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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1941 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE TWO Cbc Batip Car I&rcl The official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the Umversity ef North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Monday and the Thanksgiving. Christmas and Spring Holidays. Entered as second das. matter at the post office at Chapel Hill. N. C under act of March 3. 1879. Subscription price, 3JX for the lleeear. ,rt,t National Advertising Service Inc. 1940 Member 1"4I CUtx'mblisbertReprtseMUh associated GoDegtfe Press- 'Z?ZZ.A2. - JL ORVILLE CAMPBELL SYLVAN MEYLK WILLIAM SCHWARTZ HENRY ZAYTOUN Manaaina Editor . Business Manager Acting Circulation Manager By The Staff m U - --i m EE Z Zr M" Norwood. Henry MoU. BO! Seen, Akutant Nnre: H, Ct'rtb UrrTS'le. Charle. Kewler. Burke PHfrroaiArHni: Huieh Mrton. CJurrooNisr: Tom Biebigbeiser. v r , th-vo-,-;,. AWtant Photo:raphijis: Tyler Nouwe. Carl Bishopric Sports Enmw: Harry H.11worth. Garn- Horace Carter. Tttist: Hilah Ruth Mayer. , . Rachel Dalton. For This Issue: New,: ERNEST FRANKEL Sports HORACE OABTER I shall endeavor to enliven morality with wit, and to temper wit with morality." Joseph Addison. Who Does What, When, Where, How And Why? - A Written Student Constitution Would Tell You Whether you realize it or not there is no written student body constitution on the Carolina campus. Since the present editorial board has been in office there have been several dis cussions on the need for a constitution, and the concensus of opinion has been that there should be one. The Daily Tar Heel . wants to go on record as favoring a written constitution for this campus. - ' Disregarding the obvious fact that nobody has any records of any precedents that lasted more than a year and that if there were records of the precedents, nobody would know how to interpret themv we'll, give you a few recent examples of our students government without rule, without code, with out delegated authority. Yesterday afternoon the junior class executive committee met to elect a vice-president to replace the one elected last year who failed to return to school. A question arises m our minds. We would like to know who gave the junior class execu tive committee the power to elect a vice-president. Should there not be another campus election. Frankly, we don't know. Perhaps the junior class executive committee should hdave this power. But we want to see it written down. Four weeks ago the Publications Union Board passed the various publication budgets. They were then turned over to the student legislature who made a few minor changes. Now the board is asking the Student Council to hand down a decis ion as to who has the final say on all budgets. A written con stitution would have solved the issue. o Half the organizations on the campus do not know what ; their real functions are. They feel if they take certain steps they will intrude on the rights of other organizations. A writ ten constitution would solve this. What good will a written constitution do? Simple. It: will delegate authority in certain instances, and in delegating, be flexiole enough to allow for some exercise of judgment. "... . ;" " " ' In other words, if the Student Council has no power over editorial policy of the publications, who does? The Constitu tion will tell you. If the Student Council tries cases of honor, where does the administration of the University come in? The constitution will tell you. If the Dean of Administration sus pends a student, can the Student Council step in or not? The constitution will tell you. We do not want a constitution with lengthy allowance for a judicial department, a legislative branch, and an executive authority, with all sorts of committees and courts and robes v and gavels and braid. We want a few simple paragraphs, so simple that even the greenest freshman and the most sleepy senior could read it and understand. We want the students to discuss the problem. The Daily Tar Heel is thoroughly be hind it, and will do everything within its power to have one on which the students can vote for or against when the elec tions come up in the spring. Stacy's Houseparty Bovs in Stacv dormitory start their annual houseparty today. We don't have to wish them and their dates a good time. That's already been insured by the party and banquet and dance that have been planned. More than merely giving a good time to the Stacy residents, the houseparty is definitely a forerunner to similar functions in other men's dormitories as soon as they get adequate social room facilities. There's only one possible fly in the ointment. Last year when Stacy held its houseparty, sour grapes and sheer rudeness prompt ed other dormitory residents in the lower quadrangle to whistle at the passing girls. Such conduct might very well spoil the week end. Realizing that it won't be so long before they themselves will be having houseparties, the rest of the lower quad ought to see that such misconduct does not occur again. , Having handed the two bags under our eyes over to the Railway express we proceed with the morning KEY BOARD. Good morning all!!! ' O Well the extreme has happened Sound & Fury found an application in its office mailbox from Franklin Da lano Roosevelt. The application asks the applicant about his or her abilities 1. ' " etc. After signing PRESIDENCIAL Ms namfi the APPLICATION for a Iocal addresg was filled in to read, LOUIS HARRIS. In answer to his ability as an actor the application read. Acting? . . . GOOD Straight? . . . FIRESIDE. Another question, WHAT OTHER SPECIAL IZED TALENTS DO YOU HAVE?, was answered, "TERM AFTER TERM AFTER TERM." The last question asks the applicant if he has a car arid further if he is willing to use it in connection with Sound & Fury. The answer was "YES WHY NOT, I HAVE ONE ON ORDER." ' , O Well the greatest Minstrel joke the world has finally reached the newspapers of the great heel, Ad olph. In a recent issue of the "HAMBURGER TAGEBLATT" one of the larger, newspapers of the reich, the following item appeared: "WER WAR DI DAME MIT DER ICH DICH GESTERN ABEND SAH?" "DAS WAR KEINE DAME, DAS WAR MEINE FRAU." ... . : - o ' Some very nice individual has hon ored the Daily Tar Heel by leaving his or her horn rimmed glasses in the Editorial Office. Our editor wants the glasses to be re turned to their owner, but he has found them useful when he is handed a story he had rather read out of focus. LOST, FOUND Cirsswirni IPusssIie 1 Clad of vhlstl a Loao-sbsrk It Top el bead 11-Blunt n speech 13 Vehicles lor sxww 15 -Protection 19 Bag tabbr.l 11 Combining form: . IS Preneb tnpresstoat painter JS- And not 21 Strikes wttn rweeninf. bio r- Withered 34 Tni person 1$ Imbibed ale 27- pole that .rtrttchr rail ja Bidding farewell 31 Takes out 33 Raccoon (col J 23 Thousands of dollars slang i 35- Metal-bearing rocks 3S -Steps over fences 3S Western Indian 39 Peak of church 40 Hail 43 steamship labor. 43 Equestrian gam aa Twt satisfied Method oi propewns; boat By LASS HOBXIXS ANSWEkt TO PREVIOUS rCZZLX T UN g Al fHTff1 iT'EffilU , ".TM4 r I if 5 ifrsiunTgfckT ipiufit S(TlAJT1EDpDSOig: 'AjUfRlaJ T A 3 LIT OjW.Pg f f "UjAfyl IMMi "pMfr WprHSI 49 Punerai fire 49 OppressiTe ruler ftO Ttea in diary DOWN 1 Bargain offering 3 Roman bisbways 4 Continent laoor.t a Pushes forward Art of wooing 7 Pieces of good BKk 5 Right tabbr.t 9 Be sorry for 3 Sacred poem 3 Biessing - " 4 Looks with favor 5 Dull and tlresomo 9 Imitated ro Roman emperor 3 Part of DaiUd Kingdom 3 Backbone '5 Turns Inside eat n -Clergyman's neck war ipCl 9 To sheltered side 0 Coconat-bosk fiber 1 Put oat light "l Velrety leather :6 Division in party 31 Part man. part beast 39 Ply alone ,. 41 Extremely 43 Bubbling beverage 45 Quick to learn 46 Addition to letter (abbr.l . 47 Goidessot earth I X 3 H IS 16 p 9 I . w i 1 I 1 I UN I I I I Dadr, by United Featare Syndicate, Inc. It's only a rumor so far but we have it from eood authority, (Dube's leettle black book) that The University Res- To The Editor: A- Is a A . GUM By Morion Lippincorf So The IRC gets stood up again. The day will come through when one cf the men they sign up will show up. What I don't see is why, while they are waitimr. they don't get some nifty Dublicitv out of the whole thing. For instance, get a f ull page spread on how thft Duchess of Windsor is coming to discuss "How I Got The Duke" or This Time I Got Left Holding the Umbrei- la." If worst comes to worst as it proo ably will, the day before she is sup posed to appear they can always say she had to go to the dentist or some thing.4 " - A' Something I have never been able to understand after almost a year and a half in Chapel Hill ;s why the ad ministration has allowed the students a half hour recess every morning. Not that I'm complaining but it's sort of unusual. As a matter of fact I think it's pretty good fun. Someone once offered as a solution to tbe problem the idea that maybe it was for Fresh man Chapel. But I've never been to the Book Ex without seeing every Freshman I know, all two of them (Yes, I know, awfully old.) Someone else suggested maybe it was for studying and I did'f ind a couple of people in the library once when I looked, and an other few on South Building steps with open books but I've got another theory cn that. It takes no super sleuth to go to the Book Ex at 10:30 every morning and uncover many delightful little phases of campus life in action. Over on the right we have two girls sitting, outwardly quite calm, inwardly one of them boiling. It seems she was sup posed to meet someone for a coke and he got waylaid by some other female and she had to end up buying her own coke. "Lokk at him, the lug. It'll be a long day before I speak to him again. Never have I been so absolute ly furious ..." (more on the same line of thought). ' On the left we notice a figure ap- turant next to the post office is plan ning to use a band to attract friends. We hope the little black book is correct because we can eat our steak and supe our soup to the Blue Danube. . . T. R. 9t J4&pf&il - What right has a man murdered his mother and father to plead for mercy on the grounds that he is an orphan? And what right does the modern carpetbagger, who by careless use of his Bronx cheers and i Brooklyn boos has destroyed all sem- ERN hospitality. This hospitality, ! proaching slowly through the crowd . . ! fi,o rwsinnallv tmnctuated with a calling, "Has anybody here seen Dopey who has . "7 u rebel yell, is still representative of the I gotta message for him Hey bud, spirit of the Old South The hostility of which Miss Lyon so eloquently writes is the by-product of the mass influx of yankees into Vio Snnfri whiph has been eoine on i Brooklyn boos has destroyed all em- since Grant tasted his first mint 1 About then somebody reminds me to .blance of hospitality toward visiting to 'remove the emntv expression from my hiss and boo every speaker who is j face so I pick up my books and march hrave enoue-h to weather the storm of . to class lost in the wonder of it all. ain't you seen Dopey?' In front of us we see some of the smoother boys getting smooth with the local glamor talent. They do pretty well and all seem to be having fun. I personages, have to complain that hos tility has replaced hospitality here in Chapel Hill? I have been going to speeches and open forums here at the Hill for over 1 n rS(l Frnsh meet to decide about three vears. I have observed. The Yackety-Yack pictures. Memorial hall, offenders are not the descendants of 10:30 Seniors meet to approve bud get. Gerrard hall. 1:30 Nominations for Coed Senate. Gerrard hall. VNC RADIO Lee and Stuart's men, who still point with pride to our untainted SOUTH- cuss the Honor system and the import ance of abiding by it. Freshman chapel throughout the week will be turned over to the theme, as representative students take the Memorial hall rostrum to stress the (Continued from first page) Squires, Robert Bowers, Earl Kastner, system. Upperclassmen are especially , the loudest. their violent disapproval and still be called gentlemen just because they are members of the student body of a southern university. Miss Lyon should notice from whence come the arguments and ac cusations hurled at the next speaker that appears here. The gentlemen usually act as such. The lads from the North act just as you would ex pect them to act. This opinion is rot the product of . wishful thinking but of actual observation. It is the wounded lioness that roars Send the DAILY TAR HEEL home Elizabeth Trotman, Betty Rosenbloom, Marne Snyder, Marion Gleason, Ar thur Persky, Lionel Zimmer, and Wil liam Wolff. Sam Beard will announce the production. Technicians will be Gloyd Await, Louise Stumberg, Lucile Culbert, and John Young. HONOR WEEK (Continued from first page) special called meetings, Student body president Truman Hobbs .revealed. . , Halting his pressing Administrative and Mediation Board activities for a brief interim, Dr. Graham will speak at a special, convocation Thursday morning in Memorial hall. Among the first backers of the Honor Emphasis Week idea, Dr. Graham has stressed many times the importance of whole hearted student cooperation of the Honor system. Albert Coates, head of the Institute of Government, will start the week's activities Monday night when he speaks before the Honor and Student Councils, and the Inter-fraternity and Inter-dormitory councils of the men's and women's governments at a spec ial called .meeting. ' .Campus organizations are 'being asked to devote their meetings during the week to discussion of the Honor System. It was pointed out at yester day's meeting that all student leaders should feel it their responsibility' to support the programs. Special meetings are to be held in the dormitories and fraternities at which time members of the Honor and Student councils are to be in charge. Questions concerning the sys tem will be answered. Faculty mem bers will be asked to devote a part of their class periods on one day to dis- urged to attend the meetings, Hobbs stated. Sincerely, Chester Hill Arrow Shirts Neckwear AND Underwear AT JACK MAN P REVIEW TO NIG H T 1 1 : 1 5 P.M . x.-.w:wrs"::fr.. )1 :w M !t$T s9 . ' If iMft y ll .'f fftdvjF A Paramount Picture glarrina " j$ I Roljert Preslon Ellen Drew f 1 ksj Nils Asther Margaret Hayes Clarence Kelb 1 Wl A!ice White Cecil Kellaway Cliff Hazarro I M t . Cfc4 by WiSiom CUmm . Pr4vt4 m Nw Ta Uag hy A. H. W4s REGULAR SHOWING SATURDAY also TED FIO RITO and ORCHESTRA LATESTPARAMOUNT NEWS
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 28, 1941, edition 1
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