Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 18, 1951, edition 1 / Page 2
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Pc:c Two THE DAJL1' 'J. 'A It ixLLL Frid,.J4ti'llj1 rchids A big bouquet of orchids go this, week to Dean Guy Phil lips, summer school director, together with a card of thanks from The Daily Tau Heel staff .and the entire student body. Dean Phillips has just completed arrangements for the jjummer paper to be the biggest in history. The Daily Tar Heel will appear twice weekly as a four-page tabloid.. Prior to this year, the paper has been" anything from a mimeographed ?notice sheet to a four page weekly tabloid. Last summer, it vWqo a Turnnrrm woplrlxr - Dean Phillips is to be congratulated on his help in bring ing The Daily Tar Heel in the line with the University's pro gram of round-the-year education, the influx of freshmen this .summer, and the resulting high enrollment. Staff orchids this week go to Tom McCall and the Sub scriptions Department for setting up a plan, whereby seniors ' jniay receive The Daily Tar Heel for only $4 next year. According to McCall, if only 4.00 seniors subscribe to the fcaper, it caji be done as a service to next year's new. alumni .without our losing any money, . The weekly bouquet is tossed to McCall and his staff partly ' $or this progressive idea, but mostly for the work without ' glory .that they do day after day, all the year through. Loyalty And Freedom by.TomDonne!ty I The Editor s Mailbox ' ! Madam: ! , It has been known. for a long j time now that near famine con "i ditions are prevailing in many parts 'of India. Some of the In dian students on this campus have even received reports of ; deaths due to starvation. While : -! official action to relieve this dis- i tress is pending before Congress, . j the urgency of the situation is .i.'-such that individual offers of " food or money would prove to ; -j be great value, j. . ' A large section of .the. Press in the country has vigorously' i ', called for aid .to- India. Tlie New , York' Times, in particular has ;. time and again stressed the need J". j to act without further delay. We -i, j believe that the students of this , j. j University, as well as other resi"- l i dents : of Chapel Hill, can do their'- bit .in ..fighting., the "'"dire j!; threat 'of . famine ; facing India's' . , y ill help feed 'some - hungry .' mcuttx. At 'least; as a -gesture 'of sympathy 'fd$.sta hu':' ;' min bejhgs '.we. believe" that ae-' ;: tion' is wprtiiwhUer' - ;lu4. .Contributions, in money, will be i gratefully acknowledged ' by. the Campus 'Committee. Donations iU.avill also be accepted from 9 ' a.m. to 2 .p.m. on Wednesday,.. May Z$ and from 9 a.m. to noon on Thursday, May 24 at booths in the "Y" court, or may be mailed to the address below. The service fraternity Alpha , Pi Omega has pledged-its support to this""cmr.paign-and has agreed to man the booths. . , . '.,... It is proposed" to - send the funds collected to the Commit tee on India, American Council of Voluntary Agencies for For eign 'Service, Inc.; this commit tee, "believing that many indi vidual Americans might want to find .a channel to give friendly aid to the people of India" (let ter to the New York Times, April' 9, 1851)- has offered . its services' -in transmitting ' help, and- has stated that contributions will be used'! for-: the purchase 'and delivery of. supplies" which, .include .."cereals, flour, p.o wd eir ' ed -rrilk, and medicines.", . ..r -. ,.v-. Jkbl WUson (CliairmajO. Haa-' ; .-."' SammTTji!.,"' Ae'.'.ZsmaxV' ' . '' ; tagr'aa' Qlkta.' I shu Baagi'li-. 'wrilx SudMsii.-Griuxye, '"Gopx Kaltuaipur.;.- ' ,'''- ' ' -"'' . ir.. B.af ia laiia. P. O. Bo 223, Chapel' Hill. .- The students at Yale Univer sity got their eyes opened re cently. A student planning to form a newTcampus club was informed by Dean Havemeyer that "whenever a new organi zation is formed here at Yale (and at any other university), the F.B.I, immediately investi gates the organization, its mem bership, and its purpose." Be cause of this, the dean advised the student not to form the club or to say anything publiclv about it. It is a pleasant thing to know that the government is taking such an active interest in our doings here, that "Big Brother" is keeping an eye on us. I am not sure who the individual is on this campus wrhose proud task it is to inform the F.B.I, about what our campus organizations are doing and saying. I am sure he must be proud of his role in making America safe.' 1 Why? Because a few centur ies ago a really "Great Debate" took place in this country. It ..was all about the relation be tween the 'governed and those who govern. There were " two ideas, an old one and a new one. The old one was that the govern- " ed existed with -the consent of the government. The new one was that governments ""existed with the consent" of" thj '"govern ed. Well, acc&rding to history, the new idea won out. An idea may .seem to be a weak and fragile thing, but no power on earth can resist an idea whose time has come to be born. France tried to resist it and the coun try ran red with blood. We are a practical bunch of "Joes" nowadays, and inclined to be a bit contemptuous of the power of ideas. We are likely to shrug off the distinction between these two ideas in the Great Debate back then, as if they had no relevance for the Cold War today. Sometimes we are even fooled into thinking that we can stop communism by . armed strength alone. Maybe ideas are weapons, too. Maybe this old conviction, about governments and the gov erned is something we have overlooked in America's list of strategic natural resources. Those men who believed in the New Idea thought this way: a . government committed to acting so as to merit "free consent of the governed" will earn more than just that. Besides, it will gain a national asset which is so vital that a free nation cannot survive the enmity of unfree na tions Without it. That is, it will gain ' the.' dedicated' active par ticipation of i!,see men in the ser vice of .their , feltow man an 3 their nation. The.; men with the New ldchr seemed to thirJk that a nation would be stronger internally if, rather than spend ing its time spying out evidence.-, of disloyalty, it r.pent its effort,-, in meriting the loyalty of free men. Oh, this F.B.I, man on cam pus? Weu, his duty is to lei the government know what w are think ing .so that the gov eminent can respond more sen sitively to the wither, of us, its masters. The -Dotty Tar Hool. The official student newspaper of tho University of North. Carolina at ChajW Hill, where it is pubtoNed by the Iib licatioos Board rdnily during the regu lar sessions of the University exefpt Monday, examination and vacation riods, and during the official Bummer terms. Printing; is done by Coloni.il Press. .Inc.. Charx-1. J.UJJ, M; C. EnUrM as second claa; matter at the Tost Office at Chaiel. Will. N. C, under the act of . March S. 18T. Subscription price: $8 per year, 3 per quarter. Jte production of the - maAhead, flatf, or the name '"Dv: Daily Tar Heel." 4j! prohibited without express permission of the Publications J0osu4. Editor-in-Ouef Gienn Harden Business- Manager........ OUver Watkins Managing Editor...... .: Andy Taylor Associate Editor Walt Dear News -Editor.-. :Wc- White Sports Editor ,. Zanc -Hobtotros Society Editor - .JWancy Burgess Office Manager ,. ;..flm -Srhenck Advertising Manager .Marie Costell Circulation . ManagT .....-Wade. Sryant Subccriptlon . Manger..........Tofn McCaU For Tidr, Iwe-: Night Editor, Hotfe NHU K Tulane went through tiie pro ' J cess -of an election last week j oifly to have the whole election o'f ..all campus officials thrown : OUt." On Campus Reason given for the invalida tion 'The,:. Election is invalid on the basis that mere ballots wore returned than were is sued." - - "t;Acos i. sum : 9.' Iitijncireo r 12. Americaii rail- 14. Moaaur of lenetk " .!. 15. Slav ' 37. Bring mion ,' -"One's elt , road magnate 3. Type, of rail n. t.uff up 14. liiika a nils l - -taho ' ifk PVre 17. Untidy I K Ksjurlvofl of -60, Variety ' h. Kingly ' Pertainliig to - Benatloa pG. Correlative of eiUier B?, Rhythm p. Great Lftke 10. Put wlta . J2. Ordeal ' I ' way i ooiloti. 40. Molasaa - . 12. 8ytomlo At turbaivcwi 4. Russian tea 41?. Festival 40. Representation! in miniature 4B. Unpaid debt -fcl. Masculine name kt. Ancient ': languag 54. Talce the evening meal 5f. Peculiar - ' 5G. Mountain ridgo 67. Beverage A'3j3Du-laAk3ji-ilAcrr s o "wjE t"Twe "slrfs o A 1 j- Q. X f. . Ja" n I y k e p0 e p t ) s p llJi e Qi liiQ.i LjLI eHnTo s Ija ayT a o o c Tjelrn a ugos e w J WA I WW 0o L E a 9 An op p a "nr i d N j T ro E F C TjT V E ollYlJsjN a1heooen ' s ' ... Vtj-i;vl JL:-Kvj" .j0 ., jf" j,,., ,ttrilin-iitMir.iiiili''ii - ifn-- , 1 ' ; ' A ' . W ? 8o(ut!on of Yesterday's PuzzIq DOWN L Segment of ourve . f. Female ruft ..- mi.7r . "23 - - W r,; 52r5f Cp;fr ,mit'i 1 1 1 wty Z. Linger 4. Polder 5. Dismounted J . Forbid '1 7. And: French 1 . Fruit ' . Give back J 10. Bitter vetch i 11. Attempt IS. Span of horses JJ.-Gaelic " SO. Pinnacle of lea In a glacier IV Coolc in a cor- : - tain way , XX Arrangement i S3. Larue net ' i 2. Vexed: collog. ' 26. Shouts it. Musical shake tL AitUclpated with for - !edin : St.' Lake InT 1 ;' flwiteerfana y it, Tra&anortatlo - moner - t(. 3aon4 of the . vsurf oa the -: sfaors It. Kind of lllr 4t. 8mall4.it - ! 1 amount 45. GHatis in tli . maklnc v M. Low 47..Aed - ' ' H; 4i. Derourei 49. Suffer remorse j 50. Mineral spring 190 rjuare meters EVER HOLD HANDS LIKE THESE? Tliey're not soft and warm, these hands. They're hard and cold and mechanical. They work at the Oak Ridge atomic energy plant, preparing radioactive isotopes for shipment to Bell Telephone Laboratories and to other research centers. These isotopes which serve as -tracers arc used by Bell scientists to study the materials that go into the telephone system. Our research men, working with Gcigcr counters, are able to detect wear in relay contacts, impurities in metals, the penetration of preservatives in wood. This new research tool helps us to ; leam more in less time, helps us to make . telephone equipment even morc ruggcil : and dependable. -That's erqcciailfy imptttaat ... - right now when 1lie -Nation relics w ; .- the telephone-to help. get -tilings ync. - BELL-TELEPHONE -SYSTEM
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 18, 1951, edition 1
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