PAGE TWO
THE DAILY TAR HEEL, ,
ST TNT) A V xTmrrirrriT
Batfp tar Z)ttl
Th cffldal newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University
ef North Carolina at Chapel FT ill, where it i printed daily except Mondays,
aad the Thanksgiving, Christina and Spring Holidays. Entered as second
class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C under act of March 8,
1879. Subscription price, fcLOO for the college year. ;
1940 Mrmber 1941
Aisociofed GoUegJcte Press
ORVTLLE CAMPBELL
SYLVAN MEYER
Nations! Adrertr&z Service, Inc.
420 Mao icon Ave New Yomc K. Y.
Editor
Editor
WILLIAM SCHWARTZ
HENRY ZAYTOUN
. M ana gin
Uusmess
axager I
Acting Circulation Manager
Associate Editor: Louis Harris. .....
EnrrosiAL Boars: Bucky Harward, Mae Norwood, Henry Moll, Bill Seeman,
Bill Peete,
Columnists: Elsie Lvon. -
Pxituxje Board : Marion Lippincott, Richard Adler, Billy Pearson, M. Bu
chanan, III, Huab Ruth Mayer. , ..
Nxws Editors: Bob Hoke. Paul Komisarok. Ernie FrankeL ,
Assistant-News: Havden Carruth. A. D. Currie.
Exporters: Jimmy Wallace, Billy-Webb, Larry Dale, Charles Eessler, Bnrke
Shipley, Elton Edwards, Mike Beam, Walter Klein, Westy Fenhagen,
Gene Smith.
Photocraphes: Hugh Morton.
Assistant Photographers: Tyler Nourse, Carl Bishopric
Sports Editor: Harry HoUingrworth.
Night Sports Editors:. Earle Hellen. Mark Garner, Horace Carter.
Sports Reporters: Ben Snyder? Bill Woestendiek, Bob Jones, Jean Beeks.
Adyeetisinq Managers: Jack Dube, Bill Stanback, Ditzi Buice.
'Durham Representatives: Marvin Rosen, Bob Bettman..
Local Adtertisino Staff: Jimmy Norris, Buddy Cummins, Richard Wise-1
berg. Betty Booker. Bill Collie, Jack Warner, Stan Legum.
Office Staff: Bob Crews, Eleanor Soule, Jeanne Hermann, Bob Covington.
Asst. Circulation Manages: Joe Felmet.
Circulation Staff: Jules Varady, Larry Goldrich, Lois Ann Markwardt.
aexoss
X That vsmaa's
4- ladlin potentate
5 Watertxtc plM
11 Xxlst
U Entraac to mia
13 Cbalr.
14 Young boy
15 Emtio Implement
IT Wind taxtnaacnu
1 Abrab&m
80 Nothlnc
21 RctmJs
25 Go In vehicle
27 Printed star
28 Man's name
29 Capable el flowing
30 Unit
31 D&estiTC eland
33 Boll meat
34 Inner part of body
35 Dove's sound
3 Edible tuber
37 Very small - '
0 Not examined
44 Diffident - -
45 Smells stronffly
44 Metal-bearing; rock
47 Coaled era te general
48 Profits, alter costs
4 Thrice muslc
By LASS ZiOHIUS
A.VSWEB TO
WUY1GLS TVZZLX
rajnfeJM -lip
qLms; t moppis r: If
sMttgjS pit fer sfAlN gtel
SmoUm sjgTlMlRlTg
50 AfflrmatlTt
... DOWIf
X One of two equal
parts
- 2 Pertaining to era
J Being mora tsaa
-repaired -
4 Boney-badgex
5 Olrfs bum tpeea.)
C Email sail
T Legendary continent
Branch of oeeaa
S Standard score
10 DeToared
13 Vow
10 Flowed orzt
18 Crarat
21 ordinary
23 OpraartoGSly
13 Saxon serf
24 Oblkjre moreme&t
25 Matnr
25 Persia
27 Pertalnin to
CUlclan piain
2 Fight
33 Pitchers '
33 Scion
35 Apple sererage
37 Bar
38 Toa (poetic)
'39 Stares at
40 Receptacle - ' H
41 Born
-43 Kit
O Negative
By Bucky Harword
For This htus:
News: BOB HOKE
Sports: MARK GARNER
"Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might.''
v Ecclesiastes.
o WEEK IN REVIEW
New Stiff Tax Proposals, Huge Profits, Roose
velt Promise To Post-War Labor Feature Week
(Editor 8 Note: Week in Review is prepared by the Carolina PbliticaV
Union, the International Relations club- and the Daily .Tar Heel. News
is taken from many reports and journals.)
As the Red Annies retreated from the Crimea and prepared
to take their next stand along with the south in the crucial black
gold fields of the Caucasus, America began to slowly show evi
dence of turning out necessary supplies for defense and lease-1
lend aid.
N The Price Fixing bill finally got its polishing off in the House
Banking committee and the results showed the ceiling on farm
prices at 20 per cent above the 100 per cent parity prices originally
asked for. Farm prices will now be higher than-any time in the
history of American agriculture. Encouraging was the lack of
ceiling on wages, but this issue was expected to create a sensa
tional debate when the measure hits the floor.
Willie Bioffe and George Browne, AF of L racketeer unionists,
were convicted in a San Francisco court of grafting $776,000 from
movie magnates. Sentence will be passed next week.
Poor and Standard, financial monthly of business, was crass
enough to come out with reports of huge war profits being raked
l 13 I 14 15 lb 7 I ' Id Ito "
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Li
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.Oistr. ay VaUed Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Keyboard
By Tho Staff
Having finished all the Carolina
literature, (except the "Mag" which
hasn't come out yet . . . hey, Moll) we
turned to the Duke attempt at a hu
mor mag, the DUKE AN' DUCHESS.
T 1 ii . i
in h iTMefrr -f V, r a ! rasim6 mrougn. tne pages we came
J xuK uu " uDon the first confession that has ever
iceers were U2 5reei, up i50 per cent in Clean been put in cartoon form. The cartoon
3I0RE profits, which is the company owning the cap- was a program seller at a football game
xtxiw-t AAn.ci.ixMijr live coai neias wnere worxers are irying 10 marcmng up one oi tne
a union srion- Npw YnrV TntrAl nn fWp nhp. aisies yelling, 1'NAMES AND SAL-
nomenal figure of 698 per cent, from which the carriers of the getyour PROGRAM! M
awmiuitu jsrutuerxiuou u-e trying 10 get a suDsxantiai mcrease ; ana
William Knudsen's General Motors, far back-logged in defense or-
Music Maker
By Brad McCuen
Last week while we were delivering
daily digs at the Interdormitorv Coun
cil, a boy came into the office to com
plain. We weren't surprised. There
had been lots of boys coming in to gripe
about not being able to sleep or study
for all the hell-raising going on. But
this student had a different slant.
He had just been downtown to pur
chase a COWbell to use in tnnicrit's
"spontaneous" pep rally and had kindly
condescended to drop in and set us
straight on a few trirnpa.
Without even being urged, he told
us about himself. He was high scorer
in the dormitory bottle bowling league.
He was also leadoff man for his dorm's
cussing team in the nightly debate with
the dorm across the quadrangle. Vol
ume and variety, he told us, were the '
secrets of his success. '
Right then, he was angling for head
cheerleader of the lower quad cheering
squad. His platform had already been
worked out nightly riots at midnight
sharp, an organized team to go through
the dorms and get everybody out of
bed, and cowbells for everybody. He
himself would attend to phoning up
Coach. Wolf around one o'clock when
things really got to popping. His only
worry was what excuse he would have
for staging the rallies after football
season closes.
Another objective of his was to get
rid of the coeds as soon as possible.
What a nerve those women have walk-
ders. Which still had timP to aVp n rlpan 95' rpnt nrnfit All . Vere Jus.a
. . trying to find out who "student Kane"
proxiis were maae over ana aDOVe taxes paid out. conclusions is, so we read his article in the TAR
drawn from the Poor and Standard report indicate that the cause & feathers again and struck on a
of strikes after all might not be unpatriotic nature of workers soIution. We went to both the English
and their leaders,, but the huge profits being made by corpora- an.d Journalism departments and in
fjong , i quired of them who got the five lowest
grades last year. We received the five
, , " : , !:. , ' ' i j names and are now trying to single one
ivcpurxo oi a Drana new tax Din tnat will be placed before Con- of them out. WE ABSOLUTELY
gress came drifting in by the middle of the week, the main points GUARANTEE THAT IN THE next
of which were: higher progressive income taxes than before; com- "KEYB0ARD" WE WIIL expose wanted" one.
Tmicrurr ini'nf fov Mf,imo. V. t,Jll a'. . J x j THE CULPRIT! ! ! ! ! ,
j'j j"" A ibkiuuoi xuuux uiu cAtcaa pivjxiLa uu, aim uaa- i
ation of mutual life insurance comrjanies. which have hppn wpacl- . O
ino- ont nf thp taY nmfrra-m rt rfofo . It'is our opinion that Mac Sherman
TlTo tt;h it Tr.,.-: " j u j.- i..!- should be brought up before the Stu
ar , "'" bWJlcU tt uuuiiuiag inumpn lor dent Council for his flagrant falsifi
ew xveai iorues m iew loric, wnen ne was re-eiected mayor Of cation. It is not that Mac has lied or
; the metropolis by a margin 6f 133,841 votes cheated, it's that Mac has fooled '.the
LAGUARDIA over Brooklyn's. District Attorney William O - coeds and the r?st of th campus with
AGAIN - Dwver. Turnino- thp "tM nf tVio hattlp r,p mncf s "fresh shave." When Mac appears
HOT NOTES : In New York after
the completion of his new movie, "Play
mates," Kay Kyser has selected a pair
of beauties , to replace Ginny Simms.
One is tall, striking brunette named
Dorothy Dunn, the other is a cute col
legian looking blonde who answers to
Truddy Erwin Johnny Satterf ield's
boys do a great job on the new theme
"Take The 'A' Train." The title of
the tune, which Duke Ellington wrote,v
is easily explained. In New York's
subway system all the trains are let
tered as to their destination. The 'A' i
trains winds up in Harlem. . . . Bob
Farrington, alto and baritone sax with
Freddy Johnson, is now with one of the
nation's big-name bands. Bob joined
Sonny Dunham in New York after a
hectic week of telegraming with the
Trumpet Technician's manager. . .
Both Count Basie and Horace Height
were signed for the movies last week.
Not the same pictures we hope. . . . Dub
Martin, erstwhile student body pres of
vice, unveiled an almost professional
singing voice at the Grail dance Saddy
night. Believe that Dub could have a
future as a future Bob Eberly if he
ent name band playing four numbers
each one a tune that has been record
ed and released. The band featured on
the Saturday night program, which
is half an hour long, will be the band
that has rolled up the greatest number
of record sales in the previous week,
with the sales being computed on the
basis of all the band's records. The
whole set-up is similar to the old Hit
Parade idea, cept that bands are vying
for popularity stead of songs.
O
RECORD OF THE WEEK: Jimmy
Dorsey, who is responsible for at least
7 jukolodean hits in the last 6 months,
' comes through again. This time he has
ja pair of better than average tunes
played much better than average. "It
Happened In Hawaii" has a Bob Ebi
erly and Helen O'Connell vocal similar
in pattern to their other hits. "Tropi
cal Magic" is a beguine fox trot in per
fect dance tempo. Both are headed for
the top for sure. (Decca)
jing by the dormitories. Hewasonrani-
zing a permanent watch force for ev
ery hour of the day to be stationed at
strategic windows with wittv Mix
tions already written out It wont
be long, he prophesied, before
will withdraw in a body from school.
Now, here he banged the beil on th
desk and showed us why he was lead
off man in profanity debates just
what did the Tar Heel mean by trying
to knock all his plans in the head. As
long as we kept pushing the Interdorm-
itory council to quiet down the quad
rangles, we were throwing a monkey
wrench in a very constructive pro
gram. Floor counselors and dorm of
ficers, he told us sadly, who used to be
some of his best workmen were resign
ing wholesale and beginning to get a
little tough.
Sure, he knew that there were a few
Fauntleroys and Phi Betes heckling
against his work. Any body, would
think that you came to Carolina to pass
your work and sleep at night and live
normally.
We apologized profusely for having
taken the wrong side of the issue and
promised to support him this spring
for dormitory president.
11:00 Rabbi Max Erchorn, Hillel
director at University of Florida,
speaks at Hillel House.
.3:00 Flying club meets at Horace
Williams airport.
7:30 DTH-Duke Chronicle banquet
in Lenoir Dining hall.
8:30 Koch reads "Hamlet" in Play-
makers Theater.
Tomorrow
1:30 Miss Florine Thomason ad
dresses Red Cross committee at Car
olina Inn.
2:30 Campus studio broadcasts Na
tional Defense series. .
s 4:00 Miss Florine Thomason speaks
in New Medical building.
7:00--Interf rat council of House-
managers meets in Phi Gamma Delta"
house.
7:15 DTH business staff meets
8:00 Alpha Kappa Delta holds ini
tiation in Alumni building.
j n t- t , ... .
a lu "nwspienior.at tne iu:3U break
imFwuua hi liiixuy years, was me -American ,-n fwnt v v i
labor party with nearly a half -million votes in the mayor's favor, very neatly shaven, and it is this that
j.ne story irom tne Uonets basm m South Russia this week was the falsification. Mac is -not alway
encouraging as reports indicated stout" Red Army counter-attacks really dean shaven. The secret is the
100 miles northwest of Rostov, kev to the Caucasus: In the Mos- ".e c" 01 iai?um Powder ne carnes
r . . " " I D1mmy4 ntik L. 1 xt
cow sector. Soviet lir.es still held, as Kalinin saW street fighting 7'T17 ZT
wic jciiiaus rttreaieu in . v OlOKOiamSK ; and XMazi divisions con- hanging from his strnnr
wnuea .io pour tnrougn at liia. Tfte Mazis also raided Archangel, out the talcum and gives the
site of American shipments of war materials to our Russian ally. :erd and his f ace a ed cover up
In a speech closing the war-time conference of the International J5' The.effec!is astounding and the
Latior.Office, the last: functioning part of the League of Nations; itZrt
T- 1 1 1 is... . I ' "
r-resiaeni itooseven came our iiatiy tnat we are effect is . quite different then Your
PRESIDENTS fighting this war to see common" people, the hand looks like it was sand-papered.
FKUMIbE mass of laborers, cet mdustnal freedom after apparently mud slinging is not con
the war. He called for unity among the people, fuT ? voUdi' 3Mter th.e tug-o-war
orirl mT-ncuA fT,o ;nTi iuz: - - l'"v"uo "lc u "ew imcic ana nea-
- . I j uma, uiuuujr viuiua ana
I muddy dispositions were the final to.
Adolf Hitler hit the oratorical headlines again this week as he suits. One lad even found himself
damned out the President for his war-like Navv Dav sneeeh. Hit- infirmary having mud taken out of
ler, charged the Chief Executive with being . a 'liar,; cowardly ,Mhe.t bf mud dinging
,o.Vol .Uwn horlonT tmc, -foVn.. kJII .n.. l: wu uc commea to me Sadie
vw, ivuiij, aoc, oijr iwgcici, opcvi- Hawkins dav each vpr T T?
tuui xxicuMu uicaauunii. -Yliicx icuuc UaUk. ailU merely JSaiU,
As the nation mourned the deA hn tht PphTipti .TQmo iattSOII AdVISeeS
rumblings of a declaration of war rumbled in the nation's capital,
To Get Grades
1 1 - 1 1 A- 11 A. 1 . " m ' I
a oreaaiui omen on .wnai me iuiure win noid; Advise f rir t;
asked to get their mid-term grades
in dl5 South. Students whose names
begin with A-K are asked to some on
Monday afternoon from 2 until 4 o'clock
and all the others on Tuesday morning
from 9:30 until 12 o'clock.
o In Passing:
In the last analysis, not injustice, not Hitler, but reason and
truth are the conquerors of the world. Dr. Harry Emerson Fos
dick, president Rockefeller Foundation.
. Cootie Williams and Big Sid Catlett,
trumpet and drums, have left B. G.
and Cootie will start his own band
Helen Forrest, former Artie Shaw and
Benny Goodman man vocalist, is now
heard via CBS with Harry James
The newest dance craze, which is yet
to hit the USA but which can't miss.
is the Samba. In 'Souse America, it
has passed the fad stage and is still
gaining popularity. . . . Wallace 'Dutch'
Hammer, frosh from Durham, is now
on drums for the Satterfielrf mv
Dutch plays tackle on the freshman
football squad which is probably where
he gets that drive.
The Rustic Cabin, a spot similar to
the famous Meadswbrook, burned to
the ground last week. Alvino Key and
Teddy Powell both gained popularity
wnue piaying at tne Cabin which was
located just north of the George Wash
ington bridge m New Jersey. . . . Fish
Worley has contracted Tiny Hutton'i
Carolinians' to play for both the "Gine:-
ham Gallop" and the" Sadie Hawkins
Day Dance this Saturday. At the even
ing function, Tiny will share the band
stand with the Graham Memorial
Mountaineers. . . . Dean Hudson comes
out on Okeh records with "Blitzkrieg"
which features Parker Lund. Lund,
the drummer, is just about the only
t J i.L 1.1..
aa m xne oana tnat is not from Caro
ina. . . . Contrary to a rumor that is
circulating around the campus, AI Don
ahue has had a reorganization of his
orchestra. If any one doubts this fact,
will be glad to prove it to them.
RADIO JIVE: The dope company
is sponsoring a new program, "Spot-1
light Bands",.' over the Mutual system
at 10 :15. Every eve, Monday through
Friday, the show will present a differ-
Pick TTIaeaSre s un d a y
alt-St MUSICAL f7Z,
TllE Wj ,ineo tho
Y ..'.::y.-. .:-.tf.
si-.
A
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BmUirmioLYN
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urn
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-Also ; -
SPORTLIGHT COLOR CARTOON NEWS
MONDAY--
I
ei aim
'iirnr
f
F7 7
TUESDAY
GARY COOPER FRANCHOT TONE
v in
"THE LIVES OF A BENGEL LANCER-
Wednesday
LYNN BARI
ALAN CURTIS
in
"We Go Fast"
Thursday
SYLVIA SIDNEY
FRED MacMURRAY
in
"Trail of the Lonesome Pine
Friday
JAMES STEWART
LIONEL BARRYMORE
' in
"Navy Blue and Gold"
Saturday
CHARLES BICKFORD
EVELYN ANKERS
in
"Burma Convoy"