)t Batlp tar xeel
Tfc "U newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University
cf North Carolina at Chapel HiH, where it is printed daily except Mondays,
ad the ThanksgiviBg, Chriafenaa and Spring Holidays. Entered aa second
claaa matter at the post office at Chapel HID, N. O. under act of March 3,
1879. Subscription price, $3.09 for the college year.
1940 Mrmbrr 1941
Fbsociafed Cb!!e6ia!e Press
OSVILLE CAMPBELL
SYLVAN MEYfiK
National Advertises Service, Ioc
420 Haomom Ave New Yomc N. Y.
WILLIAM SCHWARTZ
HENRY ZAYTOUN
Editor
Managing Editor
Business Manager
Acting Circulation Manager
-i T I- nnil
ASSOCIATE X-DITUK : uouia xx.
Eknbux. Boakd: Bucky Harward, Mac Norwood, Henry Moll, Bill Seeman,
jjiii reete.
FwSSe&ST &ffl5"liwtl. Eichari Adler, Billy Peanon. M, B
chanan, in, .xinaa xvu jr-. um.
Stammler, oara anepparu, wwu ""
Photographer : Hugh Morton. '
AssSr Photographers: Tyler Nourse, Carl Bishopric
Sports Editor: Harry Hollingsworth.
SSSrStrf Bill I SUnback, Jack Dube, Ditzi Buiee, Jimmy Norn,
Marvin Rosen, Dan Bagley, Bob Bettmann.
Ahst Cibculation Manaceb: Joe Felmet. j
CtwnStaff: Jules Varady, Larry Goldrich, Lois Ann Markwarat.
For This Issue:
News: BOB HOKE
Sports: HORACE CARTER
A man ain't got no right to be a public man, unless he meets the
public views." Martin Chizzlewit. -
o Student-Faculty Day Change is Wise
Student-Faculty Day lies in a death-like coma.
We all know the students and the faculty have contrived to
devitalize it for years past, and now their strangle hold is about
to take effect.
For the average student it has been a one day holiday on which
doTf f nnV a carnival dav off. or apple-polished professors. From
the other side, most of the faculty seems to consider the day an j
olT oraeai, ana regretting uic uicao. m -
OLD SYSTEM nevertheless condescend to lay aside their coats
IS BAD of 501 sophistication to wear the often un
used attire of a "regular f ellow," and come out to visit with their
guinea pigs. Thus strangeness and artif iciality, the result of the
attitude that the faculty and students must force themselves upon
each other if "just for today," makes insincerity the order of the
day.
If student-faculty relations are ever to be carried on in any sort
of constructive, worthwhile manner, they must by all means con
tinue throughout the year.
And without doubt, one of the most beneficial phases of a stu
dent's life in Chapel Hill should be, and has been in many cases,
his close contact with professors. Casual, informal, out-of -class re
lations help" develop and add maturity to a student's personality.
But there has to be a change in the attitudes of both parties con
cerned. Students first have to look at professors not as sour, ruth
less drivers and. drips who only know how to say, Kead twenty
rTinnfprs a rnVht." and as unfeelinp; devils who give pop quizzes
every other morning. The faculty has to realize that students will
some day develop into individuals much like themselves and their
aim should be to see how much better. Hence, the students nave
to look at professors as sources of information and advice ; the
faculty must look at students as potential timber for society tnat
cannot be developed alone in a lecture, but must be molded and
shaped by continuous contacts.
Conditions must be favorable, however, before the attitudes can
change. What will be the common ground? How will relations be
facilitated?
SntrdrpjsfinTis arp. needed from evervbodv. Here are a few: how
about having weekly "bull sessions" in each fraternity and dormi
tory, perhaps in a student's room when social rooms aren't avail
able ; how about members of the faculty throwing some parties and
fostering discussions at their own homes (present teas are good,
but are a bit too formal and are restricted to a very limited few) ;
have students ask professors to go to shows with them, have a
beer with them, see them live and live With them outside the
class-room. This is the only way profs can get to really under
stand the specimens out front ano) the only way students can get
more out of professors than merely cut and dried knowledge.
Any old text book, lying stiff and dusty in the library stacks
is that good.
(drosswojrdl IPnnzzszlle
ACKOSS
1 Crocs-fcracc ta boat
T Composed of
riffraff iSoottUbJ
11 Buddea toTAdcr
It Small bottles
14 Rxprs nmptthj
1 TtDctured deeply
IT Pall to lover ataU
II Condadlrt- words
f prayers
29 Hew y if tlmb
U City ta
Pensarsa
M BuppJy twef to fir
33 Mud deposited bj t
river
34 Dry, aa wis
25 Germ
28 Modern American
poet
3T Unmannerly people
28 Poverty
29 Gem weight
31 Viscous material
of ceil (pD
33 Irrigates
33 Western India
34 Book of tnapa
3 Motion Bletora
36 Appropxiat
39 Lifeles
40 Presb set of torses .
41 Section of territory
42 Sea eagle
43 8 poo Is
- 44 Proverbial mlaslxuc
bnsband
45 Sell to consumer
By LARS MOB&IS
ANSWER TO
rKEYIOLS rczzu
3(l PlS ' ujL.
47 Artist's studio
4 Waab in clear vatcr
60 One of Hitler's
people
61 Let tt rem aim
12 Wandering
DOWN
1 Boundary of warm
latitudes
3 Medieval German
trade league
3 Proa side to aide
4 Commotion
a Complainants la
ebaseery
Snaking
Sbeep-iJce
Circular frames
Hebrew priest
10 Light strated
metal
U Inspectors of
weights
14 Attention
14 Lively sons;
17 Tbe (Preach pLI
1 aGain wltb dtliailty
as smiles
23 Inteiligenoe
2 Pliea
25 Whips
27 Pood of baked crab)
28 Feathery
- 29 Restaaranteur
M Mythical lost
continent
31 Square pillar
32 One who walla
in water
33 Looting
35 Price of serrie
33 Math in lov
37 English lord
3 Light brown
40 Rent again
41 Early Christian
43 Go op
44 Girl's nam
4ft Insect
48 Go astray
i 2 3 4 5 b T a i5"!
p--- ;r !S
!7
w . Wb r f8
WWL- II
11 I hi Mill!
Signifying Nothing
By Hirley Moore
Today we shall talk about the Benev
olent Merchant.
Benevolent merchants are not jnst
ordinary merchants. Not by any
means. They are not "what yoa would
call opportunists. Not by any means.
Instead, they form the backbone of the
community with their honest, fair prac
tice, and spread good will throughout
the world by their total disregard of
the "get-ahead-at-any-costf creed of
the usual run of merchants.
Chapel Hill has a few of these be
nevolent merchants. It was so evident
over the week end that the time has
come to offer them a little praise
In the class of the benevolentest of
the benevolent merchants are these pro
prietors who, in the habit of charging
Carolina students the reasonable price
of 15 cents for beer, felt that it was
necessary to protect these lovable stu
dents from a beer shortage. Hence
when an invading horde of foreigners,
clad in uniform, entered Chapel Hill,
the merchants placed a protective tar
iff on beer and charged the soldiers 20
cents.
Running a close second for the prize
of most benevolent are those merchants
who felt it was their duty to reserve
the thirty-five and forty cent dinners
for the students, and pawned off the
65 cent meal on the khaki-clad lads.
After all, there are just some things
that the soldiers cannot do to us Caro
lina students, and that's eat our forty
cent dinners.
Of course you realize that there are
only a few of these benevolent mer
chants in Chapel Hill, and, in order
that we might show our appreciation
for their interest in us, we ought to set
aside Benevolent Merchants Week End
during which we can crown the Most
Benevolent with a large lead crown,
dropped heavily.
Wrtr. ay PtU festers AraaicHe, la
Show Business
By Richard Adler
NEED
MONEY
Give Your Dime to Monogram Club
Monday night Bobby Gersten, Monogram Club president,
was told by Chapel Hill authorities that the proposed raffle
to send a Carolina student to Tulane, expenses paid, would
have to be discontinued, since the raffle did not comply with
Supreme Court rulings. A law is a law, and the raffle will have
to stop, but Carolina students can certainly aid, a good cause
if they will forget about calling for their dimes.
Since we've been at Carolina we've watched the Monogram
Club grow by leaps and bounds. Last year they cooperated
with other organizations from time to time,
and did much to foster better relations be
tween all monogram men and students. A Mon
ogram Club room was opened for the first time. Old Monogram
Club members had a place to go when they returned to the
HUL The Monogram Club did things.
It takes money to do things, and it's hard for the Monogram
Club to get money. They felt that a raffle would help them
raise some money and also send a student to Tulane. The stu
dent cannot go to Tulane, but if those students who bought
tickets will give their dimes to the club it will help. A single
dime isn't much but the Monogram Club has several. Why
not let them keep them?
If you're as unlucky as we are, you wouldn't have won the
trip anyway. So before you take that stub to Graham Memor
ial today and tomorrow, think twice and tear it up. It's not
such a bad feeling to know that you've helped a worthy cause,
and if ever there was one the Monogram Club is.
"The drama's laics, the drama's pa
trons give " Ben Jonson.
THE HOUSE OF CONNELLY
Paul Green's "The House of Con
nelly," a play in two acts, was presented
in gala array before a large and re
ceptive audience last week in Memorial
Hall. Staged by Sam Selden, ("Lost
Colony" director and member of the
Dramatic Art Department), Mr.
Green's Dixie "Cherry Orchard" was
enacted by the Carolina Playmakers
Repertory Touring Co., composed of
talented graduates of the University
from both the "Hill" and Greensboro.
"And all the great past that comes
to dust," said Paul Green as he wrote
of the broad, white columns, bright and
rainbowed hoop-skirts, lazy, rolling
fields, and chanting black people, bond
ed now all faded and broken grey
streaks of oblivion, never to be forgot
ten by the older generation of the house
of Connelly.
"Come with me, we'll "walk into the
fields out of this death and darkness
into the light," said Patsy Tate, tenant
farmerette on the"Connelly land, as the
author draws Will Connelly, confused
representative of the old family's
younger generation, away from the
stultifying, ever-present death-pride
and prejudice. And back into the soil,
mother of men, the earth. The fusion
of Patsy Tate and Will Connelly and
his burning ideals in a loud chorus for
survival destroy the conflict of velvet
and soil.
of Mr. Green's genius. The first two
scenes commenced at an immeasurably
slow pace and but for the presence of
Jessie Tate (Pendleton Harrison) who
played the toughened farmer with a
genuine feeling of the soil, there would
have been hardly enough spark to send
the rest of the play on its way.
Scene three is set in the ruined gar
den of Connelly Hall. And Ruth Men
gel adds a pleasant relief to the heavi
ness of preceding scenes. Seated on an
embattled bench, she has lead the un
fortunate Will from the gay party that
the Connelly's gave in her honor. She
symbolizes the typical Southland belle
that tried to carry on the ancient airs
of snobbery and tradition dominant
before '61.
- Jean McDonald was Patsy Tate and
an adequate job she did. But the part
requires more than adequacy. Per
haps MissJdcDonald was not mature
enough in her interpretation. In the
first two scenes she was too straight
a female actress. However, in the third
fifth and sixth she picked up her spirit
and seemed to feel a little more at home
on the stage. She did give the role a
full-brested warmth, even passion at
times. But her main failing was that
she never reached white heat and lacked
the earth about her presence. There
was too little feeling that she had cal
loused her palm and broadened her
beams by the handling of a plow.
To The Editor,
Admitting that it is inconvenient for
the dorm managers to have to supply
the pass key to occupants who have
forgotten their own, it still seems un
just that they should charge ten cents
for the use of said key when one takes
into consideration that it is part of
their job to accommodate those who
room in the dorm under their care.
This payment is exacted from all oc
cupants of Mangum Dorm who have
the misfortune of forgetting their
keye. . Perhaps it would be fair to
charge ten cents in the event that the
occupant did not return the key within
an allotted time. In this way, added
inconvenience and possible loss of the
key would be avoided, while at the same
time the roomer would not be required
to pay an exhorbitant fee for a privilege
he has already payed for.
Very truly yours,
David G. Boak
To The Editor:
This bright October morning and
a date were quite too much for a young
man in a Gerogia car who looked as if
he might have been a student at UNC.
He swept northward alone Raleierh
Road and tooting away at his horn
rushed between a couple of us who had
prudently slowed up at the Cameron
Ave. crossing. He rushed on to the
j Franklin Street crossing and blew his
' t l j T 1 v . . -v
norn at xne rea iignc were and crept
three quarters of the way around the
corner, so hot was he to have the light
turn. And then he capt all by parking
his car on the wrong side of the load.
It's very nice for a boy to feel gay,
but when a car gets that way, raring
and taring and bellowing down the
roads, one wonders whether there
should be a divorce between the car and
the boy. I know that noisy, careless,
inconsiderate and well nigh reckless
driving is not approved by the sober
good sense of Carolina.
Yours very truly,
Henry S. Huntington
Campus
Keyboard.
By The Staff
POOR
GUY
"The play is THE thing," a vibrant
ballad of prose-poetry, a document of
the old South bowing out to the new,
and an appeal to youth for unity and
strength it is a universal drama.
The production showed work, even
strain on the part of the company but
it could do little to help in the exposition
keeping pace
with pace
Believe me, I'm proud of our team
and the way we showed up' against
Fordham Saturday; even Woody Wood
house admitted Carolina's gallant fight
for victory wasn't dampened by those
two lucky touchdowns handed Ford
ham. While I'm talking about dumb luck;
did you hear about the lucky baboon
that had the winning ticket to the Irish
Sweepstakes a few years ago? They
say the money went to his head and
made a monkey out ofhim ... If Ford-
T. TT
it xiappens i
- . :
Perhaps one of the most unusual tal
ents ever to appear on a Playmaker
stage is Bob Carroll who last year mas
tered both Judas in "The Family Por
trait" and Romeo in the famous Forrest
Theatre production. Carroll fell down
in his rendition of Will Connelly. He
was stiff to begin with and the audience
became uneasy with him. His voice
followed regular speech patterns and
his gesticulations, over-affected man
nerisms (hair-regulating, semi-swoons,
and desperate motions when each time
he raised a drink of whiskey to his
lips) were unnecessary. Perhaps Mr.
Carroll was too conscious of the fact
that he is a leading member of a pro
fessional touring company.
Barbara Benedict played Mrs. Con
nelly with fine aristocratic shading
handing in an even, commanding per
formance, and Jane Barrett and David
Hooks as the two plantation negroes
furnished both sinister mysticism and
gay guffawing, dancing and playing
on the stage.
Hillel Foundation
The Hillel Foundation Coffee Hour
will be held this afternoon at 4 o'clock
at the Hillel house, 513 East Rosemary
ham's Sebasteansky, Pieculewicz, and j Lane, it was announced yesterday. All
Filipowicz don't make All-American
this year, it will probably be because
the judges can't spell their names.
students are invited to attend.
Send the DAILY TAR HEEL home j
10:30 Monogram club makes re
funds on raffle tickets.
4:00 Hillel Foundation Coffee Hour
at Hillel House, 513 E. Rosemary Lane.
4:30 Regular weekly tea in Spen
cer hall. All coeds invited.
5:00 Chi Delta Phi meets in 214
Graham Memorial.
7:30 Undergraduate Physics club
meets in Room 250 of Philips hall.
7:30 Dr. Ralph McDonald address
es YDC in Gerrard halL
8 :00 Extra-curriculum recption for
new students in Graham Memorial.
Soldiers Invited
To Sunday Concert
Soldiers are esDeciallv
- r vwi. w7
John Eversman concert Sunday after-
uwu.m o ociock m Hill music hall,
Fish Worley, self -appointed
of army morale, announced yesterday
The violin concert hxr Tttw
outstanding Carolina artist, is one in
the series of free programs sponsored
by Graham Memorial and presenting
yxuunceni Carolina musicians.
Eversman played here last
' w J X-U.l
a capacity audience. A graduate of the
Cincinnati collegre of Mnsir:"'RvovHivnov.
t-J V - - T 'ITt
has had extensive concert experience.
ae win be assisf-pd nT,r?r t -v i
.niivjr ujf xvtrii
neth Lee at the piano.
What's worse than trying to find a
needle in a haystack? Ask Martha
Guy and shell say a sewing machine
in Chapel Hill. Our local Sadie the
Sewing Machine Girl was whirring
away on Spencer's cantankerous Sing
er, plying her needle upon the cos
tume for her debut
in Gracie Field's
benefit program in
Durham when horrors! The needle
broke. Fearing the wrath of the Des
perate Desmond alias Fish Worley
should she not finish the finery (he's
sponsoring UNC's part in the thing,
you dope) she hied herself to the
phone to find said substitute for said
needle. Alarm after alarm was sent
out. Dressmakers had moved. Five and
Tens closed, but the Pi Phi's came
through with exhibit ' A a needle.
Twenty-eight pledges and needles too,.
Needless to say that's ni-i-ee going.
O
You see its like this. Mr. Billie Car
michael, the-controller of our Univer--sity,
knows a guy who knows A
Capp's cousin. Said cousin is trying
to get Capp down here to show all the
Lil Abners how to court Dog-Patch
style when Fish flings his annual Sa.
die Hawkins brawl in November.
O
Our editorial yesterday dealing with;
Chapel Hill merchants who overcharg
ed the soldiers has met with a lot ot
criticism here and yon. We do not
mean to place any
merchants on the so
called spot, and we
hope none were wrongly accused. The
University" Cafe, for one, did not say
dig brother dig" or yell timber at the
sight of khaki. Any others innocently
accused will be publicly cleared of the
taint of filthy and we do mean filthy
lucre-ism.
O
We knew Danziggers had the nices
softest bpothes, and the most sedu(j
tive lighting system in town, but the
have more than that, dear. We have it
on best authority that the harmless;
appearing Sachers, Linzers, and rumi
cookies contain a potent ingredient-
love powder. It all
began in 9 when
three women stu
dents nibbled on the dainties and add
ed MJI.S. to incidental BJV's, one of
the trio being at the present the wife
of Prof. Erickson. It is further stated
that the more one consumes of Dan-. .
zigger's dainties, the more powerful,
the effect. (Ed. note: We charge for
advertising, usually.) Go to it coeds.
Cakes like Mother never makes for a
fact.
O
Hospital notes: The girl still has
the measles, and the three still peer
into mirrors. We understand that, but
what we want to know is why the en
tire third floor of Mclver is convinced
it has a case of mass measles? Three
men certainly covered a lot of ground,
didn't they?
Send the DAILY TAR HEEL home
NOT
GUILTY
LUCKY
COEDS
GREETING CARDS
For All Occasions
AT
Ledbetter-Pickard