VED!iE3DAy, MAY 10, 1030 PAGE TOC THE DAILY TAR HEEL Th official new-paper of tl-e Publications Board of the University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, whert it tn ihup1 Oilv durirg tiie regular sessions f the I'niversity by th Colonial Pre.. Inc., exrc-f.it Mondays, examination and vacation period, and the summer terms, Entered as second-class matter at the pmt office of Chapel Hill, N'. C. under the act of March 3, 1379. Sub scription price: $3.00 per year, $3 (Mi per quarter. Member of The Associated Pre. The Associated Press and AP features are exclusively entitled to tne use for republication of all new features published herein. EdiVorTZ.r;:. ..... ;. QRAHAM JONES Business Manager C. B. MENDENHALL Managing Editor ROY PARKER. JR. Sports Editor ZANE ROBBINS News Editor ... Society Editor Photographer . Subs. Mgr. ... Rolfe Neill j Adv. Manager ... Wuff Newell t Bus. Office Mgr. Jim Mills I Nat l Adv. Mgr. . . Harry Grier 1 Circulation Mgr. Oliver Watkins Ed Williams .. June Crockett .. Shasta Bryant Editorial Board: Tom Donnelly. Hugh Wells, Bill Prince,. Glenn Harden, Hershell Keener. dlforTaTSlaff7SorKimerlin, Wink Locklair, Tom Wharton. Bob Hennessee. Effie Westerveli, Mike McDaniel. Barry Farber. NrwsSlalfTTirkSumner, Charlie Brewer, M. K. Jones, Tom Kerr, Louise Walker, Edward Teague. David Holmes, Andy Taylor, Dick Underwood, Caroline Bruner, Arnold Shaw Kimsey King. Sports Staff: Frank Allston. Jr., Lew Chapman, Joe Cherry, Biff Roberts, Ken Barton, Billy Peacock, Art Greenbaum, Ronald Tilley, Harvey Ritch, Wall Dear, Charlie Joyner, Pinkie Fischelis, Seth Bistick, Ken Anderson. A Buliiners'SlffTNeafCadieu, Tate Ervin, Bill Prouty. Bootsy Taylor. Don Stanford, Frank Wamsley, Ruth Dennis, Marie Withers, Randy Shiver, Charles Ashworth, Dick Magill, Jim Lindley, Branson Hobbs, Carolyn HarrilL Bruce Bauer. Night Editors: News Roy Parker. Jr. Sports Lew Chapman College Help In Resorts Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of informative articles on a problem that concerns many' Carolina students that of summer employment which enables us to pay tui tion in September and remain in school irthe winter ses sions. Before the end of the quarter, the DTH hopes to have a great deal of information on summer jobs, in order that the student readers can know , of any profitable positions open. Fred K. Lewis, Exec. Sec'y. National Resort Association . S For a great number of years, the resort industry has fur nished college students with seasonal and- very profitable employment during the vacation periods. Many of these stu dents would never have had the opportunity to complete their college education without this income. Now the time has come when the Association officers are being deluged with letters from its membership bitterly com plaining of . the attitude that the present college student as sumes during his vacation employment. The general com plaint is that these students assume they are on a vacation rather than on duty for which they are being paid. Further more, their mode of life during this vacation period, regard less of their conduct at school or home, in a great many in stances is such that it becomes embarrassing to the resort operator. "Ar one operator wrote, "How in the world can we expect an honest day's work from our waitresses when they carouse ail night, getting practically no rest or sleep." The trend for seasonal employment in the resort industry at the present time is more to married couples and teachers rather than to college students. A continuation of the stu dents' attitudes and habits in such seasonal employment is going to bring about a condition wherein the resort operator will not even consider an application from a student. During the past winter for reasons that will appear below the resort industry has been more than usually interested in its worst problem the college student who says he must work during summer vacation "to help pay his college ex penses next fall." This interest has resulted in informal dis cussions at general meetings, special clinics held in different sections of the country, and in articles in trade journals tuch as the one enclosed taken from Resort Management. The general feeling, I believe ,is that while college students have virtues, there has been an increasing number of fail ings. The more progressive managers of resort hotels be lieve the University must cooperate more closely with the student and his summer employer than is now the case if there is ever to evolve a state of affairs satisfactory to all three parties interested. I would like first to mention some of the advantages the college employee has for his employer. There is established between the average summer guest and the student a senti mental bond. The vacationer takes pleasure in learning of his servant's ambitions and in helping him along financially. In the case of a college girl waitress, let us say, he will over look ragged service he would not excuse in a professional. The employer also is not likely to find unionists and lahor agitators among the college group, although he can no long er be as certain as he once was. And last the resort operator cannot overlook the advantages that come with birth and training and these are numerous and many, by and large the property of the college group. On the other side of the ledger I would list the first fault of the college summer worker as lack of perspective. Only rarely does the student look beyond his own narrow horizon. He is so full of his own needs that he seldom realizes there is some give in return for the take. He applies to resorts without sufficient knowledge of what a resort is, what its problems are, and what his abilities will do to help solve these problems. Since he has no real interest in his job, no professional pride or desire to improve in it, it is to his ad vantage, he thinks, to salvage as much time as possible for his own summer amusements and for diversions. This lack of understanding is reflected in the first sentences of the hundreds of letters coming this time of year to all resort operators from all types of students; the post hoc ergo prop ter hoc of every first paragraph is "because I am attending college or want to attend and need the money to continue my education" the hotel manager has a' moral obligation to provide the money. Write Away Editor: I would like to reply to Mr. Robertson's two criticisms of my letter. First as regards to his remark that the quotations I made from Stalin were in reality concerned with "various aspects of the class struggle I'-fTaing on within different countries and not with relations between coun tries": It I may interpret Mr. Robertson's fur ther remark that he does not base his belief that peace is perfectly possible "upon quotations from the classics of Marxism-Leninism" as an admission that he is willing to think beyond the narrowly authoritarian mold his letters and articles of the last few years have indicated I think we might get some where. But if he insists in thinking exclusively along Stalinist lines, as past evidence would indicate, he is committed to saying that everything is inter related. It is axiomatic in dialectical material ism that the problem of "nationalities," imper ialism, relations between stales, and the prole tarian revolution cannot be treated in isolation. The" quotations in my last letter most certainly deal with the class struggle, but the class struggle and the quotations cited are of tre mendous importance in international relations. I ask you, Mr. Robertson, do you believe that relations regarding the all important question of peace and the question of class strife within a country can be considered separately except as an analytic separation for'expediency? Secondly Mr. Robertson suggested that the questions which my quotations from Stalin refer to still "do not exclude the possibility of a peaceful transition to socialism within coun tries." and if the present capitalist encirclement is replaced by a socialist encirclement, a 'peace- . ful' path of development is quite possible for certain capitalist countries, whose capitalists, in view of the "unfavorable" international situa tion, will consider it expedient "voluntarily to make substantial concession to the proletariat. But this supposition applies only to a remote and possible future. With regard to the immediate future, there is no ground whatsoever for this supposition." Then Stalin concludes: "Therefore, Lenin is right in saying: 'The proletarian revo lution is impossible without the forcible de struction of the bouregois state machine and the substitution for it of a new one . . .' " (See Stalin, Foundations of Leninism, p. 56). At present the great worry of Soviet Russia is that she is being encircled and thwarted by the Capitalist nations. Her frequent excuse for balking in the U. N. is based on the remark that she is thwarted from a fuller participation by the Western block guided and controlled by "war-mongering," "imperialist," "capitalist" United States. Whether this is so or not is not at present the question. The question is that with this attitude Russia's willing participation -in any sincere attempt for peace between na tions seems remote almost to the point of being negligible. Except that I fear being unfair to Mr. Robert -' son, I would think that his query as to whether "I consider a third world war to be inevitable" is the well known ruse of turning the question. What I consider to be the best solution of inter national questions and more specofically ques tions of peace was not the question. Further more as I do not set myself up as an authority on this I do not see how it matters. The ques tion was what is the attitude of dialectical materialism toward peace! But to avoid the Mr. Robertson's curiousity. I do not think war Mr. Robertson's curiousity. I do not htink war . or anything 'else is inevitable! With John Dewey and Bertrand Russell I consider the great weakness and great threat of dialectical materialism to be its insistence upon thinking in terms of inevitabilities and the rigid laws of the dialectic. I think that of several alterna tives war is the most likely one. But it is not inevitable, and I certainly align myself with the workers for peace, but I insist, Mr. Robert son, that my effort for peace must have a prac tical, operating basis and not resolve itself into vague platitudes. To the degree that you are willing to make use of cooperative intelligence and accept the give-and-take of free discussion rather than the chill of dogma frozen into dialec tical laws I am willing to grasp hands with you or r.nyone else across the forum table. Kai E. Nielsen TELL SENATOR BYRD 52r4 i - -jf ' - dSv HIS 9ALTHXiFTy $KVr- - i IS REACY To DISCUSS fEm WITH HIM! Write Away Dear Graham: . , . - There is something disturbing about the recent debate on the pages of the DTH between pro . ,t and opponents of communism. It is al- -j:.....kin tn watch two antagonists uww Pitching Horse Shoes At Sardis The Other Night Church Studies Coming Up WAUKESHA, Wis. (IP) A new course for church workers has been approved by the Cur riculum committee at Carroll College and will be available to students next Fall. The new major, called Pastor's Assistant in Christian Education, will prepare students for service as a children's worker, youth adviser, week day church school teacher, church recreational direc tor, camp leader, church secretary, or director of youth activities. The proposed curriculum requires 131 hours credits and 131 honor credits for graduation including a full year of History, , "The Modern World," (now a four hour course) and one se mester of "Introductory Psychology." The new curriculum offers a major in Bible and a minor in Religious Education. The minor consists of three hours in "Educational Psychol ogy" and twelve hours in "Religious Education." The new course proposes to give to a selected group of students the type of training that will enable them to move directly into church work on a salaried basis when they complete their college course with a BA. degree. Churches are asking for such workers and the Admissions office here reports the receipt of "a good num ber" of applications "already for the 1950-51 college year. Candidates for the course will be accepted upon the basis of character, scholastic record, and tests demonstrating personality and apti tude. Final acceptance of applicants will be made during the second semester of their fresh man year. At ardi's the other night, I met up with Sol Hurok, the concert impresario, arid over the third cup of coffee we got to chinning about artists their care, feeding and coddling. "You wouldn't think Broad way actors were temperament al,"' said Sol, "if you had to deal with opera singers." - "Mebbe so," I said, "but did you ever tangle" with Tallulah Bankhead?" t "A Campfire Girl,"- said Hur ok. "I used to handle Chaliapin, and whenever he didn't feel like giving a concert he would throw bottles of throat-gargle at me." "That's nothing," I said. "In Philadelphia one time, Tallulah "In Boston one time," the impresario cut in, "Isadora Dun can stepped to the footlights in the middle of a dance and bawl ed the audience Out for 'smirk ing and being filled with con cealed lust.' " . "Tallulah" '' "But the biggest troublemak er of them all was Escudero, the gypsy dancer. One night he happened to .walk under a lad der that a stagehand had left' near the wings, and did he get mad! He cnased the stagehand into a corner,- pulled his knife and announced he ' was going to cut his throat." W "Maybe Bankhead is a Girl Scout," I said, "bat -on the other hand, you aren't? Joe Louis. How did you stop tbe .gypsy from killing the stagehand?" "Very simple," said Sol. "I took a yo-yo out of my pocket and beagn to jiggle, t up and down, and Escudero was . so fascinated he forgot all about the ladder. And if you want to know what I was doing with a yo-yo in my pocket well, ycu try managing a stable of con cert artists." "What's Marian Anderson like?" I asked. " I never heard any stories of her acting up." "Miss Anderson is virtually . the only artist I've handled who has never turned temperamenti al on me," said Hurok. "Fannie Hurst once said the Negro con tralto hadn't simply grown great, she'd growTn great simp ly and that about sums it up." "To show you what I mean, a few years ago a reporter in terviewed Marian and asked her to name s the greatest moment in her life. I was in her dressing room at the time and was curi ous to hear the answer, because I knew she had many big mom ents ' to choose from. For in- 5 stance, there was the night Toscanini took her by the hand and told her that hers was the finest voice ' of the century. Then there was the private con cert she gave at the White House for the Roosevelts and the King and Queen of England. Also the day Stanislavski came to her in the middle of Winter "with a bouquet of white lilacs and begged her to play 'Car men' in the Moscow Art Thea tre. "Besides that, I remembered the time she went to Philadel, phia to receive the $10,000 Bok Award as the person who had done the most for her home town. And o top it all, there was that Easter Sundal in Wash ington when she stood beneath the statue of Lincoln and sang for a crowd of 75,000 which in cluded cabinet members, Su preme Court Justices and most attack each other blindly and without an understanding of the true nature of the gulf which divides them. Nor is the situation confined to the UNC cam pus Unfortunately, it exists in the minds of mil lionV of our "citizens. It extends into the highest councils of state in the land. Moreover, it is the situation on which eevry major government m the world bases its foreign policy a foreign policy, in eevry case, committed to the inevitability of war. There are those who, for pernicious reasons, would have" us believe that the conflict between East and West is a struggle between communism and democracy (or capitalism, if you prefer). There are others who honestly believe, though erroneously, that such is the true nature of the East-West conflict. It is for those of the latter cate gory that this word is intended. This is an appeal ,to the integrity of the hcnest-to-God peace-loving man in theworld. If there is one fact4 whichstands out above all others in the current world struggle, it is this: THE EAST-WEST CONFLICT IS NOT A STRUG GLE BETWEEN OPPOSING IDEOLOGIES BUT A STRUGGLE BETWEEN CONFLICTING NATION AL INTERESTS. The United States and the U.S.S.R. are two powerful nations living in constant fear of the power of the other to deprive it of a real or imagined interest. Neither government ever makes an important decision with respect to for eign policy that is not determined by this fear. If one is inclined to the belief that America is a pure and virtuous nation devoted to the cause of liberty and justice alone, there are a few ques tions he should ask himself. WHY does the U. S. give aid and encouragement to Yugoslavia, no less a communist nation than Russia, herself? WHY does the U. S. give aid to Britain, a nation whose socialism is, as Harold Stassen put it, a pea in the same confining pod with Russian communism? WHY does the U. S. woo dictator Peron of Argen- of Congress." ."Which 'of those big moments'- tina? Is it for liberty and justice There is one thing which we must understand if we are to act intelligently in respect to the fes tering world crisis. When the U. S. government sends a billion dollars to Britain, or arms to Turk ey, or machinery to Yugoslavia, it is not done to nrbmote libertv and iustice in those nations but to day she went home and told her anign those nations,. no matter what their political mother she wouldn't have to or economic texture, on the side of the U. S. in did Marian pick?" I askecL "None of them," said the im presario. "Miss Anderson told the reporter that the greatest .moment in her life was the take in washing anymore: Pennsy Frosh Stay Put . STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (IP) A spokesman for the Pennsyl vania State College's undergraduate fraternity system recently ex pressed satisfaction with the Co'llege's announced intention to house all freshmen in campus residence halls beginning next Fall. Here tofore,, except for the four years during which no freshmen were . brought to main campus because of the post-war enrollment pressure, first-year students were permitted to join the fraternity of their choice soon after reaching the campus. Under the plan announced by College offitials, however, fresh men admitted -to the main campus in 1950 will be required to spend their first year in college-directed residence halls. "It will provide more time for selective pledging," declared the president of the Interfraternity Council. "It will also give the prospective pledge a better opportunity to survey the fraternity field." An early check here would appear, to indicate that fraternities , favor a plan whereby students will be pledged during their second semester on campus, but not permitted to .move into fraternity houses until they return for their sophomore year. - 12 15 MM 21 24 SO 45 50 SI 22 34 42 18 43 A 38 I 19 25 777 S S f s 35 51 54 13 16 32 46 26 4 1 23 3? 20 36 'A V. 777 VA 'A yA 17 33 v. T7A A 40 47 52 55 14 27 37 10 28 4 1 2? 49 HORIZONTAL. 1. spill over 5. Algerian seaport 9. old maxim 12. air: comb, form 13. bear upon 14. note in Guido's scale 15. division of time 16. repeated 18. Indian tent 20. efface 21. young woman 23. small bitter herb 24. equal: comb, form 25. vouching for 30. transgres sions 32. exclamation of surprise 33. son of Isaac 3. insipid . 3f . worthless bit 38. donkey 39. heaves 41. asunder 44. nature 45. participator 47. hop-kiln 50. Peruvian plant 51. tinge 52. goad 53. split pulse 54. completes 55. personal pronoun VERTICAL 1. speak 2. shelter 3.. declamations 4. pondered over closely 5. Asiatics 6. religious ceremony 7. American humorist ' 8. sea god 9. bristle 10. malt drinks Answer to yesterday's puzzle. T Pit L0TllSllRriMlEN Efiii' AilLiERE WlT N D S LfPC IDES H JJ 2lli L ESS sfAlTAPOS IIST E R.S use WsYjRh lifTs A N Tf jplojESiWelTjll HiAjsLlA gos IT 1 orgy) 5-IO Average lime of solution: 23 mlvas, D:ributed by King features Eyhv!ice 11. walk in water 17. sharp mountain spur 19. edible. green seed 21. thin fog 22. continent 23. avers again 26. definite article 27. drawing instrument 28. nostril 29. constricted straits 31. begin . 35. landed property J6. heavenly body 40. perch 41. footless animal 42. South American - . rodent 43. Russian inlnd sea 44. cultivate ' 6.rela'ives 43. cn-Jeavor the nationalistic struggle with Russia. Russia is no less an imperialistic power than is the U. S. Nor is she appreciably more so. WThere Russia uses trickery and deception, as in Czecho slovakia, to gain control of a nation, the U. S. uses economic force, as in Iran, Greece, Britain, and every other nations-numbered with the West, to achieve the same end. No the great, issue of our time is not com munism vs. democracy. It is nationalism vs. inter nationalism. The vital interest ' of the peace loving people of this country, and of Russia, de mands that they rise to the challenge of the God, -nationalism, and fight for WORLD GOVERN MENT. There is no state, no government on earth, which lays just claim to man's allegiance. The people of the world must arise and create a new state a world stateworthy of their loyalty. Russell G. Baldwin Pearson Special Alaskan Free Rides Later, as the Senate Interior Committee open ed its hearing on Alaskan statehood, Butler look ed over the crowd of Alaskans and asked: "How many canve down on the free ride?" . "These people all paid thsir own way." fiashed back Secretary of Interior Oscar Chap man. "But I .don't know," he added, "how many Mr. Arnold brought down on a free ride." Butler and Chapman were referring to the practice of bringing senate witnesses in special planes from Alaska, their expenses paid. --.When Bill Arnold stood up and began to be labor the Senate Committee, Acting Chairman Senator Clint Anderson of New Mexico ad monished: "If you don't mind, please allow me to conduct the hearings in' my own way." Back stage, Nick Bez, a pal of President Tru man, is keeping a clcss watch on the fight. Bez, a big lumbering, likable' Yugoslav, and the fi nancial backer of ex-Governor Mon WaUgren of Washington, is buying the P. E. Harris fish ing outfit in the Bering Sea. A -contest for con trol of. Alaskan labor is also involved. Dave Beck, the West Ccast Teamsters' boss, is trying to organize the cannery workers and shove out Cornmunist Harry Bridges, who has had a whip hand through his longshoremen. Beck is vigor ously fo Alaskan statehood. The Joint Chiefs cf Staff are also plug ing quietly for statehood. They figure this vast and ' strategic area will be strengthened internally, PP Q Ji8Ve self-Sovernment. If congress turns down Alaska again, the Communist, car. nave a propaganda field day with his testimony. ' - Not Hep to Politics failNtoTrJRK' N Y--Ameriean colleges for -f yUng PePle to Pipate in poli Kued hv e Sn.cipal reasns, a recent report New YJ ClVZGnshiP bearing House of the The Zl ch fTTY SchOGl 0f Law chareed blameH 1 f3UltS fr whi the colloges are half tt u n tTaining in Politi at all for for th. C gl fldents; 2- inadequate training Perience fer,hali: Snd 3' lack of Pica! ex 4 del -f eaCherS in inductory courses; tion s t Un r1mity in ColleSe Poetical instruc- into t'nn' mUCh SpHtting UP of basic instruction mto too many minor fragments.