Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 22, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAB HEEL THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1941 CfjE 3atlp tar Heel The official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University cf North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second elass matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. MrMHKTtO rom NATIOMAI. towmiwa wn National Advertising Service, Inc. College mbusbcn Representabvt 1940 Mrmbrr 1941 Fhsociafed Gol!e6a!e Press ORVTLLE CAMPBELL SYLVAN MEYER . : WM. W. BRUNER JOSEPH E. ZAYTOUN 420 maoison Ave New York. N. Y. - L Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager AeanriTv TTm-mff T.nn? Harris. RnrroMAi. Board: Bill Snider. Bucky Harward, Simons Roof, George Simp son, Mac Norwood, Henry Moll, Bill Seeman. . Pvrmrtrrvro T? o T-n Q Vi-cr fVTirlH TTpTmjm D. LaWSOIl. Elsie LvOn. Feature Board: Jim McEwen, Shirley Hobbs, Marion Lippincott, Jo Andoe, Richard Adler, Mary Caldwell, amy v earson. xtttto TTnTfrtTjej. v-raA CnvtA. Philin Garden. Bob Hoke. Reporters: Grady Reagan, Paul Komisaruk, Ernie Frankel, Vivian Gilles pie, Larry Dale, Billy Webb, Carey Hayes, George btammier, ha LAsnman, Grace Kutledge, Jimmy waiiace. Photographers: Jack Mitchell, Hugh Morton. Sports Editor: Harry Hollingsworth. xtttt cdtoto vnrmws ft1 TTellen. Baxter McNeer. Buck Timberlalce. Sports Reporters: Ben Snyder, Abby Cohen, Bill Woestendiek, Fred Mc Coy, Mannie Kxulwicn. Assr. Business Manager: Bill Schwartz. Local Advertising Manager: Bill Stanback. Durham Representative: Jack Dube. .Local Assistants: Jimmy Norris, Bob Bettman, Marvin Rosen, Farns Stout, Tyndall Harris, Ditzi Buice. Collections: Elinor Elliott, Millicent McKendry Office Assistant: Sarah Nathan. v Office Manager: Jack Holland. r Circulation Office Staff: Henry Zaytoun, Joe Schwartz, Jules Varady. News: PHIL CARDEN For This Issue: Sports: BUCK TIMBERLAKE Campus Keyboard By thY Staff Almost all. Carolina students and alumni should be interested to know that the old Hal Kemp orchestra has been reorganized under Art Jarrett and is still dishing out Hal's brand of KFATP'Q music. Hal Kemp had ir lifn the f avorite Ch&vd nm -pAiND dance band when he was in school here: he took it with him when he left and gave America a new ana distinctive aance music. Two years after he left, Kay Kyser had taken his place in campus popu- arity and Kyser also was headed for the top of the music world. Carolina was therefore quite a nursery for stu dent swine: talent and still is but the point is that Art Jarrett and Kemp's band are still on top, are play ing in Chicago's Blackhawk Hotel, have a nightly radio program on the Mutual network, and play Kemp's old ASCAP arrangements .which made him so popular. "We learn wisdom from failure much more than from success. "We oftei; discover what will do by finding out what will not do; and probably he who never makes a mistake never made a discovery." Samuel Smiles. o IN PASSING This afternoon at 5 o'clock the Woman's association will hold a compulsory meeting in Gerrard hall to discuss reorganization plans. Evidently a majority of the coeds do not understand what the word compulsory means. Of the 600' or so coeds on the campus Presi dent Caldwell admits she will be proud and happy if 100 POOR are present. since we have been at Carolina we have COEDS near(j coe(js gripe about this and gripe about that. Yet when we make a study of those gripes we find that in a majority of cases it is the fault of the coed and not the Carolina gentleman or some other source. Until the Carolina coed comes, to the realiza tion that it is her duty.to improve her student government and un til she takes an active part in all phases of campus life she shouldn't expect the" Carolina gentleman to bow and scrape to her. Mary Caldwell we believe is going to make an excellent president, but she is going to need the support of all the coeds not just the 100 who will be on hand this afternoon. "I read where you all is all het up 'bout cuttin' classes. I jess can't understand it. Yo' all oughta see dat hit's all your chance to make somethin' of yourself. Dere's not a thing free in dis school. Yo' gotta pay tuition. Yo' gotta pay book money. Yo' gotta pay TTTT room rent. Yo' gotta pay for food. Yo' nearly gotta r; pay for a drink ob water. Now de folks back home is uixvv! puttin out aii de money. Dey is workin' for yo' all Yo' oughta be glad to go to class, not fuss 'bout Cuttin' closs. And de same ernes for dronrjin' coses. Learn while you is here. What a terrible place dis University and dis world would be if everybody went around fussin' and fumin' 'bout gettm' a decent education. Uncle George Washington, 19-year veteran janitor on the campus made this statement a few days ago to a Daily T ab Heel re porter. The more we read it the more convinced we are that Uncle George has a lot more sense than some students in the University. One award that will not be given to night and which should be, is some sort of official recognition to Dr. A. C. Cornsweet for his voluntary and ap parently little appreciated work with th Carolina lacrosse team. After four years of lacrosse coaching for which he was never paid a cent, Dr. iTT Cornsweet has left Car- olina to continue his LriAVllit psychological research elsewhere. We hate to lose men like him; they make success where there is none. Our lacrosse team won the Dixie League championship this year. We wonder if we will even have a team next year. ACROSS 1 Coarse Tops of teeUi 11 Eeaat (slug 13 Come Into view . 14 Giant birds 15 Annoy ' 17 Eastern UnlTersltj IS Inquire 18 Roman blsnops 31 Fish egg 23 Tellurium 33 Arranged 25 All right (slang) 28 Draws oat 28 Undresses 30 Notice 31 Large cask 32 Washes 35 Aromatic- herb 38 That man 3 Web-Uke arrangement 41 Behold 1 42 Or in 44 Gates 45 Declare 48 Limb 49 Facts 50 Tell 62 Hard coating Ey LASS MOSXUS AXSWEB TO rssnoTJS rvzzxx H A LlEl IP(ACEi icIAJMjPi 5 L A Nf JA L A 51 A LjOjEj sga ojgjsT t A 8 t fnKj B)Q LID E Rj. jE L P 5 gjg gA ft. SHEiaC , JZ E NTT SUB B 9 SHI 5C O g TJS J 1 1 lL TOM 1 A U N D Opr'job P ofgjE 5 L jr 1KEQ U " A Wl D AE IP A R 5 rTTT g FlO!RPtttgiRjAt9l IgmOiN 45 Egyptian coddeai S4 Local counter irritant tS Venetian mien SOWN 1 Shut 3 Torture derie 3 Pool 4 Double curves 6 Church councils C Connners 7 Toward sky Secret agent 9 Fruit 10 Sassafrass tea 11 Container .13 Smells strongly 18 Animal 19 Arranged feathers ,20 Hunting dogs 23 Body of vater 24 Intoxicated 27 Employ 29 Tavern 32 Church chorus 33 Rents 34 Purloined - 35 Falsified - 36 Makes happy 37 Faithful 40 Anguish 43 Baked clay 45 Identical 47 Bested 49 TJnbranched antler 61 Toward 53 Negative SO FAULT LUIS TIME Students who so of ten criticize the University faculty for nega tive legislation should find no fault with the recent resolution to increase facilities for advanced standing and for national defense vocational training. In the first, freshmen and sopho mores will be given credit for courses they can pass by examination without having to waste valuable time in attending those classes. In the second, non-credit but badly needed courses will be offered two-year students in special preparation for air corps, examinations, elementary bookkeeping and business machine operation. This part we consider another positive step which may rank equal in signifi cance to the whole student body along with the CAA and the Naval ROTG as this University's part in national defense. Obviously we approve the resolution. We hope we can do the same for faculty action tomorrow on the class cuts issue. This newspaper feels that students who are doing a good job should be rewarded for their efforts. Tonight at 7:15 awards will be presented to those who have excelled in various campus activities. It will be a happy occasion for a small group of Carolina students. While thinking of those stu dents who have done a good job, we can't help but look back at those campus leaders who, over the past year, have failed to do their duty. In fact, it might not be a bad idea to honor them. At least it would make campus leaders realize that they have a job to do with the reward coming from the amount of work done. FOR WHAT? AWARDS Italy has set up a king for the Croats, which means they're about as independent as Croatan Indians. Uncle Sam is putting the finishing touches on the world's larg est bombing plane after six years of work on it. At this rate we ought to get another one of these giant flying fortresses built by me iime ine next war comes along. These coal strikes won't even let a fellow mine his own busi ness. N There is a gentleman in the Latin department (there are only two Latin professors in school so this should be easy to figure out), who illustrates TOO ka yPe teacher we often muse over and MUCH when we're feeling bad the kind we would like to meet; some night in a dark alley with a pitch fork in our hand. It seems that on the two big dance weekends this quarter May Frolics and Junior-Seniors this kind fellow has given his class the only two hour quizzes this quarter. Now we accept quizzes and scholas tic effort and so forth as the prime motive for being in school. But also we feel that our life plays an impor tant and necessary role. Anyone who puts all the emphasis on one or the other is a little lop-sided. Our friend in the Latin department certainly could have given his quizzes a few days earlier or a few days later. We hate to think of it, but it looks like he deliberately selected the date which would be most inconvenient for his students. That, Josephine, is too much. I 2 3 H 5 7 8 9 io"" n" " " "t 12. T" " " 13 Hfc 47 49 ""T 5p 51 ?2 y - Piste, tr United feature Syadicate, Ins.. Letter ditor Of Mice By SIMONS ROOF DAY On the Campus Hitler's Rise and Our Unemployed "Hitler understood the German pride had been hurt, and he arose to power by appealing to that pride, by nursing it then bending it to his mis erable ends. It's difficult," said the elderly refu gee, "to paint you a picture of Ger many after the war to tell you in a few words the depth of misery, the humiliation, the German people felt. "Imagine yourself a failure at find ing a job, home less, believing so ciety had no place for you, that your country was dis honored. Then when you got food, you had to stand for hours in line, and had the food shoved at you as one would feed a dog. "Human pride is strange. All of us yearn to feel wanted, useful, impor tant. Hitler got support because he realized this, because he fed not only stomachs but the jobless man's pride. "The man who had been nobody was offered a uniform, was given a ;vipifi A i.i. . .w.A V; 10:30 Sophs entering Commerce school meet in Bingham; oth er sophs convene in Gerrard. 10:35 Frosh meet in Memorial hall to get numbered registration blanks. 5:00 Woman's association meets YJJJJlS uerrara nait. Hillel cabmet meets in the : (Continued from first page) foundation office in the YMCA. 7:15 Awards Night program begins an.' Feathers and the Mag would re al- m ceive equal commissions 01 zuu a 9:00 Kvser-Trotter concra written year eacn W I . for Carolina played on Cros- curing tne year-rouna aiscussion on by's program. publications salaries emphasis has Deen on reaucuons ana equalization I of publications salaries in proportion I to those received by other student workers. The board yesterday approved "Special Award" publications key to Joe Bissell, who has been a linotype operator for the DTH for two years The awarding of keys to other work ers on the publications, whose names have been submitted by the editors as having been attached to the various staffs for at least six quarters, if un der consideration and final action on this will be taken soon. To (Letters must be typed. Those over 300 words long are subject ta cutting or omission. ) To the Editor: Since your liberal policy has been extended so as to accept opposing views of professors on the present crisis, why not accept the point of view of a student? Below I maintaiB that: , If we go to war, instead of making: the world safe for democracy, we will make the world unsafe for democracy. We entered the first world war in or der to preserve democacy, but has the world been as safe for democracy since the first war as it was before? No government can function for the per fect welfare of the people which it governs; consequently, people will take the government which offers the most security during a crisis or other wise. During and after a war pro duction becomes unbalanced. Too mucb of some things and not enough of oth ers are produced. A depression re-, suits and a false notion of over-production is believed to have caused it. In our modern complex society peo ple : are dependent upon mechanical production.. If this type of produc tion bogs down as it does during de pressions people become hungry and discontented and the time becomes ripe for a change in government or a revolution. What I have just stated has always happened, and it will hap pen again after this war and much worse. Consequently, if we enter the war and since we are the only strong hold of democracy left, the world will be less safe for democracy. During the last war some small nations in Europe remained neutral. They ad justed their lives to meet the new sit uation, and they came through the aftermath very much better than the nations who entered. This is not our war. The very no tion is absolutely absurd. This is an imperialistic war. It is another one of Europe's uprisings Germany is trying to hand England what England handed France during the eighteenth, century. England has been through its epochs of greatness. It cannot be expected to last forever. History has shown us that no nation or empire can last indefinitely. There is no ex cuse for us to try to save England. The thing for us to do is to stay out of war in all respects and to increase the unity and defense of the western hemisphere. Let's keep our wealth here instead of sending it to Europe te . be blown to bits. Who wants to go to Europe and die so that someone over millions little better off than the offi daily unemployed; place in life, a task to perform in co operation with others. It was easy for Hitler to get recruits. To Join his revolutionary movement, where base actions were rationalized as justifiable in achieving the good end of the Perfect State, was the only apparent manner in which a man could regain his self-respect. And, yes, I agree with you there is a great danger dormant in the unem ployed 'of this country. Seven or eight j million people unemployed, several mil lions working on defense-projects of therft44. Hw? T . V 'to fight its imperialistic wars. Let it continue to destroy its men and prop erty. Then when the war is over, the "Yes, I've seen these people. I ones who are able to survive will see know enough psychology to understand I how effective democracy is in crises- their cynicism, their bitterness, I think, and in offering security and they will Their pride is offended: they wonder choose it. If we go to war we will be where in the scheme of democracy they trying to force our doctrines upon the world the same as Hitler is doinc The relationship between Hitler, Mus solini, Stalin, and the Japanese war lords will break sooner or later. We have nothing to fear from them. They are not united for a common welfare,, but for each nation's imperialistic mo tives. There is no love lost between, them. The solution is simple: let them fight it out with the allies and if Hitler's group wins they will be so weak that we will have absolutely nothing to fear with respect to our way of living. W. Leo Tew fit. "This is the problem of democracy, to make every man feel his necessity to the group; to give him a job instead of daily ration on the breadline. "I saw a similar hurt look on the faces of Germans. I pray democracy will reach all its people in time. And with fast work, I believe it can." SOPHS Birthdays , stuaenis whose names appear below may obtain a movie pass bf calling at the box office of the Car olina Theate on the day of publi cation.) MAY 22 Andoe, Josephine Hardy, Frank Whitaker Oswald, Thomas Wilson, Alton Duane Wolfson, Joseph Maurice COFFEY Then there's the story about the coed who has a whistling ac quaintance with every boy on the campus. Last night we saw six boys walking down the street with a Car olina coed. The six to one ratio no doubt. SCOUTING (Continued from first page) led vice president, Robert Crews, sec retary," Harry Vinokur, alumni secre tary, George Stammler, historian, and (Continued from first page) police organizations in 13 countries. Describing the work of the scien- Roland Parker, senior faculty adviser. tific crime, detection, division of the! ;At a special ceremony to be held FBI as a connecting link between the! next Tuesday,' Parker will be initiat- sclennsts . and the detectives, Coffey led As senior faculty adviser, and Bob said that the efficiency of crime de- Little, N. L. Garner, and Dan Gross tection is increasing every year. ' "The I will be initiated into membership in scientists try to stay one jump ahead! the Rho chapter. The speaker of. the of the criminals because as fast as a evening will be Gordon W.'.Lovejoy, new crime is committed a new method Ireorganizer of the chapter last quar- of detection Is devised,' he said. ' Iter. (Continued from first page) the class members didn't bother to re port cheating because, "the whole class was doing it," Palmer emphasiz ed particularly that students should report all violations of the Honor code and should not be held back by the fear of having to testify in front of the violator. When a case is brought before the council, the man who re ports the case and the violator, never meet. . . . . "We will try to do our job well," Palmer said, "but we need the sup port of the entire rising sophomore class. The preservation of student government is the responsibility of every member of the student body and active participation on the part of every student is the only way in which student government can function effi ciently ' Send the Daily Tab TTpct. home. UNIVERSITY CLUB (Continued from first page) baseball pep rally as an example of the club's support of the team. Hearn is expected back in town some time today, and Peck said that the collections will be started tonight in all the : dormitories, fraternities. and sororities. - Gibbs Secretarial Training neath your mortarboard gives you what it takes to win and hold a grand job! Catalog describes Special course f or College Women. .1 1 I'm!' u 'Nfifre i J: NOTICE loneyFor Your Old Discarded Clothes and Shoes Before Leaving in i ir . iu4 moms street Next to Bowling Alley Durham, North Carolina n r 4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 22, 1941, edition 1
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