PXGE TWO. THE DAILY. TAR HEEE WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1951 "AH Right", Comrade, Hand Me The Sledgeha on the Carolina, FRONT by Chuck Hauser The Editors Mai I bo The official student newsnaper of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it. is published by the Publications fioard daily during the. rt guJar sessions of the University at Colonial Press, -Jno.. except Sat.. Sun.. Monday, examinations and vacation periods and during the official summer terms when published semi-weekly. Entered as second cVjss matter at the Post Office of Chapel HUI. N. C. under the act of March 3. 1379. Subscription price: S8 per year. $3 per quarter. Member of the Associated Press, which is t-xchisively entitled, tn the vise for republication of all news and features herein. Opinions expressed by columnists are not necessarily those of this newspaper. J...-T!'Wtow..'t, Editor Managing Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Husiness Manager BOY PARKER. JR. ... CHUCK HAUSER ... DON MAYNARD ... ZANE ROBBINS ED WILLIAMS For This Issue: Night Editor, Chuck JIauser Sports. Andy Taylor , No Cousins Of Ours "Cousin" Wayland Spruillof Bertie ; County is no cousin of ours, thank goodness. And neither is John Kerr, Jr., a member of the Boafd of Trustees and former speaker of the State House of Representatives. If we may clarify, let us quote: Kerr, in a telegram to various members of the General Assembly, said Monday: "In view of .the action of the Execu tive Committee University Trustees, only way to meet situa tion is cut out appropriation to any schools that do not follow segregation. That has been done in Georgia and is going to be done in South Carolina. I have amendment if you want it. That will bring them around to some sense. People of North Carolina are opposed to this proposition." "Cousin" Wayland, according to a story by the Durham Morning Herald's Raleigh bureau, "showed interest in the wires and said he was considering introduction of legislation that would choke off money going to any school that admits Negroes and whites together." In other words, these two bigots wish to see the University appropriation in the Legislature eliminated if the courts or the Board of Trustees rule that Negroes may come to Caro lina. Well, the picture has changed a little since friends Spruill anu iitu mauc hictij. aiaiciijiciiia. n xiiLiuauJiu y cs ici Uciy the U. S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the Fed eral District Court at Durham and remanded to it a suit brought by Negro ' students at North Carolina College in Durham. -This Circuit Court said that the lower court must grant the injunction sought by the Negroes to prohibit Uni versity officials from denying them admission to the UNC Law School. . . - A source close to the Legislature in Raleigh told us yester day that "the boys are pretty much ignoring Kerr and Spruill. I think they're just hopping on the old segregation band wagon for some free publicity." If that's the case, we're very happy, about it, and we hope the Legislature continues to ignore Spruill and Kerr. Whether the "Board of Trustees chooses to rule at its April 4th meeting that Negroes may enter the Medical, Dental and other graduate units not provided, for them elsewhere is beside the question. The federal government has ruled that the University must admit Negroes to the Law School. We will abide by that decision, and we believe all other true North Carolinians will. rC.H. It's Not Working Think the Honor System's working pretty well these days? Take another think it isn't. Most students at Carolina understand the Honor Svstem and think they are abiding by it. Only they don't stop to think often enough. When they walk into' a quiz and sit down, watch the professor leave the room, and start to work, the great majority of students at Carolina are repulsed by the idea of looking on someone else's paper or glancing at "crib sheets" tucked into pockets, cuffs, or where-have-you. But those same students are not so averse to copying a lab drawing outside of class, or retyping a law brief, changing just a few words here and there to avoid detection. Maybe those students really don't realize that they are violating the letter and the spirit of the Honor System when they do those things. What it will take to wipe this blot off the Honor System is a little instrospection and some self-discipline from the student body. If students become conscious of the fact that their copying of themes, law briefs, lab reports, and term papers are just as much Honor System violations as looking on someone else's paper during an exam, then the Honor System will begin to mean a lot more at Carolina. C.H. The Durham Sun Frank Graham's Job Speculation as to the exact meaning of former Senator Frank P. Graham's new post and the defined field of his -operations has been setlled to a degree. The first task placed before the persuasive North Carolinian is one difficult enough to tax all of his capabilities in the sphere of conciliation. As the Nation has wondered what Mr. Graham's relation ship, within the Department of Labor would be to the De fense Mobilizer, Charles E. Wi'lson, it develops, startlingly enough, that Mr. Wilson is one of the targets in the move. While Mr. Graham is defense manpower administrator within the Labor Department, Mr Wilson, of course, has the first and final word on manpower as the mobilization chief. It is revealed that Frank Graham has been called into ser vice as conciliator extraordinary; for Mr. Wilson, himself, is at odds with Labor or, to put it the other way, Labor is at odds with Mr. Wilson and such a situation, since it involves the high chief of 'the whole arrangement, assuredly calls for an emissary extraordinary. Actually, whether it was Mr. Tobin's idea or President Truman's, the selection of Frank Graham is something of a' master stroke. He is gentle enough and modest enough, yet commands sufficient respect and bears enough prestige to approach both the sensitive and proud Mr. Wilson and the equally volatile and angry leaders of Labor. If there is any person who can bring the two vital forces together in the Nation's 'time of crisis, Frank Graham is the man. A friend of mine named Mort King from George Washington University (he isn't really a friend of mine; I just steal his ( stuff now and then) told of a - party he went to the other night up in the nation's capital. "Very strange sort of party," Mort said. "Wasn't a starving painter or writer in the bunch. All healthy, satisfied-looking people." One guy there, Mort related, had a Parakeet named Morgan. Another person said there .were four different ways to speak Greek Historic Greek, Hellenistic Greek, Modern GreeK and some other kind which Mort forgot but which fits in between there somehow. There was one who said the more he went to college the more he realized how little he knew. A girl said how much she hated oleo, and another, fellow told how he had to lift up a blanket so the coroner could look at the bodies cf four people burned to death. The talk covered love, mar riage, Stalin and now good the cheese spread was with, potato ' chips. But the best thing about the "party was Morgan. "Morgan," his owner said, "is the only bald-headed Parakeet in existence. When he was two years old, Morgan was scalped by an affectionate dog we had also named Morgan (my sister thought Morgan was a nice name). He made a completely bare spot on the top of Morgan's head. "As you probably know," "le continued, "birds are very deli cate animals. The bare spot was drafty. Morgan caught cold and nearly died. After we cured the cold we had to figure out a way of keeping the bird's pate pro tected. "My girl friend knitted a lit tle cap but it wouldn't stay on. Every night Morgan would knock it off. He caught another cold and nearly died, again. "But we pulled him through. "We were getting tired of pulling Morgan through. "Then one day, in a fit of in spiration, I brought home a box of Dr. Scholl's corn plasters, the little round kind, and pasted one" on Morgan's dome. It covered the bald spot completely. Mor gan had a pink toupee. .. "Of course it didn't look as nice as the real feathers had looked. But it gave Morgan a distinguished air that became him greatly. An elder-states-manish scholarly look. We had pulled Morgan through for the last time, we hoped. "But the next week my sister was painting the room. The fumes got into the cage and be fore we knew it Morgan was Jead." "Huh?" Mort said. "Yes," the answer came tear fully (obviously the man had been drinking), "Morgan was dead." "How about the bird you got now?" Mort asked. "This 'is another, bird. We name them all Morgan. My sis ter thinks it's a nice name," "Oh," Mort said, terribly let down because he expected a moral or something. And before they knew it Morgan was dead. Just like that. Bop. Bald-headed, too. , . ; "I also have . .a' wriitwatch," the bird-lover went on. "It's , the enly sun-burned wristwatch I've ever seen. It happened that the watchmaker put a magnify- . ing glass on the face instead of a crystal and the sun came in and burned . it so badly I couldn't - read the numbers.. Looked just like toast." Fine party, though, Mort says. Not a starving painter or artist in the bunch. All healthy, nor mal people. Add letters we rever finished reading: U. S. SCHOOL OF MUSIC .225 Fifth Ave., New York 10 "Dear Friend: 1 "Are you getting the most out of life? - "Why do I ask? Well, it's because I have been thinking . ." All In A Day by Lewis Ripps This is the first in a series' of articles which is based upon a survey of 90 political science students. This survey was originated by Mr. Thomas Aiken and Mr. Gordon Cleveland and was carried on with the cooperation of several members of the' Political Science Department. It is indeed interesting to hote' the reaction of a fairly representative group df students to the problem of the admission of Negroes to graduate school. Of the 90 students polled 'in the survey, 25 would admit Negroes to grad uate school. . It is difficult for me to understand why such a problem should arise. There js only one dis tinction between the Negro and. the Caucasian. That is the color of the skin. .' The Negro may be just as intelligent, good looking, industrious, honorable, well-mannered and athletically inclined as a member of the Caucasian race and he can live on the same social level as the Caucasian. Therefore, the Negro shojuld not be denied the major factor in his social, moral, mental, and physical development. He should not be de nied the opportunities granted by a fair and equal education. It is even more difficult for me to understand why 65 of 90 students would not be in favor of admitting Negroes to the graduate schools. It is difficult for me to comprehend why any col lege student would hesitate to favor the admis sion of Negroes to the undergraduate school: A college student is thought to have a rea sonable amount of intelligence and is supposed to be the backbone of a movement towards more liberal, government. But nevertheless, the stu dents at Chapel Hill are innately backward when it'eomes to displaying any kind of liberal thought or action. I'm tired of hearing the cry that Negroes are afforded equal opportunities for a good educa tion at the schools set up for them by the State. I've been told too often that the process .of edu cating the Southerner to accept -the Negro r as his equal must be done in a slow, and 'cautious' manner, And I'm growing rather impatient wait ing for the South to accord the Negro his equa) rights as guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States. ' : . I've grown up in a city which does not 'accept' the Negro. The people 'accept' no one. The Negro is as much a part of the city's government, edu cation, and even culture as any other .person residing in the tdwn. I've gone through 12 years of school without even noticing the Negro. But nevertheless, he was there. He sat on either side of me in class, he went to the school ball games with me, he sat with me at the movie, and he shot the bull with myself and others in the high school soda parlor hangouts. There is no discrimination between races in my hometown and this I attribute to one thing. I attribute it to the fact that the Negro has been given the equal education and other human rights granted him by the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to our Constitution. As one of our earlier statesmen said, "The wealth of a nation is measured by its. capacity to educate its people." Our nation would be greatly enriched if it educated all of its people equally and justly. " -; On The Soap Box by Bob Selig Ignorant anti - Communists weaken cur side. I have been thinking more about ; that dis cussion that took place in Steele. ' I saw something there that reminded me of a thing I'd seen a long time ago, but I couldn't figure 'out what it was. Last weekend it came to me. It was some of those people who argued against Junius Scales' and Roberston without knowing, what they were talking about. They reminded me of a small boy I once knew-who cried ad though someone had hit hircv whenever a new food was placed in front of him. But when" asked why, he didn't know; he just cried. Princeton University did some' research a few years ago which! uncovered some appalling facts.jj Eighty three percent of adult Americans think that most Rus- sians are members of the Com-if munist Party. Seven out of nine Americans don't know that Russia produced most of the war j materials that the Red Army used during the last war. Sixty- three million adult Americans believe that all goods are public property in Russia, that a com plete communal system js in force. Sixty-lour percent think f that everyone is paid the same '.in Russia Finally, there are thirty-eigth million Americans of voting age who "don't know at all what kind of government Russia has." " ' Something is lacking; we ; don't know enough about our 't opponent. The logical place for us to learn about him is in the i universities. I for one would : suggest that: 1. All college students be to read the .Communist A Plug For Victory Park Editor: ' "-' . Veterans and other students with Wives and families and with out a high income are going to continue to come to the University. Will these students have to continue to live in trailers ad infinitum? My point is, Mr. Helguera-Seis, why is it not recognized that low rent - housing1 is a necessity? The new Medical Schopl is nearly finished. Is there low-rent housing contemplated to take care of its married students or will they move into the Trailer Court? When the Trailer Court and Victory Village were erected we looked forward to a time of security to the replacement of tem porary housing within the foreseeable future. Now we are forced to recognize that there is no security ahead. Home-building is out of reach for many of us. Victory Village is likely to be with us for a long time to come. Why can't its surroundings be landscaped, the coal piles housed, play areas cleared for children, cic, -etc.? Why can't more houses or apartments be built to replace the trailers and provide more much-needed moderate-rent housing? The houses in Victory Vil lage are comfortable and pleasant. If they are geing to be there ''for: a while' yet, , why cannot; the. general air of impermanenee be altered and' Victory Village beebme Victory Park?, ' ; .. : . " ' Emily Chapman Who's On First? Editor: For three years I have been attending baseball games at Emer son Field and I've had to put up with stupid decisions on the part of our "official scorer." I think it's time somebody made an effort to give the job to someone who knows a little more abut the game. Sunday morning I was reading the account of Saturday's gme with Boston University and was disgusted to read where "a bases empty homerun by Mike Corcoran gave Boston a 2-0 lead. . . In the first place the bases , weren't empty as second baseman Tucker of the Terriers was on first. In the second place Corcoran couldn't have been awarded a homerun or even a triple since a nice throw by rightfieldex Bud Wallace and a relay by first base man Henning erased Tucker at the plate. Corcoran did circle the bases and slide safely home to score about 10 feet behind Tucker. However, to be awarded a triple with a teammate on first, a batter must advance the base runner safely home to score! The scorer might conceivably have given Wallace an error on the play since hj dropped the ball but if he chose to give Corcoran a hit it should have been only a two-base hit and not a homerun. Let's have a little more efficiency in,the future. It's a great game but nobody around here seems to give it much consideration. ' Mickey Hey ward Election Day Responsibility Editor: : : Open, letter to all students: - ' April 12th- Election Day! To many on campus this will be like any other Thursday at Carolina. They might notice a few extrd signs around withvVaguely familiar names and faces on them, and, if they get the urge and have a spare ounce of energy, they might amble, over arid play, a guessing game with a ballot. After they've-made several interesting marks beside any old names they'll df op it in the box, heave a sigh of relief, and then forget about thewhole' regrettably Incident. Some oh campus will com pletely ignore ' their privilege to vote, while others will be forced by political factions to cast their ballots against their will and better Judgement for the ."best" guys running. ' Yes, the -tittle picture I've sketched above of Election Day will be, s it has been , in the past, a reality on April 12 if each and ' every student at : this University does not wake up to the fact how, that it is their duty, as a member of the student body, to ..have a keen interest in the working of student government and to vote intelligently for the people they personally feel most capable . to lead them in all branchesexecutive, judicial, and legislative. Here at Carolina, stuaent government gives each student an equal opportunity to, gain invaluable experience in the political workings of our campus community a small-scale United States government at its best. , , It. is ,oniy by . setting up and working in a good governmental organization .here, that will enable us as citizens to help make our national government' as clean arid good. We can only accomplish this; by" active interest here, and right now! All of us ai t- rcspon- . sible for, the ultimate success or failure of student government. Vote', intelligently' on ..April 12 Who knows, maybe you'll be seeking a position in stvident government next year. You can, you know, ',if you're Iriterested. in making it your government! '' .-''- ' ., 'v. ". -.':;. -' 1 . Jane E. Jenkins M'mn m mi i ii ii i m t ii m r i . m i m n i 'nm mil miia ,rn a ,y il'made Manifesto before being awarded ; j a diploma, that they be tested : ton it for memorization and un derstanding. 2. That a course in the theory of Cbmmunism and its applica tion in Russia be made manda tory for a B.A. or B.S. degree in this country. In this way, it would be assured that afleast a large minority of Americans would know something about our greatest antagonist. If more people of this country had a good knowledge of Russia and of Communism, we would have a bbtter chance than we now do of preventing a full scale war. And if war did eonte well Adolph Hitler discov ered that it is a pretty poor idea for a country to go to war with out knowing its enemy. The cost of knowing for Germany was paid in dead soldiers whose ' . bodies were heaped high outside the walls of Leningrad and Sta lingrad. Surlely 4here are eas ier, cheaper ways of getting to , know our enemy. Atppss.'i.V', 1. .FiiiK..TjloiBijriin - ." 4.' lion n7 "-',' settlement 12. Tiny 13. An Knslish qun 14. Operatic olo 15. Postur 17. Sodium chloride IS. Uncommon 19. Thick 20. Patron saint of sailors It. Diara 2. Cuts of mt 27. 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