THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25. 1956 Page TWO “What’ll I Do Now Cackle Or Crow?” Southern Pines North Carolina “In taking over The Pilot no changes are contemplated. We will try to keep this a good pii we”m to to a Uttle money tor .11 »noem.d ^ an occasion to use our influence for the public good we will try to do ^t. And treat everybody alike.”—James Boyd, May 23, 1941. — Tarheel Writing: Rich and Varied Fare —•r.AVY'ifU'lro'hIo nnmVtPr < A wonderful service to the people of the state has been provided by the University of North Carolina Press which has published a booklet listing “One Hundred Outstanding Books About North Carolina.” Richard Walser and Hugh T. Lefler, who compiled the list, have chosen volumes from many publishers in the fields of history, biog raphy and letters, folklore, fiction and short stories, drama, poetry, books for boys and girls and others. The list includes only vol umes in print and available through book stores. It is being sent to some 20,000 Tarheels and is available free upon request to Box 510, Chapel Hill. The subject of the list is described by the Press as: “North Carolina past and present. North Carolina as it appears in fiction and in fact. North Carolina as a physical reality and a state of mind on a spiritual striving. North Carolina in all its variety. . .” It is interesting, in going over the list, to see what a remarkable number of the writers have some connection with the Sandhills, by having lived here, having visited here or through other associations. Many of these books have been reviewed or otherwise noted in The Pilot at various times. Some of the books are known to almost any literate person. Others, not so well known, promise many hours of good reading to everyone interested in the state and its people. The book list strongly re-emphasizes some thing that is already-weU recoghized: the richness, the variety, the sheer interest and enthusiasm of North Carolina writing. So much writing can only mean that the intellectual and spiritual climate, or whatever you might call the pervading atmosphere that inspires and encourages such work, is favor able for creative endeavor in this state. This is a something of which all North Carolinians can be proud. 0/// iw S' The Klan Malignancy Can’t Be Ignored the 663 -SP According to newspaper accounts, a large part of the crowd of 400 to 500 persons who attended a Ku Klux Klan rally in Robeson County last week were “curiosity seekers”— yet it is an ominous sign, in our opinion, when the absurdly garbed leaders of this thorough ly discredited organization can draw any where near that many Tarheels to any kind of a show they undertake to stage. The recent meeting, we are informed, stressed the alleged religious interest of the organization, producing as One of the speakers “our minister.” Yet, since the leopard cannot change its spots, the race issue was intro duced in its most inflammatory “racial pur ity” aspect, while newspapers, as might be expected from an organization that fears the cold truth, were lambasted as “smear sheets.” As usual, the leaders of the group declined to reveal their names—an infallible bign, in any undertaking, that there is more monkey- business than legitimate effort in the project. Leaders of this new “non-violent” organiza tion may indeed not now be flogging hapless victims in the dead of night, but their orien tation—^the intolerance and hatred that is im plicit in all their notions—inevitably leads to such incidents. The Klan, new or old, is rooted in hatred and fear and it can sow no other seed. Its menace is not what happens at such meetings as the one last week but rather from the fires it fans in limited minds and frustrated per sonalities. Intimidation and violence are the result, once the seeds are sown. How the meeting affected those 400 to 500 “curiosity seekers” is an unknown matter, but it is a safe assumption that the nonsense - spoken at the Klan rally must have fallen on a few—and we’d guess more than a few— sympathetic ears. What happens next remains to be seen, but no Klan rally, if only of a dozen persons, can be taken lightly by people of good will. A malignancy of whatever nature can’t be ig nored. VOCATIONAL vs. CULTURAL COURSES What Is Task Of High Schools? The Outlook Serves Its Community On the occasion of its 60th anniversary, cele brated last week, the Pinehurst Outlook pro duced a 28-page special edition in which the progress of both the newspaper and its home community are interestingly recorded. We congratulate the Outlook on its special edition—an undertaking that we know from experience to be a taxing task in any weekly shop. All newspapers and all communities need and should have such milestone markers as this 60th anniversary edition. Both a news paper and a town become so engrossed in the business of each day or week, so much con cerned with daily events and problems, that they tend not to look at themselves in per spective. It is startling, when there have been mark ed developments—as there have been in The Outlook and in Pinehurst—to realize the ex tent of progress and the changes wrought by the years. A town and a newspaper without back ground and history have hardly any existence at all. It is only when their varied background and eventful history are recalled that we can see them in their full significance. Such efforts as those made by the Outlook on the occasion of its anniversary are among the most important services a newspaper can perform for its community, because they in terpret the town to its residents and to all who read the paper. Past years live again and those who know little or nothing of the town’s history find themselves seeing their community with freshly informed and en lightened eyes.- Police Resignations As was brought out at the recent observ ance of Police Chief C. E. Newton’s 25th year of law enforcement work in Southern Pines, this community has a notably good police de partment. The department is modern in administra tion and technical equipment. Its chief is competent and is respected by officers Of his own and other police departments. Yet— res ignations by police officers are relatively fre quent. Without checking the records for accu racy, we’d say such registrations have amount ed to about eight in the past four years, an average of two per year. That seems high. Some resignations may take place because an officer tires of police work, finding after several months in the job that he does not want to make it a career. The .reason most often given by those who have resigned is that they can make more elsewhere, either as a member of another police department or in another occupation. Despite the record of resignations, it is a fact that police service in Southern Pines is considerably more attractive than it was four years ago, both in salary and working hours. The council and manager have made sincere efforts to make improvements in all aspects of local law enforcement work. The depart ment has good officers and a number with several years’ service. But apparently there is room for still more improvement. Small town police work has for many years been one of the poorest paid occupations— and small towns everywhere- have paid the penalty both in the quality of service they have received and in frequent turnover of personnel. An unrealistic attitude toward law enforce ment is almost a national failing, on the small town level. Contrast Great Britain’s superb system, of academy-trained constables and Indicate Problem officers who vie for the privilege of police service all over the nation through a tough coiuse of instruction that approaches college work in its scholastic requirements. There is a totally different approach to the job over there. The result is that even a small town officer is wonderfully trained in a central na tional academy—and, moreover, is universal ly respected. Small towns in the United States are com ing around to a point of view that sees police departments as much more than a place to save money that is spent elsewhere in the municipal budget. The improvements made in the Southern Pines police department are recognized and appreciated. But we urge the council not to stand still on continuing to raise salaries and standards and provide .better working condi tions. A police department that will hold men, through loyalty and incentive, over long periods of years, should be the aim. It should be possible here. THEY'RE SAYING Hiunor In The Campaign By LOUIS GRAVES In The Chapel Hill Weekly It is my observation that the Democrats do better than the Republicans in the way of hu mor. Here is a remark that, for campaign humor, is surpassed by none I have heard or read in a long time. And before I .quote it let me remind you that the opinion it reflects, the side it is on, has nothing to do with my admiration for it. The humor of it is all that I am extolling. Thomas D’Alesandro, mayor of Baltimore, was speaking, and he said: “My great fear is that Sherman Adams will die and Eisenhower will become President.” (From The Central Carolinian at SanfordI] We noted over the past week -end a report on a survey made among recent high school grad uates who did not attend college,. The object of this survey was of course to determine what these recent high school students felt were the strong and weak points of their high school training. It was interesting that most of these young people in their early twenties felt that schools had been lacking in the realm of yocational-type train ing. All seemed to be of the opin ion that they should have had access to more information which would have been of some definite value to them in the hard and tricky business of mak ing a living. Another report released re cently took entirely a different tack on the problem of high school curriculum. More mature adults, questioned in this partic- lar poll, felt that secondary schools needed to place even more emphasis on the so-called “cultural” subjects — languages history, the arts, literature, qtc. Two Extremes Here we have perhaps the two extremes. The youngster just out of high school with no hope or intention of going to college nat urally wants to be able to get a top-paying job in a hurry. Many of them marry yoimg, some even before they finish high school and they are quickly saddled with the responsibilities of a family. There is little wonder that these persons feel that their high school training should have given them better equipment for making a good living. A good liv ing is their big need at that par ticular time in their lives. On the other hand, the more mature, say the middle aged or older adult, has long since gone through the struggle to make a place for himself in the business world. By middle age or slightly thereafter these' people have either reached a peak which gives them a very tidy income or they are doomed forever to whatever niche they happen to be occupying. At this pmnt in their lives then, they are looking not so much for a way of making a living as they are for a way to enjoy living. And for some of them ir has proved a difficult problem. Face A Dilemma The sad part of the whole di lemma is that many of these same young persons who are to day bemoaning the sad deficien- cv of vocational training m the public schools will in a decade or so' be protesting as loudly that they did not receive enough foundation in the inore “cultur al” subjects while they were m high school. Many of them will make a way for themselves to financial success but will receiw little pleasure or enjoyment from itheir comfortable situation be cau^e they will never have gain ed the depth of appreciation for some of the things which make life really enjoyable. Perhaps it’s a little old fash ioned in this day and time, but we still hold to the theory that there is much merit in the more classical studies which were re quired in schools a generation ago. There is of course the argu ment that a foreign language, say Latin, is of little use to any one studying it in school these days unless he intends to pursue scholarship throughout his life time. Perhaps that is true. There is also the classical argument in favor of the study of Latin—or mathematics—that the study of these subjects is excellent disci pline. This argument has been scoffed at time and again. (We know, when we were toiling through conjugations and declen sions we thought this was an aw ful poor route to discipline, or to anywhere for that matter.) But it is nevertheless a very worth while argument. Perhaps some of the folks who are bemoaning the absence of vocational train ing would be getting ahead a lit tle faster if they were a little better able to discipline them selves, or to accept discipline from others. There is, after all is said and done, still no easy route to suc cess in the business world or in any career. And while the days of Horatio Alger seem gone for ever, the precepts of hard work and honesty which were woven through his- stories are still valid ones. The road to success can no longer be taken in tremendous strides as Alger’s heroes trod it. It is a slower, more tedious jour ney. For that reason, if for no other, discipline and the latent ability to enjoy the finer things of life are actually more impor tant today than they were years ago. Vocational training is a won derful thing, in moderation. But let’s keep a close watch on our schools, lest they turn out secre taries who can’t conduct an intel ligent conversation or machinists who could never read a line Ot poetry. The few cents an hour more on their wages won t really be worth it to them in the long run. They’ll be the first to find it out and curse us for our fail ures. Crains of Sand Reported Raid There’s been a reported run on the store that is selling those paperweights we were talking about. The ones that are a hard block of lucite with the statue of a donkey—OR elephant—imbed ded in it. Seems there’s a rumor Ike may be going to Princeton to make a speech and the Tigers are getting ready for him. Can’t be outdone by Buckley Yaleites and a few rotten toma toes. Who'll Write This Play? GRAINS views with an amus ed and sometimes rebellious eye the specializations and complica tions that form so dominating a factor in modern life: the involv ed rigmarole of the unswerving objective viewpoint, the kind of attitude in which people are called “personnel.” Among the dryest of the dri^ “releases” that flood newspaper offices are the notations of Civil Service and Merit System jobs which are open over the state. _ The esteemed Merit System^— which has certainly been a good thing for the State, in that it fills hundreds of State jobs by exaffir ination rather than by political appointment—gives in a recent release a long list of occupations in which examinations are to be given (nursing, bacteriologist, sanitarian, psychologist etc.), con cluding some 20 occupations with: bedding inspector, film serviceman, public health inves tigator and puppeteer. A frivolous mind like that of GRAINS cannot but subject such a list to some exercise of fancy, and we find ourselves casting in our imagination a little play in which the characters are a Bed ding Inspector, a Film Service man, a Public Health Investiga tor and a Puppeteer. It might add interest to the drama to include in the cast a psychiatric social worker (also appearing on the job list) whose duty it would be to encourage a balanced and healthy outlook among the rest of the motley crew. It would be advisable for one of the cast to be female. Our choice for this role would be the puppeteer. Fascinating? We invite readers to compose outlines of their own for a short play involving these characters. At least, we’ll bet, the characters don’t turn out to act like “personnel” They certainly don’t in the attempts (whmh we shall permit to go unpublished) that we have made. FROM WALTER LIPPMAN'S COLUMN WHY THE DEMOCRATIC UPSURGE? The Democrats have in this century become the agente for bringing our public policy and institutions abreast of the chang ing times. There have been, as it were, two political cycles, each with a period of innovation followed by a period of correction and consolidation. , ^ In the innovation phases the country has turned to the Demo crats, as with Wilson and with Frankliri Roosevelt. In the cot- recting and consolidating phase, the country has turned to the Republicans, as with Coolidge and Eisenhower. , There isi substantial evidence, I believe, for thinking that for the third time in this century the country is coming into an inno vating phase. This is, I submit, the reason for the extraordinary upsurge of the Democrats at the grassroots. The new phase is caused once again by the country’s need to bring its policies and measures abrteast of the times. ‘Old Plantation Mentality* Seen In Hodges Remarks (From Chapel Hill News Leader) The Greensboro Daily News speaks of a recent remark on the racial issue by Governor Hodges as a “faux pas.” But it was much worse than that. It was a revelation of the Old Plantation mentality, which held Negroes (known only as serv ants) in some contempt. When the Governor last spoke at Chapel Hill he was asked what his answer would be to those who criticized the absence of a Negro member on the Pearsall Committee. He said he had seri ously considered such an ^^ap pointment, but based on his ^ ex perience with Negroes,” he didn’t “think they could stand up under the pressure and get the job done.” What would the Governor say about the seven State-supported colleges and institutions which are headed by Negroes, and which are efficiently operated? What would he say about the Negro insurance companies and other commercial concerns who are solidly Negro in ownership and operation? What would he say about the thousands of Negro school teachers who are doing an effective work under all sorts of conditions? Would he deem none of these fit to serve on a Pearsall or other committee, so that they could give the dominant white mem bership some needed information about Negro hopes and Negro points of view? - We don’t consider these unjus tified remarks by the Governor as malicious or intentionally con temptuous. They are merely old- fashioned and dated. They be long to an era now expiring. If any more Pearsall or si^lar committees are to be appointed, they must, in fairness and in de votion to democratic teachings, contain Negroes because Negroes are citizens, because their rights are affected, and because they are human beings. International Note The British have a new gar ment to offer this year. They call it a “buffer-coat.” For wearing in the buffer zone, doubtless. Two Races Two Sandhills horses came in first in the races at Belmont Park last week Tuesday. But. one of them was listed last. "Why? Because, though the horse came in, the rider didnT. This one was Mrs. Vernon G. Cardy’s Square Dance II, second to the favorite in the betting. His rider flew off at the fourth jump when his mount dove through a brush hurdle. The horse kept his feet and ran the entire course, taking every jump along with the leaders and was first over the finish line, with the crowd cheering. Only, the Cardys must have been pretty sick. The winner walked off with a cool' $11,925. (His rider stayed on.) The one who won and did win was Mrs. L. P. Tate’s Jean Bap tiste, who has run here and won in the Stoneybrook race meet several times. But worse luck, this was a less valuable race: only $2,925 to the winning Tates. Only! Shall We Walk? Then there’s the one about the two fleas who had been to the theatre. Leaving, one said to the other, -‘Well, shall we walk—or take a dog?” The PILOT Published Every Thursday by THE PILOT. Incorporated Southern Pines, North Carolina 1941 JAMES BOYD—1344 Katharine Boyd Editor C. Benedict . Associate Editor Vance Derby News Editor Dan S. Ray Gen. Mgr. C. G. Council Advertising Mary Scott Newton Business Bessie Cameron Smith Society Composing Room Lochamy McLean, Dixie B. Ray, Michael Valen, Jasper Swearingen Thomas Mattocks. Subscription Rates: One Year $4. 6 mos. $2; 3 moa. $1 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C., as second, class mail matter m ■ — Member National Editorial Assn. and N. C. Press Assn.