Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 14, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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TtTXDAY, OCTOBER , 147 THE PAGE TWO i ? Pepper in the Lion's Den Senator Claude has blown the lid off the Pep per pot again. Since he broke his connections with Henry Wallace some time ago and retorted that he was not a supporter of Wallace for pres ident, he has not figured in the limelight until this past Sunday, on which occasion he put forth a "bold and daring plan for peace" which proposed a total disarmament and a $50,000, 000,000 contribution to finance a five year pro gram cf world reconstruction. Pepper remarked that the first requirement of his 'peace plan" called for a one-year morator ium within the United Nations on all "name-calling and all irreconcilable issues." The senator is right. If this could possibly be done we would not need to keep intact our army and navy or incur the tremendous expense of keeping our armaments in good condition. ' But evidently he overlooked the Communist International which has just been organized to dissiminate their false claims against the United States. Thev will use, as Vishinsky has, the UN as a sounding board to air their blasnbemous trice. They use these great examples of hog- Permanent Arrangement Needed The provisions of the House Privileges Board are still not in actual practice, consequently the visiting arrangement between coeds and fra ternities is in cnaos. It is a long-drawn-out pro cedure to get the agreement into effect. The members of the HP3 must compile a set of rules that will be satisfactory to the groups concern ed fraternities, coeds, the dean of women, the Inter fraternity council, and the coed senate. It is a difficult procedure, but through the years that, agreements have been made with co eds, the members of the Board who compile the rules have learned within what boundaries they dare suggest the time which houses should be open and closed and the drinking in fraternity houses, etc. . They also know by precedence the procedure which must be carried out to the smallest detail before agreement will go into effect. Under the system which was in use last year there was no HPB since the agreement concerned strictly the fraternities and the coeds the rules were set down by the Executive council of the Inter- Consider All Aspects Before You The editorship of the Yackety Yack is not just an insignificant position that carries with it a battered desk, a couple reams of copy pa per, a typewriter with a ribbon that needs re placing. It demands virtually full-time devotion to the task of assembling the events of a college year and binding them in a true composite pic ture of the University of North Carolina for the members of the student body and its posterity. Unlike this college newspaper and the two cam pus magazines, your yearbook, after its, novelty has worn off, will be carefully placed beside the family picture albums to be dragged out on rainy afternoons and times of reminiscencing. You will want a book that you are proud to display as well as one that recalls pleasant ex periences. Today you will be given an opportunity to select the editorship of the . Yackety-Yack. It is 4 33) e Daily S Barron Mills EDITOR Managing Editor: Earl Heffner Circulation Manager: Owen Lewis News Editor: Ed Joyner Campus Editor: Chuck Hauser Associate Sports Editor: Morty Schaap. NEWS: Bill Sexton, Charlie Gibson, Jane Mears, Herbert Nachman, Jr., Paul Rothman, Merrily Brooks, Nancy Norman, John Stump, Georg3 Roberts, Mack Sumner, Jean Baskerville, Bob Rolnik, Jim Spence, Harry Snowden, Sally Woodhull, Laurence Fox, Ruth Evans, Sanav Grady, Margaret Gaston, Roland Giduz, Julian Scheer, Everett Ford, Martin Carmichael, Bob Payne, Gilbert Furguson, George Dew, Donald McDonald, Charles Veen, Nina Davis, Domont Roseman, McNeer Dillon, Wallace Kirby, Ashley Branch, Mae Belle Enman, Dortoh Warriner, Gordon Huffiaes, Leonard Dudley. EDITORIAL: Bob Sain, Bill Buchan, Dave Boak, Russell Baldwin. PHOTOGRAPHY: Bill Harding, Wilson Yarborough. SPORTS: Clark Stallworth, Dick Jenrette, Bill Kellam, Taylor Vaden, Kyle Cox, Bill Gallagher, Ish Moere, Miriam Evans. BUSINESS STAFF: James Crews, Jackie Rogers, Eaton Holden, Betty Huston, J. C. Brown, Mary Willis Sledge, Charles Pattison, C. B. Mendenhall, Stan Cohen, Joe Williams, Randall Hudson. Tbe official newspaper of the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina, Cha , .erp it is published daily, except Mondays, examinations 3nd vacation periods by X . ' ioiual Press Inc.; during the official sum terms, it is pubii &ied seini-ivtekly on Weu nesuav and Saturdays. Entered as second-clasi n.atter at the post otfice at Chapel lUii, N. C, under the act of March 8, 1879. Subscriptionprice: $8.00 per college year; $3.00 per quarter. proposed just forced. However, the it will be a (Eat Mttl Sports Editors: wash to pollute the columns of Pravda and other publications that will be forthcoming with the alliance of the six-country Communistic Inter national. The Kremlin is interested only in telling the people they control about the names their own representatives have called and the accusations their own spokesmen have smeared over the UN filibusters. Since they do not have space in their publications to print the retort that we hand them in return or the answers out nations sound: the slander rings true in the Russian sphere. - But -the Senator Pepper of Florida -says that the first requirement for his "peace" plan is to cut out the name calling and friction in the UN. Everyone knows that this is the first thing that we must do to promote "peace." The Pepper statement would be even more startling if he how a "moratorium" could be en senator is correct in calling his proposal a "bold and daring plan for peace." A man who is thrown into an arena to struggle bare-handed with a lion is also bold and daring.' fraternity council and received the sanction of the Dean of Women. Already this year two new proposed agree ments have been drawn up by the Board; but they have not been approved for one or two rea sons: they stepped out of the bounds within which they knew they could tread, or they did not push the bill through the proper channels. Meanwhile the present temporary visiting agreement is not serving as a legitimate sub stitute for a regular agreement. The provision that coeds may visit if and when fraternities have an authorized chaperone in the house makes for trouble. These chaperones usually do not know the rulings incorporated in previous contracts and therefore cannot be expected to adequately control activities in the houses and perform the same function as a written agreement. long time before the opponents of trio House Privileges board- will get another chance to squelch it by a constitutional amend ment. In the meantime, some permanent ar rangement must be made for coed visiting. Vote not just an honorary position. There are thou sands of minor details that must be attended to "a theme to recall the spirit of the campus, attractive layouts for the pages depicting stu dent organizations, photography that adds ac- tion to the book, and ingenious ideas that will give this year's Yack uniqueness. Consider all of these aspects before you go to the polls today and do not be influenced by handshaking and a smile before you receive your ballot. Analyze the duties of the editor ship, the qualification of the candidates; con sider the advantages of a board of editors and a single editor. Keep all of these facts in your mind today when you go to mark your ballot, and vote for the editorship that you consider will do the best job, regardless of friendships or party affiliations. Mem ho Pbsociated Col!e6kte Press Howard Bailev EUSINESS MANAGER Bill Carmichael Bob Goldwater T ain't Necessarily So, But, . . . The Lady Stuck by UNC By Bill Buchan The lady and her husband came in the all-night coffee joint ar a few minutes past two, Sunday morning. , They were in search of black coffee in large- quanities-for, from all observations, they had spent the previous four or five hours celebrating or in mourning. Patrons also soaking up coffee soon learned that they were in mourning. The gen tleman in question was a Car olina graduate of many years back. His comments on his Alma Mater and the Tar Heels were not compliment ary. They were royally receiv- ed, however, by the majority of the customers in the cafe, inasmuch as the city was Raleigh and several yellow and black buttons labeled "Wake Forest" were pre dominantly displayed on many coats. The character's wife was evidently ashamed of her hus band and his remarks. (Or elese, she hadn't downed as many shots as he had.) Re peatedly, she attempted to quite him and in . doing so, gave one of the nicest speaches on loyalty thas has ever been spoken in a coffee joint at two o'clock on a Sunday morning. "Honey." she begged, "I don't mind your talking about the Tar Heels at home or among Carolina friends, but you just aren't doing the right thing when you let all these (her next few words are not repeatable) people hear you. Hell," she continued, they're from Wake Forest and some Carolina Carousel Happy Birthday, Dr. Frank By R. Foo Giduz October 12 has always been a great day at the University. That was last Friday, the 154th University day. They've been celebrating that around here for a long time now. But for the last 15 -odd years there's been another pretty important day right around that same time which most Chapel Hillians land students probably fail to remem ber. That's today, October 14, the sixty-first birthday of our beloved president, Dr. Frank Graham. It's a nice sort of day to speid at home with your family. There's no other way Dr. Frank would rather spend his birthday. But it's a bit different this year. Dr. Frank leaves for Indonesia What's Up in Graham Memorial 3:00 High Point club, Horace Williams lounge 3:00 Tarnation magazine, Ro land Parker No. 1 5:00 Pan-Hellenic council, Grail room 6:30-7:00 Recorder dinner mu sic, main lounge 7:00 Bridge tournament, main lounge 7:00 Henderson club, Horace Williams lounge 7:00 Sigma Kappa Epsilpn, Grail room 30 Carolina Dames, Roland Parker No. 1, 2 30 Phi Delta Alpha, room 211 8-9:30 Recorded concert, "Don Giovanni," Horace Williams lounge GM GRIND: Some really fine entertain ment coming to the campus scon. G. M. plans to sponsor Arthur Lessor nationally fa rro'is rv'an;st from the Cleve land Institute of Music, in a eratis concert sometime this quarter. . . . Ard Dr Franz Pol par, the v"rH famous hypnotist will probably anpear inder Graham Memorial or student entertainment auspices earJv next year. Polar, who has an reired hQre wce in the Ja1 decade, has been called mc phenomenal eneminer ever to perform on the Carolina ra"i pns. p. em ern V cp-r;'.- cars. . . . Tomorrow arn--n 3 in the Rendezvous Three U.. C . . J :j,rt. -V . U'.UI'T) Uf Ull ' rr.ll7rl I -' 7 I've. ' 1 reaHw ""votn apnrliiir ... And concert. -30.7 in the main loiine. will inch'e the fo-irrh movement from Tschaikowsky's fourth symphony, and selections from Victor Herbert, played by Andre Kostelanetz. even go to Cow College." Mr. Alumni reached into his coat pocket and pulled the cork from his flask. "Today that is an honor," he mumbl ed. His wife didn't agree with him and continued in a voice, even louder than his, to in form all those listening and everyone in the place was that she was a Carolina sup porter before the game and that she was still supporting them after the game. "When I get ready to analize their faults, I'll do it among other Carolina people." Then, . she went on to tell her audience where they could go cf they didn't want to go home. When she was through, the lady pushed several straads of grey hair back on her head and 'turned to her husband. "Now (and these words can't be repeated here either) you shut up!" The husband did. The moral of all this is if that the lady was quite rieht, even if she probably didn't remember her speech the next afternoon. A great many people students and all wasted no time Saturday night and Sunday and Mon day and probably today in public denouncing their fel low students for all to hear. 'Course it's swell to be able to. praise our team and point out their good qualities, but if a fellow can't sav anything good about them, he'll do his school a much greater deed by sayine nothing at all. Especially where Wake Forest and State and Dock men can hear it. by plane from an unknown jumping -off spot early this morning. So instead of their spending a quiet day of celebra tion at home, Mrs. Graham has gone to see him off on his birthday. However he spends it, here's hearty wishes for a happy birth day, a speedy return, and a suc cessful solution to the Indo nesian problem to a great guy, Dr. Frank Graham. Today' election for Yackety Yack editor might seem small, but the man elected will super vise a budget ' of more than $44,000. If you feel you don't know who to vote for, it's your DUTY to find out about the candidates and cast a ballot. Every one of you is paying over six dollars apiece for next year's Yackety Yack. Want it to be a good yearbook??? VOTE! Campus Forum Are You Entertained? By Pete Gems There has been considerable i reaction to the question asked in this column re dormitory en tertainment facilities last Friday and we have attempted to se lect the six most representative answers for today's column. Don English, who managed B-V-P last summer, has some very good ideas which no doubt could be adapted to present-day dormitory life. He tells us that he finds dorm rooms to be very plain, offering merely shelter without appreciable facilities Don holds forth that the psy chological value of a nicely furnished dorm room cannot be over-estimated a-d offers as sug gestion that linoleum be laid in all rooms: tha': the University aNindo" ifs v1lov scheme and . ii 1. 1 i. j I paint wail ill piue it pijm v"i;J for atmosphere. He also main-j tains that students will keeo their rooms in better shaoe if) thev are furnished in good tasre , f i Tr-vM be ahle to inv'te I their friends more frequently, Remarks about facilities at the i Ouonset huts wen? sent in bv t cr W: c ur-'S "xtiTs out that there are no table or ch-3-rs available for the huts prooer. "We have o-e te'eohone ro ; cpto a'-von 800 -"Hn'! f con rn ha rr. tihed. savs lim: atter all. a tele- phone is one of the necessary a 1- j ' i mr r ante rta n mpnf IU1K.13 iv .. Two men trom Mary Sid McAden and Charles Cowell Tr hone thz dormi'rones will have parties- rvh 3ff and stasr, in the future and envision the pos sibility of erecting a coopera tive hut behind Stacy near the Monogram club. Jasper Hassell The Exigency of the The Earth By Russell G. Baldwin This is the first in a series of articles designed to show the need for the establishment of a .federal world government with adequate powers to pre vent war. It is also the intention of the writer to show to the best of his ability how the peoples of the world can achieve world government; what the individual can do, and in what way he can contribute most to the achievement of world gov ernment. It is the desire of the writer that. this article and those which are to follow be judged by their accomplishment of these purposes. In the universe as we know it today the earth is a relatively minor planet. It is small and yet it is unique in that it is the only planet known (by us) to be inhabited by living cret tures. But the uniqueness of the planet, Earth, does not end there. Perhaps the most unique, the strange thing about the earth is that the creatures which inhabit it are constantly con tradicting the laws of nature. It is not natural for men to fight and kill each other, nor is it reasonable. Think what would haopen if the planets of the universe should refuse to stay in their proper orbits. The uni verse would soon be destroyed. This can be easily demonstrat ed by scientists, but, somehow, Write Away SouthBuildingGetsCompliment Dear Sir: When the person has a "gripe" he is usually quick to air his views. When all is going smoothly you seldom find that a person will both er to pay a compliment with the same vigor that was used in complaining. Perhaps this practice is unfair. Since I want to be fair, and since I recently did some complain ing about some University Officials in a letter to the Tar Heel, 1 would like to nay a compliment to those officials. My complaint was concern ing an objectionable contract submitted to Trailer Park res idents with an order to sign meeting where the contract was read, the residents elected a committee to represent them in negotiating with the Uni versity concerning the con tract. This committee met with Messrs Williams, Ben nett, Burch, and Wadsworth. From a personal viewpoint, I was impressed by the good , of Mangum believes that "the basis for the poor entertainment facilities that we have on this campus today can be found in the uncooperative attitude among dorm students, without whom any attempts at enter tainment must fail." P. McNeer Dillon, a resident of Miller hall tells us that "a bunch of people who get together to sing just for the joy of singing can have a really fine time." Hop to it, McNeer. The question for Friday's column is "Will Carolina beat William and Mary?". Please have your answers in the "Cam pus Forum" box in Graham Me morial by tomorrow evening. I r !Two Music Maiors -p s- jy i lO VjlVG IvCCllcllS First in this 'ear's series of weekly student recitals, to which the public is invited, will be presented tomorrow afternoon at o uiociv m mo oao. Raymond Askew, baritone, a voice student of Mr. Ruf us Nor- ris, will sing "The Slighted ! Swain," Anonymous, and "Ihe pretty Creature," bv Stephen Storace. He will be accompan'ed uv w.Vhard Cox. i i i nam vv S4r-r i n ann ;rii- ttrr 1 1 UV , , M. ,7- - - . . winner of last year's Kay Kyser schoiarhsip, will perform Men delssohn's "Variations S.erlouzes, Op. 54." Following these performances, there will be a short discussion of courses required for a music major. Age Is Unique nolitirians of our day fail see that the eartn, . a miniature universe to which the same law applies. As Lincoln so ably stated, A house divided against itself can not stand." In I860, Lincoln uttered those immortal words with refeience to the United States of America, but, were he living today, he would speak those same words with refer ence to the dis-United States of the World. Almost a century has passed and nothing has changed. No progress has been made" for progress is relative, and with every growth of good there has been a corresponding growth of evil. The situation today is no different than I860; only the actors and the stage are new. Then it was 30 million people and the stage was Ameri ca. Today it is 2 billion people and the staee is the world. The world has just survived the greatest war in all history, but, in doing so, it has sustain ed permanent, almost fatal, in juries. Practically every indus trialized nation in the world is on the verge of bankruptcy. With another war even those nations which today are solvent would topple beneath the weight of war, and, even if a nation should stand politically, it could not help but falter econ omically. It is such a pity that with human suffering and de- will and mutual understand ing which prevailed at the meeting on the part of both University Officials and the members of the committee. No punches were pulled, and all spoke frankly in an effort to arrive at a satisfactorily solution of a problem which has arisen through no fault of the University, but rather a result of lack of housing facilities with which most colleges are faced these days. Some one must give in, and a little giving in was done by both parties concerned. That is settlement of difficul ties in its finest form. It seems democratic to know that the door to South Building is al ways open. DANIEL S. MARTIN Integrity Needed Dear Editor: This letter is intended as a consideration of Hale Cham berlain's statement in the Sat urday DTH to the effect that the Honor System at Carolina is a matter of secondary im portance when placed beside the solution of international relations. I am inclined to say exactly the reverse: that the Honor System at Carolina is a matter of primary impor tance when placed beside the solution of international re lations. It appears to me that the in tegrity of the individuals of any nation is indispensable to the success of its relations Crossword Puzzle ACKUSS Wicked 26 Compasft point 27 It makes tea 29 Tellurium isymb.) 31 - Seals 32 Land measures 33 -Chief product ot South 35 Fish I raps 38 Indigo dves 39 Hindu heaved 40 Ball team ' 41 - Clever -42 - Mr Cobb . 43 -Ekh drink 4S Where Cattl graze 45- Oarden tool 49 Some 1- 4 Cut 9 - Louse eee 12 13 14 15 Hail! Litelesf SoonPi than ConiuRss uoint 16 - It meusure water 17 18 1!0 21 22 Away trom wind One who visits Mn ft name Carpenter Covered with foluud 23 - Past time 24 - Animal tat 123 5 & 7 g I j J o I, ' . . T J zz"mz zpLZzzzzmtzz 35 5b 57 Tj-rp 1 r I 1 , privation so widespread tha M I r.-,ri.f t tfKirnTCt- tumor ite ii-. i """ , " ity. . Even though World War H cost the peoples of the vN in human and natural rcsouiie a cum which surnames I lie nioi.t k um which surpasses (lie nioi.t k tile imagination, the world 4 i again chosen war in pre- n ence to peace. World War 111 J ferti - i has ference hn! besom. Make no mistake! i about that. It is vitally import- ant that we realize that war has y begun, for it is now in the firf stage and that is the only star- j in which it can be stopped, it is also vitally important for m to realize that the first stage i.t j ; a war always ends with the 1H S ginning of the second stage- the blood-shedding stage un- r less the people rise from their slumbering arid change the i' course of events. The situation today is ex-y tremely critical. It is no nitre i crisis; it is an exigency of the; first order. At no time since the Great Flood has the worlj been in such hazardous straits where all mankind is in im mediate danger of destruction. The atomic bomb and bacteri ological warfare are names that create terror in the hearts of. men, but their ability to pro- y duce terror is even greater than ,j is generally recognized. The ft exigency is urgent and it r - y. quires immediate action. with any other nation, an.) also that the latter cannw tx- ist without the former. Gay Iit7raU Congratulations Dear Mr. Mills: To you and your sports editors, Mr. Bob Goldwjir and Mr. Billy Carmkh.u I, r publishing the pocket pro' gram of the WAe l oust and North Caiolina lineup-, ' congratulations. Robert Neil I Music Criticisms Editor: , May I suggest to the loul "Bell ringer" that lie adjmf ! the quarter hour ' Wtiimifii'.- ter" chimes. Since about the j first of August the thiims have been one note (jut ol step. This grates on my ery sensitive nerves. (diaries Ih'xay.o'i i r MODERN DANCE CMP. The Modern Dance Club will meet this afternoon at i o'tluik in Woollen gymnasium to dis muss plans and the program i or the coming year with Bcttv Dobbs, new director of the club. Present plans for the clu!) consist of a dance adaptation of a Christmas story, sponsored by the YWCA, to be given during December, and the annual dance recital during the spring quar ter. 1NIK III PK( Viol i't ff.X y. A L ' A'N'oA i iT'c a! ia rf IvvTi 'N T iF pF?m NT O R i l& N VVVfciVVtlT'tJ ImTIl I IN V NEE f:e!s pflRj i Arts i Ib.M 47 Coarse 4tt hinl.sh OOWN 1 Yeliu truit 2- l.i the iiuda. 3 Prefix, dotfn 4 J'trmner 6 Olie a party tar 6 Turn haruiy 7 btrav 8 hiijt.t aubr I 8- Jull- i-rv Id Hill nymph 11 Small iQ.ai I 13- Wie ll.ciLn 17-Htghhat 19- River iS I 20- Acordlng to 22 Consecruo& 25 Everything 27-Name 28 --Self-esteem (pi ) 29- Capital of New Jersey 30- Attempted 31 - Miserly 32 Literary crap 33 Garden flowtr 34 Whitish vegetable 36- -Ee birds 37 Cl:r,itu. niU 39 Book by Zuia n venicie t , 44 Red Crow tattr S 11
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 14, 1947, edition 1
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