THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1955 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE TWO OPEN In re Walk Pill t Bl F s There Is More To Life Than A Cadillac F.diuatioii, we have been saying of late, is more important in a university than em pirical train.ing for a business career. Our quarrel (vith the School' of Business Administration is that it does not allow stu dents sufficient breadth in their studies a maximum of six courses outside business and economics in, their last two years. And we have pointed out that America's most progressive businesses are seeing the light themselves. There has been full scale admission by business lately that there is more to life even to an executive's life than Cadillac. Now, comes the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania with the boldest scheme of all, a full-time, ten-month liberal arts course for business-drenched, humanities-starved young executives. Let "Time Magazine take it from here: The plan for the course began when Pennsyl vania Bell's President Wilfred Donnell Gillen de cided that something was lacking in the average rising-young businessman. For all his competence and specialized knowledge, Gillen felt, the young executive seemed to have neither the background nor the ability to make the sort of broad decisions that modern business demands ... In planning the curriculum, (it was) decided to make it not only as broad as possible, but as tough. Each morning, instead of reporting to the office, the students were plunged into a world of philosophy, literature, history and art. They took courses in logic, ethics, gulped down big doses of music, economics, architecture, studied some of the major concepts in the social and natural sci ences. Though their classwork was done mostly in sem inars, they heard lectures by such scholars as Anthropologist Carleton Coon, City Planner Lewis Mumford, Yale's Henri Peyre (who spoke on Rous seau's Confessions) , Brandeis University's Ludwig Lewisohn (Faust) . . . They visited the UN, the' museums of Washington, Philadelphia and New York; they attended a Quaker meeting, heard concerts by the Philadelphia Orchestra. They read everything irom Beardsley's Practical Logic to Crane Brinton's Idaas and Men. They stu died the Bible and the Bhagavad-Gita, proceeded to the Iliad, the plays of Sophocles and Shakes peare. Dante's lnjev.no, The Brothers Karamxzov, Remembrance of Things Past ... Each man got copies of all the books assigned, kept them as a nucleus for his private library. Among the changes, big and small, that the ten months brought: . A student from Minnesota who admits that he had a "kindof void" in the arts, has now become interested enough to subscribe to a print-of-the-month club and to buy some originals on his own. What did he hang on his walls before? Mirrors.' A student (who says) "I used to go home from the office, listen to my wife tell about her day, turn on the television and go to bed. If my new attitude sticks, it would be criminal to go back to the old way. I've found there is so damn much I want to know." Says another student: "I used to think there was nothing in life but earning money and looking Carolina Front 'That's Not The Way WelMan To Celebrate It, William' What Are The Objections To Brigadoons? Louis Kraar OPPONENTS TO the proposed Brigadoons say their main ob jection lies in the" financial obligation that the project, would bring for 2ach dorm. Brigadoons as you recall, is the Inter dormitorj Cduncil's plan for name band dances for dorm populace. The individual stu dent would pay for the dances. In other words, the IDC would be selling student dances. Under the present proposal, each dorm is responsible for selling 3 number of tickets equal to one-fourth its population. Thus, if Old West, for instance, didn't sell 25 per cent of its dwellers (or an equivalent num ber of outsiders) tickets to the dances, the dorm would have to fork over the difference. Where would the money from the dorms come? From each dorm's individual social fund. If the campus wants Briga doons, this reporter has no ob jections. But, at the same time, students should know what their financial obligations will be. IT'S HEARTENING to see the Men's Council do its job and make a report of cases tried to the paper. I'm not down on the keepers of the Honor System; but if they are elected to an office, they should do their job. Reporting cases to the paper on a regular basis is part of their job. Now that the Men's Council has made its report for last se mester, one would expect to see periodic reports on a regular basis as this semester progres ses. TWO RUFFIN dwellers have sent me "an epistle of apprecia tion," and I'm flattered beyond blushing. "B.K. (before Kraar) the ec onomic philosophy of the candy capitalists, at the Carolina The ater showed a definite propen- forward to a Cadillac. Now I ask myself what is ' sity to grind the faces of the right, rather than what should I do or what am poor," write Dick Jones and Joe I expected to do. There have been innumerable Sturdivant. times since leaving the institute when I've said Only thing is, Dick and Joe, to myself, 'You wouldn't have thought of that a I had nothing to do with the year ago'." candy prices. I like popcorn my- Bell Telephone, it should be emphasized, self. paid these men to study logic, literature and art because the company thought it was a INCIDENTAL INTELUGEN good investment. CE: "Pajamas are in order" at Consider, then, the situation: Students at Smith Dorm house meetings, ac the University are studying business to the cording to a poster in the par virtual exclusion of courses, which, at the lor- Nothing like casual gather- msistence and expense of business, are being taught to graduates like themselves. Perhaps if we were a corporation, instead of a University, the liberal arts might have a higher place in the esteem of the business school curriculum makers.. ings. The official student publication of the Publi cations Board of the University of North Carolina, where it u published ' jy f daily except Sunday, S r , Monday and examina- i !tte of thr iScuvrritv J m famirtrv summer terms. Entered .s second class matter at the post office in Chapel Hill, N. C, un der the Act of afarch 8, 1879., Subscription rates: mailed, $4 per fear, $2.50 a semester; delivered, $8 a year, $3.50 a semester. Editor CHARLES KURALT Managing Editor FRED POWLEDGE i Associate Editors LOUIS KRAAR, ED YODER j News Editor ..,. Jackie Goodman Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Subscription Manager : Assistant Business Manager Assistant Sports Editor Dick Sirkin Jim Kiley Jack Godley Bill Bob Peel Ray Linker Photographer Boyden Henley Society Editor . Eleanor Saunders NEWS STAFF Neil Bass, Ruth Dalten, Ed Myers, Woody Sears, Peggy Ballard, Sue Quinn Wm&! m---il--------A 1 ft ...s m::::::..-.3 j Continued: The Quarterly Controversy Business Manager TOM SHORES Sports Editor T B ERNIE WEISS Night editor for this issue -Eddie Crutchfield MONDAY NIGHT on campus is another of the many times when there is almost too much going on If one's inclinations are liter ary, Dr. Floyd Stovall's Humani ties Lecture would seem in or der. On the other hand, the Press Club will have Kenan Pro fessor Hugh Lefler talking on "Early North Carolina Newspa pers." And the Student Party will have the most knocked-out poli tical meeting of the year. They're picking a student body presiden tial candidate. AN INFORMANT swears he saw a coed on Franklin Street whose nose due to a cold, no doubt) was as red as her lip stick. All of which goes to prove, no doubt, that they're making lipstick lighter this year (or noses darker) or that my in formant is a good coed observer. BILL SANDERS is another good possibility for the Univers ity Party choice as a vice-presidential candidate. NEWS THAT a new club is being formed to discuss and cri ticize movies comes rather late. Organizers of the new club might do well to drop into any eating place on campus after the show lets out. They'll find plen ty of discussion and criticism. It's been going on for years, I'm told. Ed Yoder Mr. Bill Scarborough's article taking issue with my appraisal of the Carolina Quarterly has gently and dia m e t r i c a 1 ly thrown me off balance a top the Quar- s J terly s soapbox. measure, I grant without hesitation .that what Mr. Scar borough says can well be taken to heart by those (seemingly few) students and faculty mem bers on the campus who are still vitally concerned with the wel fare of the literary magazine. His letter, good-humored, yet serious and sound, raises in my mind a fundamental question: What is the proper relationship of a student critic to a student publication? Apparently, Mr. Scarborough and I differ rather Whitesides: 'Excellent7 The "Petites Muslcalea" se ries sponsored by the Graham Memorial Student Union which were so successfully launched in the previous semester were re sumed on Sunday. evening with a song recital by William White sides, tenor. Mr. Whitesides presented a varied and well chosen program of songs in four languages by John Dowland, J. S. Bach, Han del, Schubert, Hugo Wolf, Brahms, Ravel and Copland. He displayed a voice of beautiful quality which is evenly develop ed throughout most of its range, and his performance was char acterized by individuality of style and interpretation togeth er with excellent diction. This writer did not always agree, with. Mr. Whitesides' read ing of the German songs, par ticularly the two Schubert num bers taken from the cycle: "Die Schoene Muellerin" in which certain . indications in the dra matic content of both music and text were overlooked and which were taken too slowly to be fully effective. However, these minor deficiencies did not hinder the singer from completely delight ing his warm and responsive audience. At the piano Mr. Whitesides had the faithful and sympath etic cooperation of Mrs. Nor ma Weaver, who coped with the unsympathetic and well known obstinacies of the present Gra ham Memorial piano with un usual success. Lilian B. Cold diametrically (as he sfays) on that point. When does a student critic reach the maturity, the grasp and- insight,' the perch, from which he may largely con demn a publication edited by a , contemporary and classmate? AN 'APOLOGY' Mr. Scarborough is right. I am an apologist for the Carolina Quarterly. But I do not apolo gize in the common sense of the term. Mr. Scarborough will remember, as a sound scholar, that Plato's Apology for Socra tes was really a defense. Plato called that dialogue a defense, not because he felt that he was attempting to cover up an in adequacy or flaw in the char acter or behavior of Socrates: his motive, in fact, stemmed precisely from the other direc tion: He believed fundamental ly in the Tightness of Socrates' behavior and character; thus, in recording the actions and speech of- Socrates before the 300, he hesitated not one instant to call himself an apologist. By that token, if Plato was an "apologist" for Socjrates, I am an "apologist" for the Car olina Quarterly. I believe strong ly in the reorientation under taken in this year's Quarterly by Jim Dunn. In neither review, however, did I attempt to whitewash the Quarterly. My criticieri as to content have been very much the same as Mr. Scarborough's. I lave repeatedly objected to the paucity of articles (and good ones); I have expressed hesitations about Mr. Rivera's poetry selection; and I have time and again asked why the Quarterly contains insubstan tial representation of literary effort right here in Chapel Hill. COVER ORTHODOXY Even with those qualifications, I think the Quarterly has ac quitted itself well so far this year. The new cover designs, I think, add much to the attrac tiveness of the magazine, even though the art work on the re cent cover was decidedly third rate. Some, critics have a very intolerant attitude toward pic ture covers for literary maga zines. I don't;, and I feel that the heavy hand of orthodoxy and that alone stands between most literary quarterlies and more attractive covers. . I disagree just as heartily with Mr. Scarborough's sugges tion that (1) the editor must write within a restricted range or remain silent; (2) that the Quarterly is overridden with ju venilia; (3) .that contributions for "The Best Freshman Writ ing" should be judged on the same footing with other material. HELPING HAND - Here, I think, lies our basic point of divergence. "The Best Freshman Writing" section seems to me typical of the at titude Jim Dunn has taken with regard to the Quarterly. Last summer, I participated in a panel discussion with the North Carolina English Teach ers Association about the place of creative writing in colleges and universities. The conclusions on the part of all who spoke up coincided: It was broadly felt that college literary magazines neglect to encourage the young er writers, the "neophytes," one major reason being that stand ards are too high, awesome, and overbearing for even a very tal ented beginner to crack. Mr. Dunn, by introducing a valu able feature inviting their con tribution, has without doubt giv en heart to "some of the serious younger Ipotential. Finally, I don't believe the Quarterly falls anywhere near mediocrity. If the contents do not match up to ideal standards, it, I believe, is due to a short age of ideal contributions not as Mr. Scarborough suggests, to faulty administration, planning, and edition. A SERIOUS THREAT Is the campus producing first rate Quarterly material? This is the basic question and I'm not so sure I like the answer. In the three years since I have been a student here, I have gotten the impression that interest in serious writing in all publica tions has declined. In the area of article writ ing, where the most crucia' need exists, even the talented writers appear to be more in terested in writing on trivial, "light" topics; to be serious is to invite violent criticism and laughter. - It is tragic that the people like Mr. Scarborough and Mr. Dunn who possess a live inter est in the welfare of the Quar terly seem to be divided on its function. A serious threat im pends from outside the offices of the campus publications. Quarterlies languish unsold on the newsstands; groups who would wither were it not for the publicity and notice they get in publications yet attack poblications spitefully; charla tans and self-styled critics of the function of publications on campus make proposals for change which could come only from mountebanks. We had better hang together, as I think Benjamin Franklin once said, or we'll all hang separately. YOU Said It: Letter From Crossbones Crossroads (The following letter, headed "Crossbones Crossroads", teas written by Karl F. Knight, 29 Old East. Editor ) Dear Mr. Grimes. My fellow-American, I hope you- will pardon the tardiness of this epistle in response to your illustrious letter which was printed in The Daily Tar Heel. As seems to be the case with you, I am so far out in the pro vincial areas of Our Great State that it takes a right good while for news to filter in and out. Me and some of the boys, all good Hundred Percent Ameri cans, were talking about your fine letter and we thought it would be a good idea to let you know that we appreciate the good that you are trying to ac complish. The president of the Thurs day Night Billiards Club is our biggest manufacturer. Since he works most of the niggers in his mill, it seemed to us that he ought to have the most to say about how things should be run around here. We don't wear Black Shirts or Brown Shirts or anything like that. We believe that our white skin is enough of a symbol of our greatness and dignity. It has been a hard job keep ing our Gracious Southern Cul ture the way we want it. The only way to keep everything like the Good Lord intended is for us to stick together. We're in contact with some of the boys in South Africa. If you are in terested, we can give you some good addresses. They have a good system and they are always glad to pass along helpful informa tion. None of us fellows ever went to school at Chapel Hill. Don't you worry, though; we don't hold it against you. We can see what you are. We have heard lots of stories about how it is down there at that hotbed of Leftism. It's good to see that a strong minded and well - principled Southerner like you could stand up against it. Well, I guess you know where we stand. To paraphrase a Yan kee statement, "What's good for Crossbones Crossroads is good for the South." If you see Mr. Clark, give him our best wishes. John Q. Ostrichhead, Esq. Integration Would Be 'Disastrous' Editor: I have a few comments I'd like t0 make in reference to the article by Charles Dunn on the pro-segregation petition. Contrary to what be seems to imply, I have not been conceal ing my name frorn anyone and I make no apologies for my opin ions. Although we received some as sistance and advice on the peti tion from some other students whose names may not have been mentioned, we think a petition should be judged by its own merits rather than in terms of personalities. I myself took a very active part in circulating the petition and trying to con tact students to help us, just as I was approached. I am happy that I did it and would do it again. I don't see why my being from the North should make any dif ference. Just as there are Sou therners who are for and against segregation there are likewise folks up North who favor it and other Yankees who are opposed. Having witnessed the results of integration in New York, some of which are social interming ling and intermarriage of whiles and Negroes which occurs fre quently there, I think it would be disastrous for both races if the same were to happen here in the South, which is the place I am now living and hope to re main. . ' Bnnt Michael Bobrow Eye Of The Horse Roger Will Coe (The Horse see imperfectly, magnifying some things minimizing others. HipporoUs, circa oOJ B.C.)' M (The Horse sees imperfectly, magnifying some things, minimizing others. HipporoUs, circa 500 B. C.) '. THE HORSE was very ill . . . or very well or ganized, in an ABeCedarian way of speaking; either condition is homologous to the other in ap pearance, as well as in cost. ' All I am doing," The Horse replied indignantly to my concerned query, "is leaning against this tree and singing Old Man River, the all-time hit song from the Kern-Hammerstein opus, Show lioai." Well, why the beating of the sternum (breast bone, that is) with the hoofs ... the pain-wracked expression of what The Horse used for a face . . . the twisting of the equine hammerhead thissaway and thattaway . . . the intermittent flexing of the hind legs . . . the strangled moans issuing from The Horsely rubberlips? "First Steps in Acting, by Prof Sam Selden of Dramatic Art, tells how It is meet anJ fitting oris should accompany one's lines with appropriate ges tures to carry the import of one's feelings," The "Horse said in a stable manner. "I was singing, not groaning; and my gestures of accompaniment should be easy to interpolate." I had interpolatecf them as being inspired by a combination of delirium tremens, acute indiges tion, cardialgia, kidney s-pasms, buijrfly belly, housemaid's knee and general malaise. "Well, I haven't be rehearsed," The Horse shrug ged. "There is family tradiiion against it." A family tradition against being rehearsed? "One of my forebears was treacherously pressed into service to pull a hearse, once," The Horse re lated darkly, "and the family has always had a Tear one of us might again be similarly ill-used, might be rehearsed." Thus pun had me feeling ill . . . and no ABCe darian supply dump closer than Durham, a lamen table situation which the Chapel Hill P.-T.A. was trying to rectify. Or was it the WCTU? "You mean the Epworth League," The Horse corrected me. "But that's neither here nor the other place, wherever that is. I'm agog ovor seinjj Show Boat again." Oh? The Horse had seen it before? "Plural times," The Horse led me on a Torn Waldman 'Down Memory's Lane' tangent. "I was ar guing with myself only lawt night, was it Jules Bledsoe or Paul Robeson I saw playin the role of Joe and singing Old Man River the first time? I think it was Bledsoe, who left the cast to take the lead role in Porgy & Bess. David Small will play that part in the Carolina Playmakers produc tion, "And I hear Suzn Elliott's handling of the Julia part, played by Helen Morgan in the original, will have Carolina lasses sitting on their Pianos for a decade to come!" The Horse nostalgiahed. "Ahhh, Helen Morgan!" Didn't The Horse mean, Ahhhhh, Suzn Elliott) And I had heard no unchivalrous comment aneiu what Carolina lasses sat on, pianos or less imposing (in size) structures. "You will understand that two decades and more can effect the nuances with which one Ahhhhs an entertainer," The Horse suggested. "Armed ush ers prowled the aisles when us young Horses ex pressed our approvals, in those days, and more than once La Morgan slithered down from the pi ano to use it for an outpost defense." One trusted this would not be necessary again, since The Horse had a nefoo, one P. (for Prince ton) B. (for Burly) O'Horse hoofing about in the cast? "A smart gal like Suzn-Julie Elliott-Morgan will have my Nefoo carrying the piano," The Horse speculated, "instead of storming it. I recall Charles Winninger played Cap'n Andy, in the original, and if I get a name or four wrong, think nothing'of it and make your own corrections . . . silently. Also we gotta stop talking because you gotta get your ticket, Roger. Don't come complaining to me later iffn you can't get in. You -do beat your gums a lot, you know." I was speechless ... for once. So was Mr Wump But The Horse had something: Get yoir tickets noio for Show Boat, March 4, 5, or 6, at Abemathy Hall or at Ledbetter-Pickard's, in tmm. - ' Ike: Dilemma For Democrats Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON The hassle over taxes neatly lUustrates the hideous dilemma confronting th". fhaT urhaS,' thndi,emma is so "cmingjy insoluble tL 1 1 Den?OCIatiC leaders of the o"e and th u -7 fe abUt the-rewdest politicians in Thi HG1 StatGS' baff,ed' stated, and" diVWed The dilemma can be defined in a couple of quesUons: How are the Democrats to win b"ck the White House when it is seemingly political noiJon even to criticize the well-liked Pres doi what issues are Democratic Congres'Una candi- THE TWO SOLUTIONS conLmrOne S" the Eisenhower admaVon ZrillfoTT rich, casting the Democratic nartv in 7k the the defender of the "little Z '0,e of Democrats should be readv tn Ieah, th, it out with the President "P SlU5i Solution number two s To ."om'h- ariSCS' with the President concenUr direct .conflict ing up the Democt build ible and the Republican nartv " d a"d r-sPe-divided. As for ? defeat KseVrreSPnSi' ,e a" assumes he will run "Jalnf th (ev' r'bod-' problem for the DeS L' he may be. unojaate, whoever