PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL Kef duvet Chatming Indian reapers retort ' The .results- of -the:" "Minnesota Democratic primary raised mystery for Stevenson supporters and storm c louds for the Republicans. Senator Kefauver no ''longer has the lustre ol the big-time crime in vestigator. He has even doffed his Tennessee coonskin. What is the attraction about him as a political (Tiuliclate that would give him a victory margin of some 50,000 votes in his contest with Acllai Steven- -son? Is he; like William Jennings Iivan. the new man of the people,, with some lightning message in or- ator ' that strikes to the hearts of the voters? Hardlv. His oratory is flat, often stale, and while the Sen ator is plainly a man of principle and some icie s his speech-making will not lmld a-. ..candle to Steven son's. Is it a resplendent personality? Hardlv, again. Kefauver is affable enough in person, but standing in supposed conversation with him din ing his last visit to Raleigh, we. might as well" have stood to con verge with a cigar-store Indir n. We had the strange feeling that lie was thinking, either about nothing at all or about far-distant phenomena like flying saucers or the Dead Sea Scrolls. 'He stared over us. into the dis tance. Did that stance win him votes" in Minnesota? It hardly seems possible; but on the other hand, he assumes the glassy-eyed cigar-store Indian attitude often while talking to others lace to face. Did Minnesota Republicans cast their votes in the Democratic Pri mal y so as to upset their nemesis, Adlai Stevenson? Likely so. But un less the .swing was more massive than suspec ted, the Democrats act ually gave Kefauver part of his margin of victory. . Yes, we are mystified,, raid .with out a solution to this enigmatic: charmer's prowess. IWit the huge Democratic vote doe. not mystify us. Storm clouds gather even for the gods and we suspect there are Republican frowns along Pennsvlvania Avcn-ue. Ervin Vs. Marshall IN THIS DAY of mass communication and mzzs debating about racial seg regatioriwastounding things can happen to you -if-both sides of--the question en ter your living room. Almost every -evening debaters on this subject take aver my attention, men like Senator rSam Imn -Jr., -Thurgood Mar shall, Thomas R. Waring, and "others. It seems odd sometimes to find myslf tak ing discussants f a subject so long out lawed from polite Southern converation into my bedroom. But hardly a 'i night ."goes" by that I don't share my armchair or bed with one of these debaters. It's all very pro per, you see, because even the most fiery of the arguers is properly pressed in the pages of a perfectly legitimate magazine or newspaper. My latest visitors ;were Senator Ervin, a polite moderate on this question, and Thurgood .Marshall, chief counsel ' for the Nafiorial -Association for the ;Acf-s vancement of the Colored People, and some of the latter"? associates 4J THE NORTH Carolina senator is a calm, leasonable; nd -moderate ..propQ" nent of racial -s gregation, and of course Mr. Mar frail fie feading fcrce in Nro legal battles, against se gregation "Senator Ervin speaks from t:i - toit,someT family-aimed pages of ! Look magazine and gives "The Case for Segregation;?, Attorney Marshall is vrv idly reflected by Bernard Taper's lucid report brt "A 'Meeting In Atlanta" in New Yorker magazine. - Perhaps I-dozed off the other night after listening to the arguments' of Mar shall and Ervin, thought neither was dull. At any rate, I seem to have a run ning debate between the two gentlemen resounding through my mind. It goes something likethisT .. Senator Ervin: Social segregation based on race . is an actual condition and not a mere theory in the South. It is, indeed, recognized by the vast ma jority of Southerners, both white and Negro, as an acceptable way of life for both races. V" " Couhsel Marshall: You knew, you hear all this talk about the movement for the Ncgto's rights and desegregation be ing pushed by the North faster than the colored people down in the South want Thurgood Marshall's supposed to be maftei-minding this whole campaign, somehow, against the wishes of South ern Negroes, those millions of childlike, happy, easygoing colored folk - that's the way segregationists talk about Ne groes when they're not describing them as vicious, immoral and diseased who would be as contented as pie if agitators didn't come along and stir them up. That's funny, because our people in the S:uth'aie actually way ahead of us on The Daily Tar Heel The official student publication of the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina,4 where it is published daily except Monday and examination and vacation periods and summer terms. Entered as second class matter in the post office in Chapel Hill, N. C, under the Act of March 8. 187?. Subscription rates: mailed, $4 per year, $2.50 a se mester; delivered, $6 a year, $3.50 a se mester. Editors . LOUIS KRAAR. ED YODER Managing Editor,. CHARLIE JOHNSON Business Manager, BILL BOB PEEL Sports Editor. -WAYNE BISHOP Advertising Manager -Dick Sirkin Coed Editor --Peg Humphrey Subscription Manager- .Jim Chamblee Staff Artist :jL..Charlie Daniel EDITORIAL STAFF Bill O'Sullivan, Bill Jta-idale. Nisnr Editor :i Xurtis Gans this thing. . . Senator Ervin: (The Supreme Court) clearly implied that. "their -novel decision was based on this 'astounding constitu- tional philosophy: The Constitution au tomatically amends itself from time to time without any change in its wording and without any action by the Congress 'and the states as required by Article V; and the scope and times of the auto matic amendments are determinable by the Supreme Court alone. If this philo sophy prevails, the Constitution will be reduced to a worthless scrap of paper,, and the American system of government will perish, and the states 'and their ci tizens will become helpless subjects of. a judicial oligarchy. . Counsel Marshall: (After being asked what' the, NAACP. would; do if it found in the future that it won court decisions but couldn't get the'decisions put into effect) I . don't . know what we'd do. Thats something' ! I can't even contem plate. It would be anarchy. It would be the end of the country; I. can t imagine'. it coming to that. i , Senator Ervini . (Southern states) know that the f commingling of the races ,is alien to the way of life of Southern ers of both races. .They are satisfied that the children of both races will make the most satisfactory progress Tn the re laxed atmosphere of segregated schools. Counsel Marshall: It 99 colored chil dren out of 100 are diseased which ob vious they're not I believe that under this country's notion of justice you still have no light to penalize the 100th one for that. If 99 Negro children out of 100 should.be found to be stupid, that hundredth one still has a right to equal educational opportunities.' Senator Ervin: The interfering outsid ers) are leery about putting everything Negro leaders do not stop with denying Southerners freedom of thought and speech . .-..'it Counsel Marshall: Some (NAACP lead ers) and leeryabout putting everything they know on paper. And when they phone ' and hear clicking 'on the line all the time, they get leery about that, too. I can't blame them. It's not safe to be an NAACP leader in some parts of the South today. Senator Ervin: The most crucial prob lem confronting the South today is this: How can we obtain an opportunity to seek a sound solution for the South's racial problem in an atmosphere free from emotional tensions and mental misunderstandings? As one -who loves and understands Southerners of both ra ces, I believe that this atmosphere can best be obtained at this hour in a sys tem of voluntary school segregation. Such a system is sanctioned by Cae de-, cision of May 17, 1954. It would afford moderate Southerners of both races an opportunity to' solve, the South's racial problem in an atmosphere of good will, patience, and tolerance. This is the on ly way the problem can be solved. Counsel Marshall: (His reporter ex plains that a citizen of one of the Sou thern states might, in debate, with a Northerner, plead the caus of gradual ism and going slow 'in changing deep seated social customs, but he would run the risk of ostracism if he suggested in his home town that change should ever come. Then Marshall adds:) They don't mean go slow. They mean don't go. - . So the argument goes with no ap parent conclusion or victor yet. As long as the fight is verbal and le gal and doesn't involve the untruths of those who maintain that one race is inherently superior it seems a good thing. Both Senator Ervin and Counsel Mar shall deserve some attention; they both speak wisely and with apparent sincer ity. Low's Kraar. jBSHSI a. ssans or u d e n ii; -' o ve m sn Sense Varpeci ' "J! i L u.y 'u n aiiues "w, l 1, Focus 0fi I he Vei,,, By Pi Si Student politics on the campus has fallen and is continuing to fall to an all time low. Or at least this is the impression that a serious minded student should get from even a hasty reading of Tuesday's Daily Tar Heel. When the leaders of one party accuse the leaders. of the oppos ing, party of dirty politics and in the act of doing so use meth- v ods which in political circles are considered to be dirty politics, this can only mean that there", has been a gross. misunderstand ing of what is dirty and what is above-board by one . or both of the parties' leaders. As I continued to read the other political articles on" the front page I became convinced that the error is not in the or-. , ganizaticn or in any one of the parties of student government but rather lies in the philosophy which lies behind student govern ment here at Carolina. PRESENT TREND . I think ithat I can best illus trate what seems to be the pres ent trend by using another arti cle on the same page teeing of V the; University Party presidential candidate Jim Exum's plan to solve , what is tenderly referred to by politicians as the "Parking Problem." From reading the article I gather that Mr. Exum would, favor completely eliminat ing what little beauty and aes thetic appeal the campus has left in order to provide parking spac es for another hundred freshman cars. Surely nothing has less aesthe tic value than a lot filled with even the latest models of cars. I simply cannot even picture the grass " of the Forest Theater or. Kcnari Woods or Emerson Field' replaced with asphalt and the majestic pines, elms, and oaks of which Chapel: Hill boasts so proudly replaced with Buicks, ' "Cad'Hlacsand Thunderbirds.' Con-' struction. Companies could come in tomorrow and spread asphalt over the entire area; surrounded by Dr. Mitchell's walls .and this would do little more than solve the problem for perhaps one or two years. Then at the present rate the enrollment of the Uni versity is increasing the same problem would be with us in an even greater way in a short time. When I confronted one of the UP's top student, body office can didates with this problem he said that this did not worry him in the least that all he is in terested in is that the adminis tration does not limit student cars while he is still here and has a car. Such apathy! Is" this typical of the qualifications tha,t we as voting students are de manding of our so-called student leaders? As a member of the University party myself, it griev es me to think that this is' the kind of men we nominate to rep resent us ' in the highe'st offices of the student body. As their chief weapon against the restriction of student cars the leaders of our student body and the administration alike cite, the fact that we do not have class discrimination at Carolina and that this would segregate' fresh man 'and sophomores from jun iors and seniors. However, we do have discrimination on our campus. In order to hold a Uni versity scholarship a student can ynot own a car or belong to a social fraternity. Surely this is discrimination. However I am not saying that discrimination is nec essarily bad, even though this' is the present connotation that is giver to the word. Perhaps it would be better if freshman andv sophomores were denied.the use of cars in Chapel Hill. , If this .'were done I am surey that the "number of students who flunk out during their first tvyo years would be reduced considerably. Would this be bad? Then comes the argument that , there is, nothing to -do,-.; on the weekends. Must the students be rerr.'nded that this is a University and not a high school that the University is a community of persons who should bo devot ed to getting the knowledge .that is power in order that they may heal the wounds of their not-so-fortunate neighbor in an ..age that is staggering under the-pains of its own rapid growth. A, univer sity is not a country club. Surely our, student government leaders are suffering from a Avarped sense of values and an extreme case of near-sightedness. --It seems that student leaders are only interesied in trying" to see how many inches of space they, can fill with their varied extra curricular activities . under their names in the yearbook. . Never before have, we needed leaders who will unselfishly use their talents for the benefit of their neighbor because of love for him . and not for personal, glory, , On his campaign' poster a can didate may list "Student' Lcgisla turc"- among his qualifications. How many students ever question this and ask : how many bills the candidate introduced while a" member of the Legislature? Once the campus politician ' gets this extra pearl 01 his string, the ex . tra line in the yearbook, he is for the most part content to sit by and watch someone else in troduce the bills and because of party pressure and obligations vote "yea" if the bill is spon- . sored by his party and"nay""if sponsored by the opposing party. We as the student body need to see the distinct difference in po litical success and " qualities of leadership. ... " ' ' ' Surely if we could eoncievc of a new philosophy and' theory on which to build, our candidates would stop walking on egg: shells and would no longer; be .afraid to take a positive stand ..on. what they believe to be r the. answers to existing problems "for fear of losing the vote of some area of the 'campus. ; ' Student government is still wearing the same garment , mis takenly placed on it years ago. The size is too small, and the cloth has become threadbare. However our "student leaders", are continuing to sew patches of new cloth on the old and soon the new cloth and the old will be lost because the new cloth will cause the old to tear because, the new does not agree with the . old. ' ' ; Jackie Cooper . THE CAMEL'S BACK I V ; , WeV note with rising " spirits . 'that a New Hanover jury found th courage t; deny an estansed wife alimony, in face . of . her, somewhat irregular behavior.! The plaint of Joseph Meshaw," in case you missed it, was some-, tj'iing like "this: - ' : .. She stabbed 'him as he slept,' for his refusal to go out and buy . .her a hot dog; ;- She knocked him unconscious ': with a hot poker; - , - Smoked his cigars at a, party; . Went home with a clutch " of -Marines; , . Tried to run him down with an automobile " Staged a party while he was out of town, with lights out; Someone yanked a rug from under him as :he entered, and slashed him with a knife; She publicly clamored for a yonngsr husband; Their marital relations had been no more than formal and cursory for 25 years. We have one question for the jury, for guidance to , future Tar Heel couples-at-war: It was the cigars wasn't it, fellows? Greensboro Daily News TEACHING VS. PRACTICE But how can a job be dorfe, as all citizens expect it to be done, when a basic science pro fessor may retire after 31 years at a top salary of $6,900 and retirement income of $250 a month for the duration of his life only? This man twenty years ago was receiving $4,800. If that were extended to the present value of the dollar he should be receiving now about $12,000 at : the ' same salary rate, so this man has been receiving a reduc tion Jn income during the past twenty years. A professor of pathology receives an income after 28 years which is actually two fifths of the salary offered to two of his residents on the the completion of three years j)f training under him. Every year over the country several hundred able young men and Vomen, disposed and qualified for teaching and research choose to go ' into practice rather thart to accept -$2,400 or' $3,000 a year from college, augmented by $5,000 from grants, possibly, which are annually submitted by themselves. When a clinical pro-, fessor, for example, has to spend 75 per cent of his time in pri vate practice to make the dif ference between his basic salary and an income ceiling which is scarcely one third of that of at least ten of his part-time col leagues in the department. John Tnislow, M.D. 9ma ALi Raymond Mc!ev, Co . professor of political scipn "l ht v (across the street from (-",Ce at arsuzrt in favr r ,l . "'ir.' . 1 1 1 1 revision of thp , ... -turai Col gara lor this proposed to have merit there amendr arp if,4 . fessor Moley's discussion Z -' NEGATIVE ARGUMcWnich d. The first part of his argumeBl . being essentially argument a'ip(!ia: posals. Stated positively thev t; 1. The Mundt-CoudertP 0DaIe,aSk the Electoral College m - 2. It would not weaken pea. with too much democracy. 1 3. It would not encourage scntation and the breakdown Ytl ' tern. l"e h Professor Moley's ar2umnnf ervation of the Electoral Collet k?!; on on the one h direct popular electi LONELINESS AS A PENALTY By Edwin C' Palmer in The Torch , ln establishing citizenship in . the life community, man profits in many ways. He grows and .-. integrates his life by the in- -creasing, circumference, of his '. social responsibilities. Instead of . measuringthe uriiyorse;;lby. him-. -self n and making all . things in cluding his gods in his ovyn im age, he begins to measure him- , , self v by his universe. He vthus achieves a valuable - humility without being humbled, for .the universe lives in him. His satis faction in life issues in no small part from the wideness of his comradeship, from the inclusive ness of his inteiests, love, and understanding. Loneliness is a kind of social - illiteracy, an ignorance of the community that exists among all living things, a failure to . de-. PROOF First Hunter: "Say, John, where are you?" Second Hunter: "Right here." First Hunter: "Are you all right?" : : Seconds-Hunter: ,"Yes'."1! : First Hunter: .TTheir I've shot a deen" ' . :' 1 ' '' ". ' " ' ' -m ;;'' : : velop skill in communication .-with 'words' and iwithotiit words.; Loneliness 7i:ta. ; penalty" ' for tolerating inequalities,1 for har boring inferiority-superiority at titudes. r. Snobbishness can be found on both sides orth'e tracks and prevents fellcnvship'whcrp every , it ..exists. Loneliness is a protective pain, warning of a condition needing "correction; ! It is a benevolent toothache which, if heeded, saves the tooth. There is a cosmic maturity by which a man finds himself at home in every land. But the conquest of loneliness is more hopefully fou:t within the limits of our own horizons. Ref tQshin 9 To many laymen, the practice of hiring", football players for college or high school "amateur" teams just doesn't make1 sense: ' T.ie terms "paid players" and "amateur sports" contradict each other. If you have one, you can't have the other! . "' ' It was refreshing, therefore, to hear a sports lenthusiast a one-time college letter man and a former college fbofbalf coach tell members of the Franklin High School football squad just that. Dr. Quinn Constantz, of Western Carolina College, speaking last week at the annual Rotary banquet for the Franklin football ers, called the so-called "athletic scholarship" just what it is "a f ee ride". The Franklin (N.C.) Press " V Li'l Abner . ; ,-.-.- ..' ' : . ! ' Al Capp JifSjWjW. : H I v' J--.-r..:.',-.-.r.--:.' f7 vo mustn't V i i . : 1U .4 1... . , l"c "y Pan resemblin . , proposal providing for an appor",--' electoral vote in direct proportion T cast for each candidate. To conclude that granting the 1 porfonal representation misht be . election of the President commits: of proportional representation in Lj . ly sound. Were this principle to be representation in legislative assemble" jections might be validly raised. Fu" "peril" is' less even in this even v v.Jhiye a presidential rather than a p'-! 1 forni 'of government. Indeed it jk$a that combining the two methods oeler the , Lodge-Gossett proposal might gi s' benefit of both schemes of represent;:-.;.'' the defeats of t ie exclusive use of eA POPULAR ELECTION i Professor Moley, needlessly' it setr highly unlikely that popular election of i dent will find favor any time soon, dra;; son's argument against popular ekc:icL is quited as holding that our govern:; be deemed a national one; since its jurU; . ! tends to certain enumerated objects only to the several states a residuary and ; - . sovereignty over all other objects." The might be raised should the occasion a:-; . : President the head of the feceral system1 ! ment or of the central (or to use the t;n , the ' vationxil) component of the fedc al Even -if a proposal for the direct popular ' of the President be adopted so long as s r for : proportional representation in conrc:; s ; ' Congressional elections is not included k " ' necessarily follow t iat splinter parties?!, in the absence of the Electoral College Professor Moey's fears or those ofPre: ; hower who he cites. j POSITIVE ARGUMENTS On the positive side Professor Molcysr: under the Mundt-Coudert proposal: I -1.' The Electoral College would he : measurably "to its proper place in a::: form of government." 2. "It would keep in De moment of a President the Federal principle of a each of the basic unites of the nation-'!'"-. and the states." 3. It would "strengthen our systcst; sentative government because it wo'-u the importance of the Congressional preserving the interest that small their relative strength in the Senate . iu , . very popular in the South for it would . integrity of their states." 4. It would substantially alter the eq uation in whic.i New York places a tif ' ate role in' the election of President.--, MISUNDERSTOOD TERMS t J There has been much misundcrsar terms as "republic form of governmen resentati've government" for the mF-;-these have been looked upon much an appellation. Also there has been much C' serious students as to the exact ide -"federalism" to a Federal sU'nl- ' tion or otherwise to indicate, as seems to do, that either the Electoral federal system is necessary to a republican form of government. h;;; cither or both may be, is a distoi ' l. An attempt to extend the i? ' to "the districts and the states' tion but complicates constitution vond the realm of practicalhty as w , nf tne l-''- relation to the Consiuuuu - tinnal rpnrpsintative Ol inc. r EVERY THURSDAY IS "ALL YOU CAN EAT" SPAGHETTI AND MEAT-BALL "NIGHT AT THE RATHSKELLER POGO 1 ill Ail.. ITS TOO A fS' LStZ 7 usr - 1 By Walt Kelly 0J f:S32Z JNTi? CCHtme. A.iZ$r7 A MO &?ZAiNT MS JOS'- fik "IT A Pcwni icr - -, ' ' ssr". 4CK YQ'J ' 1 SffSKMUfi 11 C.iTl'1 J 1 Cnl I try 1 1 r Tlie President has long been con( , tional representative of the peooUrt representation is an inu0"" ? rf eVJ:r;: tern of representation. If an.vtnn:-;d existence of the "fderal PnnC'5' ished if the arrangement would , . In so far as the reduction 01 handful of voters in the state yn,:t: cerned, Professor Moley is correChj, leading, however, is in Sivin ' by a this power is necessarily w 'ieldth n,a; voters from a splinter party w votes one way or the other. s.x;- This powerful handful of ' ing to what it thinks it " ' l f S?V recipient of their votes, and intF S; but it does not matter members of a splinter party. 01 of t- :ou?- 13 . ies, or an organizea i"'- mliC5 a large percentage, perhaps a percent goes unrepresented " lge. t'U. It is, just this problem tha Mundt proposal sought to tackle. '. posal accomplishes the same F .?!;t:f.--a higher degree of safety ,nsul u,d r,0t; are concerned. The division v same in New York State undc r v but the weight of the state nal 'vfni:,-r. ' tion time and in the national considerably reduced.