FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1955 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE TWO Dr. Harry W. Chase Former Frexlenr Harry Woodbmn Chase whose death came Wednesday night in Sara sola, Florida, ushered in a new era for the University. j After serving as Dean of the College and chairman of the faculty, Dr. Chase Uecame president in June, 1919. His administration, stretching through the year 1930, saw this school grow from a college into a major uni versity. Kn roll men t went through a post World War I upsurge; buildings, including the Library, Murphy, Manning and Saund ers went up: new departments, music and commerce rniong them, came into being; and the Universitv gained membership in the American Assoc iation of Colleges and Univer sities. Dr. Chase established a new realm for higher education in North Carolina. The Daily Tar Heel and the University community are grateful for his service and saddened at his passing. Justice Goes On "It seems to me that liberties for those we most dislike are the most crucial ones to de fend," said Prof. Robert Sonne Cohen of Connecticut Wesley an as the Scales defense opened Wednesday in Greensboro. The Daily Tar Heel concurs with that idea. We commend Professor Cohen: and we com mend in particular Professors Fletcher Green of history, Raymond Adams of English and The Reverend Charles Jones for demonstrat ing that thev, too, subscribe to that rudiment of Anglo-Saxon justice. Professors Green and Adams and Mr. Jones, in their brief, unemo tional, and concise testimony in behalf of Junius Scales' sincerity, restored some dignity to the trial now wearing through its second week. It is next to imKssible for a Communist to be tried justly today in the United States. The veb of hysteria has been spun too thick. The fear of Russian power to the East, the tattered but still flapping ensign of McCarthy, and public ignorance as to the nature and real threat of Communism throw cases like the Scales affair out of kilter. In the Greensboro trial, a long iroup of excited witnesses, paid performers, spies, and incompetent press re porting have made the outcome., as the in formed expected, all but inevitable. To be sure, mean, ill-founded criticism will fly at the professors and the minister. But it will be the offspring of ignorance and will come from those who do not see the basic conservatism of what they did.' Civil. liberties, most of them, cost hundreds of years of revo lution, abuse, slaughter and regicide. When those who believe in them arc pilloried, it speaks poorly for our appreciation. Justice goes on, fortunately; and we can thank those like the men from Chapel Hill that it does. A Word For Wheels The wheels of student government for tuneabout 100 of them will be turning on campus this weekend, as student leaders from the Carolina . and Virginia gather for the spring National Student Association Regional Assembly. Student body presidents and other wheels from the three states' will attempt everything from "defending the role of the student in the college community" to studying the mystical-sounding "dynamics of the group and parliamentary proceedure," with some social izing sandwiched in between, no donbt. The Daily Tar Heel welcomes the wheels to Carolina. The work being pei formed na tionally and internationally by the National Student Association should inspire them to serious thought and a stimulating exchange of ideas. We hope they can turn their weekend workshop into a vibrant marketplace of ideas on student government. Carolina Front Of Spring And Youth & Love's Sweet Whatnot 'See Anyone ,fcoming Yet? J. A. C. Dunn "IT IS! It is! It's Really Truly Spring!," as the Intimate Book shop so elatedly remarks in its right hand front show window. Being of a tractable nature, we are inclin ed to agree with them. It is spring. Fine. When w e think of spring, how ever, we think not only of books (as the Intimate does). or of "flowers that bloom in the etc. (as Gilbert and Sullivan do), but also of young men's fancies, which, we are told, have an alarming tendency to turn like worms as soon as cords and pedal-pushers pop up from un der every newly-thawed stone. Quite recently we ran across two young men, drunk on spring, whose -fancies had turned to g poetry. We here present their deathless (and anonymous) verse in all its poetic radiance. - d THE FIRST POEM is more malicious than anything else, and is untitled except for a no tation: "With apologies to New Faces of 1952." . Love is a simple thing; Love is a scorpion's sting, Vicious as a moray ell, Painful as a torture wheel, Sharp as an assin's tool, Quick as a pirana school; Love is a simple thing. Love is a mad dog's bite, Deadly as Medusa's sight, Toxic as wood alchohol, Chilling as a banshee's call, Damning as a voodoo curse, Morbid as a loaded hearse; Love is a simple thing. ! 'l ' ' ip P 1 1 ' IJ - - - I . ; t- : xXP-- m'h&r&$$ t I'll --1 "i 1 1 : &x i fr J. - ' V mm . ; ' ' ;.jVf - I r f -J- j JL i J " j? "Hi rt'L. r " - THE STRAIGHT SCOOP: He Pahked His Cah ln Hahvahd Yahd Wot 2Bailf &ar Qui The official student publication of the Publi cations Board of the University of North Carolina, where it is published daily except Monday and examination and vacation periods and summer terms. Enter ed as second class matter at the post of fice in Chapel Hill, N. C, under the Act of March 8, 1879. Sub scription rates: mail ed, $4 per year, $2.50 a semester; delivered, $6 a year, $3.50 a semester. .Sue id 4b e Vni vrmAx N'frth Cttrolaw ju fnHtrv ' Editors ED YODER, LOUIS KRAAR Managing Editor FRED POWLEDGE Business Manager TOM SHORES THE SECOND POEM is a bit more sincere, and is slightly reminiscent of the poetry of Porcupine, Walt Kelly's misan thropic Okeefenokee character. We asked why the author used "we" instead of "I", and he re plied that he was writing in hon or of Editors who had to sit in hot offices on hot spring days. Evidently he was once an Editor himself and knows first hand. WE The heartsung song somewhere sung for us Is sung in the heart of you, we hope. The windblown soul that is whisked along Like a leaf, is blown toward us, we hope. The starlit face questing, lighthouse-like, for a mirror Reflects in our face, we hope. The sun-bright smile meant to warm and soothe Is aimed at the person of us, we hope. 1 The song of the soul is the smile of the face; The face is the soul of the smile. And the smile in the song is the face of the soul, The soul is the face of the song. The windblown heart is lit by the stars, The sun-bright wind is warm. And the leaf, the mirror the lighthouse, all -Are aimed at a whisk around us, we hope. WHERE THEY GO Three thousand five hundred teachers in Pennsylvania will be leaving this year for a variety of reasons. These in clude: 6 percent marriage' or family, 11 percent going to oth er states, 18 percent entering other types of employment, 20 percent miscellaneous o t her reason's, and 45 percent retire ment for old age or disability. Associate Editor News Editor J. A. C. DUNN Jackie Goodman Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Subscription Manager Assistant Business Manager Photographer Dick Sirkin Jim Kiley Jack Godley Bill Bob Peel Boyden Henley Night editor for this issue .Eddie Crutchfield ALL INCLUDED Deep sea and Gulf Stream, sound and inland fishing are all included in the North Carolina central coastal area, from vast Pamlico Sound to Bogue village on the sound of the same name. J. B. Severance , Harvard, '58 (The follmcing is the sub stance of a letter written by a Harvard freshman to a friend of his gimng an impression of Har vard after eight months of resi dence there. Maybe our readers can find parallels. Editors) I have it straight from a fine arts lecture that in pre-Revolu-tionary days Cambridge was in tended to be governmental city for the Commonwealth of .Massa chusetts,' and when Boston got the job instead, the authorities founded Harvard in Cambridge as a sort of compensation. Be that as it may, the institution grew and all the New England social elite attended it. At one time the standing of a student in his class was deter mined by the social prominence of his family rather than by the student's brilliance. However, the situation has changed a good deal since then and though the Groton-Harvard type still exists (there are some in the freshman class today), the University now strives for what it calls "even geographical distribution." The Great Plains area niust still be pretty sparsely populated because some of the types from west of the Mississippi strongly resem ble the American Bison, at least mentally, and in many cases phy- -sically. I don't say that this holds for all of them since I happen to room with a broad-minded Tex an. THE YARD: Harvard Yard is the center cf the University and the original area of the place. Among its ma ny features are the freshman dorms, Offices of the President and Fellows, University Hall (the administration building in which lurk many smiling deans i.jid polite secretaries), a statue of John Harvard (which is very in appropriate since the date on it is three years off, Old John was not the real founder, and it's not a statue of the real John Harvard anyway), three libraries, an old water pump about which old grads are supposed to be very nostalgic, and Sever Hall, now a classroom building, which is considered to be one of the most important architectural achievements of the nineteenth century but which makes me wonder what else the nineteenth century produced.. THE SQUARE: There are a number of merch ants on the Square who claim to, have been serving Harvard men for generations. All I can say is that the experience they have gained has been put to good uses most of their prices are al most half again as much as they are elsewhere. However, I have to admit that there are ax good many worthwhile institutions in and around the Square. The University Theatre, a grim looking movie house, has a' good show about once a month on the average. The Harvard Coopera tive Society claims that it gives the member a 10 markup. It is handy for stationery and ugly little necessities, but no one in his right mind ever buys , cloth ing or sporting equipment there. The store on the corner .next to the Coop (I can't recall its name) sells cigars, fresh fruit (at ex horbitant prices), newspapers and almost and brand of ciga rettes you can name (i. e. Ben son & Hedges, Player's, or even Murads). It is a rather nice little hole. ' The Brattle Theatre is a very worthy institution which ' shows good revivals and foreign films for twenty cents more than any where else. The Wursthauts, a German delicatessen and bar, has mediocre food at mediocre prices and fairly drips with atmosphere. Next to the Wursthaus is a very tiny and modern snack joint known as the Tastee Sandwich shop, which, though it is new this year, is fast becoming an insti tution. It has the best hambur gers on the Square and the chea pest ones. Next to this joint, which is known as Charley's (Charley runs it) or "The Armpit," is the sha diest business establishmenf I have ever seen: The Varsity Li quor Store. The drinking age in Massachusetts is twenty-one, but even the most juvenile-looking freshman can get into the place and make a purchase with no questions asked. There is a strong possibility that it has police pro tection since there is a traffic cop's stand in front of the store and there are always two or three cops warming themselves up in the store on a cold day. I had it from one freshman that as he was leaving the store with an arm load of various bottles a cop in full dress and brass buttons held the door open for him. The local dive is Cronin's. It is full, of atmosphere, but even through the dim smokyess of the rdom Jim Cronin can guess your age with surprising accuracy. The best tailor in the vicinity is Dun can MacAndrew. Here one can have a sports jacket made of the best imported tweeds for forty dollars. Duncan MacAndrews sports a Bongo Board with which customers supposedly amuse themselves while waiting for a clerk, but it seems to be monop olized by the woman who" runs the tailoring room. RADCLIFFE: - What slim pickin's there are are really not so bad as rumor would have it. . , THE GREY FLANNEL SUIT: The Grey Flannel suit is, as everyone knows, the Ivy League uniform. It is predominant at Harvard and may be bought any where on the Square. There is al so an unsavory element around the Yard which leans toward the zoot suit and the flashy silk tie. Individuals in this class purchase their unlobely purple shirts at Leopold Morse next to the UT. The really discriminating Harvard man buys tailor made tweed suits at Duncan MacAndrew's. In gen eral, though it can be said that the Grey Flannel suit is the dress of the average Harvard man. PUBLICATIONS: The Harvard Crimson has taken advantage of the fact that the Boston papers are revoltingly un readable, and is consequently one of the better college newspapers in the country. "hjnfortunately it is fully aware of thJs fact and rather conceited. Since it has such an iron grip on affairs it can get away with the most out rageous slander and misquoting imaginable and frequently does. The Harvard Advocate is run by a very serious-minded group of writers, and is a quite readable magazine. Recently they had a monopoly on stories involving people with neuroses and odd frustrations, but it is now on the up and up and even has some Tather able poets. The Cambridge Review, a splin ter from the Advocate, is a bit smart-alec, but passable. The Harvard Lampoon is at present riding on a very good reputation. Unfortunately for the past three years it has been dom inated by a very able writer who now works for the New Yorker. The result of his ability was that it stifled everybody else's and no wthe Lampoon is a cheap pamphlet of forced humor. Many Harvard men prefer to get their humour reading the Yale Record, which, in view of the facts, is extremely broad-minded of them. Harry, Ike,. Arid Ulysses Grant Ralph McGill Atlanta Constitution WASHINGTON As V!time goes, on more and more, persons are realizing that whatever may have been his failures, Harry S. Tru man was a strong President M like a tough fighter. So, com ing down oh the elevator in the Mayflower Hotel with Sen. Wal ter George, and Miss Lucy, his wife, on thet way to the Sam Rayburn dinner I got off at the fifth floor. The reason I go off was that when the elevator stop ped at that floor I saw Truman and his wife there , with some friends. I went up to him and put my arms around him and sai3 , that it made me feel wonderful to see him looking so good. . Now, We come down to the real story for which the fore going is a sort of preamble. Two veteran senators, who have been around for a long, long time, talked freely, though not for attribution, about President Eisenhower. They like him. What they have to say is "riot said in hostility or rancor. They think, as do all of us, that he is a good,, decent, honorable man. THEY LIKE IKE But this, in essence, is their summary of him as a President. "Ike,' they said, "is a lot like Gen. Grant when he was Presi dent. Grant had won a war. The people felt he was a strong man, able to make decisions. Actually, as we know, he was not. He was a good man but not at all aware of how to govern. His Cabinet was not able and some members were corrupt. The Republican Congress was a pliant tool of special privilege, as is a majority of the present Republican House and Senate. The worst 'of the Republican party hid behind the shield of Grant's personal integ rity. - The people came to know this, but they almost nominated Grant for a third term. In a sense, President Eisenhower is like that. War threatens. The people look to a general. They say what has become well known; namely, that Ike, the good, decent man, is not skilled enough in politics to know what is going on. "He doesn't seem to realize how transparent he is. He keeps try ing to run away from the presi dency," said one of the veteran senators. "But you can't run away from it. Wherever the President goes, there is the presidency. When Ike plays golf with Dr. Cary Middlecoff the presidency is rightT" there with them. There is a story going around Washington. There was a conference with congressional leaders about the Asian situation. It was not reas suring. The chiefs of staff, who are the professionals, were di vided. "We all stood there," said the congressman who told me about it, "and we felt sad and blue. There had been no leadership, only indecision. As we stood, waiting for the President to go, ' he looked at his watch and said, 'Gee, I have time to get in nine holes of golf.' When we got out side . another congressman said, 'Golfing while Rome burns.' " 328 DRINKING DRIVERS Under the heading, "driver's condition" the Motor Vehicles Department summary of last year's fatal traffic! "accidents lists 328 drivers who had been drinking. Other driver defects eyesight, hearing, fatigue, ill ness, and sleepiness affected only 83 drivers involved in fatal, accidents. In all there were 880 death dealing traffic mishaps which produced 991 fatalities during the year. REAL BARGAIN Used car salesman: "You don't often get a chance to buy a car like this. I tell you it's a real op portunity." Prospect; "Must be. I hear it knocking." Ottaxoa Journal. ' , SMALL TOWN A small town is the place where a fellow with a black eye doesn't have to explain to people, they know. Coast Guard Magazine. FOIL FOR REDS That, of T course, is not quite fair, but it illustrates a lot of feeling here. Sen. George, for example, thinks the administration has de ceived the American people by making Quemoy and Matsu the major issue. "The Communists," he says, "are not ready or able to take Formosa, but they are about to take Indochina by de fault. Things are very crucial there. It looks as if Viet; Nam is to be lost. And if it is, then Bur ma, Malaya, Laos,tCambodia and all southeastern Asia are endan gered." Sen.George also feels very strongly that the. African-Asian meeting which began Monday in Bandung, Indonesia, should have had our blessing. Harry Truman criticized the Republican press for "covering up "the administration's errors and failures. The one thing which privately dominates the press here is the great disappoint ment in Sec. Dulles. The Demo cratic senators and congressmen who know say that he is a timid, rabbit sort of a man who simply cannot stand against pressure. They think Ike gets a bad assist in a critical job. Security Climax Stewart Alsop A showdown fight involving the SovenmenVs whole loyalty-security system now . shaping up. Th fiht will center on a minor official in tne in .Monetary Fund, called William Henry Ta Tavlor was one of those named by Elizabeth Bentley, the famous former Communist espionage eourier, as a member of the espionage group in the S2sm Department during the war. The Bentley Sarrw aired in substance before a Senate com mittee by Attorney General Herbert BrownelT in . 15, when he testified on the case of the late, ji.arry nvter White. , Taylor, who has never taken the Fifth Amend ment, has repeatedly and flatly denied under oath that he was ever a Soviet agent or a Communist. He has now demanded, in letters to the members of the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, that his can be investigated publicly; that he be allowed to confront his chief accuser, Miss Bentley; and that his guilt or innocence be finally determined. At the same time, he has asked the Loyalty Board which has been hearing his case to call Brownell and FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover to answer questions about what he alleges to be demonstrable falsehoods in Miss Bentley's testimony. In short Tayloft .and his lawyer, former Congressman Byron Scott, are now determined to force a public showdown. HEAVY CLOUD OF DOUBT One result of the showdown could be to1 prove that Taylor is guilty. Another result could be to clear his name. But if Taylor's name is cleared, a heavy, cloud of doubt will be thrown over all Eliza beth Bentley's testimony, and indeed over the Jus tice Department's methods and tffe whole security system. It is easy to see why the Taylor case could start a major row. " " '' Taylor's position is extraordinary. He has, after all, been named by the Attorney General of the United States as one who could be used by a -"parallel of Soviet intelligence." Yet he still holds a pub lic position, and part of his salary, at least, is paid by the United States Treasury. - Taylor is, in fact, the last of those named by$Miss Bentley who still holds a public position. Very hea vy pressure has been broug'it to bear on the Mone tary Fund to get rid of him quietly. Among other high officials, both former Secretary of the Trea sury John Snyder and his successor, Geoige Hum phrey, have written to the Fund urging that Taylor be filed. W CASE UP IN 1953 The Fund managers, however, have quite pro perly taken the position that the charges against Taylor should first be heard. His case was therefore assigned early in 1953 to the International Organi- ." zation' Employees Loyalty Board. This board has been holding intermittent head ings for a year and a half. During all this time, despite the statement of the Attorney General to the Senate committee, the board has been unable to establish that Taylor is guilty as charged, or even that the "reasonable doubt" required for firing as a security risk exists. Accordingly, Taylor still holds his job. Taylor's defense before the board has been sim- ply to challenge the veracity of his accuser, Miss Bentley, not only in his own case, but in the case of Harry Dexter White and others. In a public show down, he will make the same defense. Taylor and his lawyer have prepared a dossier of more than 100 pages, which purports to demon strate that Miss Bentley's testimony is a morass of contradictions. Some of the contradictions citd"3 in this remarkable document are trivial, the sort of small mistakes any human being makes. But some do not seem trivial. For example, according to the dossier, Miss Bentley at one point testified that Taylor passed her documents, and at another point she testified that she had never met Taylor. THE JUSTICE DEPT. AT FAULT Miss Bentley's testimony may of course prove substantially entirely accurate, and Taylor guilty as charged. There is no doubt that Communist spy nets did indeed operate in the government during the war. Because ex-Communist informers like Miss Bentley have been useful in establishing this fact, there are fierce pressures to suppress all challenges to their veracity. Justice Department officials, including Brownell, have come precious close to taking the ridiculous and profoundly un-American position that anyone who would cast doubt on the word of an ex-Communist must be part of a Communist plot. The best commentary on this nonsense was supplied by Brownell's own action last week, in firing th Jus tice Department's whole collection of professional full-time informers. But just because Miss Bentley's testimony has been so . important, and because Brownell himself is committed on Taylor's guilf, The pressures will be particularly fierce in this case. Yet surely Taylor should have a chance to prove, one(way or another, once and for all, whether he took part in espionage, and thus betrayed his coun try. It is monstrous and intolerable that a man branded as Taylor has been branded should be de nied a chance to clear his name. Quote, Unquote Memorable Words From Doctor Einstein Albert Einstein on education: It is in fact nothing short of a miracle that the modern methods of instruction have not entirely strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry; for this delicate little plant, aside from stimulation, stands mainly m need of freedom. Without this it goes to wreck (sic) and ruin. On war: War seems to me to be a mean, contemptible thin I would rather be hacked to pieces than take part m such an abominable business. On Relativity: ' Zh.Z I"13" SUS ,WUh 3 Pretty girl for an ur, it seems 1 ke a minute. But let him sit on a hot stove reLtivTr itS IOnSGr th3n 3ny unVh On his profession, if he had to do it over a-ain-would not try to become a scientist or schoS Seer nTedhoaDthtr ' p' " stances. available under present circura-