Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 24, 1952, edition 1 / Page 2
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Paoe Two The Daily. Tar Heel Friday, October 24, 1S52 The official student publication of the Publications Board of the University Of North Carolina. Chapel Hill. 'where It Is published daily, except Monday, examination and vacation periods, and during the official summer terms. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Chapel Hill. N. C. under the act of March 3. 1879. Subscription rates mailed $4 per year. $1-50 per ouartor: delivered. S3 and S2.25 per Quarter i- Lt. Chuck Hauser ; Tar Heel At Large Interim Editorial Board Managing Editor Business Manager Sports Editor IOLFE NULL BEV BAYLOR. SUE BURRESS ROUE NEIL.L JIM SCHENCK BIFF ROBERTS News Krt. Sub. Mgr. Asst. Sub. Mgr. Natl Arv Mgr. jody Levey -Carolyn Reichard . Delaine Bradsher Wallace Prldgen doc. Ed. Circ. Mgr. Asst. Spts. Ed. dv. Mgr. ..Deenle Schoeppe Donald Hogs .Tom Peacock Ned Be"' Hews Staff Bob Slough. John Jamison. Punchy (Billy) Grimes. Louis Krasr. Jerry Reece. Tom Parramore. Alice Chapman. Dixon Wallace. Tony Burke. Jen nie t -"" T4-V PnHtran " Sports Staff Vardy Buckalew. Paul Cheney. Melvin Lang. Everett Parker. Charlie Dunn. . Society StaffPeggy Jean Goode. Janie Bugg. Alice Hinds. Advertising Staff Buzzy Shull, Judy Taylor. Joyce Jowdy. Bozy Shugg. Nancy Perryman. ' PhoowiTiher Cornell Wright. Bill Stonestreet. Ruffin Woody. Night Editor for this issue: Rolfe Neill Happy 'Birthday? The United Nations is seven years old today. And once again the birthday of the organization for peace will be ob served by various salutes among them, a million-gun blast in Korea. Trygve Lie said on October 4, 1945, "most of the world's peoples, through their governments, launched the greatest effort in history to work together for lasting peace and for the economic, social, cultural, and humanitarian work, the progress of dependent peoples and the building of a system of world law." Certainly the agencies of the UN have provided nourish ment in several veins to many parts of the world. The International Children's Emergency Fund has fed mil lions of starving people. The World Health Organization has prescribed for the medically unaided from Palestine to Korea. The International Labor Organization has given world labor standards a hypodermic, and the Food and Agricultural Or ganization, the International Refugee Organization, the Post al Union, the World Meteorological Organization, the Inter national Civil Aviation Organization, the Commission on Narcotic Drugs, and the International Monetary Fund make us wonder how the world ever revolved without them. Martial wars in Greece, Indonesia and Kashmir which might have evolved into much bigger wars have been squelch v ed by the Uniter Nations. In fact, all of the satellites of this world peace movement seem to be traveling in the right orbit, yet we are still light years from our destination. With a mishandled veto power in the hands of a country which manhandles freedom, UN inability to keep the peace will continue. What good will it do to send a rescue squad to those in need if they are to be annihilated? We need an organization with enough power to veto those who wish to halt the peace drive. It is our hope that the next UN birthday will see the boys in Korea giving a 21-gun salute on U. S. ground. The Daily Dartmouth Absent Votes The trouble with democracy is that too often it comes in percentages. The latest percentage compiled on a democratic right is 78. per cent. It is arrived at by dividing 48, the num ber of States, by 37, the number of States that provide ab sentee ballots for student voters. Eleven other States don't.N The average student has enough intelligence to put an X in a D or a V on a . He can probably afford the postage. So, if he's of age,if s un-American, subversive, and a violation of States' Rights to disenfranchise him because he happens to be a resident of Alabama. Florida, Louisiana, Maryland, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, Massachusetts, Pennsyl vania, South Carolina and New York. CROSSWORD - - - By Eugene Sbeffer M IS 16 17 2i 22-23 WMM g To Hs 11 54 56 S7 il 441 42 4344 45 46 47 "48 4? H 11 HH 1 1 iaH i HORIZONTAL 1. undermine 4. Jewish month SCpierce with j pointed weapon 12. note in Guldo's scale 13. religious ceremony 14. vocal inflection 15. male offspring 16. concerns 18. hide 20. allays 21. 'thing. in law 22. slender 24. legal claim 26. solar disk 27. Tibetan gazelle SO. click beetle 32. Belgian seaport 34. street rail ways (abbr. 35. portion 37. snow vehicle 38. tree trunk 39. call of sheep 40. mountain. nymph 43. warded off 47. quells 49. wrath 50. soon 51. mail 52. nothing 53. deprivation 54. insects 55. lamprey VERTICAL. 1. soap frame bar 2. plant of lily family 3. bodily organ 4. sign of zodiac 5. force 6. bear witness 7. female ruff Answer to yesterday's puzzle. PASTriEglt SF LAW AN T E IJ N jfl OLA M I 1. Nl J N T R, t O H ZNOS E T E R A Sjg P nTa c e. Tc E H SJT Z U l STATE 3! caTr M J, L " AMUSElOEA E LSiIii.TTE RNS SOU S TR p0T AIsTsIa ILjPA I NT c u mTO l a t e'v aTs x ERjrETON A. jlo N. sIeIwlJpIeIeIpL iNiEiSTT 1-20 Average time f aviation: 22 minute Ptetrlbutetf by King Features Syndicate 8. vaporized water 9. throw about 10. poker stake 11. diminutive of Elizabeth 17. checks 19. lease 23. plunder 24. shelter 25. wretched 26. Russian inland sea 27. soluble jellylike substance 28. single unit 29. annex 31. species of lyric poem 33. Russian ruler 36. motive 38. farm buildings 39. outwits 40. spoken 41. city in Nevada 42. epopee 44. waistcoat 45. Great Lake . 46. glen 48. health resort (With some genuine nostalgic tears, we welcome back to this space, old-timer Chuck Hauser, one of the most colorful and most ' incisive writers ever on The Daily Tar Heel. Now working as an artillery lieutenant with his Uncle Sam at Ft. Bragg, Chuck has consented to knock out a couple of columns a week for us. Good shooting, lieutenant. Ed.) LATE: The Jones Sausage air plane at Saturday's game. The bantam B-29 buzzed overhead at . exactly 3:20 in the afternoon, which wasn't even during the first half. But maybe the pilot was tipped off that it would be a little slow until the third quarter. After the half, however, things began to pick up like Marilyn Monroe at a USO dance. The defense had improved 100 per cent over the Texas game, Bo Thorpe made up in enthusiasm what he lacked in technique, and the coed sitting behind me quit spilling whisky and coke down my back. The one thing marring the afternoon was the rude, crude and unmannerly scum sitting a half dozen seats away who pro voked a fight with the gentle man sitting in front of them and then proceeded to try to beat the daylights out of his date as -welL There were two of them, for your information, and drowning in Chapel Hill's sewer system would be too good for them. Although, come to think of it, they might feel right at home there. FOR THOSE folks who can re member back to the "old days," meaning when I was in school, The Daily Tar Heel at one time carried two columns called "On the Carolina Front" and "Tar Heel at Large." I wrote the former, and the latter was turned out by a master of the Smith-Corona named Bob Kuark, of the Wilmington Ruarks, another Carolina alum nus. This journal was the only newspaper in the country which tagged Ruark's daily diffraction "Tar Heel at Large,!' and I here by serve notice, Bob, that oI! Indian-giver Hauser is taking back the tag he invented, and putting it to his own use. You see, I'm at large these days, too. I LOVE the story they tell about Adlai Stevenson when a reporter asked him if he was surprised when he got the Democratic nomination. "Was I!" Adlai exclaimed, "I was so surprised I dropped my ac ceptance speech twice!" . . . And talking about politics, I read where President Truman says Eisenhower's just a babe in the woods, and Taft owns the woods . . . Latest inflation note: A can opener's still five cents. IT LOOKED like Army-Navy recruiting poster number 23D walking down Franklin Street Sunday afternoon. I was in uni form, beside me was Daily Tar Heeler Bev Baylor and on the other side of her was . former Sports Editor Billy Carmichael III, now a Navy JG, also in uni form. We stopped in front of the Pharmacy and I said, "Lend me a nickel, Bill, I want to call up a friend." Rising to the occasion and the old punch line, Billy snapped back, "Here's two nickels, Chuck, call both of them." IT WAS Barry Farber who al ways used to say, at a high point in the party, that he was having more fun than a pigeon with a Norden bombsight . . . And it was Marilyn Monroe who, when asked her opinion of sex, re plied, "I've never given it a second thought." The hell with the second, kid, what was the first? Off Campus Who Needs Coal?" John Taylor- RE VIEWS If Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman", the Carolina Play makers' first production of the new season, is indicative of what is to follow, then there are great things in store for Carolina this year. That is not to say that .the performance is perfect it is far from that but it is, nevertheless, one of the best productions that this re porter has ever seen here. It is in essence the story of a man's struggle to stay in his own little dream world of false ' values, while the outside world relentlessly crushes him with realities much too strong to be fended off by his pitiful delu sions of grandeur for himself and for his two mediocre sons. Willy Loman is a "little man", and "Death of a Salesman" is the tragedy not of this one indi vidual, but of the entire, tre mendous category of "little men"; that is why it rings so univers ally true. The presentation afforded the prize-winning play was a very compelling one. Bill Trotman, at twenty-two, gave a masterful interpretation of the exhausted, sixty-three year old saleman. Never for a moment did you doubt that he was approaching ifiil and fruitless Editor: ashamed of. The defense played existence. The main criticism 4 A a great game, and although the of his characterization was that I do most solemly protest the . . j v,0 droam seauences. . , , " r i j . unwise was uui yciiixi, it cvtj. u S?fgi Gr.ad,uate Students showed promise, and was great- which cover a span of many $2.00 for the privilege of having proved over the Texas years in Willy's life, he remained When Don Beran, sports writer for the Drake University Times Delphic, realized that his foot ball game predictions were any thing but dazzling, he turned to William Allen White for con solation: "Doctors bury their mistakes; journalists publish theirs." Express Yourself Mary Long, in the role of Willy's patient wife Linda, com plemented Trotman's portrayal beautifully. Here was a Linda that was warm, understanding, and, in her small way, noble. But here too was a woman made of steel under her mild and meek exterior a woman who would fight all who dared to destroy the illusions of the man she loved. Her final speech in the requiem at Willy's grave was the highlight of a fine, well rounded characterization. Willy's two sons are good foils for each other. Biff, the elder, realizes what he is, where as Happy, the younger, happy-go-lucky brother believes, as does his father, that some day he will be a leader of men. He is really the tragic figure of the play, for he will be quite ob viously follow right in Willy's footsteps. The performances of Jim Pritchett and Don Treat, as Biff and Happy respectively, 'make this delineation quite clear. Pritchett was much better in the emotional than in the quiet portions. The powerful scene in which he faces Willy with the truth about the both of them was one of the high spots of the evening. "Yack." No. its not the "fee: its the principle of the thing. Of course, one might say that the yearbook is an intergraduate affair; then, one only has to look at an issue that has taken up a good deal of space with the faculty and the canine popula tion of Chapel Hill to disprove this assumption. Name With held by request Editor: We want to take it on our selves to say something that, I am sure, most of the students feel. That is simply thanks, team. You really played yourselves a ball- game Saturday. None of you, or us, have anything to be an old man. Clegg Herrin James Berryhill This, however, is, a minor point in what was on tne whole a very effective performance. T mm mmmP W tS-XVX J" U ..t J I J hmm tmmf M LATE SHOW SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY f T - . dll UlU ' 1 - : x A It' a G.I. on a wild f!f: ' : ? adventure! ( fcWlif" Vl' - X. " girl who - f .j angel!"... and I ircttyt: JjH& - 1 ft 1 PLUS TOM AND JERRY CARTOON SPORTLIGHT LATEST NEWS ' M-G-M EXCITEMENT! TODAY AND SATURDAY , i W Over the "Niuyw , and 6 other x song hits ! fir 4 JUDY GARLAND FRANK MORGAN -RAY BCLGER BERT LAHR.JACK KALEY B1LLIE BURKE MARGARET HAMILTQX CHARLEY GRAPEWtH and THE MUNCHKINS A VICTOR FLEMIHS PROOOGTIOH Morning Maiinee Sai. Doors Open 9 a.m. ADULTS 44c CHILDREN 20c 1LEFT meAPTRUttPBT INI MY KAJAMA'a WHOP you SAY YO NAMp KATi?A? POSSUM A YOu FRO FACE V Mg PROG ' EL FAKIK-. KIN I POP HlMON, POP HIM ONE ANYWAYS. Hre thb UNSEAL- i McCoy. WHO VoU fc an who you CAUUIN' SPAIN 17. J Me. PE&PECTIVE, AN' PlSRBSPECXfUU ,syMptCATe.wc PI VN4 m. LET US METTLE. pueHiN:) 7 I'M OM THE TRACK? AND -A TDAIN IS COMINQ? 9.'MON W THASS R1C3HT; H I QUICK, VOKUM rf I I NOW.GIVE ME ( VASSUH Iwl I TRUNK AN' AH I I IF "YOU WOKTT TRUST J 1 I THE KMIFE- ( I T SO'. OH ACCOUMT I I TWO HOLES IN THE XI ITHE POSITION j 025s ( Of. MAH-h.- J TRUNK, B.G ENOUGhIJ LJT , ' K OPERATING ON A HUMAN CAN'T STQDff 't
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 24, 1952, edition 1
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