FAG t TWO , THE DAILY' TAR HEEL SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1957 That -.-Confab On Gravitation . . Isn t Just Another Seminar Although most students and luemhcrs of the general public don't know; beans about gravitation 01 phyvus. it is xerx good news that the I'niversity will be the site for an international conference on !th those subjects. The first world conference on " The Role of Gravitation in Physics V to le. Iield in the United States.the meeting will bring to Chapel Hill .o. top-rate physicists iYom the L'nited Slates anl foreign lands. I his, not only lootball and bas- TIME FOR EVALUATION: YOU Said It: kctball and the Tgly Club, is pub licity for the University. It means those p physicists will go home with talcs to tell about their meet ing in Chapel Hill: it means the University will be spoken and thought of and written about more than-4 ever before although "Hot quite so much as when. Charlie justice was here. . liest of all are the reasons the conference committee those Chapel Hill: 1. l.stablishment of thue-gravitat ion project University jeoplc. 2. The "voung and physic? fr.ultv at Chapel Hill.", I he mux excellent 9 ference facilities" here. This means the world has not- a space here bv energetic con ic cd Carolina's experiments along physical lines. It means the physics faculty here, has been recognized as voung and energetic by the rest of the science's fellows. And it means the University has establish ed itself a' name for its conference holding .vbility. All this does the University more good than a thousand ordinary news bureau releases. It helps to erase the belief in many; people's minds that this is .nothing more than a country club and a haven for adolescent alcoholics. ' Congratulations to the .Unix ersity lor getting itself picked as the con ference site. And a. bunt h of roses to our "voting and energetic" phys ics faculty that will be host for the meeting. Shame In The Libraries The North Carolina General Assembly should be thoroughly ashamed ot itself. But it probably Isn't. The shame should come from the recently - released fait that Carolina's Wilson Library has started slirming in rank with other Southern libraries. Jt used to be first in sie. This year it is third. Next vear it proba bly w ill be ex en lower. The, General As,emblv approp riates monex for the University. Tor this two-year period the leg islators, many of them. Carolina alumni, cut the Unix eisitv's libra ry budget in lull. That left about enough to run the library, very lit-' tie xvith xvhich to buy Iooks for hungry student minds. The Legislature' sk -lighter xvas an act of .pure hIukv. Hut the leg islators don't seem to mind at all. Very few citizens of this stattrcuss ed the General Assembly out for tutting the Library funds: exery one seemed to feel the state's solons were xvise in tutting xvhere they could. For xears now the state Legisla ture has been unfair to Carolina, very lair to X. C. Stale College xv hen it tame around to money. For years now the Legislature has got axvav .with it. 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 examinatiot nd vacation periods and summer terns Entered fas second class matter in th st office in Chapel -Hill. N. C, undei the Act of March 8 1870. Subscription rates: mailed. $4 per year, $2.50 a semes ter; delivered. $6 a year, $3.50 a feme ter. Editor i FRED POWLEDGE Managing Editor . CHARLIE SLOAN News Editor NANCY HILL Business Manager " BILL BOB - PLTSl' Sports Editor LARRY CHEEK Subscription Manager Dale Staley Advertising Manager Fred Katzin Circulation Manager Charlie Holt NEWS STAFF Clarke Jones, Ray Link er, Joan Moore. Pf ingle-Pipkin, .Anne DrakerEdith MacKinnon, Wally Kuralt, Mary Alys Voorhees, Graham Snyder, Billy Barnes, Neil Bass, Gary Nichols, Page Bernstein, Peg Humphrey, Phyllis Maultsby. BUSINESS STAFF Rosa Moore, Johnny Whitaker, Dick Leavitt, Dick Sirkin. SPORTS STAFF: Bill King, Jim Purks, Jimmy Harper, Dave Wible, Charley Howson. EDITORIAL STAFF Woody Sears, Frank Crowther, Barry Winston, David Mundy, George Pfingst, Ingrid Clay. Cortland Edwards, Paul McCauley, Bobbi Smith. Staff Photographer Librarian Norman Kantor .... . Sue Gishner Night Editor ... . Ray Linker Proof Reader -;BI,. Gary Nichols lut noxv that the University Li brary has been publicly ranked third in the South, some people should st; rt to question the peo ple who made it that xvay. It's not the Library's standing that bothers us; it's the fact that we haxe only 831,119 volumes" and that Duke University and the University of Texas haxe far more books. Appropriation time is coming . ountl in a month or so. It xvill be interesting to watch the Legis lature 'and see xvhether UXC's Library xvill grow as it should or sink even lower. Square Off, Gentlemen, And Fight We hate to talk about ourselves, but every once in a while Daily Tar Heel staffers get real non conformist. Ik ing insane enough to work on a newspaper, they naturally get in to -trouble quite often. Hut two of them, staff xvriters Neil (Politics) ttass anil Cortland (Religion) Kdwruds. have a fracas going that is xvorth commenting on. liass. who also .is president of Ikittle-Vance-Pettigrcxv Dormitory, is angry at Kdwarils. xvho also is editor of the dormitory's nexvs pa per. Bass asked Kdwarils to edit the paper. Kdwarils agreed. Now Kdwarils has xvritten a pretty x io lent editorial charging Bass xvith getting himself elected by unfair means. A recent move xvas a statement by Uass that: "I decided against bringing suit .'".linst Cort before our student judiciary for his libelous editorial because, being in nexvspaper xvork mvself, I respect his right to voice his own opinion.'' .Forgetting 'about who's right and xvho's xvrong, there is some thing about this matter that both ers us: If Hass. is .riii'ht and Kdwarils is "iiiltv .ol p inting libel, then liass has to turn Kd wards in to the Men's Honor Council Hass' pledge to uphold the Honor System de mands th: t he must do so. If Hiss is right alxnit the libel, and if he doesn't turn Kdwarils in. then someone must turn in Hass for not turning iu Kdxvards for breaking the rules. Hut if Hass doesn't turn Kdwarils in. and Hass doesn't turn himself in. and no one else turns Hass in, then xVhoexer should haxe turned Hass in should turn himself in. If he doesn't, then someone elser should turn him in. And so on; Maybe thisdeserxes judicial in terpretation by the honor councils. Or maybe it would be better if xvriters Hass and Kdxxards squared off, armed xvith copypencils, and dueled it out. Or, maybe, Linotype slugs at 50 paces. Looking Over: I he New Year Woody Sears Now that the Christmas rush is over and we've had time to make our respective New Year's resolutions, it's time to wonder just what the new year holds in store for us. And L is something to wonder about, for so many things are happening now that threaten to change ourlives drastically. With things having quieted down some on the Hungarian scent, there are still many prob lems to be resolved there. And on the Egyptian front, things are far from normal. For awhile, things looked mighty bleak, and though they now look mdch-ros-' ier, here is still the element of doubt. Will there be a World War III and will it come this year? With an abundance of optimism, our leaders say that it won't happen, but we never know. We can. just hope and pray that it doesn't. It's a time to stop and evaluate our way of life, and be truly thankful for it. And while we're evaluating, let's take a look a Mittle closer to the Carolina home front. The Supreme Court has ruled that segregation on public car riers is . in violation of their emancipation program. This has brought the kind of trouble that many segregationists have been promising since the issue become one of concern. This trouble is the sniping at citizens done by over-zealous segregations (we assume) down in the nether regions of the Southland. It would seem that those folks are putting a v little too much emphasis on the seating arrangement "in the buses. 'Oh, You Mean THAT Salvage Job' PROSPECT & RETROSPECT: There are a lot of folks around who don't cotton to the idea of integration, but shooting at help less people is' not the best way to cope with the problem. More than likely, it's the worst way. Will 1957 be a Happy New Year for the Carolinas or will it be a year of horror? As the evangelists say, "The hour of decision is at hand". Old Coaches Fade Away Editor; Lets face facts. Carolina has never and will never have an outstanding team in any major sport as long as the present ad ministration is in power. This has never been more evident than it is today. When a coach becomes too suc cessful, there are those -who be come resentful, and the screws are applied. The latest to feel the pinch is Frank McGuire. ' Five years ago, Carolina's bas ketball team was the doormat of the conference. Today, they are the number tw team in the na tion. What thanks does Mr. Mc Guire get? His budget is cut. and all for the football team, the futil ist of the futile. Mr. McGuire, you are a", great coach. Believe me, there are many more who are just as dis gusted with the turn of events as you. The smartest move that you cculd make would be to get away from this coaches grave yard and move "on to a school which has an athletic department of the same calibre as your' teams. Here, you will only get a lot of talk and not much action, just as did the' fans who were conned into buying last seasons football tickets. You won't get your new gymnasium, and soon you xx'ill go the way of Carl Snaveley and all of the rest. Oh yes, and Mr. Tatum, take -heed. Your day will come too. Name Withheld by Request ' 0 ' . ... - , .r -. - - - Athletic Heads Hove No Comment Neil Bass Athletic Director Chuck Erick son had "no comment" to make concerning the reputed rift bet tween Coaches Frank McGuire and Jim Tatum when questioned Thursday. Erickson, who dismissed any conversation with this reporter very hastily by saying he had just '"brisked in from Miami"' and needed a breathing spell, said he had not read reports of the rift. This statement from Erickson, coupled with a statement by Mr. Charles Shaffer of the Educa tional Foundation, autonomous fund-raising- organization which appropriates money, lor athletic scholarships, that his organiza tion had no control whatsoever over the athletic director makes some wonder if Erickson is the pitching, driving athletic head that(UNC needs. It also raises the question as to whether or L'il Abner not proper control from proper authority student and admini stration is being exerted on Erickson tj keep him in line. Shaffer's taking oyer the purse controlling Educational Founda tion's secretary's post from 'pro McGuire Frank Hogan is an in dication of the current trend to ward Tatumian policies. And with Director Erickson in the financial driver's seat at Woollen an admitted devotee of Tatum is it not conceivable that he might become a puppet for the man in the grey felt hat? It was evident that the Ath letic Dept. made no arrange ments for procurement of tickets to the basketball team's games on the New York, trip, the same trip fur which the Carolina dele gation was financially trimmed by athletic officialdom. An interested student helped procure tickets without sanction from the athletic folks. We're not trying to rack the muck or rabble-rouse; but we do feel that the Dixie Classic cham pion and the No. 2 team in the nation deserves at least 50-50 at tention along with the football team when Woollen purse strings come into play. We'd aLso like to hear what "breathless" Miami Traveller Erickson has to say about the purported rift. While on the subject of ath letics, perhaps a comment should bo made on the current relation ship between athletics and scho lastics. As the News nd Observer pointed out Thursday,' when it requires practically all of the Consolidated University presi dent's time investigating the N.C. State "bribe" episode, isn't the "tail wagging the dog?" That is to say, athletics are an important part of an educational institution; but certainly its main function, by virtue of its name alone, is education of uur nation's youth preparation for useful citizenship. We are not asking for de-em-phasization. Athletic competition and good sportsmanship are cer tainly preparation for useful citizenship. But as the News and Observer says...''Let's put first things first!" The University student who played cross-burner for the bene fit of Dr. Frank P. Graham cer tainly had - his wires crossed. Not only is a man of .Dr. Frank's tolerant nature xitally needed in his United Nations advisory capacity, but he is completely harmless to both ;white supremacists helpless to integrationalists. As, a matter of fact, the Unit ed Nations, while idealisticaily superb, is apparently harmless to everybody That is to say. now aren't the aggression upon Hungary, for which the U. N. has done noth ing shades of Mussolini. Ethi opia and the League of Nations? U. U. i. Pat C A.I r.m v ' - By AI Capp . I Ir a . AI I ' AJ3 GuQrSTf A I tpn. million T ah wont V million- I mi ,mn t 1 1 r 1 11 1 - . . . '" - . AH RUM VO'OUTA TOWM ONCE., HAWG McCALL, FO UPSETTIN OUR VOUNG GAL AN' STOPPIN'OUR COW? FUM r,llN' tr!jx MILK Pogo By Wait Kelly P030 ew$ycu bzbh in VUP. 7' 111 iii.uw " ' ' WWAT I. JT- XALL.-ruS? 0gM$ X AxAfM THIK'5 rrs as x r -awt ssiru AAYSS VOL' V 5iWNf W em' A 'SOCIAL UGPAZP f Reader Commenfs? On Killing Dogs Editor: , I am not oversentimental about animals. Al though I believe that the variety of nature ought., to be preserved and regret such evils as the ex tinction of our own Carolina parakeet, my feelings' about the larger animals are limited to this con1 " cern for the preservation of the species. The predatory ones also should be encouraged ' in suitable surroundings. It is natural for the wolf and the panther to kill deer, and it is foolish to'" denounce them for it. I sometimes hunt small game, and enjoy if. Hunting, if properly reg'ulated, stimulates an in terest in the preservation of nature in a region densely settled by man. It is the lack of regulation and education that has led to tragedies in the past In addition to hunting wild game, I have helped to butcher hogs, and have killed my share of chick ens. I do not make pets of that sort of livestock. . When it comes to killing dogs, by which I mean--killing domesticated dogs that have in some manner known the companionship of man, my feelings art---not as simple. Dogs ought to be controlled by their . owners, and where dogs run wild, men and women are to be blamed for the conditions of the dogs. Dogs ought not to be let go wild, because they are not a part of nature on this continent, and to---that extent I can agree with H. Mack Owens, who wrote about the subject in the December issue of "Wildlife in North Carolina." However, I would not care for the task of shoe' ing dogs. In particular, I would not care for it where the dog'is -obviously very well domesticated, and i-; probably the property of some child who knows little and understands less of the dog confinement laws, or is unable to obey them because of a lack of help from the child's father and mother. The hangman xvas never a popular figure in any society that I have read cf. His is a profession that few men envy, and many there are who care not for his companionship. In the minds of hoys and of thoughtful men, the dog catcher shares the profession and the personality of the hangman. BotlL are hired killers of helpless creatures, profiting fronr the deaths of ' beings who in most cases have in' no way offended them. The afternoon of Dec. 10. . . . , as I walked, from Venable Hall across the campus towards the Post Office, I saw the same thing described cy Stan Shaw in Dec. 12th's Daily Tar Heel. A small gathering of dogs and people xvere watching a fol low who was dragging off a good-sized black dog by means of some sort of noose about the dog's throat. By the time I talked over there, he was back after the small white one that he had killed. He had shot her, and somewhere there on the grass by the Caldwell monument, in the shadow of the Davie Popular, not far from the place where the Univer sity holds its outdoor concert in the springtime, she had bled out her officially unwanted life. It seems to me that if there are clogs to be destroyed, that is hardly the place for it. To kill one there under the trees between Person Hall and the' Morehead building is a little too much like shooting a man in church. Although executions of men are sometimes necessary, they are not usually carried . out in a school yard. I recall looking with some interest at a hang man's tree near an old mining camp in Arizona, but my feeling is that the Davie Poplar would not" be properly used as a hangman's tree, and that the lawn nearby ought not to be used for the shooting ot dogs. Aside from the inappropriateness of the setting, there are a couple of other points on which I xvou-d like information. Does the law make any provision for confining dogs before their killing, and what is the official attitude towards shooting on the campu? With every Dick Tracy of the dog-killing squad out blasting holes in the lawn, is there not some danger of losing a few students and professors lo stray bullets? The nature cf a man is such that when he finds himself living in a continual gunfire, he seeks weapons for himself. If the men students toke to wearing Bowie knives and 44 caliber Peieemk ers, xvill the administration object? '( Loose dogs do not fit very well into the ae of mechanized bureaucracy, but they do serve as reminders that some of the rest of us da not fit very well, either. Rebellious Hungarians do not ii and neither do believers in the traditional American form of government. I recall several pleasant visits to Clinton, Ten nessee, where I sometimes went with frisnds to look for a' good dinner served family style at tr.e little Park Hotel, which belonged to a level of civi lization that the "Atomic City" has not yet achieved. I have no great desire at this moment to go back to work on a government research project, and it is probably just as well that I do not, because 1 should not care to feel like a traitor every time the secret police came to drag away a few of the neigh bors, as they have been doing in Clinton lately, to charge them with impeding the approach of the great High Yellow Milleiiium. What decent man will be able to watch the coming schedule of mass arrests and trials without jury, already beginning in Tennessee, without des pising the tyranny of Washington? There is a c!o-e parallel between , the demands of Soviet satellite students for classes in their own languages and the demands of Southerners for the right to live out their lives among their own people. Who will be abie to watch the local traitors be traying their own state for the sake of an alien fad or a political favor, without wanting to go home after his gxin? - How many xvill cringe at home when the grand fathers, mothers, and little brothers of their friends are dragged away by the secret police, and when children assembled in a schoolroom are threatened, as they have been threatened in.Tennessee, that the all-powerful Federal Bureau of the 1 Eyeballs is watching them? IIoxv many, at least in the South and the West, will not wait cowering in the dark for the knock in the door, but xvill choose to die under the pclit'cul guns in the broad light of day,, as the Hungarians died in Budapest, or as the dog died under the Davie Poplar? Jfthn M. Ruth -