ge Two The Daily mtm 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 m attar 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 quarter; delivered. $6 and $2.25 per quarter - Interim Editorial Board- ROLFE Managing Editor Business Manager Sports Editor News Ed -jody Levey Sub. Mct Carolyn Reichard Asst. Sub. Mgr. Delaine Bradsher Natl. Adv M?r Wallace Pridgen Nevus Staff Bob Slough. John Jamison. Punchy (Billy) Grimes. Louis Kraar. Jerry Reece. Tom Parramore, Alice Chapman. Dixon Wallace. Tony Burke. Jen nie Lynn. Tlsh Rodman. Tom Neal Jr.. Jane Carter. Sally Schindel. Svorts Staff Vardy Buckalew. Paul Cheney. Melvin Lang. Everett Parker. Charlie Dunn. . Society Staff Peggy Jean Goode. Janie Bugg. Alice Hinds. : Night Editor for this issue: Rolfe Neill Symphony Opportunity One dollar won't buy much these days, but when you join the North Carolina Symphony Society, it buys a lot. There are many reasons for joining the Symphony Society: The North Carolina Symphony is a first class professional orchestra. Under the superb direction of Benjamin Swalin, it would be fully at home in any concert hall in the nation. It ably performs the world's finest music, but its programs are planned to appeal to all types of listeners. Membership entitles the subscriber to admission to any concert of the North Carolina 'Symphony sponsored by the State Symphony Society. There will be over sixty such con certs this season throughout the state. A complete tour sched ule will be supplied each subscriber. Free concerts for children are made possible by member ships subscribed by the adults of the community. Children are carefully prepared to enjoy and appreciate their concerts by educational- materials supplied by the Symphony Society. North Carolina is unique in having a symphony orchestra available for use in its public school music courses. Opportunities for North Carolina musicians are provided by the Symphony. Talented children, as well as adults, ap pear as soloists with the Orchestra each season. Instrumental ists may launch or continue an orchestral career in their home state by qualifying for a place in this professional Symphony. Annual auditions are held for composers as well as for soloists and instrumentalists. The Symphony belongs to North Carolina. It brings music to the' people wTherever they are in the state. It actually per forms in your community at less than cost. A state appropria tion and gifts to the Sustaining Fund are required to enable it to operate without a large deficit each year. North Carolina is being represented by its Symphony to people throughout the United States and in countries abroad as a truly progressive and well balanced state. Coast to coast broadcasts and articles in magazines of nationwide circula tion tell the world about North Carolina and its Symphony. This radio time and magazine space last year had a, value of over a $100,000. Membership in the North Carolina Symphony is the biggest bargain and the best investment obtainable anywhere today. These one dollar college memberships will be sold in the Y Court all week, and can be purchased from IDC or IFC members. The Ham Sees The New York Stock Exchange and the Wall Street mar keteers had nothing on Carolina last Friday. As date-time for Germans approached, the buying, selling, bidding, and praying for tickets became more and more fran tic. 1 The demand outweighed the supply so greatly that prices swooped to an all time high of $12. The night before the big day, eight anxious Carolina gentlemen were sitting on the same phone like the U.N. on the H-Bomb. The bankruptcy rate increased as the Spivaking day wore on, and the market operations closed for the fall quarter with the selling faction patting their well packed pocket books. The buyers who braved the storm of dollar marks have only the memory of free bargaining as consolation for thin and hungry pocketbooks. It "Zll!l!l!L!l PIl"Hll ziziFy- zyfzzi 51 jjj 53 54- HORIZONTAL 1. piece of property 6. venomous serpent 9. feminine name 12. sister of Phrixos 13. fast driver 15. oW-womanish 16. tumultuous flow 17. topaz humming-bird 18. adult males 19. otherwise 20. corroded 21. commodious 23. elongated fish 24. human 26. yelp 28. m; Jcious N rning 29. furze 33. edible green seed 35. French marshal ' - 36. policeman (colloq.) 39. guide 41. those in power 42. imitator 44. juvenile game 45. Massachu setts cape 46. book of Bible 48. foreigner 50. obliteration 51. riven in France 52. split pulse 53. Babylonian god Answer to yesterday's puzzle. PER ARE PAL 'JSIAID l eTaO P jj T ARE tIe sns TTp-Ij RjElDlA N .DIANA ..,.JfT U bIJS E N S5 sTaTdlj s oTr a sns s e Average time of solution: 25 minutes. Distributed by King -Features Syndicate Tar Heel Tuesday, November 11, 1952 mlpMm Heel NEILL. BEV BAYLOR. SUE BURRESS ROLFE NEILL JIM SCHFNCK BIFF ROBERTS soc. Ed. Deenie Schoeppe Circ. Mgr. ..Donald Hogb ...Tom PeacocJs Ned Bee""- Asst. Spts. Ed. dv. Mgr. 2.-Z. 54. trunk of human body VERTICAL 1. exclamation 2. legislator 3. splinters 4. feminine name 5. golf mound 6. fall flower 7 absorptive 8. by 9. feminine namd 10. thick 11. Russian independent union 14. prior in time. 18. prefix : bad 20 wine vessel 21. country roads 22. fervent 25. summit 27. cooking utensil 30. Cascade Range mount 31. transgressors 32. printer's measures 34. array 35. wooden nail 36. confined 37 musical drama 38. liable to punishment 40. artist's fold ing stand . 43. thing, in law 45. in addition 47 prefix: under 48. river-island 49. new- -.' comb, form O R E R ATM 6 E R M R R ITl nRjA"S ' ' N L E T lJpIaIsIsiy 2-2 Express Yourself Editor: I'm only; a freshman here. Naturally such a lowly person of college caste isn't heard or taken into consideration as much? as his upper classmen. Never theless I see, and what I see distresses me. I'd heard much about" the Carolina spirit at pep' rallies, ball games, and parades. I'd seen it too upon visits to Carolina footbail games before I became a student here. And I wasn't the only one who sat up and took notice to that wonder ful Tar Heel spirit. It was broadcast throughout the coun ' try and even to other countries as the greatest school spirit of any school. Remember a few years ago when we stormed New York and made the Yan kees take "notice? Sure you do, but where is that spirit now? I know we were winning ball games then and of course every one likes a winning team. How ever, I like to think of our spirit as something more than that which is enticed by a won game. Ought we not to support the team who are trying their best against .getting off to a bad start? Last night I read an account Of an incident that applies to Carolina and her waning spirit I think. It's the story of a French inventor who, while standing on a stepladder in his labora tory, let a glass bottle slip from his hand and fall to the floor. With some annoyance at him self, he bent down to pick up the pieces but his annoyance vanished quickly. For there were no pieces. The bottle, while star-crecked, remained in tact. How come? Then he re membered that the bottle, which had been lying on a shelf for years, had once contained a li quid cellulose mixture. The li uid was gone but in the process of evaporating, a thin coat of cellulose - like substance had been laid down all over the in side of the bottle. It was this that had prevented the shatter ing when the bottle was drop ped. This discovery led to shatter proof glass. But that isn't im portant to what I want to show. The story has a moral that ap plies to all Carolina students. Our team, like the bottle has been on top for a number of years, gloried by winning and full of spirit. But, it seems for the last year or so we have been knocked from our winning pedestal and have fallen to the bottom. Now the question is, have we shattered to pieces? I hope that as we go to other op positions, that we might prove to everyone and to ourselves that though we have fallen, we haven't been broken, and that there is still an inward film of Carolina spirit holding us to gether to spur our team to vic tory. Elwood Morgan Thanks To those citizens who sup ported Eisenhower in the past campaign: On behalf of the Chapel Hill Citizens for Eisenhower and of the North Carolina Citizens for Eisenhower, I would like to take this opportunity to thank each supporter of the General in the "great crusade" which ended so victoriously just one week ago. The confidence ex pressed by the American peo ple, South and North, Demo crat and Republican, is a mag nificent tribute to Mr. -Eisenhower, and an even greater trib ute to the campaign he conduct ed for a rebirth of constitutional government, clean government, and courageous government. It is our belief that your confi dence will prove to be well placed and that the sincere and conscientious citizens who op posed his election for various reasons will within the next four years be led to admit that his election was a fortunate one. Hamilton C. Horion. Jr. Chairman. Chapel Hill Citizens for Eisenhower Rowdy juveniles in Southern Cal were caught dancing the "Cemetery Drag" in a grave yard. The youngsters told police that they went in for- tomb stone tangos and some beer drinking just as a lark. The judge considered it , a grave matter. CO. The Washington Merry-Go-Round WASHINGTON I would like to urge fellow newsmen, radio commentators, and the Ameri can public generally to under- take a voluntary news blackout on General Eisenhower's forth coming trip to Korea. In brief, the time of his departure, ar rival in Japan, departure from Japan to Korea, ought not to be published. While the first lap- of the trip across the Pacific to Japan car ries no great danger the second lap behind the battle lines of Korea could be one'of the most dangerous ever undertaken by a president-elect of the United States. - When President Roosevelt took similar trios to Casablanca, Teheran and Yalta, the time of departure, arrival, and even the fact that he planned such trips were military secrets. No word was published in the press. Danger to Gen. Eisenhower is not from any deliberate Com munist attack. Presumably the men in the Kremlin don't want to plunge the world into war. But the suicidal mania of orien tal warriors is all too well known to risk a drunken pilot or group of Chinese kamikazes who, flying only a few miles, could create a crisis leading to demands for World War III. While Gen. Eisenhower will be meticulously guarded, there is no use taking chances by giving away the details of his itinerary. It's a lot tougher shifting ad ministrations than it was 20 years ago. As a result, Eisen hower and advisers will have to burn a lot of midnight oil. Twenty years ago, when Her bert Hoover handed things over TH' BULLET -Z SOME GOOD-LUCK CHARM TT f NO-IFNOU'D l f WERE STOPPED J IT MERELY SAVED HIS LIFE- L SEEN THE REST J I I BY MAH r-y SO NOW YO' KIN ELECTR1CUTE OP THAT J I I GOOD-LUCK 1 I HIM. LIKE IT SAYS IN THIS WPLRI: J PAPER. VOL) D I I LIKE ME.?- V TO fMT Aru rf I CHARM rr J V- , KNOW THAT'S A I I ALL TUB WhILE hp- VVAA 1 LieUAL.CW ? I s if mr. YOU AkB BEAST AN ( WONKEY F-VfcL j 24Sr eir!?! FATHe anT Assik o C Lvlz yVvi cone err t?Zl "Hey Looka Me! Drew Pearson to Franklin Roosevelt, there was no atomic energy, no Ko rean war. no military draft, no threat of Russia, no foreign-aid program, no rauar ring defend ing the U.S.A. There wasn't even a Penta gon in 1932. The State Depart ment was a fraction of its pres ent size, and the War Depart ment shared the same building. Major Eisenhower had an un obtrusive desk in that building in the outer office of Gen. Mac Arthur extreme outer office. He was a ghost-writer for the chief of staff. The budget was only $4,659, 000,000 in 1932. and the govern ment collected only $1,924,000, 000 in taxes. Today the budget is $79,000,000,000 and the an nual tax take is $68,700,000,900. Labor Unions had only 3,226,000 members then; today they have 16,000,000. There was no tele vision, not much radio, no big commercial airlines, not much air mail, no Tennessee Valley Authority. But there was a depression. And FDR, facing the same per sonal tensions with Herbert Hoover that Eisenhower does with Truman, came to Wash ington for conferences which yielded nothing. The time elapsing between the Presidential takeover was longer then November to March. But the economy is now 'gigantic, dynamic, and delicate. Indecision, crossed-up coopera tion, or even such a thing as a small increase in the interest rate . on government bonds, could throw our economics Off balance. Sen. Mike Monroney of Okla homa took a run-out powder on his McCarthy investigating committee by sailing to Europe without even telling fellow members tha he was leaving. . . . Langdon West, assistant to Sen. Tom Hennings of Missouri, is begging him to sidestep the McCarthy probe. Hennings is chairman of the elections com mittee, and West is afraid Mc Carthy will turn the tables and go after Hennings. Hennings is not buckling. . . . Adlai Steven son has confessed to friends that his original plan was to run for President in 1956. He figured from the first that 1952 would be a tough year. That was the reason "for his reluctance at Chicago. ... It looks like Re publican Senators were much more anxious to probe the elec tion of one of their own num ber than any Democrat, namely Senator-elect Fred Payne of Maine. Behind this is seen the hand of defeated Sen. Owen Brewster. If Payne is blocked, a Republican Governor would ap point Brewster back to the Sen ate. . . . Said 6-year-old Nickie Clark, daughter of Reader's Di gest Blake Clark: "I didn't know Ike's last name was 'Landslide.' " Those close to Eisenhower claim one of the most signifi cant things about his campaign was that the last three weeks wound up with Republican moderates and liberals closest to im. The isolationists were on the outside looking in. And they attribute Ike's big pick-up at the end to the fact that he followed these men, publicly disclaimed McCarthy's tactics, and announced rhe was "the same old Ike." TH' HAN 'SO ME. CRIMMV-NUU WHO LOOKS LIKE MC?- IS VO' GONNA ELECTRICUTE. HIM r r-c(fki4 )WE MAV MOT HAVE. TO. HE 1 MAV STARVE Y i wum it.-.- e ) HE REFUSES A J AU. FOOO.rT J -John Taylor- ReVieWS Aside from a good action pic ture, "Saramouche," Tuesday at the Carolina, "Because You're Mine," a typical Mario Lanza musical, Wednesday and Thurs day at the Carolina, and a very commendable reissue of "A Midsummer Night's Dream," at the Varsity on Thursday, there really aren't any films commg up this week that are worth mentioning, so this is a conven ient time fo ra long overdue forecast of the year's activities for the Carolina Playmakers. The next major production will be "The Inspector General" a Russian satiric comedy, by Gogole. Directed by Harry Da vis, it will be presented Decem ber 3-7, with a cast including Fred Young, Jim Pritchett, Bill Waddell, Charles Hadley, Nan cy Green, Janet Carter, Don Wright, Bill Trottman, and Bill and Bob Casstevens. On the 14th Samuel Selden will give his tra ditional reading of Dickens' well-loved "A Christmas Carol." The winter term will begin with the production of Gilbert and Sullivan's "Princess Ida," to be directed by Bill Hardy. It will be on display in Memorial Hall from the sixth to the eighth of February. February 25 will mark the opening performance of Kai Jurgensen's production of "The Good Woman of Set zuan," by Bertold Brecht. It will play through the first of March. The final presentation of the year will be "Lysistrata," the famous Greek comedy of love . and life during the Pelopenesian Wars. It will be the annual For est Theatre production and will be under the direction of Fos ter Fitz-Simmons. During the year there will be five more experimental pro ductions of both full-length and one-act plays. The value of these presentations can not be under estimated, because it is by this means that new student talent in playwriting, direction, de signing, and acting is discover ed and explored. Admission to student shows is free, which makes them attractive to all concerned. The " Playmakers will also sponsor two eagerly awaited professional shows. The first, to be presented on January 9 and 10, will be Charles Laughton's adaptation of Benet's "John Brown's Body," shown under the auspices of Paul Gregory, who sponsored the highly suc cessor "Don Juan in Hell," and starring Judith Anderson, Ty rone Power and Raymond Mas sey. On the seventh of March. Emlyn Williams will be appear ing as Charles Dickens in a group of the author's readings. RALEIGH L i g h t rain show ers eased threats of major forest fires in North Carolina yesterday but State Forester Fred Claridge said "we need a real soaker" in stead of sprinkles. Claridge can celed deer hunts in the Bladen Lales State Forest. At mid-morning the rainfall amounts were very light at most localities but the weather bureau said they at least ended a three-week spell of practically no rain at all. Skies were overcast and showers fell as far east as Rocky Mount. The showers had little .effect on some forest fires still burning except to slow their advance. NATCH EJtLY.T A FELLA T JUST WIP A TACE. LIKE GlVE ME TME.T ONLV CRAVES ONE KIN DA FOOD, AFORE HE GOEST GLORV. KJiMFIV A MINUTES WIF HIM ALONC IN HI'S t CHOMP O' DOG PATCH CELL. HAM. TV w - 111 i A s cope. ' Cjfc WAi,T