THE DAILY TAR HEEI WEDNESDAY, MABCH 6, 1952 7 I" - Glenn Harden" Editor-in-chief David Buckner :.Managing Editor Rolfe NeilL....... .. News Editor Bill Peacock Mary Nell Boddie Jody Levey . Beverly Baylor Sue Burress . , Sports Editor Society Editor Feature Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Ed Starnes Assoc. Sports Editor Nancy Burgess Assoc. Society Editor Ruffin Woody Photographer O. T. Watkins Business Manager mo s Pretty soon the student body is going to want beer served out of the Old Well. . - The year 1952 might be called the Controversy and Com plaint Year at the University. A disparaging voice is the vogue. Students want a metropolitan newspaper published in a jrJdget town. They demand a football coach thalnever has a losing team. They fuss because the express busses will not drive them right up to their little doors. They go into a fit of pique because the administration wants to discontinue the dorm social rooms after students have slashed leather chairs with knives. They stage revolts against the food in Lenoir Dining Hall on the grounds that the cof f e is not like the kind Mother brews at home, and they can't get lobster Newburg for a quarter. . . They want a sudden racial revolution instead of a. gradual solution. . . ' " They -insist that Chapel Hill merchants keep their prices lower than anybody else in the country. If this Campus Cold War is any indication of future citi zenry, it looks like .we're going to have a negative nation without nationalism, a poor example for the rest of the world. We are glad to see a complainer's club on this campus. Its members can scream at campus policies among themselves without bothering anybody else. It's a wonder they were able to find a clubroom that they can be satisfied with. Confucius say, "He who complains to the skies end? up moaning low." Beverly Baylor Tar On My Heels This poor man's example of a columnist has written two col umns so far in his infamous career with Tar On My Heels concerning the Honor System and its workings or failure to work. , For those columns I have had a little of the tar scraped off liiy heels, but here I go again. This in summary is what, I have gathered through working on the Honor : System section of : the State of the Campus Confer ence. . . Is there any . such thing -as student honor? In a word, no. More and more this one is in clined to believe that student honor extends just-so far as he thinks he can get away with it. By himself, with little or any -chance for him to be turned in to the Honor Council, it is my belief and the belief of those who helped with my commis sion for State of the Campus, that honor goes out the window. , But a student is seldom by himself with little if any chance of being . caught. So he is an "honorable studeni" He can sign his pledge with a clear Conscience. : nrverpitrK Mir;wx crr madQ!Q IM TO r" MOCySEPAPPRi' MOPES. UP, PAPPVT COMICAL STRIP HEROES NEVAH GITS MARRIfc-LP.V AM STUDIED EM FD'YARS- , MtJtMUJi',rM-i .iinwrat lifnm . n il ihiiwrf mlMk, The official student newspaper of the Publications of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is published daily at the Colonial Press, Inc., except Monday, examination and vacation periods and during the offi cial summer terms. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates:, mailed $4.00 per year, $1.50 per quarter; delivered 6.00 per year and $2.25 per quarter. Cold W by Bill C. Brown Answer but two questions to yourself and I think you might agree with what I and others have found. First, have you ever proofread another's theme? Secondly, have you ever helped another with the spell ing, grammar, or context of a theme-a theme with a pledge reading that he has not given or received aid on that theme? - There are not too many of us who have neither given that type of aid nor received it. ' Next, take the example of two schools currently being raked over theTionor coals. The Business Administration and Pharmacy schools are cur rently engrossed in this' type of mess: , One of them has the problem of quizzes missing the night be fore the majority of students have access to them. The other is simply in the process of house cleaning after a siege of general cheating reaching out into the classroom and laboratories. J. ill UUlllAUCill LJiClb bjfyi v-t. H cheating doesn't reach too many students. Most students are too scared to break into the mime- waLjAith no i m MO R COW'S ePERT but; ' THIS ONION SACK' FO' MAH WEDD1N VEIL. AH'LL STAV URAN'SEWAU. njgkt; m. I. . r Cm AM 4gM marm. WB y Uiill. PNlMf in Jin .. I 1 2 si' rri II -v HP- by David Alexander Reviews and Previews This somewhat 'new effort of . Twentieth Century Zanuck ope Twentieth Century Zanuck opens today at the Carolina theater and deals primarily with the aforesaid model dis appointedly acted (?) by Jeanne Crain, and one marriage broker, a role unfortunately assigned to one of my favorites, Thelma Hitter. Thrown into the situa tion for some remote reason, is Scott. Brady as a doctor. It seems that the voluptuous model has been carrying on an affair with a married man, and is detected by the broker, who picks up her bag by mistake. As an older, and wiser person, Thelma attempts to break up this affair, by "arranging" for a meeting between Doctor Brady and Model Crain. Several rain drops and a missing ear bob later, they meet. As usual, there is the on-again, off-again ro mance, with model Crain giving Thelma some not too pleasant . comments on her interf erring in her' love life. As a comedy, and that's the way it is advertised in trade journals, this film falls flat on its celluloid face and approaches being the type film one might expect to see in the marriage class on this campus. Not that I disapprove of serious adult entertainment, mind you, but I do object to finding it, in place of a comedy, for which I have been prepared. Miss Crain made this film just before she went into retire ment to make way for the fourth Brinkman heir, and as far as I am concerned, she should have ograph room and steal an exam. They are even afraid to use a "cheat sheet" on a test. And that word fear just about sums up student honor. Its not so .much the honor as the fear of vhat will happen to them if they cheat. - - ... Well, speak for. yourself, John, and as much as I try to deny what I have said refers to me too, it probably does. I don't have the opportunity to cheat and so I don't. That doesn't necessarily make me an honest . student. Read Milton's Paradise Lost if you don't believe me. - ..fcnft' thru wallt! can ims do it? ; t - Arthur Wm tnlcrorliM nrittt A Jmwm Btt Jean Greenwood nJiTSStj: and 8ourvi! in "MR. Directed fey Jean Boyer Produced bv Jacoui Bar . Vr.nnt. , and Michael Audiard Based ciTa story by Marcel Aym4 Released SHORE, CHILE AN' IN TH cr: more. NICKEL. AN' MAWNIN'i BRING A. AH'LL BE CUP O VINEGAR FO'TH rVEDDlK. FINISHED W1F" TV4 FEEX A MESS .O THIS WEODIN WEDDIN'QUSSTS, (fit riie-Stpr of :tKe' Grail The Order of the Grail is in character and ritual patterned upon the legend of the Chalice or Cup from which Christ drank at the Last Supper. This Cup is . the Grail, and it is said to have come into the possession of Joseph of Arimathea, who saved in it some,of the precious blood of the Savior. Legend has it that this Joseph (who, according to the Gospels, provided the tomb for our Lord) .was persecuted and fled Pales tine. Miraculously preserved by. the power of the Grail, he even tually made his way to England, where he constructed the first English Christian Church at Glastonbury. , - From this point, the Grail be came a mystical symbol of the knightly way of life. Legends which provided source material for Tennyson's "Idylls of the King" tell that nearly 500 years later, three of King Arthur's knights actually saw the Holy Relic after a long pilgrimage, The Cup had been withdrawn to Heaven years before because of the sinfulness of the world around' it; but these knights pure and faithful in heart were permitted a glimpse of this healing chalice. The search which Sir Gala had, Sr Percivale, and Sir Bors led for the Grail is symbolized today in the Order of The Grail at Carolina. Each year, 13 men are chosen to join in the search and to become guardians of the Grail on the basis of character, service, potential, and achieve ment. The tradition, policy, and the attitude of the Order of The Grail is service; and in many ways the organization works quietly and without ostentation to bring about 'a better way of life at Carolina. Based on the principles of Friendship, Truth, Courage,- and Service, this or ganization embodies a quest which is the ideal of all good and valiant men who have con tributed the best of their lives that life for all men might be richer and more meaningful. - made better use of her time say, knitting, or painting the nursery pink, instead of the standard blue. Thelma Ritter did her all to deliver this film from the hands of mediocre, almost succeeding, with the help of Michael O'Shea and Zero Hos tel, but Scott (Shades of Bran do) Brady and , trite dialogue must, of necessity, . over-balance the scales. 1 W t Peoouetlen PEEK - A - BOO ttu titan Rahm thru United Artists THURSDAY t itT-HERE COME CUCK.Ef-HE SHORE GOT A NOSE FO 4 immmmmmmmmmwm&m ;oWWX,AVWa'.'....avsv.'Av.j Founded in Authurian legend, the them of the Grail is carried put in its physical aspects by the -furnishings of the Grail Room in Graham Memorial, where the symbolic Chalice is kept, where generations of Grail members have met around the huge Round Table. The Room was given to the Order as a meeting place when Graham Memorial was completed on the condition that the Grail furnish it and allow other campus or ganizations to use it a condi tion willingly met as a service to the University. wo ; mx r ir- "ym ITe always makes such a pro duction of putting in the Angostura." AROMATIC BITTERS MAKES BETTER DRINKS P.S. Nothings quite so wonderful al a Manhattan made with Angostura- unless possibly it's the magic things Angostura does for soups and sauces, BEST SELLERS OUR TABLE The Way of The South By Odum The Bright Plain By Eaton Medical Education By Flexner FOGO By Kelly Legal Miscellanies By H. W. Taft COMING FRIDAY An End-Of-The- Monthj Sale To I J : ICnocfi You r- Eyb .Out. s - -v- -DOOKSHOP-- Zm TL FRAIIIILin ST. OPEIJ SVEimiGS " " Mf 4A w '..u IX f: Is i i.

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