PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL" THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 190 "One Side Bub I Just Won A Big Victory" mz mm . The official newspaper of the Publications' Board' of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is published daily during the regular sessions of . the University st the Colonial Press. Inc., except Mondays, examinations and vacation periods and durin? the official summer terms when fiublished semi-weekly. Entered as tecond class matter at the Post Office of Chapel Hill, N. C. under the act of March 3. 1879. Subscription orice: $8 per year, per Quarter. Member of the Associated Press, which is exclusively entitled to "the use for republication of all news end features herein. Opinions fxoressod by columnists are not necessarily those of this newspaper. Editor .. ROY PARKER, JR. Executive News Editor CHUCK HAUSER Managing Editor ROLFE NEILL Business Manager ED WILLI AMd Spo-ts Editor ... ! ZANE ROBBINS- Stafi Photographers .. : Jim Mills. Cornell Wright For This Issue: Night Editor, Edd Davii Sports, Bill Hughes Toward No Headache For the first time since the traffic problem became such a headache, the parking regulations have been relaxed 'in favor of students. The action of the Traffic and Safety Com- . mittee in opening the "little arboretum" parking lot to stu dent commuters should be an indication of good faith and earnest application to the parking dilemma that has charac terized the work of the committee. Their's has been a job that has been thankless, very nearly hopeless, and filled with seemingly unsolvable problems. - , The opening of the new lot came after an extensive sur vey showed that the area formerly restricted to faculty was not being, used to maximum capacity. The ever-growing problem of long-distance commuters was recognized as para mount when the decision was made as to who was to, be allowed to fill up the lot. Admittedly, the lot will hold barely a third of these cars. However, the action of the committee should prove to students that it is working as effectively and honestly as possible to meet and surmount the perplexing traffic problem. . 'And the hard work and devotion to duty of the committee should be an example to student car-owners. Without whole hearted support by all those concerned with the traffic situa tion, the near-crisis that is always present in the problem could easily become chaos. And out of that chaos would, almost certainly, come the removal of car-keeping rights for a large number of student drivers. . According to most members of the Traffic and Safety Committee, the present regulations are working better than any in the past. There are, of course, some incidents of gross refusal to comply, but the committee is highly optimistic over the way the present regulations have been accepted. The traffic problem is one that requires the utmost in student cooperation. Students should realize that the Traffic and Safety Committee is working for the most equitable and suitable solution to parking problems. They should continue to realize the enormity of the job and back the work of the committee by wholehearted cooperation in its decisions. The recent action of the committee should be a signal for even greater cooperation on the part of student car-owners. God Our Merciful Father Man The Seeker of God Through Devotion and Service How many times do we hear skeptics condemn religion as an escape, as useful only for people who haven't the stamina to assume responsibility for their own actions? Such critics are both right and wrong. It may be used as an escape, but then it is not true religion. It is the individual, not the institution, that is at fault. So let us think for a moment' of our responsibilities as religious people. We are privileged in our religion, and priv ilege always carries with it the idea of responsibility. To vote is a privilege; it is our duty to study the candidates to de termine, as best we can, which is the most capable man. To attend the University is a -privilege; it is our duty to work hard, to make the most of our opportunities so that when the times comes we may be able to become intelligent members . of society. It is the same with our religion. Great new areas of thought and experience are opened to us when we say, "I believe in God." But to profess our ( faith is not enough. We must also practice it. For the essence of faith is action. No matter how firmly an anemic person believes in the efficacy of liver pills to cure anemia, he will not be benefited greatly until he takes the pills. So it is with faith. Belief is the foundation stone for communion with God, but action through, service is its natural expression. . - The form our service takes is relatively unimportant. We can't all be preachers or teachers; but we can function in smallerNways, by dedicating whatever work we do to God and by making our lives reflect His spirit through the love and understanding and selflessness we bring to bear on the associations and problems ,in everyday life. Even here at school, how much more productive we would be if, instead of feeling oppressed by our study, we could feel that each new thing we learned was making us better fitted to carry out God's work. It is when we come to the method of service that most of us run into difficulty. Yet the Bible makes clear the "how" through sacrifice. We are told that we must give up our lives if we are to save them. But we rebel at that. We: feel that in giving up our ambitions and desires we are giving up the very things which make us individuals capable ofj' ac complishing something in this world. But in reality we are only giving up those elements which limit us, thus; makin'g way for the limitless power of God. "Not my wili but- Thy will be done." "My will" is limited by all the fears,' complexes, environmental influences, desires, and such that '"I" have.lBt His will is clear and free and capable of accomplishing any thing. Will we not then be capable of much greater service by giving up what we call "self" and letting God work in us and through us?. Our achievement will then be the measure of our faith and our personal sacrifice. The more "self" we give to Him, the more power we receive to use in His name and for His purposes. Thus in service and sacrifice, we have the true expression of our faith in God and in His way of life, which is the hard , est and yet the easiest way of all. Louisa Cartledge WON PLUS by Harry Snook Even political science majors at Caroliha'can see the absurd ity of some of the actions of the Trusevelt reign in Washington.' Franklin j ..Roosevelt developed the5 art of keeping rr'orn the right hand what the left was doing. When the' New Deal began op ' erating as a Fair Deal, Truman carried on the tradition -in a moi e obvious" manner. Take " trustbusting as an ex ample. The Government has been doing its best to break up big business under the false assumption that when a business grows beyond a certain point of bigness, it is no longer operating in the best interests of . the peo ple at large. Truman has pushed trustbust "ing like a bulldozer through a china shop. Any big business has been fair game to the Gov ernment, regardless of the con sequences. ' The Government, itself the biggest big business in the country, seemingly refuses to recognize that many things dear to the American Way of Life depend upon the organized control of tremendous capital and resources. The Justice Department is pro ceeding at full throttle to break up the string of A&P stores across the nation. Government lawyers assert that A&P is a monopoly not serving - the in terests of the people. In the first place, A&P is not a monopoly. There are quite a few big chain store operations, such as Colonial Food Stores and the big Mammoth Food Cen ters. In the second place, the size of the operation makes pos sible mass volume and lower food prices. A&P can buy at lower prices because it can buy 1 so much at one time. And A&P can get by on a smaller profit margin than a smaller operation. These factors make lower food prices a reality. The steel industry is the butt of Truconfiision. Although the Government is trying to break up big operations, it is threat ening nationalization of the steel industry unless the private operators expand at an even faster rate than the record one "they are now establishing. Perhaps trie most clear-cut paradox is the one involving the gigantic DuPont organization DuPont built the Govern ment's $350 million Hanf ord Plutonium plant during World War II for $1. The Government coul dnever have built the plant itself, so DuPont, m the interest of the nation, did the job cheer fully. It had the organization of -special talent end financial resources to do it. And DuPont did so well that the Government has asked that DuPont build . the hydrogen bomb plant. I So DuPont, which is the only firm big enough to undertake such a special task, took the new job. But DuPont did not want to take it President Crawford Greenewalt has ex cellent reasons for wishing that it could have shied clear of the new contract with the Govern ment. DuPont did not want to take any chances with being further maligned as a "merchant of death." Principally i' .however, DuPont did not want to provide further information for the Tru man trustbusters. For while depending upon DuPont's bigness to do a job essential to the nation's security, the Government has filed three different suits to break up the DuPont organization! And there is no indication that the Government's Trticonfusion will abandon its attempts to tear down the facilities upon which . it depends in tifneY of national crisis. .; " Tar Heel "At Large by Robert Ruark, '35 MEMPHIS A real gone trial just ended here, with a jail sentence for Dr. 5amuel Shokunbi, a real gone witch doctor from the Yoruba secion of Nigeria, Africa, with tribal scars on his cheeks to prove that he went to Heidelberg, or some thing. I disremember exactly what. Dr. 'Sam just pulled nine years in the old 'clinkeroo. which I think is a shame. All he had been doing was antagonizing the Pure Food and Drug boys by selling, some tinctures of dried newts' livers for the purpose of sprouting fresh hair and curing what ails you, wh'ilepccasionally t i, performing scientific experiments in the dark of , the moon. For that they shove him in the jug, though many a witness testified they felt better after a slug of "Tree of Life" or "Asthma Aid." ' Although Dr. Shokunbi has done a small stretch, before, for playing too fast and loose with the medical profession and the fraud laws, it seems a shame that in this epoch a witch doc tor should be burnt at the governmental stake when so many of his contemporaries are getting rich. I think here of "Scalp Food," a hair growing tonic from whose manufacture the Doc was en joined sharp.y to cease or desist. It cannot possi bly be less effective than the other remedies for glossy skull that are so frantically advertised with testimonials appended. Most of the witch doctor's pet recipes, he . said, were culled less from the Congo than from a dog-eared volume compiled by a Dr. Culpeper of England, who kicked off in 1640. That was a long time ago, when a man took a snort of wolf bane extract for the miseries in the absence of expensive physicians who still prescribe a snort of wolfbane extract for the miseries. I recall that a presently dignified potion ain't nothing at all more than that weary old witch's stand-by, Dead ly Nightshade. Of course Dr. Shokunbi is a fraud, although he actually seems to have been born in Africa, but I doubt he is a greater fraud than a great many of his licensed conferees. He told people, by propaganda, that he was helping them. A great many said he had helped them. That is as rough a definition of modern psychiatry as I have whomped up lately. Dr. Shokunbi agitated weird brews in a sinister-looking caldron in the back room, and served up the distillations of same to a select number of ailing people who had money. I do not believe that this is a violation of modern medical science if modern medical science wiil allow a patient to stretch at full length for years, on a couch, while" xthei itch '..doctdr-,; with; the pince-nez enjoins him to reach 'way back" into his subconscious to recall whether or not he had an' early, boyish antipathy to garter snakes. Also, I am not inclined to knock herbal medi cine, since I once wbr ah asafoetida bag around my neck as a child and thereby avoided colds, since asafoetida smells so bad it keeps people With colds away from you. Much can be said of the curative powers of garlic, and as I remember it th.2 antibodies such as penicillin ain't nothin' but ordinary mold, while something called quin ine comes from bark. In a section of the nation which worships cure-all brews I do not see how they can criticize 'Tree of Life" and "Nervine." To keep the American Medical Association off my back I will rip off a ringing endorsement of surgery and aspirin, but I sure do hate to see the powers gang up on a contemporary. Anybody in his right mind knows of the efficacy of the rabbit's foot and of High John the Conqueror powders when one wishes to Ward off the demons of the night. Everyone knows that psy chiatric suggestion is here to stay, and that half the cure of anything save cancer and traffic acci dent consists merely of summoning the sawbones. I hope they don't treat old Doc Skokunbi too rough, because I would like to consult him pretty soon. I been wheezing something terrible in the morning, and my hair is falling out. .1 can skip "Tree of Life," but that "Scalp Food" deal sounds just fine. The Sounding Board by Wink Locklair On Campus i I' -?A few weeks ago a geology . professor vaS-explaining to his 3 class the reactiori 6? , molecules under increased temperature. "As the temperature is in creased the molecules expand and tend to bunch together," he said. 'You mean, professor," a coed spoke up in an effort to clarify the statement, "hat the hotter - things get the more they get together?" When Henry L. Scott made his second ap pearance in Chapel Hill during the International Platform Association's convention (summer, 1949) the opinion of many , who heard and saw him was that he showed great versatility as a comedian, as- a ; pantomimist and fas a pianist. There was some doubt, though, asjto whether a whole evening of this anything-goes-sort-of-humor would bV effective. I ' Well, Mr. Scott was back in Memorial Hall Tuesday evening for the third time;in four yeai-s, this time under, the sponsorship ol the Student Entertainment Committee. The audience, more uninhibited than -Usual, was large.but far from capacity. They tame to be entertained and they were entertained for more than an hour by Mr. Scott's wide-open burlesque tf serious music and musicians, counterpoint, and by such hon-'. musical pantomime as sewing on a button, walk ing like- a penguin and the tactics a five-year-old boy, a higii school boy, ana a college student might employ while dancing. From the moment he walked onto the stage in Memorial Hall (in itself a great accomplish ment of nerve and stamina) Mr. Scott estab lished a feeling of friendly rapport with his - er -listeners. . As a clown beating a melody from the piano with an orange and a grapefruit ("Chopin in the Citrus Belt"), or showing some of the eccen tricities of his former pupils such as whistling, squirming on the bench, and breathing (breath ing? When has that become eccentric?) Mr. Scott was often hilarious. But most everyone would agree who saw the performance that he is no "Will Rogers 6f the piano" as he was advertised to be in the advance stories. His approach to hu mor is anything but the late Rogers variety. Scott's laughs come from pratfalls, facial grim aces, exaggerated gestures. Wigs and props. Then, too, his being billed as a "great concert virtuoso" is certainly misleading. There are si least a half-dozen music majors in Hill Hall who could play such numbers as the Liszt Second Hungarian Rhapsody and the C Sharp Minor waltz of Chopin with Triore skill and polish than Mr. Scott did. -He 'is hot a serious musician and that part of his publicity should be played down. He is. .a clown, a good clown, and the music he arranges for -himself he plays adequately. His music is not to be taken seriously, but his other business is meant to panic the audience, which it often does. All in all Mr. Scott is somewhere between Victor Borge and Oscar Levant as a humorist and as a pianist. Once you've see his act, as we had last year, there is not too much fun in sitting through it again because much of his material is the same. But the first time you go to see him he will likely win you ver. Which was the case with most of his audience Tuesday. The Editor's Mailbox Heat Is Missing Editor: , . Spring is sprung and fall is fell, winter is here and it's f;cttir mighty cold. We don't mind the University saving money, in i.., this economy we are all for, but not on coal. "Being true," blue (actually) Southerners, we like heat, a com modity'' Hvhich we find extremely scarce on the third floor of Stei it Dormitory. 'Never thought we wouid look forward to an 8 o'c-K.i-k so much -but it is the only way we have of getting warm. It seem.-; ' a-shame that a man has to don the overcoat and the combat n,, to nut in time on the texts. Frigidly yours, " i John Head : ' Alan Ballard Jack Prince P.S. Please excuse the typing, I don't do too well with hv mittens on. Pup Tent Is Missing Editor: Two weeks ago on the weekend of the Homecoming football game, students expressed a phase of school spirit supposedly with highly successful results. However, someone violated the Homecom ing spirit Tdv "borrowing" a piece of property from ths Spencer Hall display namely, a green pup tent which we borrowed from a buy scout troop for use in the display. We know that some of the-rest of the display was innocently taken by students of the University, but it was of no value. How ever, since the tent must have been of some value and utility to the lender, we would like very much to reepver it. Inside the front flan of the tent is the name Billy Hali'on!. Wilson, N. C. We would appreciate the return of the tent or any information regarding its whereabouts. The Committee on Homecoming Display, Spencer Dormitory The Carolina Front by Chuck Hauser I'll leave the commenting on Henry Scott's piano playing to Reviewer Wink Locklair, who gives it a going-over elsewhere on this page, but I think Mr. Scott's comedy is within the realm of my typewriter. The clown of the keyboard is a young-looking, clean-cut gentleman who will .tell you, "Professionally I'm 35, but I'm really much older." I didn't take tthe time to follow up his sug gestion that I check on his cor rect age in Who's Who, but at any rate he doesn't look like he's over 35. . Mr., Scott says his Memorial Hall audience Tuesday evening was "wonderful very appreci ative of both the humorous and the serious. That's the kind of audience I like to have." He added later that he couldn't remember appearing before a more appreciative crowd, al though this is his third appear ance here at 'Chapel Hill... His two previous engagements were during the spring of 1946 and a year ago last summer. The sum mer show was part of the star studded convention of the International Platform Associa tion, an organization of enter tainers which took over the campus for" several days during the heat of 1949. The comedian-pianist began slipping the laughs into his music professionally about 10 years ago, and he says it's not only fun but he has an ulterior motive "Comedy is a potent way to bring music to people who might not come otherwise." Scott had radiator trouble during his concert. Apparently the heat went off in Memorial" Hall about 3:30, and a terrific clanking started up over to the right of the stage. The enter tainer's first reaction was in key with the program: "Is that Truman breaking up his cabinet?" Another good laugh of the evening was: "You will notice that dining the playing of the next number my fingers never leave my hands." After his performance, Scott adjourned to the ATO House for a cup of coffee at the invi tation of Student Entertainment Committee Chairman Dick Alls brook. There the maestro showed he had other talents, too. Magic, he said, is one bf his hobbies, and he was sorry he didn't bring some of his apparatus with him. But two ordinary decks of poker cards and a few loose coins were all the tools he need ed to work with, and he amazed the ATO's for a solid half-hour with sleight-of-hand and com pletely mystifying card tricks. When I left, he had finally gotten around to that cup of coffee, but his comedian's tal ents were stjll being exercised. I hope he made his train. . Postscript to the column on Marylander Fred Greenberg Sunday: Listed on the police depart ment blotter before the week end .was over were Maryland student Clauds R. Marshall, arrested for shooting fireworks, and Terp Herbert Smith, Jr., for public drunkenness. ACROSS 1. Charge 4. Curd of a red sui-t 9. Wetl convulsively 12. Piercing tool 1:1. Command 14. Attempt 15. ICnglish river- 16. Spread 18. Contends 20. Crony 21. Small table , 23. Support for a climbing plant 27. Silent 28. Touch lightly 29. Not any 30. American - humorist 31. Value highly C2. Couch 33. Artificial language 34. Fix firmly 33. Guessing game 3ti. Galley with three banks of oars 33. Places to sit 39. Shrfrt-napped fabric 40. Possesses 41. Commonplace remark 45. Summit 4S. Small river island 49. Plunged into water 50. Old musical note 51. 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