FACE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL. TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1954 t The Decision Lines On Literature 'Nope We're Puffing On McCarthy And Cohn Instead' The Supreme Court vesteiday struck a mijhty blow in the American struggle for individual freedom and equality before the law. Southern schools, this University among them, must now face the truth-that "sepa rate but equal" is a meaningless phrase, that places of learning, if separated, are inherent ly unequal. We hold this one-like those other great truths declared in our Constitution-to be self-evident: It is lime to stop postponing brotherhood. This is a time for the turning of thought and opinion into wide, new chaii-' nels, a time for the yielding of old prejudices and ignorant discrimination before the pa tient and powerful light of Christianity. Even if ethics did not compel it, the in ternational position of the United States re quires us to enter this new day in Southern education .with resolution. We stand as. the champion of the free world, as the protec tor of the dignity of the minority, as men with inalienable and unassailable rights. This is lent special significance in a world in which the majority of people, by our standards, are colored. However, it would be erroneous and im moral to predicate doing the right thing up on the wrong reason; for the practical con siderations, important as they are, are none the less secondary. We hail the Supreme Court decision, not because it enhances our prestige in a troubled world, and not be cause it pleases a segment of professional Amid The Rumblings: A Quarterly Of Merit Palinuru: 'NO PLACE IN EDUCATION' . . .a gavel for discrimination equalizers, but because it is the right thing to do. South Carolina's Governor Byrnes and many like him in the South, many of them our friends and people we-love,. now stand eclipsed. Their South is gone, or it is going, and the bitterness and antagonism no long er seem very significant, though we do not deny that there is bitterness yet to be over come before perfect equality is achieved, ev en in North Carolina, even in Chapel Hill. It is simply that the path is now very clear indeed, and for the Southern states and the University, there is no other path, though we be emotionally reluctant at first to follow it. From whatever point you view it, the es sential equity of the Court's verdict is plain to see. That, we think, is a good test: the hu man test, how you feel about it. And we feel good. mlp Car ttl The official student publication of the Publi iations Board of the University of North Carolina, .- i 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 ia 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. The Spring Issue of the Caro lina Quarterly is the appropriate answer to the cry that the Quart erly should be abolished. It is both ironic and gratifying that Charlotte Davis & Co., have produced the best Quarterly in years just when' the first rum blings of abolition were heard. Absolutely no apologies are need ed for this issue. Before reviewing the present number, I want to survey briefly what Miss Davis and her staff have done for the Quarterly. It was just a little over a year ago that the magazine was in the depths of despair. Its end seemed certain. At lhat time DTII Editor Rolfe Neill and I, believing that the Quarterly could survive if it were free of the ivory-tower set, published the harsh 'Quo Varis' editorial stat ing that the staff should examine anew its original purpose. Then the ditorial board of the Quart erly appointed Charlotte Davis to take over the editorship. A marked changed was noticeable in th eSpring issue. Then in the fall the upward pull con tinued. With the present num ber, the staff has attained the excellence that is expected of a Carolina literary magazine. The contents of the magazine . are neither overly-esteric nor vulgarly low-brow. They are, in the main, solid achievements. The big news in the Quarterly is the article on "The 1954 Fa culty Evaluation" by Thad Sey mour. Here is the article for which the whole campus has been waiting, faculty and stu dents alike. Yet it will be a pity if this article completely overshadows the three fine short stories in the magazine. The award story, "The Lost Beach," by Louise Hardeman is noteworthy for its polished style. It is a sensitive story that is long on character and full of realistic touches that come from a woman's about a young girl. alj contact with the truth he seeks . . . far from weakening us, our tolerance and respect for the multitude of human ideas and in stitutions is the very skeleton and fiber of any rights for the individual." It certainly is an ap- propria te article at this time. " Finally, there is also an ample serving of poetry, illustrations, and book reviews in the present Quarterly which helps to provide a galaneed and varied magazine. I think that now, one year lat er, one might ask again of the Quarterly, "Quo Vadis?" A mag azine such as this thrives only in an atmosphere of creativity and encouragement. WCUNC's Coraddi is consistently excellent because of the constant influence of people such as Randall Jarrell and Peter Taylor. Here at Caro lina there is now an indication that we can hope for a literary revival under the influence of Phillips Russell, Hugh Holman, and Jessie Rehder. Young talent seems to be appearing again J. A. C. Dunn; Joanna Scroggs (whose work is very good); Louis Kraar; Ed Yoder; and many oth ers on the freshman and sopho more levels. A hard-working staff will corral this talent just as Charlotte Davis has done this year. An ivory tower never pro duces an issue as good as this one it takes work. 11 es - - H9C utt"ro - Secretary Hobby Backs Down Carolina Front Drew Pearson writing P. r SjU- vi the ymvprsity ? ' Nolb t ir?ht which first otsentHl its iuot . in JUnuary 797 Editor CHARLES KURALT Managing Editor ROLFE NEILL Associate Editors LOUIS KRAAR, ED YODER Sports Editor - JO HUs"sEY Business Manager . AL SHORTT News Editor Society Editor Librarian Asst. Sports Editor Subscription Manager Advertising' Manager Asst. Subscription Manager Jerry Recce Eleanor Saunders ; Connie Marple Dick Barkley Tom Witty Jack Stilwell Eugene Polk NEWS STAFF Fred Powledge, Ken Sanford, Rich ard Thiele, Jennie Lynn, John Jackson, Babbie Dilorio, Charles Childs. . . In "Operation Ah-Choo," Vin Cassidy has produced a delight fully satiric story about a sneeze. Not since Richard Stern filled the pages-of the old Carolina Ma gazine with his satiric pieces have I heard anything quite as funny as this in a campus pub lication. Mr. Cassidy's humor calls attention to the great drought of genuinely good satire on the campus. Excellent as the above stories are, to me the real . "find" of the Quarterly is a young sopho more called J. A. C. Dunn. His "A Quanily Unknown"' reveals the most talent I have seen in an undergraduate since Charles Brockman was startling the cam pus. Dunn's story is a three stage glimpse into the life of a ma'-h teacher. In each stage there is a marvellous achievement of tone. In the first stage Mr. Babcock is young and cocky, and his stu dents, especially Mawson, are im pudent. In the second stage Bab cock is middle-aged and cynical while Mawson is quietly subdued. Finally, in the third stage Bab cock is old and nostalgic, and Mawson is confident and grate ful. This is a story with much laughter and more truth; it is a story that disturbed me greatly, one that I shall read again and again. The insight and maturity of Dunn are great for one so young. I shall watch with inter est the future of this young new writer on our campus. In addition, Hamilton Horton, Jr., has written a surprising ar ticle defending the liberal and the individual. Although his piece, "American Freedom and Faith," begins a bit like a pon derous oration, it gets down to cases at the end with such per tinent observations as "it is no less obvious that the American search for a faith is falling into a dangerous pit of dogmatism, and that if the average citizen does not learn to respect a ques tioning and criticizing of his inr WASHINGTON There has been a backstage hassle inside the Administration over the bad ly needed Federal program to promote construction of new schools. Sam Brownell, Commissioner of Education and brother of Attorney-General Brownell, is for the school-construction bill, but he's been stopped dead in his tracks largely by the baby member of the Eisenhower subcabinet, 27-year-old Assistant Secretary of Health, Eaucatiori and Welfare, Roswell Perkins. .Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, Secretary for HEW, is also against the school bill. However, it looks as if the Senate would pass the bill any way. Here is what has happened: About three weeks ago, Secre tary Hobby testified before the Senate Labor and" Education Com mittee that she favored the prin ciple of school-building construc tion, but wanted further confer- J , 1- ' J ft 1 7V ' - V ; --in f-i ate , MRS. HOBBY ences before it was undertaken. Specifically she wanted one con ference in each of the 48 states, plus one big final conference at the White House. To this, Sen. Lister Hill of Ala bama, long-time champion of fed-. cral aid to schools, objected; "There have already been sev en national conferences on this question," he said in brief. "The conferences even began with the Hoover Administration. Seven million dollars have already, been spent on a school survey. Mean while our schools are more and more overcrowded. So it seems to me this is a time for action, not talk. The Eisenhower Ad ministration,'' said Hill, "made a specific pledge to help the schools, and this is the time to do it." Sen. John Cooper of Kentucky, Republican, agreed, and as a re sult the Seriate Committee went, ahead with hearings on a bill au thorizing federal aid to school construction. Sam Brownell Muzzled Lead-off ' witness at the hear ings was tr have been Education previously announced that there was a national shortage of 340, 000 classrooms. And his staff worked late at night preparing his testimony for the Senate Com mittee. But just before he was sched uled to testify, Brownell phoned Chairman Cooper to say he could not appear. He had received blunt orders from Mrs. Hobby that he could make no statement. Actually it was bright, eung Assistant Secretary Ros"e!l Per kins who was behind Mrs. Hob by's action. He had written a re port, which went to the Senate over Mrs. Hobby's signature, op posing federal aid for school con struction even though she had previously stated that there is a $5,000,000,000 backlog of school construction. The Senate Committee, how ever, is proceeding with the bill. Note President Eisenhower during the 1952 elections sa l' of school construction: "The Ameri can answer is to do in this field what we have been doing for a long time (with highway and hos pital construction)." A-Bombs In Asia? The Air Force is now prepared for a momentous step. Faced with growing Communist aggres sion in the Far East, the Air Force has notified the Wbite House that it is prepared to bomb any place in the world, including Indochina. Furthermore, there is growing sentiment inside the Air Force for the use of atomic bombs in Indochina. These two capabilities arc ex tremely i m p o r t a,n t because among other things, they repre sent a change in Air Force point of view. Hitherto, Gen. Nate Twining, Air Force Chief of Staff, had opposed Admiral Radford's recommendation that the Air Force be used in Indochina. And though still opposed, he has re ported that the Air Force is ready ' to act as outlined above. fThere have also been other changes in the viewpoints of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. And the Army, which is dead set against having an expeditionary force get bogged down in the Far Esst, new backs the idea of bombing opera tions and is willing to use land troops to protect air and naval bases. Reason for this change is sig nificant. It is induced by appar ent Communist determination to push ahead in Southeast Asia plus the realization that in two years Russia could meet the challenge of American air power. Today she can't. Kussia Advancing - Today the United States has a powerful-striking force of long range, B-47 jet bombers un matched by Russia. This is in ad dition to our high-flying B-3o turbo-jet bombers. As a result, atomic blows with the United States now. But two years from now she will be. She will ha-, e enough jet bombers and possibly an atomic stockpile as big as ours. The all-important question of whether atomic bombs should be used in the Far East now rests largely in the hands of the State Department. The armed services have given their okay. During the siege of Dienbien phu, the White House asked the Pentagon what could be done to break up the attack, to which th Navy and Air Force recommend ed dropping tactical A-bombs on the ring of Red guerrillas massed around the fortress. . This not only would have sved the fortress, but would have forced the .Chinese Communists to do one of two things: 1, Leave Indochina altogether; or 2, call on Russia for help.. The Air Force was willing to take the calculated risk that the Kremlin would avoid an atomic showdown with the United States at this time. State Deoartment Veto However, the State Department said No. It argued that 1. our Western Allies would desert us; 2, the huge populations of Asia would turn irrevocably against us. American hatred would sweep all Asia, the State Department argued. The Air Force replied thst the A-bomb is much more humn than the napalm fire jelly with which we have been splashing enemy troops in Korea and Inrio- Segregation Decision Is A Challenge Louis Kraar china. The State however, prevailed. Department, YOU Said It Poetic Letter Editor: T am T in this vast universe! Unique am I, for better or for worse! Forever and ever, my mind, in limitless measure Creates, and creates anew; such is its pleasure! My self, not full awake, is still in waking. My world, not given or made, is my own, in maKing; My lofty soul, my whole and sole control Has endless quest-conquest, its only goal! What if this life with sin and evil is fraught, What if is God in Heaven a know-not-what. What if the world of things is void and nought? NO ONE, including Universi ty officials, knew just what the Supreme Court's segregation de cision meant when it was first announced yesterday. The Court, it seems, has al lowed for a gradual switch. There are, unfortunately, still some of us who offer the same, hackneyed arguments against granting Negroes equal rights as guaranteed by the Constitution. Some say, "What about the argument that mixed schools will lead to violence?" And Caro lina's Dr. Guy B. Johnson, of the Department of Sociology, once answered this saying: "Anyone who thinks that the transition from segregation to racial co-education can be made without problems, tensions, and even personal tragedies is a fool. Anyone who thinks that the transition means the end of civ ilization is also a fool. The op eration may be serious, but the patient will recover. And when he recovers and looks back over his experience, he may say, 'Well, it wasn't half as bad as I thought it would be.' " Whatever the arguments a gainst granting Negroes equal educational rights (and the Court said yesterday that "sepa rate educational facilities are in herently unequal."), I hope that Carolina students and the rest of the South will accept the de cision with an effort to push a side outmoded prejudices. The Supreme Court's decision, it would seem, means that we have finally come of age and can now live and learn with each other here in the South without regard to the rather ar tificial barriers of race. At a time when we're striving so much for unity abroad, it seems a good thing that we've finally decided that America doesn't have any room for sec ond - class citizens particular ly in the classroom. CAMPUS CAFE looked like New York's 44th Street as the cast of "Dark of the Moon" pack ed into the long, narrow eating place Sunday night after the per formance. . Janet Carter, who played the female lead, and Leonard Btil- Sorry death may strike, but ends A lock sat at a back table looking me not, My self jet stands erect, and high, My boundless Spirit and I shall never die! both - tired and pleased. The play is really grand. Aft er two rain-buts in a row, "Dark of the Moon" opened under a full moon and with a full house 1 Dark Of The Moon' ' iNeeas a vveiaing uuw;i Ted Rosenthal Alter a tuo-dy boycott, the stars came to the, Forest Theatre Sunday night for "Dark of the! . Moon' ; but when the last witch bad flittered out t of sisht. beyond the crags of the Baldy Mountain j( set. perhaps they were sorry they'd changed their,' -minds. The Howard Richardson-William Bernry fant-i 1 as . if played sensitively, might have appeared a , ( good deal better than it did, but in the hands of Director William Long, it emerged as an unhappy union of over-extremes the too-phantasmal super ! j natural srqucn'.-o clashed discordantly with those j of the mountain folks, which in turn appeare.i improt.ablv sordid The overall effect was that of a duct hctwtcn a theremin and a rag-time trumpet and the result was cacaphony. "Dark of the Moon" is the story of a boy-witch who falls in love with a human girl; he persuade. , a mountain sorceress to change him into a man, and she does, but stipulates he mu.-t marry the girl, and she must remain faithful to him for a , year, or he will ;:gain become a witch. The bey descends into the valley, finds his love i Barbara, and liccause she had become pregnant after their first meeting, has no trouble in gaining . her parents' consent, although he is a stranger.- Because of his origin, the hoy is unable to enter a church this i rouses the suspicion of the com munity, and when Barbara gives birth to an in- -human creature, there is general agreement that'' he is a witch. Barbara speaks to her husband, learns his story, uid remains in love with him. j But on the evening of the allotted year, her -parents take the girl to a revival meeting. She is goaded into revealing the truth, and the hill peo- j pie, to end John's transformation, force her into ; intercourse with an ex-boyfriend, upon the floor 4 of the church. John returns to his former state, ' and Barbara, because of the jealousy of the witch- j girls who entice the boy throughout the play, j, loses her life. Daniel Reid. starred as John, gave too-frenzied ' a performance to be convincing: had he moderate.! (1 his efforts, the fantasy would have been more! compelling. V Janet Carter did much better as Barbara. Shf f displayed warmth and sincerity, and a contagious j , ' sympathy for 'he role. ' Marian Fitz-Sirr.ons delivered a good perform- v rnce as Mrs. Allen. Barbara's mother, and Leonarrtt f.ujloek was eapame as the lather, l.es i.asey actod well playing the Conjur Woman, as did Christian Moe as Preacher Haggler. Both Susanno Elliot and Mary Helen Crain, play ing witches, tended to exaggerate their voice treatments, but since over-stressing was so gen eral a flaw with the company, probably again the , director was at fault. I Donald Treat's settings were excellent. Jeanettc Pratt's makeup, Art Winsor's musical effects, Foster Filz-Simon's choreography, and John Tay lor's costumes were all well-handled, as were the 1 technical phases of the production. j1 In the last analysis, no matter what attributes ot plot, acting ability, and stage-craft are present, unless they are vclded into a firm structure, little worthy of praise can result. It is the director's ' responsibility to interpret the play and integrate t the performance into a consistent fluid entity. This was evidently not done with "Dark of the I Moon." and from that lack stem many of the short- j comings of the production. Treated with more per - ception, it might have been engaging and satisfy- ' ing, instead of indifferent and disappointing. Meet Kerr Scott Bob Byrd if t "V. The continual harping by the Lennon forces on i' the refusal of Kerr Scott to release, his income tax returns is just one more indication of the despera-' j tion to which the impending defeat of their candi- : j. , u;.,, wi,v 1'ivihln to find much tn I ' on hehalf of their own candidate, they have banked on a strategy of running down their chief opponent a strategy which is producing limited results, since Scott refuses to make a campaign for high public office into a bitter squabble over pseudo-issues of scant relevance to the fitness of the respective candidates to serve in the United States Senate. The reason why Scott decided not to make his' income tax returns public is simple. It is not that, he has anything to hide: his salary for the 16 years Jj he served as Commissioner oi Agriculture snf f Governor is a matter of public record. So are t'rf amounts he has teen paid for rights-of-way taken i ny tne Mate :or nignways duiu across ins janu. j But in addition to these sources of income, he also . carries on extensive farming and dairying opera tion.s, the tax returns for which are likely to be quite complex. i1 But Lennon could count on the average voter , of the State not knowing much tax law and could j expect them to fall for the allegation that the'J whole proceeds of the sale of land to the St at . I' should be repoiied as income, and that Scott was trying to beat the tax collector in not so reporting j it. But whv didn't Scott release his returns, andi then explain to the people the various details aboat' jt which Lennon might raise a curious eyebrow? n Because when the issue came up, there were only three weeks left in the campaign. Scott war.t-y ed to continue to talk, as he has talked to date, about the issues facing the Senate and the nation. J lie cousan t do that and also engage in long-winded quibbles about incomprehensible details of matters. So he chose to refuse to release his returns, even though he knew it would hurt hiai politically, in order to continue to discuss with th?, j voters of the State the issues which are really rele-j vant to the campaign. d ing Herald, a generally pro-Iennon paper, who re-, cently said of Ihe income tax "issue," "The candi-( dates . . . would render a greater service to the people if they would emphasize their stand on public issues rather than what they earned year. . . . The people need to know w hat the eandi-1 dale thinks about the critical problems now dedf : tr.x V5 1 0!U lasti andi-f