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Page Two
The Daily Tar Heel
Friday, November 21. 1SS2
Wl)t pailp ar Heel
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 ptriods. 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. $J50 per
quarter; delivered. $6 and $2.25 per quarter.
Interim Editorial Board
Managing Editor
Business Manager
Sports Editor
..ROLFE NEILL,, BEV BAYLOR, SUE BURRESS
ROLFE NEIL.
JIM SCHENCK
BIFF ROBERTS
News Ed.
Sub. Mgr.
Ass't. Sub. Mgr. .
Natl. Adv. Mgr...
.jody Levey
Carolyn Reichard
Delaine Bradsher
Wallace Pridgen
c3oc. Ed.
Circ. Mgr.
Asst. Spts.
dv. Mgr...
Ed.
Deenie Schoeppe
Donald Hog,
Tom Peacock
Ned Beet-
News Staff Bob Slough. John Jamison, Punchy (Billy) Grimes, Louis Kra&r.
Jerry Reece. Tom Parramore, Alice Chapman. Dixon Wallace. Tony Burke, Jen-
nie Lynn. Tish Rodman. Tom Neal Jr., Jane Carter. Sally Schindel.
Sports Staff Vardy Buckalew, Paul Cheney, Melvin Lang, Everett Parker.
Charlie Dunn. .
Society Staff Peggy Jean Goode, Janie Bugg. Alice Hinds.
Advertising Staff Buzzy Shull, Buddy Harper, Eleanor Saunders, Judy Taylor,
Bozy Sugg. Nancy Perryman.
Night Editor for this issue: Louis Kraar
Run For Your Honey
Boys, put on your track shoes and running shorts Sadie
Hawkins Day is upon you.
Following the Duke Float Parade, the men of the campus
will run for their bachelor life across South Building mall
the coeds close behind them.
Coeds, if you're among the 90 per cent, now's your chance
to get caught up with the Carolina males. If you're among
that lucky 10 per cent, here's your opportunity to start a
string or enlarge your present one.
It will be a fair race. Each Sadie lady making a legal catch
(anything under 100 lbs. must be thrown back) will be award
ed a marriage certificate, ceremony, and a free telegram to
her parents reading, "Relax, Pa, I got one."
Males escaping capture will start against Duke on Saturday.
Express Yourself
Editor:
One week ago at this time,
the students of this University
were banding together in a great
crusade a crusade with the
visible intent of placing before
our worthwhile Board of Trus
tees, feasible and intelligent
reasons in opposition to Satur
day classes.
Fellow students; today, just
one week later, we are a dor
mant body, All opposition has
ceased and we don't even know
the opinion formed by the visit
ing committee last Friday. I am
not proposing revolt, but as a
member of this student body
subject to Saturday classes I
feel that it is my privilege to
know what has happened. It
seems that our opposition has
been completely ignored, just
pushed aside and forgotten. '"
We are not children nor do we
serve to be treated as such. Why
are we not informed as to the
action taken by the Board of
Trustees? Are they going to keep
it under cover in much the same
way a mother hides the medi
cine bottle from her young child
and then pops the medicine into
his mouth before he knows what
has happened. Are we going to
come back here next fall and
discover only then that the
Board of Trustees has decided to
uphold Saturday classes.
I propose that a committee be
appointed immediately by Pres
ident Horton to find out why
this matter has been so quickly
and effectively hushed up. This
committee would also have as
its purpose to inform us as to
what concrete progress has been
made in determining the true
facts.
Have we lost the fight? Are
we to give up so quickly and
without any further opposition?
Are we, as well as our faculty,
going to submit so easily to the
will of men who will not even
consider our honest pleas? Are
we going to let these men hush
it up so that we can not know
the effect of our opposition? I
sincerely hope not.
ZACK WATERS, JR.
(Since we haen't room for a
column and a half of editor's
note, we suggest you: 1. Contact
Ham Horton in the student gov
ernment office, or 2. Contact The
Daily Tar Heel offices. The fight
is not dead; the facts are not
hidden, and nothing has been
hushed up. We also suggest you
get out some old Daily Tar
Heels, where the story has been
covered completely., Ed.)
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HORIZONTAL
1. merry
4. constellation
7. small orifices
12. grow old '
13. feminine
name
14. to the left
15. pointed
beards
17. showy
flower
18. wandered
from truth
19. Russian
rulers-
21. sensible
22. work-party
23. sweetsop
26. defaced
29. silkworm
30. quickly
33. young lady
35. three-toed
sloths
36. large ducks
38. grade
40. cover
41. ancient
Gaelic
capital
45. got up
47. feminine
name
48. thespian
50. evil signs
52. treasury
53. goddess of
dawn
54. bond
55. allays
56. river in
Scotland
57. auditory
organ
VERTICAL,
1. estimates
2. Greek mar
ket place
3. desire
earnestly
4. musical pipe
5. salutation
6. conquer
7. father
8. musical
drama
Answer to yesterday's puzzle.
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9. perched
10. eagle
11. eye affection
16. abounds
20. appeared
22. cooks over
coals
24. before
25. transgres.
sion
27. goddess of
malicious
mischief
28. patriotic
society
(abbr.)
30. equivalence
31. narrow inlet
32. landed
properties
34. plant fiber
37. ate
restrictedly
39. appearing as
if gnawed
42. winged
43. networks
44. goose
46. worthless
bits
47. Gaelic
48; high card
49. Oriental tea
51. tilling
implement
Express
Yourself
Editor:
I would like to comment on
Bill Brown's column, "Tar On
My Heelss," in yesterday's Dai
ly Tar Heel, as a UP repre
sentative, without any connec
tion with my necessarily non
partisan position as chairman of
the elections board.
As you know, (the SP jumped
to the conclusion that it had
a majority in the legislature
the way I see it, the body will
very likely be deadlocked.
In consequence I hope that
both parties will now realize
that they must work together
if they want to get something
done in student government this
year. The SP and UP seem to
be bumping headss in an at
tempt to effectively hinder each
other for fear that the other
party might get credit for some
legislation.
The parties battle so much
over so many things that should
be bi-partisan in the legisla
ture, that they are leaving the
students they supposedly repre
sent out in the cold. This "I'm
aginnit" attitude toward propo
sals merely because they are
presented by the other party,
must stop. .
The SP's self-styled title "a
party of dormitory men and
women" is a rather distorted
opinion the SP has taken of it
self. How can this be possible
when most of the leaders of
the party are in fraternities and
sororities? For instance take the
chairman, secretary, publicity
chairman, and other leaders. The
party claims to be the ptotector
of the dorm men in order to
get their votes.
The UP now has representa
tives , from three dormitories,
and plans to get representatives
from all the rest now that the
elections are over. I can imagine
how the SP will feel about this.
The only reason the UP hasn't
done this before is that the dorm
men haven't taken the initiative
needed to get a list of 25 people
who want to be represented in
the party. Now, the party is
seeking and encouraging the
dorm men to get representation
in the party.
Another thing I -dislike very,
very much the gulf you, Bill,
like to widen between fraterni
ty and non-fraternity men for
the benefit of the SP. We are
all students at UNC and every
type person should be repre
sented in each party. I admit
that the UP has been guilty of
being too much pro-fraternity
in the past, but it is slowly over
coming this.
As you say, the SP has failed
in some cases to represent any
one, but I don't believe it is
because of an "attempt to rep
resent both factions of our cam
pus." I feel it is because of the
basic setup of the SP. Each per
son is representing himself and
only himself. It appears to be
a group of students just trying
to get each other into office.
I think I am qualified in say
ing this I was an SP legislator
and was affiliated with the par
ty when I was a freshman. I be
lieve this attitude squelches in
terest in student government.
At least the UP members are
representing some group of stu
dents whom they have to an
swer to besides their own party
cohorts.
Frankly, I don't think the re
duction of UP seats in the ligis
lature was the results of the
large turnout "loudly denounc
ing" the UP. I believe it was
because the SP mechanized their
"paper publicity" campaign in
such a way that they beat the
UP to the punch and got the
names of individuals up before
the students first. In all the dis
tricts but Cobb, (where the UP
candidates over - campaigned)
the winning candidates won be
cause they posted their names
in more places than their oppo
nents did. The denouncement is
non-existent.
The statement that the ma
jority of Greeks feel that any
non-Greek is "so much trash"
is trash. You sound a little bit
ter, Bill. Most people are alike -
they judge a person by what
he is, not by his extra-curricular
activities. I don't know where
you got that wry idea.
I hope this will be a good
year for Student Government
and I just hope that the two
parties can get together 'long
enough to get the student gov
ernment apathy out of all the
students. Let's try that for a
change, shall we?
Jerry Cook
"I Think I'll Change Them All Around Just Once More'
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Drew Pearson
The Washington Merry-Go-Round
WASHINGTON, Last Sunday,
the day the hydrogen bomb ex
plosion was announced, I hap
pened to go to church. I say
"happened" because a television
program and a radio broadcast
both coming on a Sunday ordi
narily makes it hard for me to
go to church.
But the telecast is being
switched to Wednesdays, so I
surprised Mrs. P. by taking her
to church, where I listened to
Rev. John R. Anschutz preach
a sermon on prayer. Knowing
that the hydrogen bomb an
nouncement was due to be made
later that day or the next morn
ing, I did quite a bit of think
ing about prayer, and the fact
that maybe - if we had relied
more on prayer and the things
that go with prayer, we wouldn't
be in the predicament of build
ing bomb shelters and going un
derground for fear of explosions
that could burn up our civiliza
tion. Over at the Alexandria, Va.,
church where George Washing
ton used to worship, Rev. O. V.
T. Chamberlain chose as his
closing hymn: "The Day Thou
Gavest Lord, Is Ended."
That expressed some thoughts
of mine too.
For the day the Lord gave us
could very well be ended if we
and the Russians ever get to
.trading hydrogen bomb blows
across the Artie.
On the other hand, I also fig
ured that bombs never killed an
idea, and our greatest natural
resource is not plutonium or
tritium, but our moral and spi
ritual strength.
Religion and Communism can
not survive together. But one
trouble is that religion has got
to mean more than a refuge from
ruthless force. It must be a pat
tern for life, not a ritual for one
hour on Sunday.
Another trouble is that men
of all faiths and of little faith
have been seeking ideas to
defeat Communism, when right
around the corner the best idea
of all is being neglected the
Sermon on the Mount, given us
2,000 years ago as a daily guide
for living with each other.
The big trouble, of course, is
to get that daily guide adopted
not only here, but also behind
an iron curtain where religion
,is barred and- where we can't
even mail a package.
I have been harping for so
long that I guess people are
tired of hearing me, about the
fact that there will always be
danger of war no matter how
many H-bombs we build or how
many men we draft as long as
we can't speak to the Russian
people, can't mingle with them,
can't cooperate with them in a
free press, free radio, free
church, free books, and free
contact with the outside world.
As long as 12 men in the
Kremlin can declare war with
no Congress, no church, no press,
or power of public opinion to
put on the brakes, there will
always be danger of war and the
day thou gavest, Lord, may be
ended.
I have tried in what feeble
ways I could to show that the
iron curtain was not as impene
trable as it's supposed to be.
I once traveled along it from
Turkey to Berlin showing up
its loopholes; and in coopera
tion with the crusade for free
dom I helped float 11,000,000
leaflets via balloons into Czech
oslovakia and Poland.
These at best were puny ef
forts, though they showed, from
the reaction on the other side
of the iron curtain, how eager
ly its people welcome contact
with us.
Today, however, we have two
opportunities which need not be
puny. First we have a new and
powerful hydrogen bomb, there
by giving us tremendous bar
gaining power to break down ar
tificial barriers preventing peace.
Second, we have" a new Presi
dent. He is a man of great pres
tige, known throughout the
world and in Russia. And he
has what Franklin Roosevelt
had, a flair for dramatics, the
ability to win people, to cap
ture their imagination. Wheth
er you agree with him political
ly or not, Eisenhower is and
can be an international sales--man.
And that's what's needed
today in selling the world new
instruments for peace.
It is always possible at the
beginning of a new administra
tion to form important, new and
dynamic policies.
That's because outgoing lead
ers become jaded and get in a
rut. Our present outgoing lead
ers have put across some mile
stones against communism for
Dorman Cordell-
Stewpot
A letter of advice to the love
lorn columnist Miss Dixie Dor
th: Dear Miss Dorth: We have a
horrible problem and we hope
you can give us help. I am writ
ing as a representative of my
fellow women students at Caro
lina. Our remorse is just too, too
awful to bear. There are only
about, 600 of us, while there are
over 4,000 men students. But
we still don't have dates for the
Duke-Carolina game and the
other activities of the week-end.
The trouble is, the men all
bring in a bunch of nasty old
imports from other colleges all
over the state and even up in
that heathen place of Virginia.
And they won't ask us for dates.
The reason is, they want to get
sloppy drunk, but they can't
drink in front of Carolina coeds:
And they don't want to bring us
home at a reasonable hour.
Here we try our best to look
beautiful for them all the other
days of the year and we always
fill in when they need a quick
date for a movie or something.
But then, being ungrateful men
that they are, they go off and get
those horrible old imports for
big events like the Duke
Carolina week-end or the Ger
mans or all the other big things.
We have just reached the end
of our rope, and don't know
where to turn. We just can't sit
home every time there's a big
week-end. So we are turning to
you for advice. What can we do?
Please rush an answer im
mediately, so we will know what
course of action to follow.
Sincerely, Worried.
Dear Worried: Miss Dorth has
asked me to send you her ad
vice. She said in matters of love
and the like, it is every woman
for herself. She would have
answered your letter herself,
but she was preparing to leave
for Chapel Hill just as it arriv
ed. She has a date with a Caro
lina, man for the week-end.
Sincerely, her secretary.
which historians will give them
great credit The Marshall
Plan, the North Atlantic Pact.
But the sheen is off these pol
icies now. They are shopworn
and lackluster. They still form
a firm foundation on which to
build for prosperity and peace.
And on them a new administra
tion can build bigger things if
it has courage and imagination.
Seldom in history has a new
President come into office when
the peoples of the world had
reached a lower ebb of despon
dency, when the danger of total
war was potentially greater, and
when there was placed in the
new President's hands greater
bargaining power the hydro
gen bomb.
In another year that bargain
ing power may be gone. The
Kremlin by then may have the
H-bomb. But until then a new
leader with courage, imagina
tion, conviction has a heaven
sent opportunity to reopen the
Baruch Plan for the control of
atomic energy, and simultane
ously open up the iron curtain
to American truth, culture, and
the American people.
If the latter can be done, the
Korean war and all kindred
problems will automatically
solve themselves.
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