PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1940 The official nwfaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of Njrth Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanks giving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. O, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. 1939 Member 1940 Associated Go2e6icte Press Martin Harmon Morris W. Rosenberg William Ogburn Larry Ferling MFftMNTn WOm NATIONAL l National Advertises Service, Inc. OtUett Pmbliibm Rgprttemistiot 420 Maoisom Ave New York. N. Y. Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager LIGHT On The Hill BY BILL SNIDER The Sparkle of the Week Chapel Hill contemporaries of New University Controller Billy Carmich ael remember him best as the flashy utile varsity basketball star who was captain of the White Phantoms in his junior year and whose fast-moving accurate style of play out timed many an unwary opponent. And they remem ber most of all his brilliant perform ance in the Southern Conference cham pionship tournament down in Atlanta in the early twenties when Carolina opposed Alabama in the game for the crown. All this happened in the days before the Southerneastern Conference when the whole South fought it out together. Fans remember that game too for the rough the tumble exhibition put on by the Alabama team a crew of big husky fellows none of whom seemed to know basketball had any rules In the closing minutes of the game after several Alabama men had been thrown out on fouls, the team found itself faced with the prospect of playing only four men against Carolina's five. The referee was about to call that vital fifth man off the floor when Carolina asked that he be allowed to remain. Instead of showinc his prat.it.nHp. "t.Tw hio -follmw w a ri i t t. ol -11 re m t t I D -e -.w.w X.OCAX. adviu assistants: omciair uacops xvuius rauuw. xom asn roughened it up all the morCf confident jacK uoe, duck usoorne, D:ve xteiss, xign usun, cm otanoacs, doo that he wouldnt be thrown Qut in BIBLICAL PROPHET Editorial Writers: Ed Rankin, Don Bishop, Bill Snider, Frank Holeman. REPORTERS: Bill Rhodes Weaver, Louis Harris, Doris Goerch, Dorothy Coble, Zbe Young, Grady Reagan, Bucky Harward, Sylvan Meyer, Dick Young, Campbell Irving, Gene Williams, Sanford Stein, Philip Carden, Vivian Gillespie, Martha LeFevre. Columnists: Adrian Spies, Johnny Anderson, Mack Hobson. Technical Staff News Editors: Carroll McGaughey, Charles Barrett, Rush Hamrick. Night Sports Editors: Leonard Lob red, Fred Cazel, Orville Campbell. Desk men: Edward Prizer, Bob Thomas, Ben Roebuck. Sports Staff Editor: Shelley Rolfe. Reporters: William L. Beerman, Richard Morris, Harry Holiingsworth, I about fouling. Jerry Stoff, Jack Saunders, Josh Goldberg, Frank Goldsmith. s Circulation Assistant Manages: Jack Holland. Office: Bradford McCuen, Larry Dale, D. T. Hall. HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured Biblical prophet 6 He was a great leader and (pL). 13 Veiny 15 Without difficulty. 16 Fabulous bird. 17 Bound. 19 Thus. 20 Sound of inquiry. 22 Astringent 24 Weight allowance. 26 Salt. 28 Sea skeleton. 30 To turn about 32 Bellow. 34 Great lake. 36 Genuine. 38 Connecting word. 39 New York. 41 He was given the Ten by his God. 44 Golf device. 46 Almonds. 47 Domestic slave. Answer to Previous Peril e SjEoK N HAPjELTlL TtNSj jTT JDiErriRi I imf n TTlvr WNiTlElSI lAiRIATTTTSPmPI IRIAPiEOSH lAJTlEOR I SO SHAWNON 48 SoiL 50 Half. 52 To regret. 53 Either. 55 Anything .steeped. 56 Right. 58, Note in scale. 59 Negative. 61 Plural pronoun. 62 Mohammedan noble. 64 Fancies. 66 He led his people out oi the land of 67 Middle. VERTICAL 2 Convex molding. 3 Safe. 4 Half an em 5 Drunkard. 6 Ogles. 7 You and I. 8 Fuel. 9 Cow-headed goddess. 10 An ecclesiastic. 11 Ell. 12 Grain. 14 To hold 3 session. 16 Story-teller 18 Deposit at river mouths. 21 His life was full of both ease and (pl.) 23 Refuse from pressed grapes. 25 To revolve. 27 Borrowers. 29 Lion-hearted person. 31 Producing happiness. 33 Insect. 35Mooley apple. 37 Type measures. 40 Yes. 42 Mountain. 43 Finale. 45 To sin. 49 Bulb flower 51 Rodent 54 Drove. 57 Label. 60 Five plus five 63 Mine. 65 Preposition. nder & J Local Advertising Gennett Business Staff Managers: Jimmy Schleifer, Bill Bruner, Andrew Durham Advertising Managers: Bill Schwartz, Alvin Patterson. Collections Manager: Morty Ulman. Collections Staff: Morty Golby, Parke Staley, Mary Susan Robertson, Mary Ann Koonce, Elinor Elliot, Millicent McKendry. Office Manager: Phil Haigh. of anything he did. Aiong witn nis teammates young Carmichael had been pushed around j until he naturally become a bit peeved. Wisely he held back until the very last second. J ust before the closing gun sounded, the big fellow went lumbering Office Staff: Grace Kutledge, Sarah Nathan, Oren Oliver, Bill Vail, Mickey I across the floor. Very neatly Car- Grindlinger. For This Issue: News: LEONARD LOBRED Sports:, FRED CAZEL MINORITY Miss Igo And Phi It seems the surge in student activities made by coeds last year is not just a temporary shifting of the sands Carolina's women students are indulging in ever more active participation in campus affairs. The newest example of this trend is seen in the selection by acclamation of Marian Igo to serve next quarter as speaker of the Phi assembly. Last year vi vacious Mickey Warren became tne nrst coea to oe elected to a class office, and Louise Walker became the first woman presi dent of the Di senate. All this is as it should be, and the Daily Tar Heel welcomes the end of the days when the single function of coeds on the campus was to furnish an op portunity for expressive whist ling. And yet many women students complain that their opportunity for participation in campus af fairs is still too limited. Rapidly increasng in numbers and ability, coeds in the future should hold more and more responsible positions. being conducted by the Di senate, to which Wolfe belonged. The holder of the Wolfe manu scripts has promised to give the University of North Carolina first option and the price is set associates, at $5,000. Paul Green, a Pulitzer prize winner, and contemporary of Wolfe's, has headed the commit tee trying to raise the necessary funds, but his efforts throughout IT ail tne state nave produced only a small amount. The Di will canvass each stu dent and, as in most drives, will michael extended his foot just in front of the other's toe. Spectators say the bully went riding down the floor on his face with the crowd's roar of ap proval sailing behind. P.S. Carolina won the game. Dept. of Enlightenment In Washington last week rounding up a flock of prospective speakers, "Senator" Harry Gatton and his CPU Bill Joslin and Norman Stockton, had an unexpected interview with silent sincere senior Senator Van denburg, the Republican from Michi gan. They were puttering around the impressive senate office building when they accidently ran into the walking; very busily. along a corridor, Never one to let an unexpected oppor tunity slip by, Gatton approached the senator, introduced himself, and pro ceeded to rattle off the familiar CPU pressure spiel. "Senator," he said, II p p M & I & I j? Id 19 i0 lit j!Z I -r s Jr- ; J " t7 i8 202I 22 23 24 25 ST 27 28 " "79 30 51 32 33 ' 34 -"35 36 37 35" WW?l ""IT"' " 44 15 W 5 5T 'pU W 5T " p ' 5F54 p 5T5T"-W KhjM - 59 "60 61 6263 : " P'ijf 64 "66 f1 il 1 1:BI1 11 In On Other Campuses From 3 oast To c G oasi By BEN ROEBUCK "We'd like tn have vou down in Chanel accept any donation, no matter Hiil for a speech in the spring when how small, for each ten cents your campaign gets rolling." adds to the total. Tom Wolfe was a great student Here. His grades were A-l, and he served first as managing editor, then editor of the then weekly Tar Heel. The senator turned majestically, "IH have no campaign!" he said. And with that he turned quickly, step ped into an elevator, and was whisked away out of sight. Oh well, it didn't hurt to try, did it? ! The Flicker of the Week "Of Mice And Men" leads the field Romance Versus Realism The 60-day kissing ban on campus kissing which University of California sena.or j health officials decreed Thursday beT cause of a spread of an influenza epi demic got a stamp of approval from our own (Oklahoma) campus Friday. Dr. W. A. Fow ler, director of t&e student health ser vice, agreed the measure was the proper action t o take. Fowler scored a statement of Dr. S. L. Katzoff, Cali fornia campus doc tor, who expressed a belief that "a good . healthy kiss snow flying never spread any germs.' QnlA XT i. 1 T4. ! j ... . . .1 -"i rumci, 11c in us i, nave suixie It is fitting that the original by far among the new film entries at inide information the rest of us don,t me oiniia paiaces uiis ween, .uapieu There's plenty of room for stu dents with ability any time. manuscripts of alumnus Tom Wolfe should be the property of the University of North Caro lina. And the drive ior, funds must get its start and gain mo mentum here. For only then. closely and intelligently from the first successful Steinbeck novel, the pro-l duction loses none of its original power in the transference to the screen. Quite wisely producer Hal Roach,! whose greatest efforts hitherto have when the University has proved been the "TPPer" and "0ur Gans" comedies, chose no Hollywood stars to know anything about." Fowler also labeled as "unreason able," the statement of Katzoff that a genuine kiss generates so much heat it destroys germs." However, the health service head added that the kissing situation on the local campus is not critical at the DI DRIVE Manuscripts, 5,000 It was said that Tom Wolfe left a fortune of $10,000 when he died in 1938. Ten thousand dollars, while a tidy sum, certainly doesn't com pare with the legacies of the rich. Yet Tom Wolfe, class of 1920, left more than a nice fortune. His "Look Homeward, Angel," his best novel, is one of the outstand ing pieces of fiction of the past thirty years, and "Of Time and the River" and "Web and the Rock" have also gained critical praise. You can spend money, but his books will live. The foregoing leads up to a consideration of the current drive Its interest m Obtaining these glamourize his " ilm rather selected moment because there is no contagious manuscripts, Will Others be inter- his cast for its ability to portray the emdemic makmS e rounds at pres ested m Contributing. Steinbeck characters. Notice the novel ContrratnlAtinTi fr ri and manner of introducing credit flashes may their drive be successful! ent. Oklahoma Daily, January 27. at the opening and the skillful evasion I Snow and WCUNC Color of the censors in the murder of Cur- in their footprints until the plows came to the fore with colors. ; , r "It's still here all 14 inches, of it; a real treat for the Southern gals and a home touch for the Yankees." WCUNC's The Carolinian, Jan. 26. University of Cal. Leads With 26,004 full-time registered stu dents, the University of California ranks more than 50 per cent higher in enrollment than any other univer sity in the United States, according to the recent annual survey made by Raymond Walters, president of the University of Cincinnati. The report, published in School and Society, lists the following as runner ups in the nation's top ten institutions in size: Minnesota, 15,301 ; Columbia, 14, 211; Illinois, 13,510; Ohio. 13,231; NYU, 12,745; Michigan, 12,098; Wis consm, 11,268 and Washington, 10,- 129. The University of Southern Califor nia enrollment total was 4,876- and Stanford university had a registration of 4,345. The University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) contributed to the University of California's rec ord total with an enrollment of 8, 522, with the other campus of the University of California also being included in the total registration fig ure, lne L.alifornia Uerklev campus ensor By DON BISHOP The coming week-end is a big one for dancers. Four fraternities will hold the annual Neophyte Ball; two or three other fraternities, and the law and med ical schools will be dancinsr. Earh dance - sponsoring group is given some "Suggestions for Entertaining Dance Chaperones." These suggestions are intended pri marily for the per sons immediately in charge of the ance, but it isn't out of order to let the remainder of the campus in on them. We give them to you for what they're worth: 'Chaperones at dances do not like to be wallflowers They are people, interested in young people and in their social activities, who have consented to attend a dance and perform a cus tom prescribed by social usage. Every effort should be made to make them a part of the spirit of the dance. With this in mind, the Order of the Grail has drawn up the following sugges tions: "1. The persons arranging the dance should ask if the chaperones have transportation to and from the dance; if not, it should be provided. "2. Some person should meet them at the door and arrange to check their wraps without charge. After the dance their wraps should be brought to them. "3. Comfortable seats, with a good view of the orchestra and dance floor, should be provided. "4. The dance arrangers and other members of the organization present ing the dance should take a few min utes to speak to the chaperones. This will encourage others to do likewise. "5. During figures, grand marches, etc., space, should be cleared in order that the chaperones may have a good view. . "6. At intermission cold drinks or other refreshments should be brought to them. "A seventh suggestion may not be practicable if the organization does not have sufficient funds, but a box of candy, or some such gift, to each chaperone, is a very worthwhile cour tesy." "Woman's college will remain open." Can you spare a dollar, buddy ? ley's wife. "Of Mice And Men" reaches said the radio announcer. And it did. i figure was 16,199, which alone top the screen at a opportune moment. I But no avail. At 8 o'clock Tuesdav ped the enrollment of nthr institn- tions. The Greater University of North Carolina (including UNC at Chapel HilL State college and WCUNC) totals ant occupation of making snow cream, about 8,000 students. "It's a pity .4 o d & y just in time to avoid standing in the Inight there were less than 40 people shadow of Zanuck's magnificent ver- in the library. Every one had aban sion of "The Grapes Of Wrath" which doned exams for one brief evening and is the current rave of New York film turned to the lighter and more pleas critics. 12:00 Swimming for faculty and coeds at the pool. wives 3:00 Basketball practice for coeds at the gym. 4:00 Coed swimming practice at the pool. 5:00 Girls' glee club meets in Hill hall. Young Republican club meets in the Grail room of Graham Memorial. 6:40 Vesper services in Gerrard hall. 7:00-Band practice in Hill hall. Geography placement exam ination in 401 New East. 7:30 Film forum on Far East in main lounge of Graham Memorial. Spotlight On The News Controller Carmichael was in the vil lage last weekend for a short almost secret visit. He will take over his throwing snow balls and sliding down the hill in back of Woman's in laundry baskets. "In front of North Spencer, the girls made a snow man, just because thev University job in June remaining as 'didn't have any other kind.' (WCUNC a special partner in his New York is 50 miles or so from the brother brokerage firm. . . . "Prof f" Koch is school, UNC.) Some more helpful considering copyrighting the name, I souls assisted in the excavating of a "Playmakers." ... The Jackie Coo- Florida state V8, in spite of the as gan starred, "What A Life" which play- persions that the driver cast on this ed to a mere handful here several weeks ago, folded last week in New Orleans, its backers having lost $50, 000 on their roadshow tours of three Broadway hit shows. The movie compe tition was too stiff. Every state and 47 foreign countries are represented in the Harvard uni versity student body. The American Youth Congress will ASU meets in 213 Graham Me- meet in the nation's capital from Feb morial. ruarv 9 to 12 'sunny Southern climate.' "The Tavern and the corner spots did a rushing business in the hot choco late line.' Bert provided a valet who brushed the customers off as they en tered the store. The drug store (UNC hangout) was infested by a party of Curry high school boys who discourag ed patrons with a continuous volley of stinging snow balls. that WCUNC is not over at Carrboro and that State college is not located out there near the Woollen gymnasium. Robberies Reported ( Continued from first page) investigated and campus police under the direction of P, L. Burch, superin- lenaem oi me pnysicai plant, are carrying on a thorough investigation. New Constitution ( Continued from first page) can be recalled by their electorate to whom they will be responsible, if a vote of this organization warrants this recall. The legislature will have the power to review and pass the budgets of all campus-wide fee-collecting organiza tions and shall regulate the procedure to be followed by classes in passing their budgets. It shall also set up and pass the student government budget. It shall regulate campus election pro cedure and shall set the dates for all elections except those of the freshman class. The Student council will still control elections, but this will be ac cording to the rules set up by the leg islature. All members of the legislature will be required to be familiar with funda mental rules of parliamentary proce dure, and no student will be admitted to membership until he has been train ed in this procedure. Also to be presented to the legis lature Monday night, will be a bill providing for a general campus vote to determine whether a representative from the graduate students will be al lowed on the Student council. Dance Leaders ( Continued from first page) Siewers, Joe Welborn, Paul Severin, Jim Howard, and Charles Barrett. Juniors nominated for finals dance marshalls are: Ott Burton, Skipper Bowles, Don Baker, Reddy Grubbs, Herb Hardy, Louis Gaylord, Charlie Idol, Don Bishop, Charlie Barker, Watts Booth, Steve Forrest, Bob Far ris, Joe Joyner, Bill Dees, and Sid Sadoff. "flame the dawn in nil ito v: I iw nuilfCi glory. Early arisers with undamped-' ed spirits but not feet blazed trails to the dining rooms. Others followed A description of the missing articles has been circulated throughout the campus and any other missing articles should be reported promptly to the of fice of P. L. Burch or to the dean of student's office in South. Students are warned to take neces sary precautions "in order to prevent 'any other thefts. GIVE A PICTURE FOR VALENTINE'S Let Us Finish Your Yackety Yack Picture for a Gift Wootten-Monlton n GET FIXED UP FOR THE DANCES THE GRAHAM MEMORIAL BARBER SHOP 1