PAGEt&0 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1935 THE DAILY TAR HEEL SSL, Carolina Delegation Dp Themselves Very Proud TAR HEEL HISTORY The State Student Legislature, and particularly the UNC delega tion, should be commended for asking that the Pearsall act be re pealed. The Pearsall at!, For which Gov. Hodges politicked so hard and for which he called a special session of the X. C. Legislature last summer, is North Carolina's official weap on against the Supreme Court. The act. voted into the Constitution by a large inc jority in a special elec ton, p'roviks for "private" schools if public schools are desegregated. The at would.. be considered un constitutional by the IT. S. Su preme Court, and will be if a test case gets to Washington. Besides being unconstitutional as a side stepping levice for the desegre gational decision, it also provides for the tfest ruction of the state's public school system. If the public schools, are destroy cd. NortlvtCarolina will sink even deeper merits educational mires. - . V ' .--- r . . The State Student Legislature realized iXtU when it called for repeal of Vne act. We doillt that the State Student Legislature, passed Jts anti-Pear-sall measure just to be liberal, as many of the previous student legis latures have done. Rather, the SSL measure reflected, a great deal of considered student opinion. Students, especially college stu dents, are pretty up-to-date o?i what is lacking in North Carolina education right now. They rer.l we what will happen iT the people of the state, inflamed emotionally by the Ku Klux Klan. the Patriots of North Carolina Inc. or rabble rousing' politicians, have. power to wipe out their public school sys tem practically overnight. ' ....' The vote of the SSL last' week technically meant nothing, jit car ried no official weight, passed no actual legislation. 'lot of the people who read about the action turned the page of their newspaper and .wondered what the damnfool younger generation was coming to. Hut the' SSL's action, introduced by the Ci-.olina delegation and passed by a majority of the dele gates, piit a portion of "the sta e's student body on record 4 as oppos ed to the plan which provides for the end to public schooling. Perhaps the students will lead the state where the state itself has fallen down. And Chape Hill Could, Too Chapel" Hill, we' remember, w-'ts one of the few communities in the state to vote aga-inst the Pearsall Plan early?, this fall. -The measure failed to ok ry the town by a small margin. But a majority no mat ter how bare of the town didn't like the plan. . This wquM indicate a great deal of people here are in favor of de segregating the public sclfools. It bears out our conviction that Chapel Hill, with' the University community and all the people who go with it, is the most important cent of liberal thought in the state. -. " Why. then, is there no action to 'desegregate the town's schools? The people of the town Who want a de.sesrer 'ted school system should- oj r??euiiieiiseIvrs,andt- 1 -tempt to desegregate. They should not wait for "more appropriate times" to come along. The present time is appropriate. There is little action on the seg gregation --integration front, even from the extremists like Dr. W. C. George and the rest of the Patriots. People appear to have grown tired of talking about segregation, even in South Carolina., that mud pile of prejudice. Careful- well - planned action right now on the part of pro-in-tegrationaljsts in town would rer suit in a desegregated Chapel Hill school system by the beginning of the school year next fall. If they wait much longer, the'School Board will start talking aboiit the next year, and the year after that, and so on into infinity, and very much' of nothing will be done. The Supreme Court ruled more than two years ago that segrega tion in the public school is uncon stitutional. This state, like most of it he others in the South, refus- l. . ,tr. , ; ; The Daily Tar Heel The official student publication of tbe Publications Board of the University of North Carolina, where it is published, daily except Monday and examination and vacation periods and summer terms Entered as second class matter in the oost office in Chapel Hill, N. C., unde the Act oi March 8, 1870. Subscription rates: mailed. $4,per year, $2.50 a semes ter; delivered, $6 a year, $3 50 a semei ter. ed' to comply with the decision. But this town, like several others in the South, appears to feel inte gration would work to the mutual benefit of all the rates which would be involved. ' It is time for Cliapel Hill to de segregate its schools. The ' Chapel Hill Ministerial Assn. worked hard and Long hours to defeat the Pear sall Plan when it was before the legislature. The Chapel Hill In terracial Fellowship has doiie r:i excellent jpb, too. Various individ ualspeople like Paul Green have shown true leadership in this time of crisis. ' Now, they should blend their energies and efofrts into one or ganization to desegregate the pub- lie eh'ueJs.Chapel Hill could set a fine precedent. Longhorn Justice: Tyranny Down in Austin, Texas, college type freedom is being meted out again. Editor Y--- . FRED POWLEDGE Managing Editor ... CHARLIE SLOAN ' News Editor RAY LINKER Business Manager BILL BOB PEEL Sports Editor LARRY CHEEK EDITORIAL STAFF Woody Sears, Frank Crowther, Barry Winston, David Mundy, George Pfingst. Ingrid Clay, Cortland ""Edwards, Paul McCauley, Bobbi Smith. NEWS STAFF Clarke Jones, : Nancy Hill, Joan Moore, Pringle Pipkin. Anne Drake, Edith MacKinnon, Wally Kuralt, Mary AJy Voorhees, Graham Snyder, Billy Barnes, Neil Bass, Gary Nichols, ,Page Bernstein, Peg Humphrey, Phyllis Maultsby. Four University of Texas stu dents who were passing around a petition were called into the of fice of the dean of students. The reason? The dean of stu dents didn't object to the petition itself. (It advocated withdrawal of the United States from the Olymp ics because of Russian "interven tion in Hungary which is bar baric and unjustifiable . . . .") Rather, the dean said, the peti tioners didn't ask the University of Texas for permission to peti tion. The Texas institution has a rule that its facilities (obviously, in this case, its classrooms, soil and air) are not available for such "purposes unless they are sponsored by "ap proved" organizations. Even then they may be questioned, the dean said. ," The; the University of Texas is run similar to a dictatorship is not new. Last year, thefine stu dent newspaper there got put un der the school .of journalism, its freedom squashed forever, simply because it differed with the state's politicians ribout the natural gas bill. Since then, student freedom has been laughed at in Austin. The right of students or any body else to petition is a right that" cannot be denied, even by a sensi tive dean of students. The students oft he Universi ty, of; Texas should petition all they want even petition to kick the dean of students out of office, if they feel like it. A few head may roll, but' we believe the' na tion will support the students' v 1 he Clarke Jones One of the favorite topics of conversation of Frank P. Grah am, University president in .the 1930's, was the story of Mrs. Cornelia Phillips Spencer, other wise known as the "lady who rang the bell." It was shortly after the close of the Civil War. Because of a revenue loss, it was apparent that the University could not last much longer and shortly. af terwards, the resignations of Beer Bottles A Problem In Library Library Notes, Wilson Libra ry's staff bulletin, recently re painted the following from the University of Kansas Library's bulletin, GAMUT. ''One of our more fortunate recent acquisitions in this field was the Schlitz-Hammweiser col lection of beer-bottle labals. 'The peculiarity of this col lection lies in the fact that all the labels have been left intact on the bcttles, creating we feel, a unique storage problem in li brary history. Some of the bot tles, in fact, are still full. "We expect a larg? number of research projects based on this collection." A. NORTHERN VIEW A New Set Of Beliefs In The Lord Corf Edwards To me God is not love. God is work. To me there is no such thing as religion. Religion is a social concept, a classificatory term. It is an ethical system. " To me-the soul is .nothing more" th'ana..dispds.ition." As. a dis- , position It S.xil$ 9l asts .in- , dividual creator exists; "r To me there isn't now and never were such things as Jesus Christ as the son of God, the Holy Trinity, angels, etc , . To m? the Bible is worthless as a book of prophecy, of" as !a' strengthener of the weak. It is not the book of God. To me the virgin Mary of Christianity was not a virgin in . our definition of the word, , and T should not be worshipped as such. " To me Heaven and Hell don't exist. They are mythological goal concepts. To me the Church is a pros titution of Cnrist's teachings. To me a particular Religion is good and necessary,, but then too, war is good, and necessary. To me science is doing away with religion. To me there is a God, but ... The God in which I believe is dynamically effective in this world for ALL mortal people.. One God over the whole Uni verse - (To be continued) Ladv! Who Rang President Swain', and the faculty memSersi were obtained. Thus the University was closed. In the -early part of 1875, there was talk that the University trustees lias acquired, means of raising flinds for .re-opening the University and when official word came that it would re-open, Mrs., Cornelia Phillips, Spencer, one of .the University's t'staunchest supporters, simply, couldn't hold back her joy. - . ; Climbpig up to ' trie' belfry in South Building, she, took hold of the rope and personally rang the bell there, and, as Phillips Rus sell says in his book "The Lady Who Rang the Bell," she did . more than ring a bell; "she rang out an old world of defeat and ' inertia and rang in a new' world : of hope and belief." j ' ''.. r SAME BELL 8 BFC FLUSH .1 r The same bell that Mrs. Spen cer rang over 75 years-ago ,is the same one which rings inter mittently through out the day to signify the beginning and end '.'". ing of classes as well as remind ing coeds of their curfew. Occasionally when the auto matic switch is not working, the bell will not ring and in this ' case the bell is rung by hand by the long rope which Mrs. Spen cer used so many years before. " ; The b?ll seems to have a cer tain significance and meaning for students here, and as Bill Fri day, Consolidated University president, once remarked, Uni- . versity graduates should ha,ve a recording . of this bell to wake them up in the morning. 'Pull Over To The Curb' 3)?; HSf(HP; tSSM A iikv" ."''. '' " " ' -. ... i - 3t J t '-.. . ' - ... i ... "v .ji j ........ i ; 1 YOU Said It: Michigan, Reader Defends Editor Editor:- .- I have- just finished reading a letter to the editor in the November jl Tar. Heef and fell compelled to air my views on the subject. This .letter was written by one David Suckow in which he states that the Tar Heei has been printing "leftist garbage" and that, you, .as the editor, have been allowed to air "pink-tinged ideas." Never be fore have I read such rubbish. In the past I have followed the Tar Heel k quite closely, and, while it is evident that the views of the- editor are predominately those of the Democratic party, I have found no evidence of either "garbage," leftist or other wise, or "pink-tinged ideas." Mr. Suckow should be very careful when making such sweeping statements. It would seem to me that you have a very good case against him for slan der, defamation of. character, etc. As to- the rest of the letter, words fail me. How can anyone, who has given any thought to politics at all, make statements such as Mr. Suckow's statement on the H-bomb issue. "Vaporiz ed,", indeed! This would imply that the U.S. has no stockpile of atomic weapons ready for use at a moment's notice, and also that Mr. Stevenson . had given . no thought to the possible re percussions of such a plan. Perhaps now is not the time ' to stop H-bomb testing, but to use the emotional appeal that we will all be "vaporized" if such testing ceases is ridiculous. I should like to applaud The Daily Tar Heel for printing such an inane letter. At the same time I firmly believe that the space used to print Mr. Suckow's letter . might have been used to much better advantage by Pogo. .... .... ... . : Jean Irving ... University of Michigan Pogo By Walt Kelly human ay XMutnAhtf AN UGIV FWOOf r r i - w t s mw r w m wm mm m riMm mm t mm mm w w m u l I AJtSmf AJ&f9 Pt . 0 mT.lkmt ' ml m HA mm. a 1 sZ. ' T Li' I Abnor By Al Capp Night Editor Woody Sears right to petition. FO' VORE PAPPVS SAKETTTt T'KEXCH J ' MOONBEAM ) GIVE SOMEONE ELSE TH' PRIVILEGE O' FEEDIhT VO'.r.r AH DONE HAD THET HONOR, FO-6Koitr-SEVENTEEN VXRSf TOO TARD r CHASE ONE, BUT EF ONE. DRAPPED IN MAN LAP RECKON AH'D MAFIA MARRV HIKA.FO PAPPV'S SAKE r. m -1 c5X IS THIS THE END OF MOONBEAM SWINE?. FADING TRADITIONS '9 usiness Saves Holidays Woody Sears Here we are ir the midst of the Christmas sea son again ... so soon ... . literally and figuratively; the commercial Christmas season, that is. With Thanksgiving not yet here, we find ourselv es surrounded with gay reminders that it's present buying time again. Before we have a chance to enjoy the traditional black and orange colors of the harvest season and our harvest holiday, we are blinded by the tinselly red, white and silver of the hucksters' holiday. Maybe I'm old-fashioned, but I find it rather dis gusting. But at any rate it clearly indicates the present trend toward commercialization and a shifting .sense of values. , The worst thing about it is that we all but ignore Thanksgiving, the one truly American holiday. It is the one holiday that is completely of American origin, representing the culture of our forebears. It is tragic that we give so little attention to t'His holiday because it is lost ir the rush to prepare lor Chnsmas. but it is no longer felt as it should be. We should all stop to think of our good fortune in living jn this land of freedom and plenty, especially in'thtw' itmK.i Ail tnrirtt? What has happened to feeling that one inspir ed us to sing "Come yc thankful people, "tome, Raise the song of harvest home, All is safely gath ered in, Ere the winter storms begin . . .?" - or vo me leeiiiig uiai n is a nine ior iamuies to be together, as reflected in the song that es: "Over the river and through the woods, To Grand mother's house we ",o. . .?" Or yet another. "We .gather together to aK the Lord's Blessing. . .?" Possibly we no longer feci the necessity of being thankiul, because things come too. easily for us, and the modern grocery store eliminates the ne cessity for laying in stores for the winter. Possibly the mobile society in which we live has us spread so far apart from our relatives that it is no longer practical for families to get together around the Thanksgiving table. And possibly, we haven't got time to worry about Thanksgiving htncp it's almost Christmas. , It's a real shame that progress so often neces sitates losing some of the "old" traditions. It's truly unfortunate that we are losing Thanksgiving,, our one "100" American holiday. But in this changing culture of ours, wher family ties become less meaniful and less it. entrenched in our daily lives, it is more or 1 inevitable -that we mast .sooner or; later, forget.' family holidays. It fits into the pattern;-' Not too many years ago Armistice Bay was a big holiday, with parades and fireworks and bands in the city park, but that too has fallen victirA to our changing ways. The big Independence Day, Fourth of July holiday is fading too. v . t-r m. It seems as though the oniy holidays which .'!ave managed to survive are the two religious hplit'ays, Christmas and Easter. And even though they have lasted many hun dreds of years, they too would probably die if it weren't for the great merchandising industry. If we keep the money pouring in, 'maybe.lt he business world will keep Christmas and Easter for us, even though it will become less meaningful every year. We need to slow down and do some reorienting. Duke Bell iheff Not Destructive Editor: I suppose it would be better to leave well enough alone, but I do not believe that I should. It is my belief that Bob Young's statement, "It is embarrassing to the football players . . ." is so much bunk. The football players at Carolina are reg ular guys and are certainly not ' a bunch of nam by pambies as Young's statement implied. There is nothing immature about school spirit; if there were, then we'd better stop having pep rallies, a cardboard section, and cheerlead?rs. The wave of vandalism which has plagued bah campuses broke out weeks before the bell was stolen. I do not believe that stealipg the bell was an ;ct ot vandalism. Webster doesn't either. Ironically enough an article appeared in the Durham paper the same day Young's statement came out: "Members cf the A.T.O. chapter it Syracuse made sure no one from Colgate wjuU swipe the cannon the fraternity uses to signal Syra cuse touchdowns." A photo with the article showed two boys wheeling the cannon into a bank vault. , The Navy goat has been stolen before; the Army mule has disappeared several times; and on th-j West coast, Stanford students once even - robbed the Bank of Berkley to get back' the Axe, symbol of victory. Is this custom below the level of Caro lina gentlemen? I believed that this deed would increase spirit at bath colleges; and it did. If the Dook students had any real spiriHney would have tried to get it back in the same manner iq which it was stolen. The bell was to have been presented at the game. L we had wen we would have kept it; if we lu i lost, return it on the field after the game There is only one thing I would like to get straight . . . We did not break into the old gym, we touched nothing, and we broke nothing to get out. There was no vandalism involved. We wished cIy to return the bell to its PROPER place. JOHN C. HARRIS n. ii .tl i m . .... '." '' "" ?" w ttntttwowi' m. mt,m nimin. w , i., fc , i.n,gm.,i wim . iw.iii.ii iw.Hi m.mtttmiititMi"'mIm.minmi ' f t Tr . ..n.im j.r.r..n-.-'in ' i!.mur m .. L. t,m . . n...rjLr Jr--. 'l-'t t 'm - ..m .m r m, . ,, ,.., Mm,., m .. , 'tKtsilm,,.