Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 2, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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Pago Two The Daily WMt MmlpMm Heel The official student publication of e Iiblicat ons Board o rthe verlty of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, where it is Ph dally, cept flionoay. examination and vacation periods and during .th e offici al Entered as second class matter at the post office JfJJ?- $i'per the act of March 3. 1879. Subscription rates mailed $4 per year. p quarter; delivered. $8 and $2.25 per quarter. Editor Managing Editor Managing Editor Emeritus Business Manager Sports Editor 1 Adv. Mgr. . Assoc. Ed. Assoc. Ed. Sub. Mgr. Wallace PridgenNews Ed. Bev BaylorCirc. Mgr. T.uc iJUi . ..Carolyn Reichard ..Sue Burress-soc. jss ss&wsaS'ss S5SS sinssss&k lace. Tony Burke. Ed Yoder. Jennie Lynn. Sports Stoff-Vardy Buckalew. Eddie Starnes. Paul Cheney. Advertising Sta-Ned Beeker. Johnny Williams. Donald Christopher. Society Statf-Peggy Jean Goode. Janie Bugg. Ac jHinj" Photographers-Cornell Wright. Bill Stonestreet. Ruffin Woody. Night Editor for this issue: Bob Slough SUAB SUAB'is the Student Union Activities. Board, newest or ganization on campus and potentially the most functional of Carolina's numerous committees. SUAB will serve a two-fold purpose, according to Ken Penegar, President of the organization. First of all, it will co ordinate campus activities by bringing together the leaders of all student organizations who will keep each other inform ed of the schedules and programs of the various groups. This method, it is hoped, will alleviate mix-ups, such as having two lectures, one concert, ninety-seven meetings and a dance on the same evening. - The idea was perpetrated in response to lamentations from The Daily Tar Heel, South Building, student organizations, and in general, everybody concerned. SUAB was proposed at the Student Government Clinic last spring and was adopt ed by the Graham Memorial Board of Directors. Another purpose of this coordinating robot is to augment the program of the student union by bringing more students into direct participation in Graham Memorial activities. The work will be done by the coordination council and the chair men of twelve committees representing various interest fields on campus. f ... We say that the first signs of recovery from "student apa thy" are apparent. A full recovery is possible. SB. Room For Several Hundred Now it has been done. The bleachers problem has been solved. Yes, the Athletic Association has made it possible for the men students to sit with their foreign dates (imports) at the football games. Heretofore, the boys dating imports sat in the student section and watched the team make all the passes while their dates sat on the opposite side of the stadium. Now the imports are back in the game. By a simple trans action at the ticket window over at the gym, all the girls can enjoy all the privileges of a full-fledged coed. Maybe someday, the coeds can enjoy all the privilege of the imports at other campus social events. Send The Daily Tar Heel Home CROSSWORD - - - J2 12 'A IS 16 A 24 22 2i 24- yA 27 28 It A ii 52 S3 lb 5? 40 4 23 147 51 52 55 54 HORIZONTAL L. variety of lettucA 4 feminist name 9. queen of the fairies 12. not employed 13 variety of corundum 14. former - European coin 15 be in force 17. lease again 19. steeps fiax 20. heap 21. lower foreleg 23. retards 27. stops 29. sister of Ares 30. moon goddess 31. salutation 32. listens 34. by 35. personal pro nou rr 86. strays from truth . 37. vestige 39. pleads . 42. aweetsop 43. frees 44. native of Poland 46. scouted 43. reddish purple 91. corrode 32. growing out 84 spread for drying 63 ogle 86. thick 67 mournful 77? Y77A i Answer to yesterday's puzzle. HAL T S E A PART y Nil eon l i Jin Averace time f intUo: X4 missies. Ctatrttnrtrt ay King PMtWM 8ymst . Tar, Heel Thursday, October 2, 1952 BARRY FARBER ROUTE NE1XA. LT. CHUCK HAUSER JIM SCHENCK BIFF ROBERTS Jody Levey ..Donald Hogg JDeenie Schoeppe Tom Peacock " Asst. Spts. Ed. r-a. By Eugene Sbeffer to il 14 17 21 20 25 7b SO A 54 A 37 'A 42. A 145 4f So 12-30 VERTICAL 1. head 2. possessive . pronoun 3. barren 4 flesh food 5- wrong 6. Babylonian god 7. symbol for erbium 3. lyric writer .affray 10. high card 11. except 16. opening; 18. large deer 20. young salmon 21. chagrin 22. refuge 24 lowest 25. femaJ relative 26. afflictions 23. torn ini particle 33. epochs 34- government grants 36. Great Lake 3& harsh - respiratory sound 40. threadbare 41. gaiters 45. curved molding 48. observe 47. discharge obligation 48. adult male 49. beverage 50. annex S3, symbol for neon XA U2. it Sf 1 A IN I At 1 1 DIE X i E J J. A aMo peners mammm .tmma . mm GJLJfcu, sjhXme. 1M 511 At. 1 91 eiviaIn E "STA WW nge"v enuI s ,d ej e n u me SEA S TIE IE n Barry Farber- Personally Olympic Diary HELSINKI, July 191 got up on the wrong side of the world this morning. Or at least I thought so when the opening day of the Olympic Games found me without tick ets, without clothes (The Fin nish railways accidentally gave my baggage to a Hungaran nam ed Fazer.), and without money (Helsinki banks won't cash a check without a passport which I lost.) With my luck, I think if I ever went into the hat " business little babies would start being born without heads. At noon I was up in my hotel room trying to learn enough Finnish to get downstairs when the desk clerk phoned and of- f ered to lend me a pair of Swed ish navy dungarees until Mr. Frazer saw fit to repatriate my luggage. I slipped on an old Car olina monogram sweater and hopped a tram out to the Olym pic Stadium. That's where the fun started. The ticket situation looked hopeless. The Olympic commit tee had been sold out since early May and over a hundred thou sand people were bitterly fight ing for the seventy thousand seats. The Finnish Army had a triple cordon rigged around the three gates; the outer gate, the inner gate, and the inner-inner gate. I stood there half -hoping somebody would drop dead so I could haggle with his heirs over his ticket, or maybe a mil lionaire countess would fall in love with me and. invite me to sit in her guest box, when sud denly one of the guards spotted my NC monogram, snapped to attention, and saluted. He call ed over three of his buddies, who also saluted, and together they proceeded to escort me through the players' entrance. I caught on quick. They thought I was a participant in the Games and they were anxi ous to show off their northern hospitality. I didn't have the heart to disillusion them. In stead I told them I was a half back on the Swiss soccer team and acted hurt because they did n't show up sooner. They convoyed me to what ' would be the upper card section in Kenan Stadium and shoved aside a group of tuxedoed diplo mats shouting "Make way for the athlete." (This sweater rou tine worked faithfully all through the Games. Gate keep ers, street car conductors, and hot dog salesmen all refused my money at the sight of the Caro lina monogram. It was embar rassing when the little Finnish children, who also thought I was an Olympic ace, clustered around for autographs. When I tried to explain I was just an other .tourist they thought I was being modest and prodded me all the harder. There was noth ing to do but grab a pencil and sign my name between the scrawled signatures of Mathias and Zatopek.) The Olympic ceremony open-, ed with a welcoming speech by Finnish President Paasikivi and was followed by a lustrous par ade of athletes from seventy one nations. Then a sensational fias co exploded which was largely ignored or underplayed by the world press. Immediately after,, the light ing of the Olympic torch by Paavo Nurmi, Finland's long dis tance wizard of the 20's, a wil lowy figure in white drifted down from the bleachers under the scoreboard waving a scroll over her head and raced past the guards onto the track. The " teams broke ranks to cheer the snowy, apparition onward as she made her way unobstructed to the speakers' platform. Even the well rehearsed officials thought it was all part of the act until the "Lady in White," Fraulein Barbara Pleyer of Stuttgart, Germany seized the field mike and began to speak on peace through Communism. The crowd was shocked into slience as the chairman of the k Olympic Committee leaped from his box, darted across the cin ders to the platform, and began struggling with the frenzied woman who was fending him off successfully with one hard hold ing the mike with the other, kicking policemen with both feet, and shouting her message to the world all at the same time. Finally the Finnish Army managed to lead the spirited young lady from the field and the show went on according to the program. 'Things Weren't Drew Pearson The Washington Merry-Go-Rourid . WASHINGTON After Gene ral Eisenhower spent two days at a New York film studio re cording radio and TV "spots" for the wind-up of his campaign, the Republican high command is at odds regarding their use. More specifically, they are at odds on how to raise the money to buy the radio and TV time for their use. The subject came up at a meeting of top GOP money raisers in New York recently, at which Lloyd Dalzell, dynamic, young tugboat operator, offered to raise $600,000 to $800,000. "I will raise the money, but only to be used for the General's spot announcements," he said. However, others were skepti cal; not over DalzelFs ability to raise money, but over the same issue which has caused friction inside the Republican party in the past local leadership vs. National leadership. Winthrop Aldrich, head of the Chase National Bank and brother-in-law " of John D. Rockefeller, was afraid that Dal zelFs money-raising would con flict with local money-raising. He feared he would tap the same moneyed people that local leaders will have to tap. Others agreed. Even if the national tic ket should lose, they argued, Republican organizations must be kept strong locally and local tickets must be elected. Jock Whitney, who once served in the Roosevelt adrnin istration and married Jimmle Roosevent's ex-wife, took the opposite view. He felt nothing was more important than raising money for the spot radio and TV time. These consist of radio record ings and TV kinescopes in which Eisenhower answers current political questions. They are to be used in the last three weeks of the campaign to "saturate" key states in the East and Mid west, which Truman carried in 1948 by only a narrow margin.' This idea was evolved by Rosser Reeves, ace advertising specialist for the Ted Bates Agency. Cooperating with him was Mike Levin of the Erwin Wasey Agency. Later Fred Rudge of Fisher, Rudge & Neb lett came in. Note Presiding over the fi nance meeting was Sidney Weinberg, head of the giant banking house of Goldman Sachs. Born in Russia, brought up in Brooklyn, Weinberg is a director of more corporations than he can recite himself, got to know Gen. Lucius, Clav dur ing World War II days in Wash ington, later got Clay his job with Continental Can. It was through' Clay that Weinberg got on the Eisenhower bandwagon. Dynamic Dick, the GOP vice presidential hopeful, can , cer tainly rub newspaper editors and publishers the wrong way. Holding a press conference with the top editors at Okla homa City last week, Nixon de clined to answer questions, gave editors the brush-off. Commented . Wheeler Mayo, publisher of the Sallisaw Times and Claremore Daily Progress: "Never in my 20 years of own ing and operating newspapers and as past president of the Oklahoma Press Association Tough Enough' have I witnessed the snubbing that Nixon gave the press. "Oklahoma editors were call ed by special invitation for the specific purpose of attending a question-and-answer conference. Itwas a fiasco. "Editors found that they had been called to a stacked meeting to witness and be impressed by a 15-minute glamour-boy show in which Nixon acted three parts his own moderator, in terrogator and the answerer of his own questions. "His refusal to answer ques tions, in contrast with Spark man's give-and-take of the day before, made Nixon look silly." Notfr The point most news men and the public want Nixon to explain is how he paid $20, 000 down on his Washington house, while also buying a house in California, after his wife wrote in the Saturday Evening Post that they sometimes didn't have enough money to buy pos tage. Jim Hagerty, press aide to Eisenhower and one of the best in the business, may be eased out.- He's been the subject of considerable private debate among the General's advisers, so much so that John Foster Dulles, a good friend of both Ike and Governor Dewey, has been in touch with Dewey re garding the situation. Hagerty is a veteran of many t presidential campaigns, havingH been righthand man to Gover nor Dewey. He is popular with newsmen, but has one handicap the General doesn't know him well. And the General doesn't feel comfortable with people he hasn't known a long time. For one thing, Hagerty can't get to see him on important questions which should be given the press without delay. Eisen hower's friends keep a tight wall around him, anxious to con serve his strength. The man who would take Hagerty's place, if he leaves, is Maj. Gen. Wilton G. Pearsons, an old friend of Ike's, who is an expert at getting along with people in tight places. During part of the war he was the Army's top lobbyist on Capitol Hill, had the job of smoothing the ruffled fur of congressmen. Following the lead of Spain and Colombia, Peron's dictator ship in Argentina has now started cracking down on free dom of worship. It is doing this by revoking the preaching per mits of Protestant pastors on trumped-up political charges. Rev. Julio N. Sabanes, Uru guayan minister of the Central Methodist Church in Buenos Aires, and Rev. Angel Sainz, an Argentine pastor of the United Protestant Church at the fash ionable seaside resort of Mar Del Plata, were both notified by the Peron government a few days ago that they would no longer be permitted to conduct services. Significantly, the charge sounded like the pretexts of Communist regimes to . elimi nate independent religions. The two Protestant pastors were formally accused by the Argentine Ministry of Foreign Relations and Worship with hav ing denounced the high cost of living. Harry NONPLUS "You ougth to write about the infirmary." My fellow student was dead serious. With several minutes before class and a lot of curi osity, I waited to hear his story. "Tjiat place is the best ar gument against socialized medi cine you'll ever find," he went' on. I was doubly interested now because I could guess the train of his thought. "Don't like the way it's run, huh?" I prompted him. "It's lousy," he said. "Let me tell you what happened to me. "I sprained my arm during summer school and trotted out to the infirmary. The nurse at the desk is talking with some guy when I go in. He seems a nice, quiet fellow who isn't too handy with words. He's trying to . get the dope on filling out some papers, but the nurse is so damned snippy with him that ' he never makes her understand. I mean she was snippy, too even I can see his problem, but she never tries. Finally she re sents him saying 'I don't think you understand what I'm after in a very quiet voice, nice. 'You just go somewhere else with your troubles,' she tells him.- "Then she rattles some pa pers on her desk and the guy leaves. After a coupla minutes she notices me standing beside the desk. 'What do you want?' she asks. "I tell her I want to see a doctor, that I've hurt my arm. She tells me the doctor will see me soon's he can, and that's all she says. "So I sit down in chair out side the doctor's door and wait. "He finishes up with a patient about ten minutes later. He's alone in his office, I think about about going in. The nurse sees what I'm thinking and says she'll let me know .when. "The doc comes out in the hall, looks around, goes for a three top-notch FALL BOOKS o Ernest HEMINGWAY The Old Man and the Sea....$3.00 o John STEINBECK East of Eden : $4.50 o Henry MILLER The Books In My Life $5.00 O You'll always find the live new books at THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin St. Open Evenings S jfy0&&lf ill MrsrrF' Cry, Snook drink of water. This pregnant woman comes up and takes a chair across the hall. When the doc comes back, he asks if she wants to see him and she tells him no, that she just came for a shot. The nurse goes to help her, the doc goes back in his office and I sit there. "I've been there about 40 min utes when I hear the doc talk ing over the phone to some friend. I ask the nurse how soon the doc can see me and she snaps at me: 'Are you in a hurry?' "She says wait, so I wait. The doc comes out in the cor ridor again to talk with some other docs. The nurse doesn't say a thing. "After I waited almost an hour, I went down town to a private doc and got fixed up right away. "That'll show you what I mean. It's happened to me be fore and I've heard other stu dents talk about it. They get your money in advance and then they don't give a damn. Treat you like they thought you cluttered up the place." "Yeah," I agreed with him. "It's happened to me, too." FREE DESIGNING . FREE PROOF S M ! ! n and his friends EACH DAY on the ' COMIC PAGES of THE mi UU )
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 2, 1952, edition 1
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