Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 16, 1957, edition 1 / Page 2
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.0.11 .IJifl ttstdO SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 19S7 THE DAILY TAR HEEL fAOi TWO Fanaticism Runs Rampant; Not Confined To Dixie . . "lint now I am ulnnd. trihld. s. fanaticism is not a provin- IjohiuI in to s.iiicn ilonlns anil i a 1 matter. It is not conliiuel to U-.us." Sli ikt'sjiiaio Dixie. It is as tiilcnt in .Northern I iti.iiit ism is rnnnin rampant s,1Us as il is cl wn South, in Atiurie.i piimaiily as a icsiilt Anl Wl' aic lli:ult' i-Mmm-ly il the Max ii", Snpmnc- Court ,iul ,,v imn.ilists vvlio lontantly Doision oiitiauin educational I,nP 011 ,,u" "racial cxtmiiists" in seU'atioii in public schools. Dixie. ,. , , Raciallv integrated schools are i onirar to repoits w huh haw , , , ' , , ., .... ' . me liable and rijlulv so. lint we lilteuil aiios ilie nation, reports , i r ,' . . . , , , , 1 . would erv dehuitelv advocate a piomul4.ited bv rabb e-rousiii 1,1,1 , , I . . .. ,. r lYiioel ol Relaxation. 1 he nation .t tlie t 11 lot 1 1 iiahsts. ihis lanati- 11 . ... , Mas ocome so rate conscious th.it (ism is as picailiii' as that pio- 1:. . . i-, ,, ,, , , . '. literary masterpieces like lluckle- pouncleil hv southern exliemists. , ... , , , , v. .. . . . . ... , l)eii I inn ate banned Irom New I he case in mind which stibstan- - .1 1:1. 1 .. .. . . .... 101k 1 1 In .11 us because 1 wain s t tales sue h a c hai -Je against ankce- .; 1 r ,1 11 t ... 1 ., . . , . 'h dialogue includes Ireciuent l,u' episode imoU 1112 ,,, , , 1 1 , ... . usac ol ili" woicl ni''''er. (.eor-e I ichner .r Chua-o. Here , v v wi ? . i- .,, . ,i , ;i , ... . . ,. 1 ' .V.(.r is as violent .Incl m- au elci.nl ol the ignominious 1- ... , , v. . tM (). loiuaole .;s the rati lots ol .North ' ' Carolina a relined version ol the l.icluur. an iS 'ar-old junior ku Klux K Ian. Yet it is sometimes .11 I hom.is KelK Ili'h School in necessary to resort to extremes to Chic. 1-0. wrote a petition against dispel deep seated bias and pre- i.ui.il iiite-'aiion in Kelly llili judice Irom provincial minds. Shoo! and 1 ; ,,r his classmates lan.it ic ism is no solution. Their t siun it. As a ic siilt ol I ic line 1 should del iniieK )t- ;, lVriod o' pitiik." .is he turned it. he u.i. Relaxation, rdiitatiou.il inu-i.i- siipended horn hi-h school, .11- 'ion is upon us, :uu j, js Mr;i,'u.d- uslcd. ch.ii-ed with clis, .1 t 1 Iv l be in eptel. ini,huil?y bein- conduct, 'iveii a nc hi. ill ic lest accepted. ".d pl.ccl uiule. ,01111 superxi Tun minds should be -iven , si.-n lor cue w..r. e h.ui, e to u lax. PROM CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS: Party Within A Party: Soviet Bolshevik Ball I ..1st wee k m.i.ke d the loriieih ,,,, in bo Khr.ish, he v didi.-. want ...... ixe,s,,N o ,! Novembe r davs , ,, ,u. , (),IlU,I(1 uil!l. ol the Russ.an Ke vohu.on. and , ,u. u.,nllli(,n )Ilv Nt,us ( omniums, hades bom all ove, u1 p(,shevik coup d'et.ite ihe wo.hl went to Iomow lo, the , oU.n1IOU l!u. .,i)M,illU. u.illK. i ablation. 1 . . .1 11 and to Nt.nt the- Russian state- oil Willi the 1u1iov.1l ol Maish.d soii.distic path to eveniu.il huko .0 eleue Miuisie-i CoinmuniNin. I lie- leader ol the tine e we e ks .1-0 and the aniiount c - devolution. X'ladimir l.enin. inn- nitiil lli it he has been expelled cived diilei ih 111.1! er i.il iMii as a to. in iiu. Commun'iM J'.mv liei- caiis to an end which would diuu. .n. ( Vntial ( oiumuUf l.isi "cmic- ihe- inilcii.il conditions loi week, l.e 11011 C :oiiiumml evoihl ' i,t,,,"' ",l hapjiier lile. will lou.s its a. ten lion on the lcsnUnn was instituted snu.Je wnhu, ,he K.emlin lor J(, 4ll.,u. ., S,.1U. in uhi(l u. ,,. cj.mplcte ecmt.ol ,, lJu. ,,,,,, ,Ml t, , u. ,V(mUi)1, ( , ould liile and eveiitu.illv the link, v had been uilicied lol slate would disajipeai to make- w iv vi'litiu Leninist p.utv piinci- br a c lassless. siatc K mk k tv . Out pies.' dixplaiii4 "iiiadeiiate Jar- die 1 ev ol ut ion euui j,ed an 1111- tv spiiit" and losing his "aliy disputed iiile-i ol the new Russia, niodestv." Ihe statuuent said that Joseph Stalin, liv elnnin.ii iir rival he- had lla-ianllv violated" ihe .ups and individuals, he linallv piiix iIe ol CommuniNt I'artv 1 i p t i Li tec I all o )i sit ion to his h ade .ship ol the aimed lo.ees. powci . W'este.n obseiveis seen. tc think Recent events in the Kremlin that hukov's puijie was just Ni- ltni 1,1 point t this same- teu- kiia Kin ushc he-v s dec ision 10 eli- ('( v ,M" U;,ls Si. din's mill. ite one mote ol his possible .''lh. Indeed Khiiislichcv is do- liv.iU 1 1 1.1 1 he- c ..nsidc led a lineal ,,u' X( ,N same- thin.; ilin Stalin l his position. Ihe late ol Mar- did to obtain pow er. I lei e is w he. e slid hukov. icuudcd as the sec- ,,,(' 'i'hition -ot out ol the re or.d most powiilnl man in the So- ol ut ionai ies' hands and headed viel Cnion. h sc uibh s stioiidv llw '" """pc led dil ee t ions, oust in-., ol Malenkov . Molotov, XVhile living to coniiol its po- and Ka.;anoi(h liom ihe I'lesi- htical clisis. the- Russian state- has diuu. in ul ol this vear. advanced at a rapid .ate indiistri.il- In the- inst ame s it has be c-ti the- 'v hnolo-ic allv to become .iimv which has caused ihe shake- ,,K' M(,,ll' st highly developed tips in the Russi.n. hiciaichy. Ihe ' hi.olodi .d st.,te- in the modern ni'iy siiwe- Stalin's death in n,-', '"ld. Indeed, the- Russians hae has been a -icat iiistiuinent ol )o- suipassed even the- I'nited Stales l'tial powe-i .,,! has alwavs been '" VM,U' Mit'"'l' I'clds with the- '"' pic-se iu thre at to So ie-f 'l'11'- ,Uo l''"h sate llite s, mleis. In the pui-es in ulv it was S ll,iN t icl 1 1 y.-.u c elehi at ion 'he- aimv thai decided the late ol fiiiphasie the- advanced Mduikov. Ioloto .m( K..i-ano R,,NN,IM l'hnolo- lUu at the Mh. As De le ne Minister, .hukov v."Mt" ,mu ,t U ;l - 1 immature po- icldcd t.cmciidoiis power which s,:,,('- As Xu v,"ts limes Tl T " nc-spondet. Il.niison Salisbuiv The Dai v Tar Heel ,"" " "Kuv 1 ' " 1 1 " " ,s IV4I IICBI serves lo emphasize the dispaiiiy The official student pat'acav.Dn of the bclweet. the- capabilities ol Soviet ruWjcation Board of the t'niversity of ,(-c hnolo and the minimal im- North Carolina, where I' is put .shed h,,.,,.,,,,,.. , , ., , , daily except Sunday. Monday and exam- " .V'" ' "." '"'-'S in-tion and vacation periods and sum- "ec led in )(. lu.s ,,, S(). mer termv Fntc red as second rlass mat- Ut ' l'( ul)l1 ter in the post office in Chapel Hill, N. C. under the Act of March 8, 1870. O O I A A A. Subscription rates: mailed. $4 per year. IVlriT $2 50 semester: delivered. $8 a year ,w,v" $350 a semester. yUc Student 'Legislature will Editor " NEIL BASS ''(,"'M,t' ,u'x, Ut t" 'I'1' un i its ol State Student Leislatuie delc-'a- ManagiDj; Kditor DOUG EISELE ,jollv News Editor BILL CHESHIRE ' 'u" ''" onceinin the- SSL al- sIlEd.tor PATirMTLLER " "';"'.s a passage which would . make it mandatory lor local law- sporti Editor BILL KING makers to a))toe SSL delations Ast. Sports Editor DAVE WIBLE ;MPl,i,,u'I h a 'l-lions eouimit- .. tee. Business Manager ... J01L VVH1TAKER , K. sllo,(1 p,ss Advertising Manager . FRED KATZLN the I'niversity should de- ntnnn, linilely preserve its reputation as Night Editor PEBLLY BARROW . , 7 ' . the leading SSL participant laig- Prooireader VRIN'GLE PIPKIN est and leading paiiicipant. VIEW FROM THE HILL: Subversives & Repression: Democracy? By Curtis Gans Sputnik and Muttnik may have clone the cause of individual rights in America more service than anything that has happened within the last fifteen years. It will ultimately call into ac count the entire loyalty-security system of the United States. It may even recall from enforced academic hibernation such im portant figures as Dr. Robert Op penheimcr, top atomic scientist, and Owen Lattimore. expert on Chinese affairs. As it stands now the loyalty pro pram is a blight on democracy. The initial step of the loyalty program, the loyalty oath, caused considerable debate and furor several years ago. but it has been largely taken as matter of course now. Tins type of invasion of in dividual privacy should never be taken as a matter of course at ;aiy time. Not only is the oath an invasion of privacy, but more important it dis courages competent men of integri t from pursuing their profession, t or it is only the man of integrity who will re-fuse to take the oath, as an invasion of privacy or be cause the oath contains phrase ology which will bind them from acting and thinking freely. The true Communist who is out to wreck government by force will see nothing against signing an oath inorder to get into the inner workings of whatever organization lie wants to pervert to his purpose. To discourage the thinkers among the American people is bad. to hide the real subcrsie in fluence is worse. The see-one! and pe-rhaps meist odious part of the system is the loyalty-security boards set - up under the Truman Administration and carried to excess under the Ki sen how er regime. No one denies the right of the covernment to hire and fire its -nploye-es. What is denied is the rUht of the government to tag in dividuals with the stigma of ' sub- ( ! s t"- ,,- -security risk", and prohibiting their employment in private companies and agencies cont rae-ting with the government. Net only are then- tagged "sec urity risk", but they are assumed unity of this, and to vindicate them selves they must prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that they are innocent or they will be working as laborers or as professors or researching assistants in extreme ly liberal universities. Moreover, these men. iu order to have the stigma of "subversive" not connected with their names, must appear, before boards who think of the individual as guilty fust, and pry into his private af fairs to such an extent that the process represents an inquisition in form rather than the concept of a jury trial. The employee is denied the right L'lL ABNER VO' 1 NOW PMTITI rrrx I TO ALLTH '-ccjCK'-f rr I jITvii r-r- . . V BACHELOR.'.' Think You've Got Enough Control To Hold 'Em?" 4 WORup SERIES ii n ii ii ft m 47 h. iSCn V I -v 1 to face his accuser; is questioned about events happening twenty years ago, longer by 14 years than the statute of limitation; and is cleniod the right to know his judge. This is distinctly fereign from any democratic concept of judicial procedure. Moreover the executive depart ment of the government has taken chatue ol ruling on the guilt or in nocence of these empleyH's. This contitutes a bill of attainder which is specifically prohibited by the Constitution. The process has met with little success, besides. Not a single real subversive has been uncovered, but at least one instance of subver sion was uncovered after the loyal ty boards passed on the "loyalty" of this subversive. What the process is doing is keeping good, clear thinking men of integrity out of the government, and substituting for them, people who are willing to subject their thought to control. The program is at the heart of the U. S. lag in the technological and armaments races. An efficient counter-espionage system should be created in its stead, whereby true subversives could be thrown out of government and the process handled through the courts of law. as they were intended, and where the democra tic rights of facing one's accuser, being innocent until proved guilty, knowing the identity of one's judge and having credible witnesses make their accusations still obtain. Someone said not too many years ago. ' The seeds ef revolution are in repression." In a democracy, repression is anathema. CAROLINA CARROUSEL: Compl acency Danger In The Recall Election Gail Godwin With recall just around the corner, there may be a tendency for supporters to become com placent, etutc to the fact Chat they have only been subjected to the hopeful predications of "theirside." They may be complacent if they are supporting the editor now in office because he is already editor and has the freedom of the press on his side. They may be com placent, on the other hand, if they are supporting another candidate because he is running against this controversial figure who is called "incompetent" by his opponents. On Nov. 26, when you just can't seem to find time to go vote, when you've discovered you left your I. D. card back at the dorm, think twice before you ignore your voting responsibility. Remember the Dewey-Truman race in '48. One man was so sure his candidate was going to win that he wrote a book entitled DEWEY - OUR PRESIDENT! One of the country's top news papers went ahead and made up its front page on election eve. The result was ridiculous. We arc still seeing pictures in sociology books and history books of newly-elected President Truman gleefully hold ing up a paper whose headlines are screaming ' Dewey elected president." Why this unpredictible phenome na? Simply because Dewey sup porters were so complacent they stayed home in bed while the push, ing. plodding little groups that were scared their man might lose went out and faithfully marked their ballof. So don't go to bed too sure on election ee. The next morning you may be in for a shock. And you will not be able to complain if you didn't vote. At present. Chapel Hill weather is going from one extreme to the other. One day it is piercing cold and dry. The next day it rains. The next it is humid and sticky and if you are a girl, your hair falls in ugly little pieces. If you are bewildered about all these weather changes. I want to make a suggestion. There is a delightful little course called geo graphy 38 in which you learn why some rain is hard and some is soft, and why some clouds are puffy and others are thin and anaemic looking, and even why rainfall in Singapore is greater than that in east Alaska. Then when if is cold one day and then it gets warm, you can reason ably be sure it will rain, and you can cancel that barbecue for two. This knowledge of climate caper ings and careenings is most bene ficial for those unfortunates who don't know "what makes weather run." . f THANK MOU, fiOlPA Al LADIES-AND )( J -) NOW, MISS. Jr r vviidu"1iv- I c. UME5.'Ss I , X AEXJUI OeJR ; y t- ., u s rxi- Ait ,.,k ,,. by Al Capp w ,NAr-W TOeJAIL-UNTIL XTlMEFO'W' l HAWKINS DM" J ANOTHER INNERCEMT VOUNG HARVARD" ' POGO ( fW J YAy hanpin. c&fw&S ) , V tH? Jg0 II "VOUCltt LIQUID A 4 THS? KOA17. I f I 7KAW.J ' I by Walt Kelly OUT WHAT Litfg A TyKH? - PQVQHHVT. ic ik --. m . A i veAVS IKJ ' I IWS TH(s HOtfff y SOME- ERIC THE RED: Gen Chowhound 8i Heartbreak Inn Harry Kirschner News Item: The White House, Nov. 15. Today the President and Air Force 1st Lieutenant Oswald D. Chowhound had breakfast with the crew of Inter galaxy Saucer X-fl. ... Lieutenant Chowhound was until recently a four star General with the Air Force. He was demoted yesterday for conduct unbecoming an officer which was itemized as: using profanity before members of a foreign delegation, and allowing himself to be cap tured and brainwashed. Setting a precedent, the president invited him to breakfast in spite of his demotion because he is the only earthman at all familiar with the saucer crew. Inter-galaxy Saucer X-8 comes from a planet which is - 4,500,000,000 light years from earth, the saucer's commander told the president. They com mute between earth and their home, he said, by travelling at a speed many times the speed of light. The trip takes them a month. , The saucer-men's skin is colored green, and their ' facial structure is that of a broad nose and a Jull, protruding jaw. USIS photographers were on hand to take color pictures of the president having break fast with the green men. Copies are being sent to the next UNESCO session to demonstrate our na tion's encouraging attitude to the universal civil rights program. The president had scrambled eggs, lightly salted, three strips of bacon, toast and coffee with cream and sugar. Lieutenant Chowhound had creamed bepf on toast and black coffee. The saucer-men each had one pin-head sized protein-energy-carbohydrate-vitamin pill which, they said, they ate only to he polite as they had all had previously had their pill for th? week. The saucer-men told of learning English by listen ing to the radio regularly during the ten years that they have been observing earth from their space ship. They demonstrated their command of the language by singing their rendition of "Heart break Hotel" for the president. When asked if they had any weapons comparable to ours of the modern Nuclear Age, the saucer's commander replied that they only carried survival weapons which consist of a hand grenade worn in the belt by every crewman. It has the force of two of our super-hydrogen bombs. At this point in the interview the surgeon-general happened by to check on the president. He gave him a double sedative and four tranquilizers, and declared him "sound as a dollar." It was noted that the saucer-men were quite af fable and friendly, and laughed at everything thi president said. J Lieutenant Chowhound told of his experience when he was taken into the saucer. He said that he got a very close ud view of the Russian Sputnik n as the saucer followed it around in its orbit for a few minutes. He mentioned that the saucer-mA told him that they "liked to come up and look at it" every so often because they had never seen one be fore. They had only heard of them through their planet's ancient history. When they were children they told him, they had been told of their planet's sending hp experimental satellites, but that wrs over a million years ago-. Chowhound said that the saucer flew up to the moor, and stayed behind it for 12 hours, so as to avoid being seen from earth, while he was inter rogated. He said that it was only because of his demonstrations of our government's friendliness to foreign delegates that the breakfast with the presi dent came about. An?7 I?" breakfaSt the President Save a state ment to the press which said that there is no need l,htehgeaeraI PWic to be alarmed by the visit from the saucer-men. They had come to see the president about getting a foreign-aid grant for their Planet from the State Dept. The president said reassuringly that they are believers in democracy o heJTnr ?p,talism- and hve little use for other forms of government andor economic sys- Electorate And Poor Response Nancy Hill The Carolina student electorate made a poor sS;rd3? b3ll0ting- A 35 t vo" ipteret H ?6n.where student are traditionally ' k on ?hen m,Cal iSSUeS' indicates definite lack on the part of students mvInhavee hCSSe ,f WeCk'S e,ection e lack be'v of Le,Vf ,nformatio- An unusual num- d fn nS V1Cd fr offices' Particularly oed ofiice. The coeds adopted the usual cam dorm, TIT" They visited i dorms and leit printed cards with their picture They exhibited posters in all available sp But "he hf3t StPPe,d by in ro- aPted wha Ite Tl r Wh3t She f6lt ht'r e,ect5n to of nee. would mean. th,mvotedldr thent l thC Tuesda-V' s of thm Noted for the names that stuck in their minds. Some may have voted along .strict party lines But very few were able to make accurate judgement on the basts of knowledge of a candidates pa expenence. motives for running, or plans if elect- An informed student electorate would be an in terested one. and would make a better than 34 pi cent turn out at the polls. The fault lies with both voter and candidate, but candidate, always fa e d,s,nterest on the part of voters in running for SmflTnTr-0! r0UUne fficeS- candid should offer information on himself in these case,. The student electorate should make a br than average-turnout for the forthcoming recall election. The issues are controversial, and confused, and the election is being held at a time when eleS tions are not normally held. Something other, than information will be lacking on the part of students if they allow , minority to decidone the most crucial issues that will arise this year. i i.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 16, 1957, edition 1
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