FRIDAY, APRIL J,
PAGE TWO
THE DAILY TAR
: ;l
rrv wffTBtfly of flu Carolina. PnblicatioilS
Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the
Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. En
tered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel
Hill, N. C, under act ox match a, xoiv. uDscnptreu
price, $3.00 for the coiKge year.
J. Mac Smith-
Charles W. Gilmore
William McLean
Jesse Lewis
.Editor
-Managing Editor
Busines Manager
.Circulation Manager
Editorial Staff
Editosial Wkte28: Stuart Babb, Lytt Gardner,
Allen Mernll, Voit Gilmore, Bob duFour, Ramsay
Potts, R. Herbert Kolier.
Nsws Editors: Will G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Mor
ris Rosenberg.
Deskmen: Tom Stanback, Ray Lowery, Jesse Reese.
vvxiTtui tta PmnRTvrss7 (Thar Ipr Barrett. Adrian bpies,
David Stick, Donald Bishop, Miss Lucy Jane
Hunter, Carroll McGaughey (Radio), Miss Gladys
Best Tripp, Hill Snyder, Lawrence 21. x ening.
Rewsite: Jim McAden.
Exchange Editor: Ben Dixon.
Sports Night Editors: Shelley Rolfe, Frank Holeman,
Laffitte Howard.
Sports Reporters: Jerry Stoff, William L. Beerman,
Richard Morris, Martin Kalkstein, Leonard Lobred.
Business Staff
Advertising Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey.
DURHAM Xilii'KJWSJSiMlAll'. UV-B. jaoi.iiix.
LOCAt Advertising Assistants Stuart Ficklin, Bert
Halperin, isili ugDurn, Anurew vjenneu,, xxaui-
Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, Louis Barba,
XSOU J-ztilllcI, .tvi JJULn., vim uviii-'-
For This Issue
News: Gordon Burns ' Sports: Laffitte Howard
Jewish Services
To Be Held In
Union Tonight
Professor Bernstein To
Speak At 7:30 On "On
Being a Jew" In Grail Room
Two services for Jewish students
will be held tonight in the Grail room
of Graham Memorial, Rabbi Bernard
Zelger announced yesterday.
At 7 o'clock the Orthodox services
will be held in the Grail room, and
at 7:15 the Reformed service will be
held in the banquet hall.
Speech
Professor M. E. Bernstein will
speak at 7:30 in the Grail room on
the subject, "On Being a Jew."
The Passover Seder will be held
April 15 at 6:15 o'clock in the Caro
lina inn ballroom. Rabbi Zeiger will
be in his office, second floor of the
YMCA, from 2-4 o'clock next week to
accept reservations.
No reservations will be accepted
after April 8.
Illustrious Jurist
BIRTHDAYS
TODAY
(Please call by the ticket office
of the Carolina theater for a com
plimentary pass.)
Robert Witherspoon Falk
Royce Coles Jennings
Charles Jerome McCrathy
Elizabeth Gordon Taylor
John Burton Thompson
Frank A. Rice
Sidney Melvin Schwartz
Carroll McGaughey
Bob Perkins
Duncan McColl.
On The Air
GERMAN CLUB
ELECTIONS 3 MINUTES FLAT
The German club elections were over in 3 min
utes yesterday. The old "crowd won every office.
Of course the meeting had been announced to
the public and the whole membership of the Ger- j
man club. There had been a brief bulletin tucked
away in the 'back of the Tar Heel (for it had
Vippti nnimnortantlv sent in late the night be-
X 1)
fore) ...
. 8:00 The Cities Service Concert,
awful lot; there IS a lot 01 money mVOlvea, DUt starring Lucille Manners (WEAF)
rtit.Prt- tJiptg is a sizeable bloc 8 :d0 Mildred Bailey will be the
..:, , ., , guest of Paul Whiteman on his pro
01 xne campus uiiicumy wuuucu pcuu-iuwuwwu gram tonight (WBT) ; "Death Valley
of the club, but they get the dances and don't Days" (WJZ).
mi-i- o Krtf h fim or cm . 9:00-" Goodbye Broadway" will be
yxy u o v. a previewed in a special radio version
the dance committee.
It doesn't really matter that the German club1
elections are sprung upon us each year in flagrant
violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the
campus rules of fair play.
HORIZONTAL
1. 6 Famous
American
judge.
11 Street car.
12 Citrus Trait
14 RelaSed by
blood.
16 Large stringed
instrument.
17 Sheaves.
18 Fairy.
19 Kind.
20 Spinning
machine.
22 Measure.
23 Northeast.
24 His father
was the fa
of the same
name.
25 To pierce
with a knife.
27 Southeast.
28 Sailor.
29 To weep.
31 To choose by
ballot
33 Mohammedan
nymph.
35 To declaim.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
iPtotEim
it ir!Q! 51 laiYiRDiNl
TPnPl ILjCTAJSlElJ 1 NNL
uIfmoBIi st ItIllt3rs
kbtNA ; ' e mm
AJ A S r un U M1 L m
N tiriT Kl ffflDI MK U
Ki
DTO'
N
P
rm
A Al 111 Dl I IINI
He o 5 e ju 5 c Mr aq
SjE R E IS C oNnMB l OB
36 Oak.
37 Opposed to
lee.
59 Fragments
of wood.
40 Within.
41 Nay.
42 Form of "a."
43 Aristocratic.
48 Musical note.
50 Starch.
51 Plant shoot
53 He was jus
tice of the
U. S. A.
Court
54 His middle
name.
VERTICAL
1 Pope's scarf.
2 Small bird.
3 Little devil.
4 To run away.
5 To relax.
6 Cornets,
7 Assault
8 Geographical
drawing.
9 Pieces out
10 Male ances )
tors.- .
11 He was lib
eral all
his life (pU.
13 Males.
15 He was in
his when
he died.
20 To classify.
21 Reckless.
24 Compacts.
26 Covered stall.
28 Mortise tooth.
30 Engraver's
tool.
32 Classical
language.
34 To pot again.
38 Theater plat
form. 39 Linked neck
lace. 42 Sloths.
43 Nominal value
44 Male cat.
45 Provided.
46 Frozen water.
47 To bow. . -
49 Sick.
50 Spain.
52 Compass point
II il ""3 " H 15
, - ; jg
19 zl Ti '
uuiMrZ9 30
32 I inX 1 33 34
37" " '
1 11 I I I L-J L- ' ' Li
'ANGLES
By AUen MerriU
Bob Maeill called together a littu
eight students Thursday night to launch j J
grara lor miruuuciiig a campus legislature ir
SLUUCUL gUVCIUUlCUb.
Recalling last year's blood-sweating strj??5
on the part of a group of enthusiasts, ila
minded the "starters" that the
rt-
jected by a narrow margin the complicated, teaw
j :j li-ii T l t ...
anu luteins Lit pxau 01 last year s (x)mrnittee.
After quoting a list of over twenty-five praj.
tical cases since September when some sort cf
legislative organ was either necessary or desira.
ble, he urged the committee of eight to sponsor a
legislative plan which was, above everything else,
practical and easy to wedge into the present stu
dent government set-up.
Certainly no single group on the campus is h
a better position to recommend a legislature to
the student body than the student council.
If the committee of "drafters" keep their fee
on the ground long enough to draw up a sound
proposal by election date, poll-goers on April 12
can "mark" into student government the biggest
innovation since the Student Council was organ
ized in 1904.
starring Alice Brady and Charles
Winniger on the "Hollywood Hotel"
(WBT); The Royal Crown Revue,
starring Tim and Irene (WJZ).
10:00 The Song Shop, with Reed
Kennedy and Alice Cornett (WBT) ;
"Oh, Your Highness," is the title of
Campana's, First Nighter (WSB).
11:00 A blow-by-blow description
of the heavyweight championship
bout between Joe Louis and Harry
Thomas in Madison Square Garden,
Announcers will be Bob Brown and
Lynn Brandt (WENR or WIS).
MY LITTLE
GIRL
(Montgomery Advertiser)
Today my daughter, who is seven years old,
started to school as usual. She wore a dark blue
dress with a white collar. She had on black shoes
and wore blue gloves. Her cocker-spaniel, whose
name is "Coot," sat on the front porch and whined
his canine belief in the folly of education as she
waved "good-bye" and started off to the halls of
learning.
Tonight we , talked about school. She told me
about the girl who sits in front of her the girl
with yellow curls and the boy across the aisle
who makes funny faces. She told me about her
teacher, who has eyes in the back of her head
and about the trees in the school yard and about
the big girl who doesn't believe in Santa Claus.
We talked about a lot of things tremendously
vital, unimportant things; and then we studied
spelling, reading, arithmetic and then to bed.
.
bne s back there now back m the nursery
sound asleep, with "Princess Elizabeth" (that's a I
doll) cuddled in her right arm. You guys wouldn't
hurt her, would you? You see, I'm her daddy.!
When her doll is broken or her finger is cut, r
her head gets bumped, I can fix it but when
she starts to school, when she walks across the
street, then she's in your hands.
She's a nice kid. She can run like a deer and'
darts about like a chipmunk. She likes to ride
horses and swim and hike with me on Sunday
afternoons. -But I can't be with her all the time
I have to work to pay for her clothes and her edu
cation. So please help me look out for her. Please
drive carefully, please drive slowly past the schools
and intersections and please remember that chil
dren run from behind parked cars.
' Please don't run over my little girl.
Ami n wtii ii t jii ami, mi mm,iiiiiin umiji 11 .. i mill nil uij.m j t m hiim'imimuii n w 1 1 i n in.. n n-w.ua
DEATH ON THE UPGRADE x
'i Htpi i itiri
- hyfigjgjk fjf"' " !
Firm. fmihM hr K. C u S. C. Sutc tnM Dn Cmlii mm CM.
JPmM
IPeip
Garibaldi to his Roman Soldiers-
Soldiers, what I have to offer you is fatigue,
danger, struggle and death; the chill of the cold
night in the free air, and heat under the burning
sun ; no lodgings, no munitions, no provisions, but
forced marches, dangerous watchposts and the
continual struggle with the bayonet against bat
teriesthose who love freedom and their country
lKsss
Ml fjs400 ,
cetVo2ii-
POINT OF VIEW
By Ramsay Potts
To reduce automobile accidents on our highways and
streets accidents which are daily taking lives of Carolina
citizens Pure Oil dealers are launching a Drive Safely
Crusade in which leading civic organizations are being
invited to act as CO-SPONSORS.
The purpose of the crusade is to persuade motorists to ap
ply the Golden Rule to driving and to observe "common
sense" rules of safety at all times.
Everyone can lend a helping hand in this Crusade. Here
is how you can do your part
Sign the Drive Safely Pledge
EUTER THE BIG PRIZE CONTEST
Ho Cost - No Obligation
Stop la at your Pure Oil dealers' today. Get a Pledge Card
and an Entry Blank for the April Prize Contest You don't
have to buy a thing there's no obligation whatsoever.
Do this NOW. Be among the first to sign the pledge to
Drive Safely To Save A life Avoid An Accident Pre
vent An Injury.
Get this
Free Emblem
for youx car
$02
e? DRIVE SAFELY
A large corporation .had violated the National
Labor Relations Act and the case was referred to
Mr. Bennett Schaufflet, the Regional Director
from Baltimore. The violation was an obvious
one but nevertheless the corporation hired some
high-powered lawyers to present its defense.
As the review before the trial examiner pro
ceeded it became clear that the company had no
answer to the charges brought against it. The
counsel of highly-paid lawyers could only stall
for time. Every day meant more fees, so that
was the "wise" thing for them to do. The climax
of the case come on the last day. Mr. P. D. Q.
Tillinghast, the spokesman for the corporation
counsel pronounced this dictum: "You cannot
overlook the fact the Joe Doaks was discharged,
not for union activity, but for soldiering on the
job."
Mr. P. D. Q. felt righteously indignant about
the plebian prostitution of his own "wise" tactics.
Mr. Schaufflet accompanied Mr. Edwin S. Smith
here for the latter's talk on the NLRB, given
Wednesday night in Memorial Hall. They agreed
that the simplest cases as to the application of the
Labor Act, have been those involving big com
panies. The Ford's and the Remington-Rands
persist in believing that might is right. Their
violations are so clear as to present no problem
of interpretation.
These large companies have of course used
pressure on Congress to curb the NLRB's power.
But all attempts to cut the appropriation of the
Board, or to amend the act, have met with de
termined opposition. Despite the criticisms that
have been directed at the Board by some promi
nent labor leaders the rank and file of labor or
ganizations are zealous guardians of its powers.
The evolution in the public attitude is looked
upon as a necessary step to greater co-operation
between the Davey Clark's and their mill-workers.
Not on the basis of paternalism, but through col
lective bargaining is the way labor wants it.
The NLRB is seeing that it gets its demand.
"But," said Mr. Smith, "public criticism has been
the most powerful instrument of pressure brought
to bear on us. We need the confidence and sup
port of the general public"
Letters To The Editor
Over 250 Words Subject to Cutting
SAVE A LIFE - AVOID AN ACCIDENT - PREVENT AN INJURY
KENAN OIL COMPANY
BEN STROWD Operator Pure Oil Service Station
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
TORN TENDON
To the Editor:
Dear Sir:
Several days ago in your sport page there ap
peared an article concerning the prospects of &e
1938 edition of the baseball team. The author
of the article stated that the team would suffer
considerable because of the ineligibility of se
players among which was Herbert Abramson. Evi
dently the author of the article was misinform1
about the status of Mr. Abramson. He is
ineligible as stated, but he is suffering from
torn tendon. I would appreciate it very much
you make a correction.
HERBERT STAN&
may follow me.