PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1954 Toward The Community Of Man' (These are excerpts from a speech given by Dr. F. P. Graham, former UNC president last week at Woman's College in Greens boro. Editor.) ( The decision of the United Na tions to resist aggression in Ko rea, with its risk of the military disaster of a Dunkirk to avoid both the moral disaster of a Mu nich and the collapse of the U nited Nations, will increasingly become one of the great decisions of our time in the development of freedom as part of the devel opment toward the community of man and the community of faith. The boundaries and strug gles of the people of the little .Republic of Korea were widened by the soldiers of the United Na tions to include the horizons and issues of freedom in the world. The community of heroic spir its who, with their youthful lives, held the passes of freedom down the centuries and across the earth from Thermopylae to the hills of Korea, call for the spirit ual muster of the community of faith to re-enforce the moral pow er of the United Nations so that freedom will live through the co onpratinn of nations in Deace rather than the death of youth in w war. In order that the United Na-t lions in this divided and broken world develop through a com- munity of faith into a communi ty of man it is timely in a des Derate age that the peoples of if the earth, whether Hindus, Budd-i hists, Sikhs, Confucianists, Shin-lr-toists, Muslims, Parsees, Jews or Christians, should, as suggested fir i L l. ' i j . m"v-'f-'n lfl i"r "3'' '" 7" ""T!! IT" " f Til nn '"'fa. -- mmmmtmilmmmmmt THE UNITED NATIONS .under the shadow, a community of heroic spirits 5 N -. ft" DR. GRAHAM i in many lands, reassert much of the common spiritual heritage and ethnical faith against, totali tarian tyranny, outmoded colon ialism, national isolationism, ra cial domination and economic ex ploitation of any people. Toward the development of the community of man and the com munity of faith let us begin at home. As human beings may we grow in appreciation of all races and the spiritual aspirations of all peoples. The American people, in one of the fateful transitions of his tory, are being tested before the world as to the worthiness of their leadership of the West to ward the community of man and the community of faith. The bas ic relation of religion and races, the integrity, freedom and digni ty of individuals, the abundant enterprise and cooperation of creative groups for the general welfare are the dream and prom ise of life in America, now a stra tegic proving ground of the meaning and the destiny of free dom in the modern world. You have heard that the Unit ed Nations is a sounding board for propaganda and mainly a talking society. Yet it is only in the United Nations that the prop aganda and counter - propaganda rampant in the world have to run the gauntlet of surveys, cross-examinations, debates and the votes of 60 nations as the moral judgment of mankind. It is better that the delegates of 60 nations shout at each other in the forum of the world than that 60 million youth shoot at each other on the battlefields of the earth. Without appeasement of in justice and aggression and a gainst the acceptance of the in evitability of a third world war, we must re-enlist in the high adventure toward the community of man and the 'community of faith through a more effective cooperation of nations in a more adequate United Nations for more inclusive collective securi ty of freedom, justice and peace under the Fatherhood of one God and the brotherhood of all people. fCSt BnHv fttd Thespians, Hail! The official student publication of the Publi cations Board of the University of North Carolina, where it is published daily except Monday, examination and vaca tion periods and dur ing the official sum mer terms. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Chapel Hill, N. C, un der the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: mailed, $4 per year, $2.50 a semester; delivered, $6 a year, $3.50 a semester. i i i . Ixle of the Univerjty North (VirolwiA ibth first t Editor CHARLES RURAL T Managing Editor ROLFE NEILL Associate Editors CHUCK HAUSER, LOUIS KRAAR, ED YODER Sports Editor JOHN HUSSEY Business Manager AL SHORTT News Editor : Society Editor Asst. Sports Editor Circulation Manager Subscription Manager Advertising Manager Asst. Subscription Manager Asst Business Manager Jerry Reece Eleanor Saunders Dick Barkley Don Hogg Tom Witty Jack Stilwell Eugene Polk Tom Shores NEWS STAFF Fred Powledge, Ken Sanford, Tom Clark, Babbie Dilorio, Richard Thiele, Jennie Lynn, Dell Hoyle, James Wright, Benny Stewart, John Jackson, Warren Love, Charles Childs. EDITORIAL STAFF Bill O'Sullivan, John Beshara, John Taylor. SPORTS STAFF Larry Saunders, Ray Linker, Dave Connor, Charlie Blankenstein. BUSINESS STAFF Dick Sirkin, Betty Covington. PHOTO GRAPHER Cornell Wright. ARTIST Stan Smith. : Night editor for this issue: Rolfe Neill A group of visitors to Chapel Hill strolled along on the brick walk, beneath our window yesterday, enjoying the campus springtime and singing what seems to have been a fight song of Edneyville High School. Surely, you have noticed them too, the high school students from Edneyville and 39 other towns whom Chapel Hill has ab sorbed this week on the occasion of the gist I annual Carolina Dramatics Association Fest ival. We are glad to have them, for more reasons than one. Their presentations on the stage of the Playmakers Theatre are competent and enjoyable pieces of native drama, as you will see if you spend a couple of hours today or tomorrow watching them What's more, we suspect that a big per centage of the fight-song singers of yesterday afternoon will be voicing Hark the Sound next year or the year after. And we're glad the high school mob is in town, too, just because we like to see them having fun, taking pictures of each other beside the Old Well, and singing lustily and long of the glories of old Edneyville High. Inflated Daughters The Eisenhower Administration's dreams for a stabilized economy have taken another beating. The high cost "of living has finally aitected the family tree, according to the high priestesses of pedigree, the Daughters of the American Revolution. The DAR, meeting 1,000-strong in Washington, voted to increase the fee for investigating claims of descent from Revolutionary Warriors from $5 to $io. These arbiters of origin may well be init iating a new upward spiral in the vicious cyclone of inflation. It seems inevitable that the UDC the United Daughters of the Con federacywill soon hike its family tree fee, and shortly thereafter, the largest pedigree factory in the country will be forced to fol low suit, causing Fido's certificate of blue bloodedness to be raised in price by the American Kennel Club. Vli & - x .VV - vj-s'" in i k.v m a l a mm am o" ?,..'--y 'S,!vc uvwoi .rs iinnir- . ... :::. . v ..yx'-.vMQrr-.-. -mot- ..v.-.-.-.v.v.-..,i'- v.-.. :mamf.- a mw mmm -. m t - o - ITi.W - 3 I sf5 .VSf rv-" A, 55 -"ttillH i 1 L1J mi k II dt M7 0 " I I ft I II I rtr 'r:rnJUL UuJ 4 I 1 I I II tell rfl Sx, The magic cameras of CinemaScope go down, down perilous million-year-old razor-sharp cliffs into the blue-black kingdom of killer-shark, manta ray and giant octopus! The triumphant adventure of those who challenge the m last unknown for booty, for power, A for love! ROBERT TERRY GILBERT WAGU' M00EIE ROLAND wSfl J. CARROL NA1SH RICHARD BOONE ANGELA CLARKE PETER GRAVES JAY NOVEaO JACQUES AUBUCHON nooucto tr duecteo y wimw ROBERT BASSLER ROBERT D. WEBB A. I. BEZZERIDES FRIDAY SATURDAY Plus CinjbmaScope Short 'Tschaikowsky's Symphony" P Lrodaimdl" test t J:JI ,Avf The new 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-door sedan.. With 3 great seriei, Chevrolet offers Hie roost beautiful choice of models in its field. . . . and we know this is what you'll find Chevrolet is out ahead in powerful performance Chevrolet is out ahead in economy ' Year after year more people buy Chevrolet than any other carl You can easily tell the difference between engines when you drive and the difference is all in Chevrolet's favor! That's because Chevrolet's great engines deliver full horsepower where it counts on the road. What Chevrolet promises, Chevrolet delivers! There's new power, new performance and new economy in both 1954 Chevrolet engines the "Blue-Flame 125" in Powerglide models and the "Blue-Flame 115" in gearshift models. And they bring you the highest compression ratio of any leading low-priced car. That's why they can deliver a big gain in power, acceleration and all-around performance, along with important gasoline savings!: Your fesf car's ready now. . . We'll be glad to have you compare the smooth, quiet performance of this new Chevrolet with any other car in its field. Come in and put it through any kind of "proving ground" test you care to, and judge its performance for yourself. Your test car's ready now and we hope you are, too. SEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER FOR ALL YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS! Conveniently listed under "Automobiles" in your local classified telephone directory Old Fashion Fish and Chips Night at the Rathskeller 99c All You Can Eat 99c P O G TELL NOLI MY KlNP OP A eeem a aam was talkin' to a moth OUT TAX PROW-EMS -THE MOTH SAV5: THEM TAX& HIT5 Ale RIGHT, SA I LIVE -SOlJP iff HIM MLSfc. jEMW L- '"' '' , I TOP IV