess became the only inmate left in the prison. At that time Baldur von Schirach, half - blind 59-year-old Hitler Youth leader, and Albert Speer, 61 - year - old head of the Nazi war eco year terms. . NO MIXER Hess, was not a great mix er in prison, but the absence of the others nevertheless was expected to worsen his men tal and physical state, nev er of the best. s The Americans, British and French proposed that Hess be moved out of his cell into the prison infirmary. And the Rus sians agreed to discuss the pian. TTnovi fj-h. A Taw i-J- 1.11 J little, complained o n - stantlv Vbout his health and tl rrr, appeared to.have, withdrawn to" .;;;!.a,; world of5 his-own,, 7l But in recent years he chat ted with Speer and Schirach when talking was allowed dur ing work periods and walks in the courtyard of the 95 - year -" old red brick prison in the " J UlNlEfjS HOT mo l Eg Lip a n c A N JELJBa STER t aroaiDTn THb I DAM 1S.E N K S fefcisTsi 26. Agree- IAIRI JTTElNlSiJZ0E ments 27. Wor ships 29. Farm Hear sffCu r e s Yesterday's Answer 35. Weblike membrane 36. Spigots 37. Russian river hut, So. Am. style 30, Oriental nurses 32. Diminutive for a young girl 39. Old measure of length 40. Low Iipi-- 34. !!!L y Vh I 1 b TV?fAlR WEATHER T0CAV, CHARLiE 5R00M.. Madman Old Man Spandau district of the Brit ish sector of Berlin. . He does not like work. Of all the garden patches in the courtyard his was the most untidy, although once he took pride in his cabbages, that most German of all vege tables. Hess is untidy and the other Nazis used to help him clean his cell and make his bed, two of the prisoner's chores. Is Hess sane? That ques tion has puzzled the world since his mysterious flight to Scotland May 10, 1941 in a mad effort to get Britain to make peace. He flew without Hitler's permission or knowl edge. He was unrealistic enough to think he could persuade the British dukes he was con vinced the dukes had the real power to fire Winston Churc hill because the Fuehrer would not deal with "such a warmon ger." But he was skillful enough to pilot a Messerschmitt 110 without a navigator or ground guidance through British a i r defenses to within 50 miles' of his goal the residence of the Duke of Hamilton. Sir Ivone Kirkpatric, former British permanent undersec retary of state for foreign af fairs, described the attempts to make sense out of Hess in the early days of his captivity as "a mad hatter's tea party." He wrote in his memoirs that Hess gradually went downhill and in 1944 his let ters home were so rambling the British feared the Ger mans might demand his repa triation under the Geneva Convention. LOST MEMORY Hess himself at the Nuern berg trial for the first 12 days argued through his lawyer that he had lost his memory. He sat in the dock and ignor ed the proceedings, busying himself with reading books ranging from Edgar Wallace to Goethe. , But then one day he stood up, laid hisbook on theOted cushoined prisoners' benchand testified "he had feigned amne sia for tactical reasons. "v "I am willing to take part in the rest of the proceedings ' with the rest of them," he said. Dr. Maurice N. Wash, a University of California psy chiatrist, said he examined Hess in Spandau in 1948 and found him suffering from schizophrenia. Walsh wrote in the American Medical Jour nal last year that American military government authori ties in 1948 asked him to sup press his findings because they did not want to anger the Russians during the tense Ber lin blockade situation. Alfred Seidl, Hess's lawyer, is demanding Hess's release on the basis of that state ment. Those who come in contact with Hess say he certainly is eccentric, that imprisonment has sapped him physically and mentally but he probably is not insane by any Anglo Saxon legal definition of t h e term. Speer, a highly intelligent man who lived with Hess in Sapndau for 20 years, was asked on his release if he though Hess insane. "That is for the doctors to say," he hedged, but added: "He tood up well under the strain of the last few days as he watched us prepare to leave. I must pay him a high compliment. He showed strong nerves." The West Berlin city gov ernment pays the 400,000 mark ($100,000) bill under occupa tion costs and it says it costs 50 times as much to keep an ordinary prisoner in an or dinary jail. - NO, couldn't be - ( U 1 (1 ON EXHIBIT This Elongated silver bowl. Persian, from the Sassanian period (Sixth and Seventh Centuries AID.) is one of the re cent acquisitions now being shown in the Full Id ntis To Business Prejudices LONDON (UPD The wom an boss in the United States is accepted as a matter. . of course. r Not so, though, in Britain, where a woman must work ex ceedingly hard to get any where near the top, must overcome quite a bit; of male prejudice against females in the executive suite, and where she must be prepared to . earn less than her masculine coun terparts. These were conclusions of a report from London's Junior Chamber of Commerce .-..It circulated 10,000 commercial and industrial companies .to provide up-to-date information for girls leaving school or uni versity. . But only 1431 questionnaires were returned, an indicajtion of the massive indifference the majority of British firms feel towards the sex that op erates the company typewrit ers, makes the workers'-tea, andyimames;: the company n chereppEt has; sad otiews for the - ambitious girl -with a mini skirt and smile for the boss but not much else. Feminine guile, it says, won't get a wom an ahead, though it may help topple seme of the barriers of i ll M It II NOW PLAYING r Mi- - and swinging in mi 4 rliftO SO UMR ARE ALL MY FRIENP5 - WHOEVER 'EARO OF AN'YBObV BORROWIN1 MONEY FROM A QOGf -s I 4JS f "1- PMC y - III Wo ntsn prejudice against her. A British girl in business al so encounters stinginess. More than two-thirds of the women executives polled earned less than $4,200 a year, and only eight per cent got more than $7,000. The women have compara ble responsibility of male ex ecutives but very few men earn less than $4,200. One firm observed: "We do not employ any women execu tives because of all our buyers have to make frequent visits to extreme tropical climates, for which women would not be suitable." Some of the firms also gave novel answers for not com pleting the quesionnaire: Their type of business wasn't suit able for women: they hadn't had any applications from would-be women executives; they employed women, but they wouldn't call them exe cutives. Jt , appears,, that -;a . woman can be her own worst enc ny . Get out from under this weekend. Fly some placefor half fare on Eastern. Visit a friend in another town. See an 'away" game. Change the scene. Leave late, come back late, enjoy a long weekend without cutting classes. Use your Eastern Youth ID Card, or an other airline's version. If you don't have one and you're under 22 you really ought to. To get your Youth Fare Card, send a $3 check or money order, proof of age (copy MP -. X'. v. -,v w, 'a- -r. 1. V Permanent Collection Exhibition at Ackland Art Center. The exhibit will be on view to day through November 13. Subject In 'the second questionnaire, sent to already successful wo men executives, one-third an swered "yes" to the question: "Is it your experience that the majority of able women prefer not to reach executive positions? Some women apparently "see" prejudice as one sees a mirage a kind of -defeatist thinking which justifies their own fears of inadequacy. The Featuring : OH BOY BAR-B-Q dinner Jfcifc CHICKEN witli trimminga Permanent Collection Exhibited At Ackland Ackland Art Center opened its doors yesterday to its Full Permanent Collection Exhibi tion, including its most recent acquisitions. The exhibition will remain at the Columbia Street Gallery until November 3- The main exhibit hall will be filled with paintings and sculpture and the north and south galleries will contain more of the same, plus part of the Art Center's collection of prints and drawings. The collection covers a wide range of objects and periods and is primarily a teaching collection. Dr. Joseph C. Sloane, the director of Ackland and head of the Department of Art, is largely responsible for pur chasing and acquiring the col lection. A substantial amount of the collection has been lent in the past to various other galleries in this country and abroad. Three paintings have just ar rived back from the Musees de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France, which were lent for their major exhibition of the - summer. Outstanding pieces in the new acquisitions now on dis play are a large Corinthian vellel of red and black-figured clay, called a column krater, from about 620-600 B.C., with friezes on both sides; a Pre - Greek, Cycladic period (250 B.C. terra cotta sculpture of a figure; a terra cotta relief by Claude Michel Clodion (French, 1738 - 1814), "Satyr with Attendant Amor ini," an oil on canvas by II Domenichino (Bologna 1581 -Rome 1641), "River Scene"; an. oil on panel, "A Big Tree DRIVE IN Call 942-1339 THE OH BOY DOUBLE BURGER a giant double-pattie meal STEAK PLUS of driver's license, birth certificate or pass port) to Eastern Airlines, Department .350, 10 Rockefeller Plaza, N.Y.,N.Y. 10020 With your Youth ID Card, you can get an Eastern ticket for half fare. No advance reservations are permitted. But. if there's a seat free at departure time, after passen gers holding reservations and military per sonnel have been seated, you can fly to any Eastern city in the United States. And look down on all the drivers. NUMBER ONE TO ?r.''.'. si V". in a Riverlandscape" by Jan Van Goyen (Dutch, 1596 -1656); a statue from the Basonge Tribe, Congo; a gift of an original gouache draw ing by Amedeo Modigliani. "Head of a Young Man"; a number of drawings and prints ;and some pieces of glassware purchased in con nection with the Art Nouveau show of the summer. The most outstanding ob jects in the regular collection are Gustave Courbet's oil, "Roe Deer in the Snow"; Camilie Pissaro's landscape "Les Bords de L'Oise, Pon toise"; Eugene Delacroix' "Cleopatra and the Servant". The galleries are open . to the public Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m and Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. The museum is closed all day Monday I Student Rates (WI.D. Cardf (Week-Ends Only) jf 7.50 Single & ? 8.50 1 DDL Bed 10.50 2 DEL Beds J 138 Rooms ) t Dininr Boom & Banquet & Facilities ? King's Tavern Z 1103 N. Eha, Greensboro- 275-0271 y Now Offers A DELIVERY SERVICE! 5-11 P.M. Delivery Charge 75c SANDWICH MANY MORE! THE FUN

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