! WEDNESDAY, MARCH U, THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE TWO Spring Fipst Carolina Front Ft'ohf tonight il the time for the annual little pilgrimage to Hill Hall to hear Rob. ert Frost. There's an essay-"The Other Frost'-b? Woman's College's Randall Jarrell, perhaps the best of all coimmentators on Mr. Frost, that we especially! like. Mr. Frost, says Mr. Jarrell, is knowii to everybody who ever read any American poetry "the conservative editorialist and 'elf-made apothegm-joiner, full of dry wisdom1 and free complacent, Yan kee enterprise, tre Farmer-Poet this is an imposing private j role perfected for public use, a sort of OK'mpian Will Rogers out of Tanglewood Talqs." " But this, continues Mr. Jarrell, is only a tiny corner of tl Frost. Naturally, e real portrait of Robert klr. Tarrell. a ooet himself, - j f j - i knows a creat deal more about Frost than most of us do; and he maintains that the "Farmer-Poet" landle doesn't fit Frost at all. "These views! of Frost," it seems to him, "come either frohi not knowing his poems well enough or ' from knowing the wrong poems too well.'i I We agree; In any anthology, you'll come across "The Roail Not Taken" and "Mend ing Wall" good poems, of course, but not at all representative of Mr. Frost's world icv. The easy and cordial superficiality of "Road Not Taken" is eclipsed in works like "Design" and "Neither Out Far Nor In Deep" which cojivey a deep, almost terrify- 14 1 r r.l mg, ana .vrnoiaesque picture ot tne urn- verse. Mr. Frost, in short, is a poet who thinks and writes about man, the heart of man, and human life andj to a deeper degree than whether good ferjees do or do not make good neighbors. His annual visit here is always something to reckon with, many springs tor jand we trust it will be for come. Cliche Club It's a curious season, Amid the Frost visit, the baseball practice down at Emerson, the Graham Memorial cherry trees, comes a chilly rain moje like January than mid Ma icIk And to add to the confusion, there is the 60 point type on page one bearing the poli tical tidings. ! After several years of 60 point headlines, we find it possible to become a little cyni cal about the plaudits and promises and par liamentary procedure routine. t One could Iejam, for example, from yes terday's front page that one nominee was "tlie finest candidate in the finest party in the finest University in the finest state . 7 ." and had "a brilliant grasp of the world about him." One candidate piomised to be "responsi ble," another to "uphold the University's principles," another to "serve to the best of his ability," another to "try to do a good job if elected."! How well qualified is the candidate? "Em inently." What! will his campaign be like? "Clean and hard." What kind of support will he get? "Overwhelming." All is for the best, we suppose, in the most political of all possible milieus. But we're tempted to look around for a lazy, no-good, dishonest, unqualified rascal with a dull grasp of the world around him and cast our "overwhelming" one vote his way, just as a matter of "principle." p . The official -student publication of the Publi cations Board of the University of North Carolina, where it is published j .., c 1 f? I 7:1 f hr tvr i - tHji-iil jit fo&ti , in int.tfy :!ditor Even The Vets Of Politics . Are Surprised Louis Kraar EVEN THE old-timers in cam pus politics the graduate and 1 1 T- a w students who somehow ' keep a light finger in the ' j campus politi cal pot- were. Monday and examina tion and vacation per iods and summer terms. Entered t& second class matter at the post office in Chapel Hill, N. C, un der the Act of "arch 8, 1879. Subscription rates: mailed, $4 per fear, $2.50 a semester; delivered, $3 a year, $3.50 a semester. ' CHARLES KURALT -yu j j shaking their i heads yester- .day. 'A (Manning -iMuntzins's presidential hopes took on a new light with Don Fowler's filing as an independent. Ed McCurry, the University Party presiden tial candidate, was also worried Here's why Muntzing and Mc Curry were worried: First of all, Fowler will offer formidable opposition. He gave Muntzing a good race for the SP nomination, and many of the same supporters that he had in that SP meeting are enrolled on his petition. And, secondly, a run-off elec tion seems almost unavoidable. A majority of all votes Cast are required for the election of a candidate. With three candidates as well-known and as energetic in campaigning as Muntzing, McCurry, and Fowler, the stu dent body will be greatly di vided. That's why Muntzing and Mc Curry and their backers are not too happy about Fowler's candidacy. Managing Editor FRED POWLEDGB Associate Editors LOUIS KRAAR, ED YODER Business Manager TOM SHORES Sports Editor i News Editor Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Subscription Manager Assistant Business Manager Assistant Sports Editor Photographer . Society Editor B ERNIE WEISS Jackie Goodman Dick Sirkin. Jim Kiley Jack Godley Bill Bob Peel Ray Linker Boyden Henley Susan Andes EDITORIAL STAFF Bill O'Sullivan, ' Tojm Spain, David Mundy, Paul Chase SPORTS STAFlj' Al Korschun, Bob Colbert, Chuck Strong, Marshall Waldman BUSINESS STAFF Joan Metz, Carolyn Nelson, I Jack Weisel, Bill Thompson Night editor for this issue .Eddie Crutchfield KENAN HISTORY Professor Hugh T. Lefler the other day answered a question long in the minds of students who have lis tened to his effective rapid fire lectures. The question: how a Southern er (Dr. Lefler) developed such a fast delivery. Lefler's answer: "I used to teach at Pennsylvania, which is located in the center of the city. Every time I would get wound up in a lecture, a streetcar would come roaring along. So I had to learn to out talk the streetcars." A COLUMNIST for the Em ory Wheel (an Atlanta, Ga. lib eral arts university) included in his list of the "ten worst movies of 1954" the film "The Barefoot Contessa," one of my favorites. His only comment was, "A fairly good movie, but it had the most disappointing scene of the year." THE STUDENT party's Mon day night session took on a na tional political convention air as the vice-presidential choosing got underway. Bob Harrington and Sue Fink were up for the post. And party members asked Harrington and Miss Fink who had backed Fowler previous to Muntzing's nomination "Will you. pledge, whether you are nominated or not, to support the SP slate?" SPEAKING FOR Harrington, Dave Reid (whose academic dif ficulties kept him from running) declared frankly: "Neither one of these candidates are my first choice, as you know.' Politics needs more of this type candor. WITH POLITICAL campaigns so close at hand the deadline in yesterday's paper "Fiction Contest Deadline Just 2 Weeks Away" seemed ironically ap propriate. Perhaps this spring will be different and candidates will be Moderate in their promises to voters. It'd be a pleasant change. TARNATION, CAMPUS hum or magazine, will come out with something entirely new this time when it hits the dorms and houses in a couple weeks. I caught a preview of it the other. day. And all I can say is that it's going to be different. The Script's The Thing: Cast And Crew At An 'American Adventure' Production 5 3 'fey , ! njnf y ).. - mi'", -" - ---- " ---y-Sf;' . j - rT.; a --, ... . .. ' i , ( ' SOUND MAN PHIL GOODMAN ACTOR JACK SPOONER ACTORS PHIL JOHNSTON & BOB THOMAS TECHNICIAN GEORGE BRENHOLTZ e Were Dealing With The Soul Of America" if in i ramarnzm mt m Mi r f m an s u By John Ehle ("American Adventure" is a series of radio dramas about the American people pro duced by the University's Communication Center. It is written, by John Ehle and directed by John Clayton and carried on transcription by radio stations coast-to-coast. The latest series of programs begins on the campus station, WUNC, Thursday night; this, we thought, would-be a good time to ask John to write down the purpose of "American Adventure." lie responded with the following letter. Editor.) When we consider how soon it was ago that reores f Ad Editor: I hope you read this letter when you are in a reasonably jovial mood, if such moods are permitted editors. It is not that there is anything light, or ever interesting about it, but that the weight I feel as I approach this subject would not be so obvious ta you then. It is a heavy task, writing about America, and you have asked what our purpose was in the 26 recorded American Adventure dramas which John Clayton directed, and which the Communication Center is now ready to dis tribute nationally. And I could tell you simply, state it so that no questions would occur unless you are particularly interested. I could say, for exam ple, that we were interested in dramatizing the basic values of the American people. Certainly no one would care to go on from there. But the fact is that these values are the life-source of the nation, and that we were dealing with the soul of America. And I must state it like that, because it is the way I feel it, and once having brought up this matter of the soul of this nation to which we look as citizens with anxiety and hope, and at which the world looks from various viewpoints and with many emotions then I'm afraid you might ask "Yes, and what is it this soul of America? And I cannot answer you. I have written 23 dramas about it, and I would not think of put ting down here what the soul of America is, even to me. Oh I know; rather I feel. And 1 do not hesitate to state my feelings because I fear the extremists both left and right who are bound to attack any definition, for attacking is their outstanding characteristic. Through A Glass Darkly Rather, my reluctance is tased on a respect for that which is best seen when seen through a glass darkly, not face to face. The soul of the country is not one thing, or so it seems to me, but is many things, so cross-pollinated and grafted one to another that a clear state ment belies the subject. We have grown objective, haven't we, so much so that we have reached the point where we feel we can analyze anything. Doubtless there are those who believe that even so sim ple a thing as the human hand can be under stood only when dissected, when its parts are separated and weighed, when its movements are plotted. On the contrary. I believe the hand is made to reach, to touch, to hold, that that is its highest understanding, and is the one which is commonly known. The fact is created by the spirit, not the spirit by the fact. , So it is with the soul of the nation, I think. It is understood in action. It is a living organ ism, made to operate with courage when cour age is "neded, with boundless love, with suffer ing, with anxiety, with fear, with confusion, and with a dedication to basic truths which come from other men long dead and buried, but living still in that true life which touches us. The soul of the American people is often bantered about by one authority or another, left wingers and rightists, extreme liberals and conservatives, as if by words they can de fine it to serve a particular purpose. It is designed to serve no such purpose, but it stands as a composite of all that the people are and believe it to be. America is her demagogues, as well as her visionary statesmen. She is housewives and farmers, businessmen and miners. She is mothers and sons, the living and the dead and the newly buried. Slavery is older on her soil than Plymouth Rock; yet freedom is the way she tries to follow. Show me the man who would explain her simply. I would like to ask him a question or two. Oh, there may be some in Hollywood, who explain her every week or so to a world audience. They have the Hollywood point of view, which makes all things possible, and they polish her grandly. They paint the picture ' of America proudly. ' But who are the, people they paint? Do they change their babies' diapers? Most Amer icans do. Do they grow potatoes, chop weeds, crop tobacco, pick cotton, work in steel mills, build ships,- or do anything else which Ameri cans do? No, America is not a motion picture concepts It's not so clear, not quite so wealthy,, is much more human, and has a better plot. a handful of men and women, scratching themselves and hungry, stepped ashore to look, into an utterly dark continent, and there be gan to do the impossible to clear a million trees and plant crops when we know that that was only the week before last as time is count ed in centuries, then how can we explain the wealth and power that America now struts ia youthful stridings before the world? What a proud thing has taken place here! What an achievement! Where is it equalled? No, I do not want it to be explained simp ly. Please do not touch it with a scalpel either. Do not put a footnote lo this drama. Let us not reason it out. Let us feel it. And if we fx I, I - . II llllliT' H I ll ilMMMMfcllHIIIIIM MIIMUT m ij WRITER JOHN EHLE cannot, then of what value are explanations carefully made? Rather, let us seek ways to grasp the truth of the country closer, remind ourselves of what we know in order to make it even more meaningful. The Spirit Of Joe Palmer's Beard In American Adventure we looked in his tory and in newspapers to find men and wo men of this country who revealed facts of this American spirit, and we dramatized critical events in their lives, in the belief that Ameri cans would respond to what were their own true feelings. One of them was Joe Palmer of Massachu setts, who decided he would wear a beard. His fellow citizens decided he wouldn't. Ev erybody back then knew wearing beards was of the devil. But when they charged Joe Pal mer to shave, he refused in a booming New England voice, his eyes blazing over that rich growth of hair that hid most of his face. He would wear the beard. So they attacked with razors. He fought them off. They sent him to jail. For over a year he stayed there, denounc ing them from the jail window, refusing to shave, defending himself from attacks of fel low prisoners. Finally the people relented, let him go. He walked out of the jail, his beard flowing longer than before, still a free man. Joe Palmer was part of the American spir it. So were the townspeople, some may say, and have numbers on their side, and be quite right. Then there was the legendary Johnny Ap pleseed. who went about giving away all he had. Naturally this struck many of his fel low Americans as being unnatural. They wanU ed him to settle down, build a house, marry, rear, a family, lay by for the winters and for his old age. A girl he loved came to seek him out, asked him to stop his wandering and be come respectable, but Johnny chose to go on his way. So we remember him to this generation because of that quality which, by settling down, he would have sacrificed. Those who tried to induce him to settle down were good solid Americans, and part of the American spirit But so was Johnny Ap pleseed. One final example: , Back. in the. late, depression there was a young Tennessee carpenter . who wanted to build a house. He. lived in a shack in a shack town that had sprung up on free land along a river bank. He had no job, no money. But he couldn't bring himself to live in a shack, didn't want his mother and his brother to live in a tumbling down place that was held together by rusted nails. So he built a house. With ingenuity and courage he worked, until finally it stood, straight and true and clean, a monument to his spirit. His fellow citizens heard of it, traveled long distances to see it. looked with amazement at this symbol of what could be done by an undefeated man. There was something basic about that house-builder, almost tear-provoking to them. They Were Out Of Step So in 26 dramas, we wrote about the Amer ican spirit, the inner values. Some were about Jefferson, Lincoln, Lee, Jackson, and other outstanding Americans. Some were about com mon people, who were not common, after all. It has occurred to me since the series was finished that a large percentage of the men and women who seemed to represent the Am erican spirit were actually exceptions to their own societies. They were out of step. If there remains anybody who dares to be out of step today, let him take some hope that in a future generation somebody may write a short play about him. Of course, if he is soundly motivated, he may be remembered more grandly than that, even in his own day. For we cannot all be as strong as the strongest, and most of us must single out certain ones of the strong among us, hold them up, and shout "Here we are." For it is by the strong that all of us want to be remembered. And rightly so. We should hold them up and claim them as ourselves. For I believe a people is more than what it is. A people is what it is plus what it dreams of becoming. It may be that we will never become what we dream, but the hope of the nation depends on dreaming, anyway. Today there is a vast army of people poll ing us to see what we are. This is valuable, of course, but where is the pollster who is in terested in what we want to become? Surely we have not decided individually that we are perfect, or that we have created the perfect country. What is the perfect country? What is the modern American dream? We come from a nation of dreamers. No country has ever had greater faith in the com mon man, in the worth of humanity and the value of aspirations. What a tremendous day might come if once more this nation caught a glimpse of its own highest visions. Before a dream, a wilderness of confusion and doubt might fall. Without it, a people could conceivably fight each tree in the wil derness each person until the trees conquer them. Do we have a positive crusade, we Ameri cans? I am asking. I don't know of it, but we may. What is it? Because we live in a materialistic coun try, some believe that truly visionary plans are not practical "now. But Americans have al ways been materialistic. What is more mate rialistically inclined than was the pioneer? From dawn to dusk he was trading and build ing things cabins, fences, chairs, cribs chop ping wood, brcding animals. Half of this na tion was opened up because of a gold strike. Settlers didn't keep going west because of the sunsets. '' But they reached great heights on occa sion, and so may we. A Deep Thirst, And A Striving If a fault exists, perhaps responsibility must fall on the leaders. It would seem that a high Dereentase of our statesmen, at least, are bound by their own machinations as they en ergetically try to control thissort of a type of a kind of thing that has been created, lest it run away with them. And our leaders in other fields are prone to seek comfort by blam ing the people for lack of taste and vision. But the people do not lead the people; they follow leaders. Are some of our leaders criticizing the people for .being leaderless? Many of our better artists, for example, who might be exploring and interpreting the hope of man's soul, are intrigued by the more despondent and commonplace aspects of mod ern life. Some have a greater emphasis on technique than, content, assuming, as perhaps artists may in these necessary periods- of ex perimentation, that the method of expression 4 1 j - DIRECTOR JOHN CLAYTON is more important than what is expressed. The people do not respond warmly to cither tech nique or disillusionment. No, the fault does not lie entirely with the people. The people are present, and I do not believe people change so radically in a gen eration or two that they become deaf to their own high values. , Thejr are deaf to them only when they are not stated, or when they are stated so that they cannot be understood If you state them clearly, the people will either follow you or stone you, or both, but they will not ignore you. The American people know, below the sur face, in that area of the human being which, chiefly matters, that an individual is of. tre mendous value and is born free. They do not confuse a man with animals, or with clay not the common people. They know full well that a man has a fraction of the patience of God but an even greater dissatisfaction thai he was born to be dissatisfied. They know he wants to move forward, even though he falters on the way. There is among them a deep thirst for beauty and a striving for goodness. Most of them recognize with the slightest sugges tion that a man is free, not because the Jaw says so, not because the government permits it; not because it's nice to get out on tail, but because a man is a creation of God, conceiv ed in dignity, and that no other man has the right to stand between him and his creator or his creations. I do solemnly maintain that thc people of America believe these things are hue emo tionally believe them. Yes, they will throw a Joe Palmer into jail on occasion; they will also let him out, and when they do, it is to recognize in him the spirit-that should be theirs, also. And so with us. Which is a way of saying that I think America has the same heart she had a generation or two ago. She Is Still New And Unfinished I must also say before I'm done, because it is the framework of the rest, that I believe the best understanding of America begins with the realization that our country is young yet that she is stiU'ncw and unfinished" and that she -remains man's greatest adventure in time, and space. It is this adventure that should rnn,r., lead us on with the promise of added grc ness 3 10 come out of it. I'm sure that this was in Earl Wynn's mind when he placed th facihUes of the Communication Center behind these productions, in the mind of Robert Schcnkkan when he wrote the proposal which obtained the first of two Ford Foundation Agency grants, and in the minds of the nine professors of the University who so ably serv ed as consultants for this series: Professor Bernard Boyd, John Gillin, Fletcher Green Everett Hall, Wrank Hanlt. Clifford I von William Poteat, Clemens Summer, and the late Howard Odum. u But the opinions expressed in this letter are, of course, my own. I have di-'resi , siderably from the series itself, whlch vv s "t" concerned so much with specific problems f our day-real or imaginary-as with the in herent values of the people of the comur which are lasting. -uunir, Thirteen American Adventure dnmv ) been released, as you know. The otho P have been recorded by Joh n , th,rteen staff of some sixty actors ad Itec 3 the whole Chapel Hill conl t V'' now ready for distribution. arc I nope they will be heard hv nih can. state. better-and will "So L u "ho greatness of our country. ' llt(1,Ki:tly the- us. ut-