SATURDAY. FEBRUARY i', yr, i PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL -1 3T() e Hatty 1 JUL The official newnnper of the Publication Board of the University of North Tarfillna, Ovipel Hill, whrre it Is issued daily during the regular sessions of the t'nivefsily Uy the Colonial I'rffss, Inc.. except Mondays, exarriination and vi.3lmr priiods, iind the summer terms. Entered as second-tlass matter at tl, foht office of Chapel Hill. N. C. under the ,-nt of March 3, 18TJ. Sub wrifiM.m pi ire:' $8 00 per ear. $3.00 per quarter, "tyember of The Associated 'rea The As-roci.iled Vt and AP features are exdufaively entitled to the ir inr repu mention ot nil new leatures i:il'ltrr ISufiine Mannaer Itlanuiimd h.tlitorr Spirrtr rd'tor 'vVic.t t.tlilvr ., Dtfok EJifor .... .SoHrfy Fditor Roy Parker, Jr. Zane ItobLlns Caroline hruner . . Jim Milk K'liUrrtal ataf): Jack Brown. Bill Kellam, Mike McDnniel, Tom Wharton. Charlie Citron, Joe Seykora, Vestal Taylor, AI Johnson, Charlie Joyner, Dave .S'ltirpe. John Ftnmp. Nfu'i Staff: Hole Neill. Don Maynar. Glenn Harden, Bill Johnson. Wuff Newell, Sam JUrKeel, MarK Sumner, Art Xanthos, Craham Jones, Charlie rlro'ver. Oinnv Jones. M. K. Jones. Untitles StaiJ: Neai Cadicu, Don Stanford Bootsv Taylor. BUI Brain. Ruth Dennis. Marie Wither, handy Shiver, Charles Ashworth, Mary Tomlin. Dick M:igill. Jim Llndley, Branson Hobbs, John Poindexter. Carolyn Harrill. Lila H U I n son . Beverly Serr. I'.nice Bauer. Joe Nelson. Ieonard Rawls. Sport Staff: I.arry Fox Erank Allslon, Jr., Joe Cherry, Lew Chapman, Andy Taylor. Art Greenbaurn, Bill Roberts, Ronald Tilley, Bill Peacock, Ken Barton. .Society sluff: Peggy Wood. Mane Withers, Betty Ann Yowell, Judy Sanford, Mn r p ie St o ry. Don't Mind the Cold! The Communist Bulletin, edited by the still prolific Hans Freistadt, made its regular appearance on campus this week with the usual exhortations to read the Daily Worker and join the Communist Party. There was an editorial condemn ing Gordon Gray for being a "Big Businessman," plus a num ber of stories on "Negro History Week" and "Progress in the Fight, to Admit Negro Students" to Carolina. However, one editorial caught our fancy, for not two hours before the last bit of coal in the house had been burned. At the time the Bulletin arrived everyone was shivering around the fire place. The editorial follows: "The United Mine Workers lost any illusions they might have had about Truman's real position toward labor when he invoked the Taft-Hartley Act against them the eighth time he has used his powers under the act. The press pre sents this development as if Truman were an impartial mediator. Yet, with the enactment of the Taft-Hartley in junction, the miners can be forced back into the mines. The militant UMW is the backbone of the American labor move ment. It is one of the last major unions that have not sur rendered their economic demands to help the Big Business bipartisans fight their cold war. This blow against the UMW is clearly part of a plan to shatter the American trade-union movement. "The press would have us believe that the responsibility to reach agreement rests solely on the miners. Yet the re cord shows that the operators, with cunning intransigeance nnd full support of "Fair (to Big Business) Deal" Harry, with Taft-Hartley injunctions rather than to bargain in good faith. . The miners know that all the injunctions in the world won't mine a ton' of coal (didn't you say earlier an injunction could force the workers back to the mines ed.); that only by sticking together can they have a say-so in their conditions of employment, with a living wage, and have some security in a most dangerous occupation. Let us support their just demands; the fight for a strong labor movement is a fight for democracy." Strong words, indeed. But they are not bringing us any more coal. Hans, we suggest you read Drew Pearson's column jesterday to see the long-range result of hese refusals to work. From Syracuse U . . Carolina's New Dean Reprinted from Syracuse Daily Orange Dean Thomas H. Carroll of the School of Business Admin istration will leave in Septem ber to become dean of the School of Commerce at the University of North Carolina. Dean Carroll's successor has not been named, but University officials hope to have someone replace him next September. At UNC Dean Carroll will be in charge of graduate and un dergraduate work. He succeeds Dean Dudley DeWitt Carroll, who asked to be relieved of his administrative duties two years ago. THE HILL'S dean appoint ment was" also a direct result of the Business Foundation of North Carolina. This organiza tion was founded to make UNC the leading business school of the South. Although the uni versity is a-state school, its business school is also under the supervision of the business foundation. North Carolina's Dean Car roll stated that "expansion into graduate training in business ran only be undertaken if staff additions of high quality and seasoned experience are made." Dean Thomas Carroll had these requirements and his ap pointment was approved by the executive committee of ths university trustees. Although the two deans arc not related, their rise to fame is very similar. Both became known as excellent scholars and became deans of well known business schools when they were very young. DEAN THOMAS CARROLL has been instrumental in mak Tat Heel imousneq nerem. DICK JENKETTE - C. ti. MENDENHALU CHUCK HA USER TAYLOR VADEN Adv. Manager Bus. Office Mgr. Not'l Adv. Mgr. .Oliver Watkins Ld Williams June Crockett ing Syracuse university's School of Business Administration a leading school in its field. He was one of the youngest dean's at SU when at 31 he was ap pointed a professor of. law. From 1937 to 1942 the Hill's dean was assistant dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. In 1942 he was in charge of the Navy's V-12 program, the of ficer's candidate section of the bureau of Naval personnel and was honorably discharged as a commander in the naval re serve in 1945. TWO YEARS ago Dean Car roll was one of seven Ameri can educators named to a study committee on policy and pro gram for the Ford foundation. The committee has been devel oping data for use in advising the foundation on utilization of its resources in the promo tion of human welfare. At present the business school at UNC has a student placement bureau which con ducts interviews for 165 com panies. It is also connected with the Bureau of Business Services and Research. A $2 million expansion pro: gram for the School of Com merce, now to be known as the College of Business Admin istration, has just been author ized by the North Carolina legislature. Plans for new buildings and equipment have been drawn and. construction of the new buildings will soon be under way. ' - The average hen will lav somewhere between 180 and 345 eggs per year depending upon the breed and various other conditions. Pitching 'Horseshoes Bilfy Ros WHY BREAK YOUR HEAD THINKING UP PLOTS? In Battle Creek, Michigan, on July 30, 1949, a Mrs. Zilpha Persake asked her husband for a hundred dollars, and when he wanted to know what it was for she refused to tell him. One word let to a thousand others, and finally the hysterical house wife ran into the bedroom, took a rifle from the closet and shot herself. Mrs. Perseke hung on for two days, ' and during that time her husband not only gave his blood to keep her going but persuaded friends to do the same. A few minutes before she died, he learned what she had wanted the hundred dollars for to sur prise him on his birthday with a new hunting rifle. One night in the Spring of 1924, in the middle of the Illi nois flatlands, the engineer and fireman of a fast fail train found themselves looking into the barrels of a couple of. guns. The men behind the guns told them to stop the train and back it up to a crossing they had just passed. . All the crossing, four men wearing gas masks stepped out of a sedan. After shooting the glass out of the mail-car win dow, they tossed a tear bomb inside, and when the mail clerks came out the bandits went in. When they drove off, they took with them 60 bags of registered mail which contained $2,000,000 in cash, jewels and negotiable securities. The case was assigned to Bill Fahy, the Post Office Depart ment's ace inspector, and in a matter of hours, road blocks were set up, suspects were be ing questioned, and detectives from New York to San Fran cisco were on a 24-hour shift. Two days after this historic heist, one of the army of dicks working on the case got a phone call from an underworld character who offered to give him the name of the man who had masterminded the stick-up. His motive for squealing, he said, was revenge, and when his yarn was checked the man he named was arrested and con victed, and most of the two mil lion recouped. The thief, as corny and con trived as it may seem, was Inspector Bill Fahy. and when he planned the hold-up, he was certain he'd get away with it because he knew he'd be assigned to track himself down. The thing he didn't figure on was the resentment of the underworld because he' was muscling in on its racket. On an early morning broad cast out of Berlin a few weeks ago, Bill Downs CBS relayed the followings: Shortly after the war, a Ger man Hausfrau was notified that her soldier husband had died in a Russian prison camp. After the usual formalities, the Ber lin authorities -issued a certifi cate of death, and a few; months later the woman remarried. Last month she was informed by fhe commandant of the pris on camp that her husband was alive and would arrive by train on a certain date. The woman showed hus band No. 2 the notice, and the couple decided that the sensible thing was for the three of them to sit down at a table and talk the matter out. When the train pulled in a few days later, however, hus band No. 1 didn't get off. The Russian officer in charge in formed the wife that the excite ment of the homecoming had been too much for the ex-prisoner, and he died of a heart attack the night before. When the woman got back to her flat, she found ht second husband had commited suicide. A note explained that, under the circumstances, it was the only decent thing to do. CHICAGO GIVES WIDOWS A BREAK CHICAGO (JP) The taxpayer is getting a better break. The cost of replacing shattered windows .in Chicago's public schools is ' going down. Broken panes numbered 33.916 last year. In 1946, when a campaign to keep windows in one piece began, 60,799 panes were broken. Distributed by King Features Syndicate by arrangement wUb The Washington Star LETTERS OPEN LETTER REPLY Dear Mr. Rogerson: - Your new plan for electing the officers of student govern ment is indeed unique and shrewd, but would it really work? Granted that you are correct in saying that your plan is more democratic and more . efficient, would you say that, you would be able to get : enough money by this means to , subsidize the Daily Tar Heel and the other minor groups . who are clamoring for a fee . raise? 5 . , . I. for one, .f eel that you would get just enough money to have shoe shine boys twenty-four hours a day in the dormitories but enough to keep from raising the fees to skylimil. No! It interests me very much that you are so well-meaning and so, solicitious for the welfare oi student government. If you sin- ' cerely feel the A. P. O. is more efficient in having a democratic election, I will agree with you in transferring the election board job to the A; P. O. As 3 , former member of the Elections ; Board, I feel that my thoughts ! must be given a penny foi j Yours for a lot of pennies. ' Kenneth Lackman : P. S. Haven't I heard the -, name, Jim Rogerson, in po- i litical circles, running for some big office, hmm? KERR REPORT Editor: v.' , I have several comments to make to the Kerr report and coeds in particular. I am really serious in some statements but not in others, so you be the choice as to when I am serious. . 1 . We do not know when to make passes. Do they? Who is Jane? 2. When should the first kiss be? If a boy is allowed to kiss a pirl on the first date, she will start the old curiosity up and the boy is likelv to lose interest in her at the same time. If the boy and girl find they I ke each other after a few (3) dates, start shoveling! 3. 6& of vou coeds think we are tightwads. We don't all own Cadillacs! This dating three or four times a week can get ex pensive after a while. 4. I have vet to see a coed dress in thirty minutes. (I have yt to see a coed dress.) "Just for th hell of it' the coeds (30) kAeo vs vraitin". Just for the hell of it I am late because I know they will keep me waitixto. 5. I mav be crude, but so are some of you! 6. Congratulations on not list ing cars as a major asset for a date. This does keep more than one boy from dating over here and the sooner we handsome C. G's. realize this the better-it will be. 7. The basic coed gripe here is tkai we brand them as the - He MdSHs If . ' ' - "a TO THE pigs of the earth whereas at : home they become nice girls again. I don't know here the idea started, but I was really burned up recently when I . went home and some girl said "Are you really dating a Carolina coed?" She thought . I had lost my morals (what few I. have left) and was los- ; I ing my reputation. Admitted - . ly, a few girls here do "go all t. the way' but they are in the minority and ruin the reputa tion the others are trying to maintain. So why don't we give . the gals"a chance and judge them individually. ; 8. 16 of the coeds think that pinnings are convenient and for, prestige. Pity the poor husbands they get! 9. "Most of the boys are sweet and date you for your- ' self." Thanks'. ...... 'That is always the basis for 1 true friendship or love. , Coeds, I love you alL Could that be the reason I stay in " HOT WATER? It must be said though , that Ii love one of you :rmore than all the rest put to gether. "Joe Clark SEGREGATION Editor: ;. . - - As a free, white. God-fearing, law-abiding, anti-Com munist, conservative South erner (who sees with his eyes rather than with his ideas). I take this opportunity to go on record as favoring the im mediate removal of any bar riers that may now exist to the entrance to this Universi ty of any person on account , of race, color or creed. Once that has been accom plished, I suggest that anyone who feels he is too good to be on the same campus with repre sentatives of another race, col or or creed is at liberty to go somewhere else. ' William F. Patterson STROMBOLI Editor: . Perhaps the most influential people in America' are "those who make our movies.. It is a sad commentary on bur way of life when our morals are dic tated by the most irresponsible among us. . - The current .popularity of stars like Errol v Fly im. . - Van Johnsoni ;'. and, Robert; Mil- , chum seems io indicate that : box off ice, appeal is inversely . proportional to morality. Now we are all shocked at , the infidelity, J3r better, the in discretion' of the heroine who, while still wedded to the father Of her . young daughter, - bears a -son for another man. Yet Hollywood believes that our natural curiosity will up the demand jfor her latest picture. ! M we believe in the sacred -ness of marriage or if we sympathise with the little fellow who doesn't know how EDITOR many fathers he has. if any. then let's all boycott STROM BOLL Maybe we could start a nationwide protest strike, not against Ingrid and Rosse linL but against the immoral ity that they epitomize. Name Withheld By Request SAVED BY THE PHONE A L T O O N A, Pa. (jP)-Mrs. Marie Raichle was overcome by carbon monoxide fumes while talking to her husband on the telephone. . Unable to leave? his job in the Pennsylvania railroad in time, her husband, George, dialed a neighbor and asked her to go to his house and take his wife to safety. Then Raichle raced home. His wife was taken to a hospital where she recovered. , Officials said the fumes came from & leaking furnace. Portable one-man saws, driven by small gasoline engines, have considerably lightened the labor of the lumberman. HORIZONTAL 1. example 6. metal tea urn : . 13. sharp v mountain " spur ' 14. ate too . much 15. flowing outer - garments . 16. abandons ' -r 17. Luzon :'r. Negrito 'J .18. asterisks v 20. rodent t.:.- 21. winged V' creature 23. S-shaped worm " 24. high hills 25. revolve 27. wander 29. pursue 30. stock . 34. baneful .., . 36. noisier . v 37. small rugs . 40. before 42. weblike T membrane - 43. gMt 44. evergreen tree 46. legal science 47. appetizers 49. choicest part 51. run 52. ship of the . line '. 53. cuddles 54. germs it u up n . tttM-ttt, 1 m 50 21 11 & 37 38 39 40 41 242 W 48 pTS0 H 11111 WW 1 1- -j Answer to, yesterday's puzzle. IMA R UilA N I Si A WiiMO W iATON J.A SMjNf. A MIND Q.K1LLZ AcTT i SHSi Ailc ji r a3T -r-r-IX, ODUSTTot A A R C AMLlSETA R A WTlSTf A U II I C T H m "eiT tTtTb IeIxIeIMte tmm iWtT Avenge time of colntfoa: 24 minatef. Distributed by King Fetturea SyndicaU u j I he vvnoniiMU iun V MERRY-GO-ROUND WASHINGTON. It looks like .the' Truman Administration's secret intelligence is now even ' tapping Senators' telephones. . " Wire-tapping has increased under Truman even morejthan during the war, most of it being done by the Army and Navy. The FBI is careful to stay out. . Newspapermen's, wires are espe cially watched by other agen v ces, chiefly to find out where ' , Ihey i are getting exclusive in formation. Hitherto, it was believed that Senators' telephones, were relatively sacrosanct, but here is what happened to fighting Senator Joe McCarthy of Wis consin last week McCarthy got a phone call from an office assistant saying that the House Un-American Activities Committee had a "secret report" listing "400 names" of alleged subversives. ' McCarthy then phoned, ; Con gressman ' Richard Nixon of California to ask about the "400 names" but did not mention the .. matter of another soul. On the floor of the Senate, . however,'' before McCarthy's speech about the State Depart ment, ; shrewd .Senator Scott Lucas, the Administration's spokesman, came up and asked McCarthy about 'his "secret re port" and "400 manes." "I've, never said anything about a secret report or 400 names," objected McCarthy. "Oh yes you have," insisted Lucas. "We've got the clip ' pings." ' Suddenly Lucas looked as if he had talked out of turn. "The only time I have ever mentioned it McCarthy quick ly added, "was over my private phone." Lucas didn't say a word but walked off. . Twenty years"- ago, when the present Secretary of State was a young lawyer in Washington, one of his friends in the State Department, Prentiss Gilbert, got into minor row partly be cause he had gone up to , the Senate to call on Senator La Follette of Wisconsin. La Follette was a Progres sive: and the thought of a Stale Department official talk ing to a Progressive made the white-spat reactionaries of that day cringe in horror. Because of this and other prejudices. Gilbert had some promotion trouble, and his friend Dean Acheson served as his ait or - VERTICAL 1. gruesome 2. declamation 3. leaves 4. summer (Fr.) 5. minus 6. popular beverages 7. reluctant 8. state of disorder 9. native metal 10. Roman scholar 11. rose essence 12. takes ease 19. golf mound 22. smears 24. salmonoid fish 26. afternoon party 28. Greek letter 31. feminine name .' 32. akin 33. sliding ' receptacles in bureau 35. cancel 36. Bulgarian coin 37. city in Georgia 38. gaping 39. harmonife 41. ascends , 44. iridescent rem' 2-28 45. lampreys 48. aptitude 50- nravaricatfajj. DREW PEARSON ON CH iftfH CIIIfillTAM ney. No one ever dreamed ,-,t tr.a time that Dean Acheson lau would be. Secretary of Stat? Nor did anyone dream that Wisconsin later would oWt in. other Senator, Joe McCarthy who would also cause troubip for American diplomats. This writer, who has co', the State Department for about twenty years, has been cund. ered the career boys' sevc-rf critic. However, knowing sorrr. Ihinfi about State Dcpartmf r.t personnel, 11 is my opinion th.-.t Senator McCarthy is way ofT base. The Senator from Wisconsin has; been a healthy watchdog of ! some Government activities, but ! the alleged Communists which he claims are sheltered in the State Department just aren't. McCarthy picked his names from an old subversive list examined by the 80th Congress three years ago, and most of the men on his list were either ousted or, after thorough exami nation, found to be OK. The dangerous female, whom he says is with the Voice of America, for instance, just isn't. She was employed briefly some time ago, but dropped. His "Case No. 2" is an American Minister in Europe who is well known to most Washingtonians and is about as Communistic as Harry Truman. Every man on the McCarthy list has already been scrutinized by the House Un-American Ac tivities Committee or by a House Appropriations Subcom mittee. The tragedy is that Mc Carthy's blast is likely to send State Department officials so far in the opposite direction that they will become as stuffy as in the days when it was con sidered revolutionary to be seen talking to another Senator from "Wisconsin Note When Senator Tom Connally of . Texas was asked ' to have . his. Senate Foreign Relations Committee probe McCarthy's charges, he re marked: "I have more import ant things to do than go on a skunk hunt." A lot of people have been wondering why crusty, hard working Congressman Fred Crawford of Michigan punched a young farm hand, then sat for two days in a Maryland County JaiL The real explanation goes back to some unfortunate philander ings in which the Congress man got himself involved, which have handicapped his hitherto useful service. When a man holds the high honor of representing the Ame rican people in Congress, his actions must be subject to more scrutiny than the average citi zen. Such scrutiny is the only way the voters in this district can know whether or not he is adequately representing them. Here are the unfortunate facts about the Congressman from Michigan. ;Iost tragic of all this that when Ray Hanbury, the boy he punched, went to the Police Station, Crawford's ihn William went with him to help swear out the warrent for his father's arrest. Undoubtedly this parental re sentment stemmed from the facts that the 61 -year-old Con gressman has been so open in his attentions to his 26-year-old secretary, Miss Ruth Peters, that, it has caused great family embarrassment. Not only did he take his secretary to Aslaska on a Congressional junk-t, leav ing Mrs. Crawford at home, but park Police records show that on July 15, 1949, the Congress man and Miss Peters' were sit ting on the grass at Hains Point (Washington's Lovers' Lane) when two negro boys stole Miss Peters' purse. The Congressman gave chase,, recovered the purse after $15 was stolen, but did not prefer charges. When asked to prefer charges by Sgt. Charles Apfelbeek, he. said: "Hell, I can't do anything.. You know .what the situation is with me." Meanwhile Ray Hanbury. Ike youngster who got Punched, had become a good of MkC Crawford, and constant companion of "Skip" Crawford, the 17-year-old son.