Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 3, 1953, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE TAR HEEL FRIDAY, JULY .3 1953 PAGE THREE The Tar Heel, published Tuesday and Friday during the first Sum mer Session and printed by The News Inc., Hillsboro, N. C, is the of ficial publication of the Summer School of the University of North Carolina where it is published by the students. STAFF Al Shortt, Pete Adams, Tom Farramore, Rolfe Neill. The Eye Of Roger Will ("The horse sees imperfectly, ing others . . . " Hipporotis; circa ' THE HORSE had appropriated an adding-machine from the Dean Carroll Building and he was parked with it behind New West and really making a hash of things. I wondered if I could help him? "Listenno Insults, please," he growled. "Things are not too good with me, but I ain't that bad off that even you can help me. Stay if you must, but tais tot, dorik." - " That rude French should be Tais-toi, done, not dorik. "When it is you, it is Donk," he chittered. "Nope, I just can't figure this thing out." !.. What couldn't he figure out? "This here now Dan'l Reed, Chairman of the HouseMays & Weans Committee - Pardon. That was wrong. "Well, okey," The Horse wav ed a negligent hoof, "The Mean Ways Committee, or whatever. But anyways and means you choose to call it, he has got a point in his favor about not let ting the Excess Profits Law stay on the books. If Adlai had got in, you think the Repubs would have said if he had requested it, 'Why, sure thing, Ad, ol' boy!'? All the more reason they won't t - TODAY AND SATURDAY DALE nooERTso:j ..EUTtKAlOll - SUNDAY - MONDAY A THOUSAND ROUSIfl' CAROUSIH' THRILLS! ft I n BURT I Ikons? m i isilEIT K nnvincir:iA 1 ay . 1 ? 1 s'if- (J- Warner Bros. jflmr I -S 4k Oil. f II ....... ?55 The Horse Coe magnifying some things, minimh- 500 B. C.) when the campaign was run on a basis of reducing taxes." But they wanted to balance the budget. "For goodness' sake," The Horse snapped, "the durn bud get has been unbalanced so long it is a more favored attraction than The Leaning Tower of Pisa, or Leaner Home. Whatchu wan na do, ruin one of our great sen ic attractions?" That was Lena Home. The Horse sat bolt upright. "Where?" He slumped back to a sprawl with his head on the adding-machine. "Always kidding," he sighed. He grinned hugely at the clouds passing overhead and jsaid, "Some weather is moving in from the Horse Latitudes! I wonder if the Mayor of Carrboro knows about this? It makes me homesick. The way Ike must feel when he looks through his scrapbook and sees some of the Special Orders he cut when he was whipping the world ta a frazzle." Ike had been a great leader. "He still could be," The Horse said, his eight-ball eyes follow ing the clouds so far that a bru nette intersected his gape and carried it along in the other di rection with her. "He still could be. But he ain't going to be it listening to every mush-mouth in and around Washington. The way I figure, he got a case of White House-itis and before he could recover, ol' Chuck Wilson was in there telling him how God made little green Chewies, and then Dulles took off to slurp shiskebab with the A-rabs, and Syngman Rhee frightened him by posing like Washington Cross ing The Delaware, and Holy Joe McCarthy heard Ike had bid and made Six Hearts, Redoubled, and that's a Red suit, you know." I thought there was a limit to fault-finding. What was wrong with. Dulles? "A victim of Grammar," The Horse murmured, trying to pick his teeth with a hoof and ending up by biting himself. "Just a victim of Grammar." How was that? "Compare," The Horse invited me, "the adjective 'Dull.' I didn't go along? "You have my permission to do so," The Horse yawned. "Ain't you got no eddycation? Dull; Duller; " Dulles. John Fos ter may be an all-right Joe, but if don't look like a fat Harry Truman walking around half asleep, I give up. Heck, it is an invitation - to eucher him, to our so- called friends. One way and another, though, Ike ought to snap out of it and start to bawl out the orders, not just stand around trying to take them." Maybe he thought Ike played too much golf? "I'd prefer Polo for him," The Horse said. "Polo is mounted golf, sort of. But I favor his playing golf, especially at that Burning Tree club of his outside Washington. Once, a Burning STOur favorite flshSng C2?t we're set with wlia? yen noQti . . evosrvthing from a vihlto disincar f selrcl to a T slt&f. on the' Carolina Front Louis Kraar DANVILLE It almost scares you "to find so much of . yourself in a-book. That's the way it was today as I finished Thomas Wolfe's "Look Homeward Angel" on the train. Wolfe's freshman loneliness, sophomore know-it-all, and sen ior sophistication were all there. The way he described Chapel Hill would make even Trustees proud today. . , "In this pastoral setting a young man was enabled to loaf comfortably and delightfully through four luxurious and in dolent years," writes the editor of this paper in 1920. . Later he says, "And they talk ed, under trees, against the ivied walls, assembled in "their rooms, they stalked in limp sprawls in cessant, charming, empty South ern talk: they talked with a large easy fluency about God, the Devil, and philosophy, the girls, politics, athletics, fraternities and the girls My God! How they talked!" No doubt he'd have added Sat urday classes to those conversa tion topics if he were writing to day. He didn't omit anytring else though. I closed the book as my train slid into the dirty Danville sta tion. I shuffled down a flight of stairs to a dreary looking wait ing room. A tall drawling woman asked me if I wanted a sandwich. "They really supposed to be for service men," she said. And then she added sweetly, "But you can come too." I went" into the room they call a "service lounge" a small place with a few leather chairs, maga zines and a desk. We ate pimento cheese sand wiches and talked. And talked. "Oh you're reading "Look Homeward Angel,' she said eye ing the book in my hand. I agreed that I was. ''You know," she bubbled on in her best drawl, "I met him when I was studying at Caro lina." She didn't look that old. She went on, "He seemed to feel so deeply about things. I told him that I was working on my doctor's in psycholoby. He said to me, 'My god, that's enough of all that stuff. Why don't you quit?' Well you know I never did get my doctorate, but that Caro lina is a lovely place. So much going on and all. "Yes, I know," I couldn't help telling her, "I'm there now." "You are. You're so lucky. Will, I'll never forget Wolfe. It was in '41, and he died right af ter that you know." The train came and I left. As it finally pulled out, I wondered about the drawling hostess who had talked to wolfe in 1941. It must have been his ghost, though, because the chronicler of youth, love, sex, Carolina and loneliness died in 1938. That's one conversation that I'm sorry I missed. Bush led a great people out of danger, so maybe he'll get in spired by a Burning Tree. Ike is,, our President. Not Wilson; not Taft; not Dewey; not Holy Joe and his unholy minions. I want to see him start acting like the old Ike again." I hope to see what The Horse wants, for once. Golnfj vocation Sag? 7hcfihcr fca'ro rjolag' to a ferrate piece es :: ...Ji ..,..1. .,.... W 7 "' s,ikS i .T A&P Fancy Light Meat una fm Short Grain VBEH BCSE Bartlett HI-C mm- mice Take Home A Case Sweet Mixed Jane Parker Golden im mi FRESH FRUITS i m Sweet Sf Golden -o.fe a LfiOVS PHHlES m uarrois - - - Firm Ripe Heavy with Juice Lemons A&P's Vegetable SHORTENING J Tetley Tea 4rOZ. Pkg. - 77c - 22s TEA BAGS ict 19c Lava Soap Med. Bar Spic & Span lie P&G Soap fell a Bars Peter Pan Salted Peanuts 5 & VEGETABLES Sweet Jumbo 36's plus Bottle And Case Deposit uauiiiLi For South Carolina California Red Plums - - - Crisp 5 - l-Lb. Bag Bananas - 2 Lbs. - Lb. Krey's With Brown Gravy Chopped Beef With Brown Gravy Sliced Beef With Brown Gravy Sliced Pork A & P'S i X Mon PriohortShtnk 12 14 hb.Avg. jN ISmoked Hams - S7cSl1 f BUTT " gQn SHANK rw Pjn. VrW-y I PORTION OlSC PORTION Lb- SlfiSfe 4SuoerSieht''MJD P Rea JV"1 JJr J1! Tfi:" xesh Fryers 'Super-Right" Chuck ?ot Ooast SWIFT PREMIUM FRANKS FRESHLY GROUND BEEF .... SLICED ALL MEAT BOLOGNA PICKLE AND PIMENTO LOAF . 210 WEST FBAfilCLIf STREET t-os. n n r 2-Lb. Pkg. Facxers 16-Oz. fff Cans lj - Can ML to - N. B.C. Peanut Creme Patties Per Case Marcal Soda Pillsbury Cake Qt. Jar 4m Rajah Picnic Each wmmm Q"CLOtH 2 fif l mMW Mild And Mellow Eight O'clock Rich & Full-Bodied RED CIRCLE ARMOUR'S MEATS VIENNA SAUSAGE . 19c ARMOUR'S TREET 45c CORNED BEEF rw I I fcU MEAT CORNED BEEF DRIED SLICED CHOPPED HAM . - - 10-Oz. Can 16-Oz. Can 16-Oz. Can "SUPER-RIGHT" MEATS Blade - - - - - nap STORES WILL . . CLOSE ALL DM SATURDAY, JULY , , - .n- Orange Juice -- cans Paper Towels .:2 s35c Superfine Cut 9 8-Or. 1Q- Green Beans cans Everbest - Dills - Kosher - Sour Pickles o jars c Ann Page Sparkle Mix For Pkgs. 6-Oz Pkg 6-Oz. 1C m. Straws pkg 5c White - Chocolate - Yellow . Mix,. 3 "f-$1.00 Shredded 4-Oz. M. Cocoanut pkg Shoestring 4-Oz. 1 Q. PotatOeS Can Packers' Label i 19 Oz 'JC Tomatoes -- Cans --'v' CUSTOM GROUND to give you BETTER FLAVOR, BETTER VALUE! Freshly-roasted A&P Coffee is Custom Ground when you buy just right for your coffeemaker . . . you get all the fine flavor you pay for! Yet, compared with others of like-quality, it saves you up to 12c a pound! l-Lb. Bag urn 3-Lb. Bog $2.37 I Vigorous & Winey BOKAR 83c 49c cT 13c HASH ... J? 31c BEEF 15 29r Pkg. Swift's I'JEL pt Bot. 82e 47c 35c 49c 49f. 25c 7V4-0. Glass k as s mi . . - TEA coiuiJ- ,hCHUCK CONNORS i nc5 Effective Thru Fri., JcIy 3rd Hi
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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