WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1958 PACE TWO THI OAll? TkW Hffli- Need For Planning lluir !i.s Ixcii ,i sciit's of articles aj Jf.u ini in litis p.ipci c oik crniiV4 the situa tion 'ot i !u- I'M. I. unity. Throughout the art i U- time .tpc;u u! the word "eeunpeti t i . The (pillion i uIuiIhm the l Tnixcritv U piemtlx ahle to iouiKtc with other pub lic colleges and the private school lor stand ard ol-education through faculty. The ;m swev at picscnt - no. , The s.il.irx standard of the rnixrrsMy is Ik lou that ol many other schools in the I'nited States. The nppoi tunitifs tor useanh . ate limited. (Ionises here do not challenge the lii;;ht. ;nd hence inanv pass elsewhere, luither. the outstanding college ;taduates aie not eoniin to I'M'.. Moieoxer. the op: poituniiies lor hiving hooks I mm xvliieli to xoik are limited, .ind ahoxe all the opjwn limits to puhlish. in many cases, is limited to lhoc who can allotd it. Heiue. the salary ollered piohihits the ie.;tixe work xvliieli would lead to -adxanc ement. 'I he picture is riot ;ood. Howexer, there is at le.iNt one lrilit spot. According to ChaiKclIoi Axcock. thete are plans in the works for a merit salarv increase budget. This ill stimulate incentixe in a xvav that no acioss the boaid increase tan do. since it is spurring tulitx rather than quantity. The xvhole problems falls in the hands of the state leislatute at Raleigh, who must be made aw ne ol the need at the I'uixersity and tlx ciitic a! condition of the entire liili ci education program in general. It is not enough to meet at crucial times the olfers of other institutions who are trv int to ;;et rnixeisitv piolesoi s. It is more impoitant to be p. yiny; llu-se'people the i iht txpe of salarx to bein xvith. It is not enough for research grants to be linanced bv prixate coronations, lor the state should take the inteust in its future citi zens. It is not enough to make promotions de pendent upon serxice measuied in years: it must be service measuied in cptality. It is not even enough to raise salaries, without the lriiuc beneliu that faculty need to pursue their prolession adecpiatelx or even siipoi latixelv. It his been too lonj; that legislators have been in the 1 0-4 about the needs ol educa tion. It his been loo lonj; since theie has been a realization ol the necessity lor an ade quate faculty. A leappraisal of the state's Mlicx towards education in general and in tellect in particular is due and oxcrduc. It is all ri'Jit to think of Ininin to thf state induottv. hut it is moie inioitaut to develop the unouiccs ol the state. One of thoNe KNOtyrces hapeiis to 1k- the mind of its youth. This resource must be cuhixated and piotectrd. The need lor ac tion' that looks to the fit tine ha nevei Ihtii so apparent as it is now. 1 he state must lealize that the I'nixeisity is one ol the bastions ol democracy. It must luithei lealize that the vouth xvhich pass through the- school aie the leadership ol to inonow . The cpiesiioii is then. "What kind of leadcis will theie be tomonow?" A partial answer 111.x eouie liom the final budget that is appiopiiated t the I'nixersitx next winter. publication of the Publica- The official student ti(n Board ef the Uui ersity C)f North Caro lina, where it is pub lushed daily except Monday and examina lion and vaiation pe riods and summer terms. Entered as sec ond class matter in the post office in Chapel Hill. N. C. under the Act of March 8. 1870. Subscription rater, mailed, $4 per year, $2 50 a semester; de livered. $6 a ear, $3 50 ii .it r? L 'vii l)i i.'aroiuwt J j 'i'- vU.k r.rt ' Ji' m i a'semestcr. F,ditor .J...' CURTIS B. CANS Manasln- Kditor . CHARLIE SLOAN Business Manager '.. JOIIN WIIITAKE1; News Klitors PAUL RULE BILL KINCAID Feature" KditoV IZ7. 7T aVIS YOUNG AssTTeature Editor". KE:Tfr7eDMAN Sports Editor ... . DAVE WIBLE Asst. Sports FMUor RUSTY HAMMOND Arts Editor . AiTHO N Y WOLFF Coed Editor lJOATBitOCK Librarian GLENDA FOWLER Subscription Manager Circulation Manajjcr . AVERY THOMAS SYD SIIUFORD Postscript Jonathan Yardley "Yoirll Make Better Time Without This Extra Wheel" S ..I v 1 inIT STAFF Jonathan Yardley, Gail Godwin, Fete Yountf. Glenna Meginnis. Gary Greer, Ethan Tol man. James C. Miller. Sam Fraier. NEWS STAfT Frintjle I'ipkin.' Sarah Adams, Dave Jones, Parker Maddrey, Ed Rowland, Mary Moore Mason, Westbrook Fowler," Stan Black, Virginia Sandidge. Ben Taylor. Eddie Goodman, Wyndham Hewitt. Raymond Gray, Morris God; frry. I am terribly sorry to say that I was unable to attend' the recent appearance of c. e. cummings at Duke University. That talk seems to have causht the imagination of a great many students, and mut have been highly stimulating. It is too bad, however, that so many of them have taken such a superficial look at the poetry and ideas of the poet, for there have been a good many erroneous, though well intended, statements about his poetic credo. Those who really wish to gain an honest under standing of cummings' poetry would do well to read his introduction to New poems (1938) which is axailable aiso in both editions of his collected poetry; this is the most accurate summation of his credo available. The primary misunderstanding is that ' cum mings is "beat" and has no more faith in the world that he gives the appearance of wishing he had not been born. Cummings is disappointed with part of the world. He refers to this segment of th ; population as "mostpeople." It would be best to let him explain for himself: ' Life, for mostpeople, simply isn't. Take the socalled standardof living. What do mostpeople mean by 'living'? They don't mean liv ing. They mean the latest and closest plufal approximation to singu lar prenatal passivity which science, in its Unite but unbounded wis dom, has succeeded in selling their wives." And on those opposed to "mostpeople," xvhom he refers to as "ourselves," meaning "you and I": "You and I are not snobs. We can never be born enough. We are hlritfa ri beings; for whom birth is a supremely welcome mystery, the mystery of growing; the mys tery which happens only and whenever we are faithful to ourselves. You and I wear the dangerous looseness of doom and find it becom ing. Life, for eternal us, is now; and now is much too busy being a little more than everything to seem anything, catastrophic included." Cummings is highly critical of man "pity this busy monster, manunkind. not" but he is critical in a constructive, thoughtful way, and he is critical because he loves man. Me loves man as an individual but not as society. A few quotations from one of his most Camous poems should bear this out: "Anyone lived in a pretty how town (with up so floating many bells down) spring summer autumn winter he sang his didn't ne danced his did. "Women and men (both little and small) cared for anyone not at all they sowed their isn't they reaped their same sun moon stars rain" This is not quite as difficult as it looks. Anyone Ls the htro. rep resenting individuality and sensitivity. lie lives in a little town where public opinion pretty how" is opposed to him. but all year roun I he was happy "sang his didn't danced his did." The people, how ever, lived an unalive life of conformity "sowed their isn't they reaped their same." Anyone falls in love with a girl named "noone" anyone being opposed to noone as male to female. Together they live J a happy life of this society which could not understand them, while the someones and everyofies were born and grew into moitpeople. Eventu ally anyone died, and noone followed him. "Busy folk buried them side by side," and life went on. as the people "reaped their sowing and reaped their same." This poem, in its entirety, is the summing up of cummings' be liefs. If the reader can surmount the initial hurdle of understanding the complexities of English as cummings sees it, he has opened the door to not only the understanding and appreciation of a major con temporary poet, but to a fuller understanding and appreciation of life on this earth. Cummings. like all of us, can only surmise as to the ultimate meaning of life, and can only suggest criticisms to im prove life on this earth, but the mariner in which he expresses his views is at once beautiful and profound and deserves appreciation bv us all. Good Grief! Happy Readers Sidelight Ed Rowland Men Of The Golden Rule Niht Editor PEBLEY BARROW Editor: I am a junior at Chapel Hill High School and recent editor elect of our rchool paper, the Proconian. This is all insignifi cant, however, and nothing more than introductory, for I felt like dropping a note saying that there certainly is a noticeable improve ment in the Daily Tar Heel since the recent turnover by election. To me it's the best I've ever known it to be (that's pretty long) and I especially like the use of editorial columns on the editor ial page, and the big features elsewhere. Editorials are sensibly written, too. Especially the one on the parkins meters. The sports page seems to have excellent cover--age. Actually, the reason I'm espec ially interested is 'that I plan to try some of the same things with the. Proconian next year. After the Daily Tar Heel's shaky go of it last year, I think that at last it's once again a top-notch publication. Paul Houston Editor: I am sorry it I have said or written anything to offend you. I haven't meant it that way. I think you are putting out an excellent paper, and congratula tion are in order. "O Lost," Daily Tar Heel, May 6, was a brilliant editorial. How ever, if we have faith only in our selves for our ultimate security we are certainly leaning on a broken reed. He who spends all of his time worrying about se curity and how to save his life will succeed at neither. When Senator Carter Glass said at the beginning of World War II, that people should have some greater purpose in life than eating and sleeping and going to the movies, he touched a sore spot with us. We! don't like to face up to it that whe have hard tasks to do and loads to lift. Gerald W. Johnston, recently speaking to the Phi Beta Kappas at Wake Forest College, points out that colleges exist not only to keep a young man from being infected by error; but to show him truth. Tennyson penned these beauti ful lines about man's quest for truth: "Some with sad faces sought for her. Some with cross ed hands sighed for her. But Norman Cousins Inevitably, a man is measured by his largest con cerns and by what he regards as the ultimate ques tions. If he is troubled only by what happens to him here and now or in the hereafter, then his measurement is quickly taken and it is not neces sary to use the long rule. ' But if a man places a high value on life, what ever its accent or station; if he respects a mysteri ous but real connection between himself and the people xvho have gone before him and these not yet born, then there are proportions in his measure beyond estimate. In such a man, the gift of aware ness has come fully alive. His perceptions are keen est when he looks inward and sees others in him self. He will fix his mind on the things that are more important to him than xvhether he lives or dies. The ultimate question for him has to do not with his personal immortality but with the immor tality of values and meaningful life beyond his own time. Civilizations must submit to the same measure. No society is smaller than the one that acts as though history does not exist beyond its own time and needs, or that sees no obligation to a later generation. Conversely, a society earns its place in the future by respecting the unclamorous claims of the unborn. How, then, are we to measure ourselves and our civilization? In using the term "our Civilization" ATondav nisht at the meeting of the Board of Aldermen it was apparent that students and the city fathers are far apart in viewing the parkin problem in the downtown area. Student Body President Don Furtado presented the aldermen with a series of proposals which he felt represented the students' viewpoint. The alder men postponed action on the situation until they had time to look over the proposals. In the meantime, the Planning Board of Chapel Hill, under whose direction the overall plan for re strictions and 1 meters was drawn up, sits on its hands while first merchants and then students find fault with the plan. The two groups seem unable to look at the merits of each other's plan. The Planning Board employed John Horn of Traffic and Transportation Planning in Raleigh to make a comprehensive study of the traffic and park ing problem in hapel Hill. The study was made over a period of more than two years, and his pro posals were adopted into a resolution presented to the Board of Aldermen. Students living in Fraternities on Cclumbia St. between Franklin and Cameron are yelling that their sacred right to park on these streets is being removed or infringed, and others living on Franklin between Henderson and Hillsboro claim the same thing. They presented their objections to the pro posals Monday. The planning board surveyed the Columbia St. area and found that of 84 parking spaces on the block (both sides), they were in use 64 per cent of the time for an average usage of one hour and 47 minutes. At present parking is limited to two hours in the block. All parking is diagonal. The Planning Board proposed to cut out all di agonal parking and permit parallel parking only from Franklin St. to the south side of theBig Fra ternity Court driveway. Meters would be installed at the parallel spaces, limited to two hour usage. The reasons the board listed for the changes in clude facilitating the flow of traffic. With the changes a third lane would be added to permit driv ers to have separate lanes for right, left and no turns. The Board feels that the intersection of Cameron and Columbia is a bottleneck that must be opened, and clearing the street to the driveway is the only practical way of solving the problem. On Franklin St. between the Post Office and the ATO house the survey found 102 spaces, 85 per cent used for an average time of one hour 33 min utes. Presently all parking on the street except for spaces in front of Kemp's and the Dairy Bar is un limited. The proposals would eliminate diagonal spaces on the north side of the street and replace them with parallel ones, a total loss of 16 spaces. Two hour metersvwould be installed. The proposals for other streets will not affect students as much and the aldermen have encoun tered no other vocal opposition. At the Monday night meeting a representative from a parking meter company was present. President Furtado has presented a good case of student objections to portions of the overall plan. The question is: are these objections valid or im portant enough to destroy the result of studv by competent officials? her. At life's dear peril wrought for her, and tasted the raptured fleetness of her divine complete ness. ''They followed her and found her, where all may hope to find. Not in the burnt out ashes of the mind, but beautiful, with dangers' sweetness round her." St these, our brethren, fought for We are not limiting it to one nation or one conti nent. Whatever the razor's edge of our own em phasis on national differences, the species of hu man life as a whole is noxv in jeopardy, for Hi-? precarious balances which enable life to subsist are now being altered and damaged. The national units involved in the life-and-death rivalries are going far beyond the requirements of mutual total destruction. The invasion of the Jfuture has already begun. Day by day, the assault, against later gen erations is growing in size and power. Even if the Mr. Johnson, trying to find the present tensions do not culminate in a worldwide answer to the confusion which explosion, the killing poisons now being put into envelops mankind, comments as the air and into the genes of human beings will follows;, "Every great spiritual re- twist and cramp and disfigure later life, ligion is based on faith (or truth) Several men who are unwilling to participate in that in man alone among the an- the tyranny of the present over the future have imals God implanted a spark of attempted to stake their lives on their ability to divine fire. To search out and awaken people. They believe that the species of identify this spark of divinity is man is a single organism; and so. they have no trou- the- first step toward learning ble recognizing and acting on the fact of connec- how it may be nursed into flame, tion among all men. They believe that people can which Ls the goal of educatiovi become aware of the implications of what is hap- nnrt this ran best he arrnmniuho i pening only as their moral senses can come alive. through, the study of the attri- horsepower motor. There, are four men in the com pany. The leader of the group is a former Lieu tenant Commander in the United States Navy who is also a former state housing commissioner. The men of the Golden Rule set sail some weeks ago for the Eniwetok nuclear proving grounds. It was their object to expose, themselves to the effects of the explosions. They put their faith not in the ability of their bodies to withstand the radioactive bullets released by the nuclear experiments but in the power of a universal response the moment the dan ger -became real. The certainty which sustained them was that no force in the world was powerful enough to keep people from seeing the great moral issues involved as soon as these issues became visible and clear. In short, they were betting thei lives that the necessary awakening would come not on the level of argument but through the strength of a symbolic offer. The United States Government has put these men in jail rather than have them proceed to the nuclear proving grounds. But there is no law that is being violated. The United States does not possess the ocean area from which thesp men are hem? barred. Nor does it make sense to profess to pro- be leavin Carolina next January to become head tect them against themselves: rather, it is we who of the department at UCLA. In other words, the Carolina Playmakers, and the DA Dept. as a whole, are in for a new leading personality. With all due respect to the present chairman, Dr. Selden, it is high time the depart ment and the Playmakers had some more vital lead ership than is now in evi- View 81 Preview Anthony Wolff It has become official that Dr. 'Samuel Selden, chairman of the Department of Dramatic Arts, will need the protection they are trying to give us. . If these men are guilty of anything it Ls of an effort to break down the idea that the individual is forever and tragically separated from large events. They do not satisfy themselves by bemoan ing the fact of an insane society bent on altering the conditions on .which life depends. Nor do they crave the distinction of belonging to the last gen eration of man on earth. Hence, they affirm the power of the free will to shape government and to effect historic decisions. The men of the Golden Rule have been called crackpots; but who among the rest of us can call I V v i : . . . i---"' . X denee. There are many things which might well be ac- ourselves sane lor sanctioning me action tney seen " "ic iicai iuiuxc, in regara to notn to slop? The men of the Golden Rule have been e Department and the Playmaker organization, put in jail, but those who have arranged these Not the least of these is expansion of facilities, en hideous explosions, with their toll of lives ye un- rHme-nt, and curriculum. calculated, will go free. What the men of the Golden There is also a crying need to make the Tlay Rule seek is a simple test of conscience; what the makers an active part of Carolina life both as an nations seek is a test of devices that can expunge intellectual and educational stimulus, and, equally human life devices that no longer have meaning in important, as a source of entertainment. These func military terms. The weapons have nothing to do tions of the organization are almost entirely neg with victory; what they pulverize is the future of lected at present, Very few students attend Play man and with it the things that are as valuable maker productions, and the fault is not entirely . 1 f . . 1 . : p with iha nhcntitnm-. U TV I 1 t . a aie nseii jusiice, me assertion 01 conscience, ""uku. mc i iuymaKer ironi ottice dews bute that we call greatness, wherever and whenever it has appeared among men." Mr. Johnston closes on a note of high hope: If the task before man is immeasurably great, so is the promised reward. That spark of divinity in man that makes God mindful of him is im mensely more potent, vaster, and more wide-ranging than the sput niks and atom bombs .And to the extent that xve understand and use this force "we have the hope that it will carry us forxvard, not into a new world, but a new uni verse of power, and beauty, and truth." I certainly haven't done justice to Mr. Johnston's most delightful address at Wake Forest College. I have simply tried te resolve These are the men of the Golden Rule, a thirty- foot ketch with a sturdy sail and a twenty-four freedom to grow, freedom to be. There is unlimited power in the Golden Rule. If we would measure it, we have only to stop shield ing ourselves from the symbolic power of what these men are and wish .to do. some questions raised by your editorial "O Lost." Olelia C. Connor. Editor: Regarding Mr. Dalton's letter concerning his faith: It is en couraging to find one so devoted to his beliefs and so proud of his faith. The world certainly needs more men like Mr. Dalton xvith a missionary zeal which matches their Episcopalian ire. As a Baptist (Southern, that is. suh!), and a member of that "historical ly, structurally, theologically etc. etc. etc." division of Christendom xvhich has had so little influence in the history of our nation and the xvorld, I take the liberty! to speak for my Protestant brothers in apologizing to Mr. Dalton for being "classed" among us low down, po-folk Protestants. Philip Gamble Dear Mr. Wolff: As an avid-and-awed reader of your column, I would like to join you on the mourner's bench for a moment. I have noted, in your comments on the Sigma Chi Der by, with what open xlismay you regarded the attendance at Beau ty contests as compared with that of "any event of intellectual in terest." It's sad but I'm afraid. Mr. Wolff, that it's the xvay of the world. Hard as I try, I've had no absolutely nothing to encourage the students to .it- tend, and, in fact, make it difficult for them to do so. If it is true, as it is supposed to be, that one of the functions of the local DA Department and oar- - From The Saturday Review ucuiariy 01 the Playmakers is to encourage pubic interest in the theatre, then they defeat the r avowed purpose by withdrawing the Playmake: s success in trying to convince my from the Carolina students, friends and colleagues that the PETITE DRAMATIQUES Saturday Review is a far more The final Petites Dramatiques production of thro-warding publication than Play- year, playing on Sunday night only, will be a survev hy- 01 the fielJ of poetry with the emphasis on the con Perhaps we should follow the temporary efforts of Cummings. Eliot and Gins old Chinese proverb and fight burg, with a bit of Robert Frost Ahrow'n in for re fire with fire. To wit, may I sug- spectability. gest that in forthcoming adver- . PLAYMAKERS tisement of events of intellectual The most joyous Haymaker production of the interest, you use as a drawing year, regularly entitled "Capers," will be given on card a reproduction of a Matisse Saturday evening in the Playmakers Theatre The nude, or a line or two from John local thespians will spend the evening making fun Donne's "The Flea." of themselves, their productions, and their facultv. You may fmd consolation, as I Those who have seen the Playmakers in action this have, in the fact that our position year will probably get a kick out of this shebang, was strongly defended by a group TELEVISION of early twentieth century female 6 p.m. Channel 4 Subject is Jazz writers, commonly called "the Tonight's subject is "Cool" jazz the modern Oh-God.-the-pain girls." idiom, xvith particular emphasis on its relation to Roy P Lathrop classical music.