TUESDAY, FESKUARY 2!, 1557 PAG S TWO THE DAILY TAR WESTL 'i Aocisf n At t'G'iii-rdtt etfter: Saying Whaf Slid ofcl-tie So Student legislators g-ot a big latijfi out of the reading of Lenoir Hall's Operating Procedures" last Thursday night. The passages were strangely incongruous with actual conditions ill the University's cafeterias Promises and descriptions, whether they be irr the form of a list of operating procedures, a prospectus, the first lecture of the semester or the preface of a book, are developing more and more frequently into expositions on what should be in stead of what will be. If enough people believe in a project, almost anything can be ac complished. The very fart that peo ple find a list of operating proce dures, or any of the above, believ able must mean that what ever it is being described is possible. After all, as Lincoln said, you can't fool all of the people all of the time. But now very few people are being fooled any of the time. A student entering the University for the first time hears tradition, honor system, qualities (supposed) of the Carolina gentleman and the Caro lina way of life until Chapel Hill looks like a minor Utopia. Then let this same individual get back to the dorm and talk to some veteran Carolina gentlemen. There is nothing violently wrong with the topics of discussion, aca demic as they may become, but the content usually runs in diametric opposition to the minor Utopia as orginally touted. It is naturally difficult to de eribe anything intangible. People tend to picture' things from only their point of view. So students ratif compliment the quality of the food in Lenoir llall, and when they do the phrase "for the price" is begrudgingiy appended. And the management of Lenoir Hall declares in the Operational Procedures that' work in their establishment is "z. wonderful op portunity for a man to secure fine education in a manner that will make him proud for the rest of his life." That he had to scrape garbage off plates to get an education may be a fine thing for a man to tell his son, but as fai as being a '"wonderful opportunity" is con cerned well, the wonderment of it escapes us. The. time is coming when yrild ed lily publicity will stop working. People will do well to start make ing the facts pleasant enough to sell their program. Greek Week A Good Deal This week Carolina's fraterni ties are sending their pledges through Greek Week. The week replaces the immature and often dangerous "Hell Week" of before, and gives the fraternity men a chance to pit their future brothers against the pledge classes of other houses. Chapel Hill's gentlemen greeks will help conditions in Chapel Hill in many direct and indirect ways. The most direct of course are the service projects each group's pledge c'-iss must do. But the more in direct was the community is bene fited rre equally valuable. I irst, relations between j,he fra ternity men and townspeople will be strengthened. Greek Week is an annual reminder that fraternity is not all party and noise; that fra ternity men are, for the most part mature individuals and capable of doing good in and for the com- munitv. Secondly, relations between the houses will be strengthened. Through the exchange dinners the pledge classes will have a chance to exchange notes on their pledge training and will observe living conditions in houses other than their own. Through competition in intra murals the houses have been drawn together as a group. On field day the pledges will be put on their own, to carry their house's banner to either victory or defeat, but al so to a greater unity within them selves. Fraternities aren't really on any better behaviour this week, but they are in the spotlight. They will prove that they are more than social animals. Time Has Come For Funds Married University students are no longer a novelty. An estimated jo per cent of the student body does not sound like a novelty. Yet the state legislature refuses to accept the fact that in this era of speed and pressure from all over the world people are getting mar ried sooner and must be housed while they get a college education. This is especially so for students in institutions of higher education. Their very environment is on a higher plane than that of the aver age citizen. The powers in charge of doling out money should realize that education, the University and married students are related by ties other than the almighty check book. Married students are not detri mental to the standard of educa tion. Quite to the contrary, they are uplifting forces. The married student has taken on a great re sponsibility, he is a mature indi vidual. The University needs ma ture individuals. It needs them badly. ' All that can be done in the way The Daily TarHeel The official jtudent publication of the Publications Board of the University uf North Carolina, where it is published daily except Monday and examination and vacation periods and summer terms Entered as second class matter in the cost olfice in Chapel Hill, N. C, undei the Act oi March 8, 1870. Subscription rates, mailed. $4 per year. $2.50 a seme ter; delivered. $6 a year. $3 50 a seme ter of advance work has been complet ed by the University. The hardest workers of ill for getting married student homing have been officials in the University. But the - work has reached zj point where it must have funds to continue, and other forces have power over the purse- strings. I his Season Could Use New Title Chapel Hill's highly variable -'weather is approaching the season in between winter and spring. There is no name for this particu lar part of the year, it just hap pens. Actually there is not even any way of predicting it. One day students will be stroll ing the campus in shirtsleeves and praising the arrival ot spring, and the next morn mo: Editor FRED POWLEDGE Managing Editor CHARLIE SLOAN News Editor NANCY HILL Sports Editor LARRY CHEEK Business Manager BILL BOB PEEL Advertising Manager FRED KATZIN Night Editor Manler Springs- be crunching across frosty grass to early classes. j he campus seems- to be in the middle of just such a time how. In a few wcjks the great out doors .will go through what poets and writers h:ve been singing of for .centuries. The rebirth of na ture, the return of collte-swil!iug students to South Building's steps and ever thing else that comes with the vernal equinox. In a few weeks the season will be over. But nobody has written about the in between time. Just because Sunday was warm and sun ny is no excuse to start warbling cheerful melodies. Tomorrow will "-nbably bring a frost that will kill any brave buds that tried to mile an armearance for the, warm weather Sunday. Snmp body should, recognize the mugwump season the campus is - thrnir) and. oriv it an of .Hf'al one suitable for mix- . ?d groups. VII i c Some Clarke Jones A large number of married students in Victory Village will more' than likely find them selves in a very unpleasant situation next fall in the event the two-story units th2re are torn down. Even though they the fami lies in the two-story units wil not be faced with the danger of fire as they are now, some of them may find themselves, out on the street with no place to live. . Although - Housing Officer James Wadsworth has said the -married students who will be affected in that event will have priority over the remaining one-story apartments, it 'is doubtful there will be enough vacancies to go around. The 12 two-story units recent . ly '"condemned" by the State Insurance Dept. have eight jcparate apartments four each" on the first and second floors in each, one, making a total of 96 families. Therefore, (al lowing for the probability some . of the 96 may not return next ; fall regardless),' approximately . that many , vacancies will have to occur among the remaining one-story units. - . University officials now study ing the facilities in Victory Vil lage to determine what will be done with the condemned units may do one of two things, judg ing, from what UNC Chancellor' Robert B. House has said re cently. Either repairs and improve ments will be made on the old units with discontinuation of the second floor (the state law says frames of wooden construction' must not be more than one story in height) or the units may be torn down altogether and re placed by more permanent housing.- Either way won't help the , situation much, if at all, at the . present time. "Don't Worry They're Condemned Anyway I'll Show You One' You Can Move Into By 1960 isx iro4,jfiooo utic RBQvsst .-ry VvfX: irk srvasifrsHCUSi:J8- ;w "pk x-' ' ; ... 3 i - . "V- "S J I i I if I II .f .- - jr. 1 J . -i. -viJ A' l 'a i w .r.'j vs. : i i l-i rBV f- J f ,j . ' U-i - Aivirczz: j 7- . : 4 ' V jf YOU Said It: How About Caddie For Others? Editor: It seems that the Christmas spirit has extended this year in to late February. Ail occasional bird chirps in the trees of a morning, and the mercantile in terests downtown have removed .. their symbols of good cheer from Franklin St. But not only hasn't the spirit of the past season died, it seems to have gained proportions far beyond those of last Dec. 25. As a matter of fact, Santa came to my room the other night on a . -k L'il Abner most charitable mission: it seems that a poor Mac-something-or-other was without a Cadillac car in his stocking last Christmas. I was so touched by Santa's plea that we rectify . this mis take "that I began to think of all the other poor folks who were . by some cruel fate overlooked in this respect. I therefore submit . the following names for consid eration in this time - of bene ficenop. - Mr. Archibald Henderson One Cadillac for indirectly per- greater service for forming- a this university and the world of letters than the esteemed Mr! Mac-whatever-it-is can ever hope to do. . Mr. Thomas Wolfe for the same reason, one Cadillac. To be awarded posthumously. Chancellor House A like award, in. recognition of his many years of service. With the inscription: "He did his best more can no man do." I could go on, but I think I've made my point. Anthony Wolff Repairs and improvemepts would help but the second floor discontinuation would leave the ' area with 4 less apartments. The waiting list would grow even ' longer. The obvious solution would be . to build more permanent hous ing facilities, but that will be an impossibility for at least another two years. '., Why? : Because the University would not be able to start construction of new facilities for at least that long, judging from the example of the proposed three , men's dormitories ' and an addition to Spencer women's dormitory. Contracts for the dormitories and addition took over a year and a half to be awarded due to various reasons. The Victory Vil lage construction woi4ld more than likely take about the same length of time. There is a good chance'the University will be .successful in: its quest for an enabling act from the General Assembly, ac cording to University Business Manager Claude Teague. Even though a similar request failed during the last state legislature session, Teague soun ed hopeful. He said University officials had been doing much more work on the matter this time than was done then. Nothing concrete' is known at the present time concerning the terms of the act. Teague said last week it may be a while be fore the measure is introduced because the session is still in its early stages and things needed to settle down somewhat before action will be' taken. But he said it would take only about six days in all to get the bill through, if it will pass. Just how much money the University twould be able to borrow was not known, said Teague. He said since the act passed en the proposed men's dormitories and Spencer Hall wing allowed the University to borrow 1 million, the figure for the Victory Village hous ing would probably not be more than this. Other questions are raised in connection with this.such as vvhy should the University have to seek passage of an enabling act? Why did the Advisory Budg et Commission completely turn down the University's original appropriation request of over $15 million for married stu dents' housing? The answer, according to Teague, is opposition on the part of some members of the Budget Commission to students' being married while in school. Those objecting to student marriages apparently think they are more or less of a passing f anc7 and do not realizi they are here to stay. ! This is a blind attitude. Stu dent marriages are more than a passing fancy. The number of married students in college is increasing each year in col leges throughout the country and the situation here is no exception. TH' JAMBOREE J THASS AWRIGHT W1F ME,, ) GOES D-DEAR. AH IS A r- ' ON ro WE IS OFF TO TH' . ( ANNOOAL HUSBINS-AN'-H WIVES UAMBQREE 7 ON FO ( OAMSOREEtN Jl AT P'MEAfPLE f A WEEK )V N U YO'STAY HOME? r a i l'rx PNtrr . i . . . r BEIM' SEEN THAR WIF YO -AFTER VARS OF ATTENDIN'WIF A REAL MAKJ,NAM MAH FUSr HUSBIH UJ U AIRIER By a: capP yi no r . 1 fell v f v ...Air k Pogo By Walt Kelly . V . , " " in S : . . . Of Mt8m& CZOCKG, FJIfM? A V' CaJuT KINA WANTS TO ATHgZ H3$6M$ Ti ' V J VOQrgZ?Ue.$. wgwoo a time riO -i r (Lotst m-i -1 rflii ; AVrsT;. lie's 1 i Jessi- flch'dcr - TAPHOUSES IN WlNTcR, By Doris Ecttv published by G.'P. Putnam's. ,. 'j. w tVip fientle Insurrection, a vol Ia hor first book, -The Gem i ume of short stones jD Prize. In fact, Putnam-Universuy ui -- - rPt.n7P( as .5 .omo to be recognized as. almost at once .Mrs lters of our time one of the mo gif Betts has gone be- write the novel - pected of her. In the book the author gives us the Godwins 4 s?oneville the returning Ryan Godw.n br.ng cf Stonev.l e. tn bur(Jen of his TTme-W ,o-hrffair with Jesca His sister hllaw. Back home Ryan finds Fen h,s nephew IT 12 living memento of Jessica and fmds too, Tself he perhaps has been unconscious! seekmg. The whole of the book; which is complex and satisfying, centers around the search for this self which is never quite exactly defined The author asks that her main character, Ryan, be judged in the end by his growing compassion to wards the boy Fenwick who might be his- son and by his own realization that although he is danger oulsly ill of throat cancer and very tired, he is not yet tired eough. In Ryan's own words, "I'm not through yet, that's all. I haven't finished " In Fenwick's thoughts at the books end, which projection Ryan's, the reader like the boy, comes to ask for a time to be with new capacities for change, to demand it from the leaves, the bare trees the almost blue skies; to demand it from whatever there is beyond the sky that hovers over Stone vill el . Set in the pattern of the journey home, the novel begins with Ryan's interim life with his sister Asa, the boy Fen, and Lady Malevena the cook, who rep resents the continuity of living in the Godwin house. TV-e very real ghost in the novel, so real that in the central section of Tall II -uses in Winter she almost takes over the book, is Jessica Ryan, the wife of Aver who has died with her husband in a car ac cident' 10 years before, but who is still very much alive in Ryan's mind when he getrf off the bus with the crowd at the station. Sensibly for Ryan, home is Wellman College in New England, where he is a teacher of English lit erature and to which he will return when the jour ney in search of himself is over. Actually, home is still Stoneville and in one sense the book is an in vestigation of the effect the past in a very ordinary small Southern town can have on a man who is forced by circunu-tances to take a long look at him self and the surroundings that made him. Doris Betts knows her town the bus station, the realty office, the orchard behind the Godwin house and the frosted hunting country of tb final scene. Thematically, the town conies to stand as an ex planation of what all the people in Tall Houses in Winter become because of each other. Using a shift ing, point fo view to dramatize her theme, the au thor starts her story slowly moving forward with the hesitancy of a child at a new game, here turn ing back again, now jumping with hopscotch step, . but always managing to keep the focus on the R an Fenwich relation and on Ryan's remembrance of Jessica, and on the relationship of all of them to Stoneville itself. Ryan does move IN SAD AND UNDIGNIFIED WAYS the caption for the first part of the movel down to the Jewish tailor and back home to Lady Malveena's kitchen where she and Mister Lord some times seem to have consummated an alliance against him, and eventually into an interview with a sharp operator named Peyton who wants to es-tablish a college in Stoneville for reasons known only to himself. On the question of the college, Ryan vacillates but it is apparent that his inability to take sides for or against Peyton is no more than a small part of the larger indecision that permeates the first part of the novel. In A VIRTUOUS DAY, the novel's center. Jessica Maples, who became the wife of Avery Godwin in 1936 and soon after became the mistress of her brother-in-law, is projected through Ryan's mem ory with such force that her presence changes the pace of the bock. Virtuous, serene, erotic, but at the same time cold in facing reality, Jessica is more woman than heroine. Some of the most powerful writing In the novel, and Doris Betts is a powerful writer, lies in the pages that project the love sir.1 brings to Ryan in a way that for many never stand as having any virtue at all. These remembered todays, part of Was-Time move forward through love making, renouncement, and more love making to Jessica's pregnancy with Fenwick and to her decision to make him, in the world's eye the son of her husband Avery thus for ever anchoring Ryan as a Romeo. But in Is-Tlme .with Jessica's death 10 years in the past Fenwick begins to take his mother's place with Ryan. Their relationship feeds on small friendly deeds. It holds deep intimacy. It contains within itself that the love affair which is now pari of Was-Tim. could never do more than re flect. And so in the end and by compassion with the journey to Stoneville i almost over the final motif becomes apparent as one of grief calling unto grief until out of the calling a new bond appears between Ryan and -Fenwick and by extension between Ryan and his relationship to Time-To-Be. In the moment the taxi that is taking Ryan back to the bus station comes to a halt before the Godwin house and blows like Gabriel, we know like Ryan that the world is always in peril however blue the sky and bright the sun, but we know too with him in which all the lenient are in perfect and pre- Zl T ' 3nd that in such a blinding moment we draw close to the heart of the axis of joy, to the place where the universe is hinged. Jessie Render is a lecturer in the English Dept. here, and she teaches courese in creative writing. She recently published a novel, Remem brance Way. r