PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAB BZZZZL TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1941 The egrfal newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University f North Carolina at Chipel HilL where it is printed daily except Mondays, aad the ThanVrtgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C under act of March 3, 1873. Subscripticn price, 3J0O tor the college year. 1940 Member 1941 Fhsockafed CbSe6ce Pi-ess ORVILLE CAMPBELL SYLVAN MEYER WILLIAM SCHWARTZ HENRY ZAYTOUN Nations! Advertss Service, I2C 420 Madison Ave New Tom. M. T. Editor Managing Editor Burme Manager Acting Circulation Manager Assoczatz Esrros: Louis Harris. EurrcsiAL Boaed: Bucky Harward, Mac Norwood, Henry Moll, Bill Seeman, BillPeete. fViTTTwisTS ' Eliria Lvrm. Fzatukx Boakd: Marion Uppincott, Richard Adler, Billy Pearson, M. Bu chanan, III, Hflah Roth Mayer. NXW8 Editors: Bob Hoke. Paul Komisaruk. Ernie FrankeL Assistant News: Harden Carruth. A. D. Carrie. Rxtobteks: Jimmy Wallace, Billy Webb, Larry Dale, Charles Kessler, Burke Shipley, Elton Edwards, Mike Beam, Walter Klein, Westy Fenhagen, Gene Smith. PHOTOCZAFHat: Hogh Morton. Assistant Photogslafhxxs: Tyler Nourse, Carl Bishopric Epokts Edttob: Harry HoUingsworth. Night Sports Editors: Earle Hellen. Mark Garner, Horace Carter. SrcKTS Repostess: Ben Snyder, Bill Woestendiek, Bob Jones, Jean Beeks. AmnamsiNG Managers: Jack Dube, Bill Stanback, Ditzi Buice. Durham Representatttes: Marvin Rosen. Bob Bettman. Local Advertising St ait: Jimmy Norns, Buddy Cummins, Richard Wise- J bert?. Bettv Booker. Bill Collie. Jack Warner. Stan Leena Office Staff: Bob Crews, Eleanor Soule, Jeanne Hermann, Bob Covington. Asot. Circulation Manages: Joe Feimet. Circulation Staff: Jules Varady, Larry Goldrich, Lois Ann Markwardt. across I OxfcSaed traa a -Goes burins 16 Becoca Mood aftia 14 Esaeac el fiewt 15 Eazle'a nest If Rjtt la Ual 17 Oriental aat-cs 1$ EcrjjporUiyj stractart IS Tvo-toed alotfe 23 Signify nxUgnttVon 34 poU 2S River ta Praac SS ctar-llxa flower 2 Kniht UU 30 Sand bills 24 Series of contests TT Torn apart 34 Sick 39 Period of ttma 4 Period of time 43 Larre wars 43 Utmost 4 Unwaveringly 48 Flat reeepUdM 50 It is 51 Clamping; derieas S3 Muffled 84 Was tn SfMlon &5 Snip's captain SS Fascinated 63 Zens consort 3 Female relative 65 Lofty Bejin n Trap for animals Pathway By LASS XX02SX5 A-VSWta TO runoii rczzu AlRiS lA'Dj I ft J? k T SNiTlRiA, Hit 1c Op) W Make neat V 10 Heron feather Tl Snow vebida, i? DOWN 1 Butts 3 Western stato 3 Epic story 4 Politician who appeals to bota sides Mr. lOermaaj 1 Itoat&a S ' R oari tids Oracles 18 Eaasn tineas 11 &ca eado 13 Literary ceUectJona 13 Cluraiy leiiow 31 Biver ta Fraasw t3 Afed 3 Compete 34 In spirited opposition XT PertainiBf to sea 23 City tn Oklahoma 2 Slight toKrwledzo 31 Birds tKMnos 33 Administer extreme ruction 33 Cnecks nrniisas f 35 Art (Latini 3S Dra 41 Pertain In to armed fleet 44 Pooiposl ty 4 Assistance 47 Ceremonies 49 Bat late reeal 93 Time of verb M 6 now and rain 35 Bit vita bullet 94 Military cap 9 T Made wrathful 54 Measure of arts 59 True 0 Plsn-catOac bird I Colored 94 Organ of beart&s I X. 8y Elsie lyoa r Thw Staff For Tki Its: News: BOB HOKE Sports: EARLE HELLEN ''What is food to one man may be fierce poison to others. Lucretius. o Carolina's Freedom of Speech Continues Some persons on this campus who lay claim to an intimate knowledge tjf foreign affairs are champing at the bit to tear into Henry-Haye, Vichy ambassador to the United States, when he speaks tonight in Memorial hall. They assert that he does not represent the true France, that the Vichy government is a puppet of the Reich, that whatever the ambassador says tonight will be in line with orders handed down from the Wilhelmstrasse. They are calling him "a helper to the crime of Hitler in making slave people of the men and wo men of a once free France." They slam the IRC for its untactf ill ness in bringing the ambassador here on Armistice Day. The last charge, we believe, is justified; but there is no utility in complaining at this late date about a relatively unimportant point. Not belonging to the clique of international omniscience, we pass no judgment on the other accusations against the ambassa dor himself and his government. We prefer to reserve our opinion until we hear the Vichy representative's address and his answers to the questions that are bound to come hot and heavy. Main point is that those students who are antagonistic to the ambassador and what he stands for, refrain from showing him anyhing but the strictest courtesy throughout his address and the open forum. Carolina's tradition of freedom of expression is too old now to be violated by one night's rudeness. Evidence that this tradition is respected has come in a telegram from Jonathan Dan- IaI a TMATVl l ! rtTt f i 1 l 4" 1 w -J 1 4 . nfrss-l T Tn ?rr rfs-n i 4 -w nlittMMiin -wwV s-v 4wrvt piwmiutui uwiUA, wxoAwjr .oiuumus, wnw wu- isULge productions. Taint done in New gratuiates the HtU and campus on securing so prominent a speaker J Yawk and out of consideration for to explain Vicnjrs policy and position. the actors, lets put a stop to it at Students who tonight with their questions will help the Univer- Chepei Coiiitch. sitv to a better understand in o of what has reallv trarisrrirerl since! t m. o ... xt - i , i ..i I Envied Jim Pritchett x-rauces lau must remeniDer mai me ireeaom oi speecn wnicni wnen ne showed mey enjoy aemanas tnai tney snow tne same privilege ana at tendant courtesies to Henry-Haye. - I H I 1$ fr 17 IS ? I ixo p j'l I3 np- ' - is " 5r z . 22 Z 5r SS " - - Ti 111 I I 1 I I 1 I 5 lilt Members of the coed Senate by a vote When something is done well once of 7 to 3 approved an appropriation of I it is the subject of much praise, but $126 for keys the other day. The deed when something is done well everyday has been done, the keys" will bought, I it is usually taken for granted. The but still we feel that this new Senate J . job of keeping Chapel is starting a dangerous precedent. I . happily supplied The approved appropriation allows with motion pictures $3.50 apiece for 34 coed3. Not only is lis all on the shoulders of E. C. Smith. that a very generous individual appro-1 Sunday night Mr. Smith gave a special priation, but considering that there are showing of "THE BIRTH OF THE 17 members in the Senate to receive I BLUES" for the members of the Daily keys, nine on the Honor Council, and Tar Em, and their guests at the Tab eight on the Interdormitory Council, Heel banquet. We really appreciate it seems that quite a large number the extra effort that was necessary to of leaders will benefit from the fees I do another show. Thanks, paL of over 700 coeds. w 1 we most break another promise, True, coed leaders, just as leaders! but in this case it is going to please everywhere, spend a lot of time serv-1 so many, people that the promise is ing their school, and get very few tan- worth breaking. We promised that we gible benefits from that service. True, would not mention either Jack Dube the Woman's Government association or George Grotz in this has a large ($2,091) surplus, and it column again. The part can afford, to buy keys. True, the! '-' of the promise we want Senate also voted to establish a scholar-j to break is the part concerning Dube. ship with some of this surplus, but do All the coeds that KNOW Jack will be any of these facts justify the spending I glad to hear that he has finally been 7 (MM Featsn SrafUcst Sac Among The Damned With Damtoft Snack into the sneak preview of The Male Animal t'other night, and even if it is a thing of the past now, I'd like to put in one more good word for it. Thought Adolphe Menjou was tops as a stage drunk until I saw Frank Brink go through his tipsy scene. I hate people who smoke at 0 Another Letter More Criticism To The Editor: The quotation below the masthead in Sunday morning's paper was "Whatsoever thy hand f indeth to do, do it with all thy might." In reference to this quote I might say that my hand is sorely troubled and I shall press this issue I discuss with all my might. ' You, as editor, have asked all year for better feeling be-, tween organizations, coeds, the male students, and Carolina at large. In fact if I remember correctly, part of your cam paign promises last year included better relationships . and improvements. I wonder how you think things can ever be improved without criticism? I am referring to the deletion of My Say by Elsie Lyon that has failed to appear all of last week in the DTH. Surely you wouldn't be so narrowminded as to stop a column because of pressure from a bigoted few? Surely you who stand for all that is pure and white, wouldn't stop a commentary that had the facts correct, yet expressed the author's opinion. As soon as we here at Carolina start patting ourselves on the back and come to the conclusion that We have reached perfection . . . then and immediately then do we cease to really live, and become nothing but a stagnant pool, giving nothing, offering nothing, but living-in our smug complacency. It is true that Elsie Lyon has knocked several prominent campus groups, yet it is also true that these organizations have retaliated by offering new plans for their betterment. Your columnist may not have, been directly responsible for these improvements, yet she brought the facts before the eye of the campus, expressed her opinion, and gave to them a new knowledge of what was going on. If you have suppressed her column because you have re ceived adverse criticism, then I say you are no longer the broad-minded, liberal editor that was put into office last spring by voters that believed in you. - Randy Mebane. : 4 .O Editor's Note: The column in question is being run today. For the benefit of Miss Mebane, we asked Miss Lyon to check the column over with us. She failed to come by, and the column stayed on our desk for a week. Since we have been in office, we have received quite a bit of criticism concerning untrue facts stated by several of our columnists. Trying to curb this criticism brought the unfor tunate situation about. Sincerely yours- The Editors. the other up at a St. M's girl-break to find he had four (count 'em) dates. Twas OK until the last dance which was a no-break for the gals and their dates. Jim emerged very bloody and muttering all kinds of nasty old things. O -Wish these Carolina gents would quit drooling over Mr. Petty's version of Rita Hayworth appearing on last week's Time cover. - O Exclaimed a student as he walked into a frat house for a supper one eve ning, -What a gawjus moon!" "yuiet freshman!" muttered his more blase ' brethren-to-be. LAMENT TO A JAYWALKER - Once there was a college gent, J. Wilfred Jones by name. Whose artistry on Franklin Street, Had brung him gobs of fame. He weaved and turned, jumped and jerked, And laughed with fiendish glee. Whene'er he missed by a matter of inches, Some driver on a spree. And now he's dead as dead can be, And I for one ain't sorry. He wibbled when he should have wob bled, And now he's a mess quite gory. .' 0 After going to the Fish's last fling Saturday night, I couldn't help won dering how Carolina could have such a successful Sadie Hawkins Day on a minimum outlay, whereas Yale made a perfect fiasco out of it after spend ing several hundred dollars. Can't help wondering how many Daisy Maes there were with frost bitten toes about 1:00 ayem Sunday. Heard there was one Hairless Joe who started a major conflagration in his beard when a cig got out of control. Elsie, I've been drawing all kinds of nasty conclusions from this sen tence that appeared in your write-up of the S. Hawkins dance. "Sirenish Sadie Hawkins the Fifth, Marcella Clarke, was given a rooster as the most convincing Widder Fruitful." Anyway, she shore war convincin'. Tis currently rumored that Benito is now the heel on Adolf s boot." Playmakers Hold Tryouts Today Tryouts for Robert Sherwood's "Abe Lincoln in Illinois," the second major production of the Playmakers, will be held this evening from 4 to 7 o'clock in the Playmakers theatre. Fifty people will be cast. Everyone is invited to attend and copies of the play are on reserve in the library. of such a large sum for keys? Student leaders do spend a lot of time when they might be playing. But they are not entirely without reward. Sup posedly they are serving because they have a desire to serve their school and do something constructive for its im provement and not because they will be given a key. But student leaders should not overlook the fact that they are also getting a knowledge of govern ment and people, something which mon ey will not buy, and are learning to be good citizens. Certainly these are ben efits which make the amount of time and effort spent seem inadequately small. The WGA does have a large sur plus, but merely having the money does not warrant spending it unwisely. The members of the coed Senate are, after all, spending the combined fees of some 700 coeds. And the same members are supposed to be representing the 700, expressing the wishes of those to whom they are responsible, not making their own decisions regardless of what the coed student body feels. We wonder how many of the 700 coeds, if they were qtjfjstioned bjr their representatives, would approve the spending of their money to buy keys for, these repre sentatives. . ' The Senate did vote to use some of ship. That seems to be a worthy pro j ject. But why not set up two scholar ships, using the money now being spent on keys ? That $126 might enable some girl to finish her education. Members of the student legislature See MY SAY, page U put in his place. Jack has the habit of walking up to girls that he doesn't know and grabbing their arm he in quires, "WHAT'S YOUR NAME." Well our little Jack tried this stunt on one very attractive coed, Ann Mont gomery by name. With a goodly size crowd standing around Jack slid up along side Ann and grabbing her arm asked, "What's your name." Ann turned around and looked at Jack and after looking rather grave replied. TAKE YOUR HAND OFF MY ARM . . . YOU PIPSQUEEK." So dear coeds if you will all follow the attractive Miss Montgomery's method we won't have any more trouble with Jack. Looking to both sides of us to make sure that no guns are trained on our back, we start the daring expose of "student Kane." If, however, dear reader we are assassinated before we can utter these bits of truth please bare with us. For weeks now we have traced this myth of a man hither and thither, under tables, into Harry's, into the second floor Alderman, far out to the airport, into the Journalism building, and even into the very sanc tum sanctorum of the Daily Tab Heel. Now we have his name before us on a little pink slip of paper. His name (ugh we've been shot in the back.) (T.R.) TRUTH KNOWN We all love to stop and watch the army trucks go by and we all read where in some cases the army is with out the proper provisions, (we won- See CAMPUS KEYBOARD, page U Be Walk - fitted today in good looking, good feeling Bostonians. Ragged, Soft, Tweedy Leathers ... Boot maker Finish, Wing Tips, Quarter Brogues, Bluchers. Fit right, Feel Right Because They're Walk-fitted. Charlie Nelson '4r s "Jeep" Holmes '41 - Robert Varley's -a m m mw tw m a- a MEN S SHOP Yftf" f'i - - Yi & a . 1 - ave fun -be friendly Treat yourself and others to fresh-tasting ey s Spearmint Gum The Flavor Lasts i - v i WngI V 1 it

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