Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 22, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL ' WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22. iq4, &)t Batlp Car Zeel Tbe official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class raatter at the post oSice at Chapel HillN. O, under act of March 3, 1879. SuDscriptionprice, $3X0 for the college year. -a IMPORTANT FOOD. 1940 , Mrmbrr 1941 Fbsocktfed CbHe6a!e Press National Advertises Service fcc QtUex Puilhben Repntemtttiw AZO MAOI90N Ave. NEW YORK. N. Y. Don Bishop CHAKLE3 BaEEETT Wm. W. Beuneb .Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Joseph E. Zaytoun Associate Editor: Bill Snider. f EDrrORlAL BOAK): Xouis Harris, Simons Roof, George Simpson, Orville Campbell. Columnists: Martha Clampitt Barnaby ConraoV -Cabtonist: Henry Moll. Feature Boaed: Jim McEwen, Shirley Hobbs, Marion Lippincott, Faye Riley, Constance Mason, Kathryn Charles. , City Editors: Fred Cazel, Rush Hamriek. Wzss EorroR : Ed Rollins. Njcht Emtobs: Dick Young, Sylvan Meyer, Bob Hoke. Assistants: Baxter McNeer, G. C.McClure. Repostebs: Bucky Harward, Philip Carden, Ransom Austin, Mary Cald well, Grady Reagan, Ernest Frankel, Paul Komisaruk, Elsie Lyon, Vivian Gillespie, Josephine Andoe, Larry Dale. Staff Photographer: Jack Mitchell.- , Sports Editor: Leonard Lobred. Night Spts Editors: Harry Hollingsworth, Abby Cohen, Ernie Frankel. Sporra Reporters: Ben Snyder, Steve Reiss, Earle Hellen, Dick Jaffee, Arty Fischer. Local, Advertising Managers: Bill Schwartz, Morty Ulman. -Durham Representatives: Sinclair Jacobs, Jack Dube. Local Assistants: Bill Stanback, Ditzi Buice, Isidore Minnisohn, Jimmy Nrris, Marvin Rosen, Bob Schwartz, Jim Johnson, Ferris Stout. Collections Manager: Leigh Wilson. Collections: Morty Golby, Mary Bowen, Elinor Elliott, Millicent Mc- Kendry, Rose Lefkowitz, Zen a Schwartz. . t v- Office Manager: Jack Holland. Office Assistants: Grace Rutledge, Sarah Nathan. CIRCULATION Office Staff: Cornelia Bass, Henry Zaytoun, Steve Piller, Joe Schwartz. . i HOHLZONTAL, 1 Pictured food. 5 This cereal grass is called 10 It is important as feed for 14 Wild" cot 15 Sprites. 16 Thought. 17 To unload, 18 To accumulate 19 Dressed. 20 Periods of illnesses. .22 To seesaw. 'Affirmative vote. 27 Small island. 31 Tall candle. 35 To sneer. 37 Game on horseback. -33 Works dough into a mass. 40 Tax seaL 41 Above. . 42 Marched in formal display 17 Hornless animal. Answer to Prerioss Puzzle AjNlAjNjDfAt lUiNlciLTT a E s a Tit KING Q EjD O A !LAK I C ON I CLiTtJAtL LjjS CHE 5 STTaTT S I EASES E PIS " 5 AfPJC A S MU A'LIE iD il iKpnlA Mjsy TOG A OPTER A"" AE.R.1 aHokI Q uImiorun AG s 53 Portrait statue 54 Boxed. 56 Olive shrub. 57 Birds' home. , 58 Step. 59 Blemish. 60 It is a food. 61 Its kernels grow: in 62 It has a stiff straw . VERTICAL. play. . 4 Back of neck. 5 Floury. 6 Charity. 7 Bugle plant 8 Gusto. 9 Actual being. 10 Member of an Iberian race. , 11 Unoccupied. 12 Eccentric . wheeL 13 Sorrowful. 1 Vulgar fellow. 21 Upright shaft 2 Burden. 23 To devour. 3 Boisterous 24 Its ear has a tassel cf 26 It is an important . u. a 23 Measure. 23 Sheltered place. 30 Age. I 32 Fit 33 Blue grass. 34 Tree genus Ulrous. 36 Appearance. 39 Old garment 40 Sun. 42 Sound of a bullet 43 Maple shrub. 44 Genus of rose shrubs. H 45 Person opposed. 46 To challenge. 47 Fruit 48 Queer. 49 Opposed to won. 50 Genus of auks 51 Genuine. 52 Absence of light 55 Ocean. For This Issue: News: SYLVAN MEYER Sports: ABBY COHEN Feminine Progress Education Needs Money i k b k b k b -id b i to ill i b i7" ' ' ieT " " jzo ' "2i : zrz$ W " ""ST 35- ST" W 42 43 44 (45 ATI 147 Mo 49 bo bl ' 5? 57 " 5cT" 5? 1 1 U-1 1 li i4 1 1 h The coeds proved the other afternoon that they, like most other American people, are essentially middle-of-the-roaders. Daily Tar Heel columnist Martha Clampitt went into Monday afternoon's meeting hot over abolishing the secret nominating committee. Wom en's Council President Jane McMaster just as vigorously upheld the status quo of main taining the secret group. Out of the squabble came a hybrid that showed some form of progress. They passed a proposal that will make all nominations come directly from the floor, instead of being sprung upon an unsuspecting women's student body some dark night by a totally secret group. Under the new set-up, every nomination will be made when the coed student body meets in general session. No one will know who the secret commitr tee's candidates are. Any girl can put up another's name just as long as a second is in the offing. , This move frees the woman student who makes a nomina tion from the floor from being labeled with the stigma of being an independent, and try ing to buck the committee. All the secret nominating commit tee will do now is to insure that "capable" girls are put up for office. The progress made last Mon day was of an evolutionary nature. It seems as though the call of the Dally Tar Heel for more democratic leadership and greater participation by more coeds in the running of their part of student govern ment is being heeded. Some day the coeds will be able to nominate their own, better leaders from the floor without a benevolent, mother ly group looking over the field an-5 Peking out their leaders for them. As the women stu dents assume more responsi bil'tv. they will find this con trol from the top gradually diminishing. We're straining at the leash to see that day come 'round real soon. L. H. The Daily Tar Heel wishes to throw in a word of support to the assertion of the North Carolina State College Tech nician and the Raleigh News and Observer that the Budget commission set its recommend- . ed appropriation for State col lege at a much lower figure than it should be. It is pointed, out that the proposed amount for 1941-42 is $3,000 less than it is this year. -Furthermore, though the budget estimate turned in by President Frank P. Graham and Dean Harrel son of State college had re quested $200,000 additional for 1942-43, an increase of only $7,000 was recommended. The Technician makes its plea for more money on the grounds that national defense needs trained men, and that State college must have suf ficient funds if its students are to come out with the technical ' training that modern warfare demands. This is a valid argument. At the same time, the Daily Tar Heel would plead the case of the Chapel Hill branch of the University. This institution is training 100 students in the Naval Reserve Officers Train- . ing corps ; 40 students a quar ter, are learning to fly under the Civil Aeronautics author ity; chemistry professors are doing research for the war de partment; the University's professors are constantly being called on to perform special services f or the government and for national defense; on a shoe string budget the depart ment of physical education es tablished compulsory exercise for aH male undergraduates. . .All of these steps are contribu- tions to the national defense effort; they require funds. But the plea for education . in general is equally worthy. The world is giving itself a terrific beating now. When . peace comes and men are sane again they must demonstrate, a mental ability that never in history has been seen, if they propose to reconstruct a world on solid and permanent basis. ' Hope lies' in education. Money t spent now to make men think will pay huge dividends in a She Walks Alone-With Men By Martha Clampitt Tales That Nobody Told Me or I Was There This isn't exactly a worm's eye view I guess you'd call it more of a dishwasher's, ice-cracker's nour ishment - giver's simple type, at any rate. For we have been in ) and out the flu ' mazes at Graham Memorial and the Infirmary, ' ... " Vi " if -i 'Zr fv4 what like a kin- s;iii&ilS!Sa: dred soul (prob ably will be one soon!) And let us assure you that all is not stark drama behind the lines. ' For instance, there's some of the things that happen down in Graham Memorial, which is a student union building in the true sense of the word at this point . . . the boys there are wonderful patients ... in fact, we've become so attached to them that we hate to think the epidemic will be over soon. ... There's Ed Kantrowitz who has to be tucked in every night, and who keeps a complete record of the coed nurses who come and go ... no ad mittance unless you check with him ... then there's the boys, Clyde Stallings, Jack Lindsey and .Richard Upchurch who had to be put in the lounge part of the G. M. Ladies Lounge and who were heckl ed by the sign somebody put on the door "Maternity Ward" ... but Clyde claims the worst part is the thought that he may have to die in a Ladies Lounge. ... The first day we worked we came whipping into the mass bedroom with a fellow male worker, and were immediately greeted by a patient about half-way across the room who . said in a voice "Well, if it isn't Dr. and Mrs. Kildare" ... a favorite nurse is "Smitty" . . . who came in one day and told the boys that there, was a new crew of flu-ites coming, so to straighten up and be able to give the new boys a warm welcome . . . the boys did, for when the new recruits came they all rais ed themselves, however feebly, and let 'er go with a loud burst of ap plause ... the drugs store orders are sometimes quite interesting also ... the other day we had to go all over town (joke) looking for such things as Superman Famous Fun nies, Whizz and Action Comic Book, Rexter of Mars, Judge, and other such literature . '. . we had one in tellectual who ordered Time, and one timely person who got Good Housekeeping. . . . Fred Schmidt is now working on a sampler he's embroidering the letters at this point, which read "The house may be wee but the welcome is big" . . . requests for Dr. Worley vary from those who can't wait to hear "Tiger Rag" to those who wish to hear the Romeo and Juliet overture . . . once and a while there's a good poker game going: ... and people keep asking Betty Moore (nurse Edith Cavell to you) to play the ouiji board with them ... to speak noth ing of the boys who asked us to help NEWS BRIEFS (Continued from first page) to be dictated by a Nazi threat of com ' plete occupation. The Rumanian premier meanwhile moved to strengthen his authoritarian rule against the Iron Guardists by making an army leader, Gen. Leovianu, the Bucharest chief of police, putting another army officer into the Ministry of Interior, and ousting all provincial police prefects. Army colonels were , named prefects of the provincial po- lice, it was reported from Budapest in what might be a move toward a tight .military dictatorship. BUCHAREST, Jan. 22 (Wednes day) Premier Gen. Ion Antonescu last night fixed a 24-hour deadline for re-establishment of order throughout Rumania and the wiping out of "anar-; chy" resulting from the assassination of a major of the German general staff in Bucharest. Antonescu, who holds supreme com mand over the Rumanian armed forces, moved rapidly to strengthen his posi tion by placing high military leaders in posts of high authority, including the Ministry of Interior and . Bucharest police. ' . The situation of the past 24 hours, which a government communique de scribed as "anarchy" not "only in Bu chares t but in other parts of the coun try, was said officially to have been a result of the assassination of the Ger man staff officer. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. Joseph P. Kennedy, resigned ambassador to Great Britain, told Congress today' that he was opposed to President Roosevelt's lend-lease bill "in its pres ent form," but he warned against re visions that would hamper or delay all-out aid to Great Britain. . . Testifying as the first "opposition" witness on the bill beore the House Foreign Affairs Committee, he urged that a limit be placed upon the Presi dent's powers under the bill, but at the same time he defended the Adminis tration's present course in the world 7" crisis as " the least risk for the great est good." He said that anyone suggesting that Mr. Roosevelt is trying to take this country into war is "crazy." He vigorously endorsed utmost aid to Britain but said equally em phatically that such help should stop short of plunging the United States into war.. In addition to curbing the r Presidential powers, he said, the legis lators also should retain control of the purse strings. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 The State Department announced tonight that the United States has advised Russia that President Roosevelt's "moral em bargo" against shipping of airplanes to countries that bombed civilian populations no longer is considered applicable to the Soviet Union. just peace and world order after the war. 3,600 Guinea Pigs Many's the time that a woe begotten senior or an ideal istic sophomore has come back from making an "A" or a "B" on a course, and re iriarked, "That course and the professor were out-and-out awful. I wish something could be done about it." Then, too, there are those fellows who don't do so well on a course because the professor was obscure or because the subject matter itself was pre pared poorly or coordinated badly. These students have a legiti mate claim. There are many others, however, who come to school, pay their tuition and then do all they can to get out of examinations, and work of all kinds. For the former, we have sympathy and a panacea, while for the latter we offer . scallions and say, wake up! For the students who have a legitimate claim for kick on courses and the way they are taught, a student advisory f committee on curriculum should be set up. We students at present have no easy means of making our reactions to courses known to the faculty or admnrstration. Cerf ainlv the guinea pigs out there in front of the nrofes- 'sors ought to haw V' sifte represented arA ? ye have a hunch tn coming very soon. 7- since dawn, it was stated official- night ' Great numbers of Fascist priso including an Italian general, e?f taken in the final assault on the iied. iterranean port, a communique of ti British middle-east command said, British warships, bombing pUaes, artillery were said to be blasting bruk savagely. BOGOTA, Jan. 21. The govsra. ment published today a decree sp, pointing Jorge Wills Pradilla to th post of Colombian consul in iliasj. ATHENS, Jan. 21. Italy's big. best assault since the early days g the attempted invasion of Greece, sa. leashed with swarms of tanks asJ planes and waves of infantry, was re ported to have been halted today heavy Fascist losses in the Klisura sector of southern Albania. The launching of the Italian blitz assault was accompanied by wide ranging bombing raids on Greek cities, ports, and islands which killed and wounded civilians and destroyed an emergency hospital at Prezeza. ROME, Jan. 21 Benito Mussels and Adolf Hitler were reported in re liable Fascist quarters tonight to have agreed on a blitzkrieg spring of ec sive ranging from the eastern Medi terranean to the British Isles in a be lief that the United States may b forced into the war before summer. - Virginio Gayda, authoritative Fas cist spokesman, implied in an article that the Axis blows will be speeded up before the United States can become the "arsenal of democracy" and pro vide any great amount of aid to Britain. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 The House today unanimously approved and sent to the Senate a bill author izing $300,000,000 to modernize the fleet's anti-aircraft defenses the first phase of a $1,209,000,000 naval-expar-sion program. SAN DIEGO, Calif., Jan. 21 A mass meeting of CIO. United Automo bile Workers was called tonight at the Ryan Aeronautical factory so an im mediate strike vote could be taken be fore the 7 p. m. deadline on negotia tions for a wage increase. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 Presided Roosevelt declined today to confirm reliable reports that former Republi can Governor John G. Winant of New Hampshire has been selected as am bassador to Great Britain. He said, however, that he might reveal tbe identity of Joseph P. Kennedy's suc cessor tomorrow. South Dakota State Has Plenty Double-Trouble CAIRO, Jan. 21 Britain- em pire army, unleashing a mighty "death blow" against the Italian base of Tobruk and the 20,000 to 30,000 entrapped defenders, has smashed more than five miles through the in ner defenses of the Libyan stronghold them cut paper dolls. . . The In firmary is a little more dignified, and now contains four former stu dent helpers ... cheerful thought ... the girls giggle a lot, why, I'll never know . . . the boys out in the halls have a good chance to see everything that goes on and they probably would rather sleep . . . the new ones are bewildered, the old ones bored v . . and if everyone who promised to read our column if we would do them a favor does it, we'll have a good circulation. . . . P.S. Sorry to have disappointed Columnist Conrad by not writing a column with social significance. BROOKINGS, S. D.-(ACP) Par don me, but you look just like Margie. With only a change of name, that phrase probably is being used more often on the State college campus this year than it is in the well-known comic strip. Four girls, two brunettes and two blondes, identical twins, have been spreading confusion ever since they registered in home economics. They are ,the Smiths, Nona and Zona, and the Ogilvys, Florence and Margaret Although the two pairs of sisters claim well co-ordinated tastes in most things, they , have their troubles with hats and boy -friends. The Smith girls' trouble is identical taste they usually both like the same fellow. Ogilvy arguments arise from the op posite source they can't agree on hats. Margaret and Florence answer questions for each other when they find themselves in the same class, and Dean Stallings, chief of the library, where the Smith girls work in their spare( time, admittedly never knows whether it is Zona or Nona who is oD duty. 4ay is - Hv J - y f ' ttABEKDA$RERY :HsfT$, jfpjgff mBb. YOUNG GENTLEMEN ' , : ft llNtf I K y COMMUNITY CLEANERS -Today & Tomorrow Jan. 22 & 23 Representative: Mr. Robert Gray v AMf it in i- - FIFTH AVBNUE, NEW YORK
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 22, 1941, edition 1
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