Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 27, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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Pago Two The Daily Tar Heel Saturday. September 27. 1952 Barry Farber Personally "Well, What's New?" Harry Snook- The official studeht publication of b"aS?MdS' of North Carolina. Chapel HiJero it-telWied . examination and vacation periods. during me oqc gr 5 SKK Per quarter; delivered. $6 and $2.25 per quarter. - . Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Sports Editor Adv. Mgr. Assoc. Ed. Assoc. Ed. Sub. Mgr. Wallace Pridgen Bev Baylor ..Sue Burress .Carolyn Reichard shjg&ss sss-Jar ratfs&.'ES Tony Burke, Ellen Downs. Snorts Staff Vardy Buckalew. Eddie Starnes. Paul Cheney. ZTJZ' sZ-Ke Beeker. Johnny WiUiam. DonaU Cipher. Vocietv Staff Peggy Jean Goode. Janie Bugg. Alice Hinds. SaSeU Wright. Bill Stonestreet. Baffin Woody. Night Editor for this issue: Rolfe Nelll ' Welcome Longkorns The eyes of Texas are upon us. So are their tackles and halfbacks. We're hoping they won't be the lone stars out there on the football field, but whatever happens, we're glad to have the Longhorns back on Tar Heel soil again. B.B. . In Our Churches BAPTIST: Sunday, 9:45 a.m., Student Bible Class with Dr. P. H. Epps; 11 a.m. Morning Worship, "Developing Moral Fibre," special music by Mrs. David Herring, soloist and choir; 6 p.m. BSU Supper Forum with Dr. Arnold Nash on "Christian Faith and Life's Decisions." CATHOLIC: Sunday, Mass at 8 and 9:30 a.m. in Gerrard Hall. Reception for new students in the Rendzvous Room of Gra ham Memorial 5 p.m. CONGREGATIONAL CHRISTIAN: Sunday,- Rededi cation Service for the recently renovated sanctuary at 11 a.m.; Sermon by the Rev. R. L. Jack son and a talk by W. T. Scott Supt. of the Southern Conven tion of Congregational Christ ian Churches; 7:30 p.m. program of special 8 music with Mr. Thomas Potter as baritone solo ist. EPISCOPAL: Sunday 8 a.m. Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. Student Bible Discussion group, 11 a.m. Worship service with sermon by the Rev. D. W. Yates; 6 p.m. Canterbury Club; 8 p.m. CROSSWORD 1 3 &yyM is & 7 Yyyxz 19 in m IS 16 17 V", v " 22 JZZ 23 26 MM .22 2 ii 28 W7, n so j 22 ( mv&Zz VAty, 40 41 YZy 42 43 44 45 1 LZZZIZZZZiLZZ HI 1 KM 1 1 Wr 1 HORIZONTAL. I. personal pronoun 4. flesh food $. feminine name IJ. equivalence 13. river in Italy 14. footless animal 1$. estrange IT want It. aft parts of ships 19. leading . performer 21. a king of . Israel 23. feminine name 29. female horse 29- gave forth : radiance 31. before 32. East Indian palm 33. in excessive ' degree 34. conjectures 36. interdicts 37. forcibly . 38. network 40. frosted 42. rambled 46. meat from PS . .. 48. indicate 50. Cain's brother 51. sway drunkenly 52. French author 53. brood of young pheasants 54. spreads for drying Answer to yesterday's puzzle. JR E L OjWflT MIA LA 6 A) Ir ITIRIUlAlNpfl risiElN 0 S Averagr time vf Aolution: 23' minutes. Distributed by King Features Syndic! BARRY TARBER ROLFE NETLL. " JIM SCHENCK BIFF ROBERTS News Ed. Circ. Mgr. Jody Levey Donald Hogg ..Deenie Schoeppe ... Tom Peacock Soc. Ed. Asst. Spts. Ed. Evening Prayer. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: Sun day 11 a.m. Worship service in the lecture room of New West. QUAKERS: Sunday 11 a.m. Worship service in the Grail room of Graham Memorial. JEWISH: Sunday 7:30 p.m. special High Holy Day services for the Day of Atonement, ser vices continued Monday at 10 a.m. ' LUTHERAN: Sunday, 9:45 a.m. Sunday School; 11 a.m. Morning worship "The Witness Bearing Church" by the Rev. E. C. Cooper; 6:15 p.m. student supper, meeting with topic "Why Am I Here?" METHODIST: Sunday, 9:45 ' a.m. student Bible Class; 11 a.m. morning worship ."Is It Worth the Price?" by the Rev. W. M. Howard; 6 p.m. Wesley Foundation supper meeting. PRESBYTERIAN: Sunday, morning worship services at 9:45 and 11 a.m. with the Rev. C. M. Jones; 6 p.m. student group meets for supper with topic "Why Believe in God?" By Eugene Suffer 12-27 55. secreted . VERTICAL, 1. mineral springs 2. stop 3. Great Lake 4. bread from heaven 5. obliterations 6. insect 7 pedal digits 8. British Dominion 9. short humor ous opera 10. fish eggs 11. annex 16. Gaelic 20. caudal appendage 22. more recent 24. masculine name 25. commotions . 26. fiat table-land 27. lily 28. mended 30. abandoned 32. skeletal part 35. preserve, as with brine 36. emit light 39. labors 41. refuse 43. crush into pulp 44. case for small articles 45. act 46. woodland spirit - 47. Japanese sash 49. born YV t S T IoItIeI '4 P SIAINIE 1NIN1EI I ID isTs R I i TIT I Els N K l R T Li. U M Olympic Diary LONDON, June 26 (Con't) The stage curtain of the Unity Theater, London's Communist playhouse, was actually a giant map of Europe with the western part shaded and the slogan "Free World" plastered over Russia and the satellite states in brilliant crimson. Around the fringes of the map the word "peace" was spelled out in eigh teen languages. Promptly at 7:30 p.m. the lights dimmed and the entire cast marched back and forth across the stage . singing "Bau Auf," the East German Com munist Youth Anthem. The program indicated the play, en titled "Barriers Across Europe," was to be a "factual" drama tization of an incident involving British students on their way to the East Berlin Youth Fes tival to join with exhuberant comrades from all nations under the red flag to annihilate Ameri can imperialism and build a new socialist world of peace and abundance. It seems Wall Street got word of the pilgrimage and ordered American troops in Austria to grab the youngsters and throw them into a concen tration camp. For the next two hours we were treated to a swashbuck ling extravaganza in which American soldiers, shouting the most extreme obscenities, slapped British students with rifle butts, forced a young Com munist girl to lie on the rail road tracks until a train hit her, stabbed a French woman in the busom because her papers weren't in order, clubbed a Negro youth into unconscious ness because he asked to use the bathroom, and impatiently asked their sergeant "When are they going to let us drop our bacteria on those g 6 Reds?" The theater was sparsely popu lated but the few partisans pre sent giggled with delight at each gory episode. Every time an American officer sank his hob nailed boot into a Negro's bloodied face we heard such comments as "Quite good," "Splendid portraval." During the intermission we chatted with a chap from Australia, who naturally as sumed we were both devoted followers of Mark and Lenin. He was delighted to learn I was from Dixie, or "lynch-land." "You'll adore our next act," said the Aussie with an elfish smirk. "It concerns the treat ment of colored people in your section of America." The curtain for act two rose to find the young prisoners behind barbed wire lounging around on the jagged rocks the Americans had given them for pillows and discussing the eventual outcome of the "class struggle." 'A Negro boy rose and took the full spot light. "You don't know what suffer ing really is," he intoned. "Down where I live the white folks treat us worse than swine. The Ku Klux Klan is everywhere. They lynch over a hundred' of us every year. Nobody's safe." He then cleared his throat and gave a melodious rendition of "Strange Fruit," a ballad des cribing "Blood on the leaves, blood on the roots, black bodies hanging from the trees." The audience applauded vigorously. There followed a climax that would make Hopalong Cassidy wilt with envy. A band of blue shirted saviors from Czecho slovakia broke through the com pound gates and rescued the British martyrs while the Ameri can guards lay stone drunk in a ditch. Soon they were all safe ly within the borders of the "Peoples' Democracy," the Yan kee torturers were, robbed of their prey, Stalin was in his Kremlin, and all was right with the world. As we rambled homeward through the subway tube after the final curtain of the. volcanic "Hate America" orgy I directed a pointed remark to Clews, which bordered on' the tactless, reflecting dismay that our American dollars had failed to instill even a mild degree of gratitude into British hearts. He chuckled. , "Anti-Americanism does exist in England, but the proof of the pudding is simply this," said Clews. "Jack Benny played to night in London's largest theater before a packed house of friend ly Britons. The Unity Theater, capacity of five hundred, was two-thirds empty." . . ei a Drew Pearson The Washington Merry-Go-Round Washington General Eisen hower's period of indecision re garding his Vice-Presidential running-mate was due largely to the fact that he was torn be tween a crossfire of advice from two groups of backers.. One was the professional poli ticians who accompanied him on the train. These, led by GOP National Chairman Arthur Summerfield, fought hard to keep Nixon on the ticket. With him were Senator Seaton- of Nebraska, Congressman Hugh Scott of Philadelphia; While Milton Eisenhower, the General's brother, a non-professional, was emphatically in favor of drop ping Nixon and General Wilton Persons, one of Ike's old mili tary friends, was on the fence. But the enthusiastic amateurs who got on the train during its stops en route urged that Nixon be taken off. These, were the leaders who had rounded up the big write-in votes for Eisen hower during the primaries, who sometimes had voted Demo-' cratic and who represented the independent bloo which can swing an election. They felt that the General must give an : example to the nation, must show that he meant business right at the start by cleaning out any taint or even suspicion of corruption. They argued that if the Nixon "ex pense gifts" had been known at Chicago he would not have been nominated, and that if the Gene ral put action to words the elec tion would be in the bag. One factor which hampered Eisenhower's decision was the fact that his advisers kept the Nixon news from him for 18 hours. Though they got the first -query on the New York Post story via the United Press on Thursday afternoon, they did not tell the General about it until next morning. And since the General sel dom reads the newspapers care fully, he did not learn the bad news even though his advisers sat up until 3 a.m. at Omaha trying to decide what to do while the man chiefly concerned slept peacefully in the next car, blissfully ignorant that the worst political story in fifty years of Presidential Campaigns was about to break over his head. Next morning, the General was told what had happened and at first it was suggested that perhaps Senator Nixon should fly to Kansas City or St. Louis to talk things over. Finally it was decided that Senator Seaton of Nebraska would get off the train at the next stop and phone Nixon which he did. Nixon, when reached by tele phone, had some strong opinions. GOTTA FOLLOW I MCTOa THET GAL.V f OH, BOV WHAT SHE. GAVE, ME a BUILT ON He asked that no action be taken until he could give a full state ment, and he put some of his staff on the phone to tell of the big crowds he'd been getting. They indicated that the people around Eisenhower had buck fever. The thing to do, they urged, was t& play down the story and proceed as if nothing had happened. VJho is ho? This chap represents thousands of young, red-blooded sons of great American families. He is ready to stand on his own, to carry his share of responsibility. He is preparing for a bright future and desires to train further toward his success. He wants peace, security, and a full life for his family and home. If need be, he is ready to defend his rights and his country. When called on to serve in defense of American liberties, he will be fully trained and equipped to fly and fight with the U. S. Air Force. This is vhaf he viil do Today's college man will plan to stay in school and graduate , if at all possible. If he is faced with early entrance into military service and possesses at least two years of college, he will enlist as an Aviation Cadet in the U. S. Air Force and choose between becoming a Pilot or Aircraft Observer. After a year of the world's best instruction and training, he will graduate into a real man-sized job and wear the ' wings of America's finest flying fraternity. x Commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force, he will begin earning nearly $5300 a year. His future will be unlimited! IIovj ho qualifies He is between the ages of 19 and 266 years, unmarried and in good physical condition, especially his eyes, ears, heart and teeth. After he has graduated from a recognized university or college, or has earned at least two years of college credits, he is eligible to enter the Aviation Cadet Training Program and will receive immediate processing for assignment to training. By sending x for an Aviation Cadet application now, this Most Important Young Man in America Today will help bring about a peaceful tomorrow. &U7-AH cssesst: JSSZ Goao-i P2T f5iisJ?LLOW!KJi J we're Li 'SHE MUSTN'T NW vgpfjP M, rP- A Mr HERE J-ri j 5VO lr 1; " - 1 -JJ NONPLUS I like Ike. But not because he is better qualified for the presidency than Stevenson. Not because, his views coincide with mine, or because his. views definitely are superior to those of his oppo nent. And not because Ike is a bigger, better person than Stevenson. Eisenhower may score on all of these points. He may score on none. On the basis of countless news articles, I am fairly convinced that both nominees are fine men. Each possesses many qualifica tions for the office. Ike, however, differs from Stevenson in a respect that looms large and distinct. Stevenson is the Democratic Party's candidate. This party takes credit for rescuing the nation 'from the Great Depres sion. Unbiased economists and businessmen can point to the economic status in 1938 as ir refutable proof of the New Deal's failure. Stevenson's supporters hope to perpetuate in office the party which has controlled the ad ministration of our government for over twenty years. This party has backed the relentless exten sion of central control to the point where federal employes who want to keep their jobs can almost swing the elections alone. Stevenson is the personal choice of the man who tried usurping the United States Con stitution. Truman ignored es ' tablished law in dictatorially seizing the steel industry. And Truman pushed Stevenson in to the nomination although the 0 people at large clearly expressed an overwhelming preference for Estes Kefauver. Stevenson's party has allowed the cost of living to reach an all-time high despite the great est volume of production ever. His party has given us the high est taxes in our history without any reduction in the national debt. And Stevenson Represents the party which tossed China to the Communists. This party threw Americans into a peninsular war which they are not allowed to win, but in which they are being killed and wounded. This party which backs Ste venson has set a real record of corruption, one made possible by the entrenchment of two de cades. Ike is a Republican, yes. More than this, Ike is the standard bearer of the only group which can possibly oust the Democrats from power. Ike is our hope. in COMICS I TC2DYHALE Raleigh Memorial Audiiorium THURSDAY EVENING 00 8 6J THIEM RECORD SHOP $3.75 - $3.25 - S3.08 - $2.50 - $2.00 $1.75 - $1.50 mm t 1 M ? f HH 4 k w .VTv S?v A-., V I WHERE To Get More Details VhH your awtt U. S. Air fore Batm or writ dicf to Aviation Cadit, Hmodquarton, V. 5. Air Fore, Washington 25, D. C. WWW f AIRCRAFT observer
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 27, 1952, edition 1
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