THt. OAILT TAB Hf H. SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1760 rsr.r. -nro E r .3 Why I'll For Dr. Vote Lake W. C. George r 4 VI. ; DR. I. BZVERLY LAKE . . . candidate for governor C.iticiis I North C.irnli II sIlotlM Ull cninc ;incl cin In.ur I lie -Htiinitv to ic li Picwi lv I . ;i k c- lor ( io ii nor lor tin- lol'ou iir i c.is His: i II c i a l i .i c iiii n Uim li;is Hu ron r .i v to lilil ioi (inn- l i I ii l i oii al t; eminent Avlu'll jOWfl I 111 louts aw trv in t (U'story it .uid .m one who stcadlist Iv supports it. J) Hi- i a lointi'ous "c'li t I c in a- n. tlhHl'Jlttlll .u h! Hstraiiiid in l c a c h i n '4 iii(lncMiK-n:s. ;) lie is an al)U-. mIioI.uIv const it u tional lawver capable of clis tinnisliin Ie tween tnic latv and sophistry at a time when l e i e i t and I. Ischood are widelv used to v;ain power. 1 Mi is anxious to help out Nero peo ple drwli p 1 1 u- talents the possess but is iirni!!in- in s.uiiliir ut white (hilthen. iKctIUsl .uid looJisliK. in the process. V lie is l.imili.ii with the pioccsses ol Mate '.'(iciniiirnt. h.ix in p.n tit ipated in its opt i. ii mm .is .in o:(i.d ; ml hain closeh 'hsi'i i d ii Idi u ais as a titien ol Wake lo'csi .mil a, a p;ai tiling l.iwwr in Raleiyh. i Noiili C'.iiolin. iiiicns aie onlronted vsiih the most l.iutul human and constitu tional niis n this (enttux. It would hue lieeii hitu.istu and tragic it at this time they h.id-uo i .in.'.ul He loi (.oNcrnoi who was will epiess . t m tiii i 1 1 1 opinion reard iii'; the piim.iis issues, some one unwilling t s ii rtli i ii n hi Id ui i and the principle ol Si.iles' Rijiis ;uai anteed l the Coiistitu iiji mi dun. mil ol )iessine groups and ern i '! toua I! v. dec i i ed i c i!e. i DR. W. C. GEORGE . . school of medicine Newsman's Notepad Roland Gidui "How to tell the children, - that's the his prohTotn. What can we do to make it easier on them?" At least that's what we kept saying to each other in shock and deep sorrow over the death of the family dos. An cisht-yrar-cld shepherd collie had died painfully and in evitably from rat poisoning. A dose of the deadly warfarin a'e away his liver despite the vali ant efforts of veterinary medi cine. Where the poison came from we'll never know. If it was deliberate poisoning we'd best not know. "Tup Dog" at eight years old was the same age as the oldest of the three boys. We got the dog as a playmate for the first born when boy and dog wen both in infancy. The canine grew up with th children and loved them better than any of his four-fo )tecl friends. He was their trusted pro tector and they knew it and de pended on him. No stranger could approach the youngsters without the dog sounding ar. alarm. If the children by chance went out in the street to play, "Pup Dog" would instinctive ly stand between them an any car that approached. They rode him, punched him, kicked him, ran with him, scolded him, praised, hugged, and lov ed him as one of the family. There was nothing special a bout "pup dog" within th" world of dogdom. He was not a purebred nor was he mongrel. He knew no tricks. In fact he seemed deliberately dumb at times when you wanted him to do something. He wasn't a beau tiful dog, and he loved dust and mud. (He was just another fam ily dog outwardly like hun dreds of others in this dog-loving community.) But he ioved his young mas ters, and they were his life. For a week while his life hung by drops of glucose and antibi otics in the veterinary hospital, the household hoped and pray ed for his recovery. Then ! mid-morning the nev. came. The veterinarian (Jump to col. 5) llien in hum. in lustoiy when have atisen able men In.ve an- t 12. Newsman's Notepad "Washington Slept' Here' ttt W WW. Perspectives By Yardley ! Now .ii id mil jor i isrs I cued iih the will and the wisdom to help liud a solution. Piecil l ake iN that man lor thjs Si .it c in iliis i iuie ol i isis. r Where Dr. Lake Stands i I he lollowing mateiial is taken Iroui an I l',eel Lake lor (iovernoi carnain 1 1 1 ( k ! 1 1 1 1 c . I !iec ai e iiotat ions hum speeches whiih he his made in the past lew years. 1 he I diioi .) I hi iriii to ote should Ik- limited to people who (.in le.el and wiite." Kinston kiw .mis ( lull. June -,. )'t- I In jiides ol mil courts otiht to be i Ik ml h the people" Raleigh Ciit.in Club i in ;o. ll ei iioi . Mate." '.MM L'O I 'glo pt I '' . H Is lo ll 11 !i Le dei i leiiile.scnv I lie an ;islat in e l.ne the die Kiw anis Club not the Co policv ol this Au- ie A is out enemy, not the Ne- '.. .l.r. ...... 1 t till. IllK ie ( i it io i ( 1' s ohjctliw is not b: tter m e4i0 ihilduti. Its id imate ob- jutiu- is the blending ol tlu white and Ne--lo i.iics into .1 niied-blooded who'c." UAL- I . Sept. m. K)-,;. I am opp mil to the miin ol white And .e;io 1 hihlicn in 'ihools.' " I he 011K dillcunic between the NAA CP . .id the Moderates is that the NAACP would 411 to their desiied lesult laster." Kiiision Kiw.mis Club. June iu.vj. ' " 1 he liiixtuie ol our two yveat races in the ilassiooin and then in the home is not inexitable and is not to be tolerated." Ashe boio Lions Club. July iu. lft'. ' I he adiiiinistiatois ol our State j;o -(iiiuieiii aie puisiiiii policies and tactics which en lead onh to the final success ol the NAACP." IJtu lintou Rotary Club, Mm Ii nivi Jonathan Yardley During the current e;mip;aign for the presidency of the student hody we have heard a yreat deal of discussion centering around the honor system, its fallieies and the need for improvement of the system in many facets of its present ' operation. . Rumors have been circulating about faculty oppo sition to the existence of any system at all and about student apathy rcgarilin; reporting cases and infractions. From all outward appearances the hon or sjstem would si cm f' be at a crossroad, and i; may well he. While much has been said about what we have now and what we should have in the future, no one has examined the purely objective aspects of the honor system: what does it assume on the part of the individual, the jjroup. or the institution? What are the implications of such a system? Is an honor system the best solution to such a problem? When one is faced with the problem of curbing dishonesty, there are two clearly cut roads that can be taken. The first assumes that all human beings are innately dishonest, the second that all human beings are as innately honest. If we are to take the first point of view we will abolish any form of honor system and install a proctor system to -rvise all student activities in which cheating couid appear. On the other hand, the second belief would lead us to impose no sys tem. If all human beings were honest there would be no necessity for control of any sort. Our honor system is the middle road that runs between these two. Obviously all men are not dis honest, but neither are all honest. The honest should not pay for the crime ot the dishonest, so there is no real justification for the imposition of a strict monitoring system: but neither should the honest be the dupes of the dishonest and have their papers used as cheat sheets hv someone with a roving eve. violence born of utter despair as So we, along with a few other institutions in the I can imagine. And I felt a bit country, arrived at a system of self-regimentation, offended that the death of my The problem we now face is whether or not world would play second fiddle the system is workable. The assumption that on to the last minute loves of a student will "rat" or. another is not entirely true; Hollywood cast. But if it t mios. there is a sei se of another kind of honor that keeps it will be the most universally personal experience, and 1 sup pose that was the point. One thing impressed me more than aH else: throughout the en tire show the characters se' me I to be saying "this cannot be". I feel the sa,.ie way now. 1 suppose I aave to. Regards, Chester Allen- Letter To Mama Dear Mama. I just got back from seeing "On the Beach." and think I un derstand catharsis better now. I don't even know whether or not is was a good movie 1 suspect not. I don't think anyone can give Ihe end the treatment it deserves. It left me though with the em ptiness, the limpness I've felt on few occasions. I am spiritually wrung out. I caught myself wondering whether or not this is the way it will be (and wondering if ii will bo in '64 as Shine indicat ed): a creeping sort of sickness called death. I think 1 rcalizf that someday I will die, but I can't fathom the idea that every one else will go at the same time. If this is the 'case, then what excuse can I have for living? The movie was a bit absurd in spots, and ran extremely shallow in others. There was not as much sequence the large majority of violations are turn ed in by faculty members and here the system breaks down. The honor system is not a faculty system. They have no business in a system that they allowed us to create for ourselves. Yet if we are not going to participate in it and if we are not going to welcome their intervention, where will the system be? The implications which the assumption of an honor system by a student body bears are great. It assumes that we are willing to bear the burden of dishonesty and to punish our fellows. It assumes that we want to overcome our hesitance about re porting another's error. It assumes that we want, more than anything else, to govern ourselves. We must ask ourselves, then, if this is really what we want. Because if we do not really want this we do not really want the honor system; we only want the independence the system allows. This writer does not know the answer to the question. This writer does, however, happen to believe pretty strongly that an honor system is the best system. We do not like the thought of an instruc tor or graduate assistant hanging over our should ers while we are taking a quiz. We do not like to be suspected of dishonesty before we have a chance to prove ourselves otherwise. We believe that there is a pretty strong streak of honesty in the students of this University. Obviously there are those who do not share our beliefs. We assumed a great responsibility when we undertook to govern our own honesty. This is nol a responsibility to the University; it is a responsi bility to ourselves, a responsibility to prove to our selves that we are capable enough and mature enough to conquer the doubts of our elders and make a go of it all alone. 11 We are mature enough and we are capable enough. Yet we have not solved the problem. Ii it is going to be solved more will be needed that the efforts of a few in the Student Legislature or the Honor Councils. A willingness to cooperate must be demonstrated by all of us who do not hold positions on these bodies. If this system is what we want, we must give it our all. or there will be nothing. (Contd. from col. 2) had pnt much of the previ ous night working in vain to keep life in a fatally-poisoned body. So the Newsman arvi wife sat stunned and saddened. "How will we tell the children?" we asked each other amid unashamed tears. There was. we decided, no way to get around it. It was a sad moment one that comes in time to all dog owners, and to all people for that manner. We asked friends. What hid they done? Some had held elab orate funerals. Some had tried to rationalize in explaining away a dog's death. Others had resort ed to attempts at diversion or had gotten an immediate replace ment for the deceased animal. But all agreed: "You're not going to fool the children." So when we'd regained our own composure we told the children. The pain of the task was lessened only in that we'd known longer than they had. The two-year-old accepted it as information. The five-year-old wasn't happy. But he rushed to greet his eight-yea; -old brother returning from school, shouting as a news vendor "Pup Dog died!'' The oldest boy already knew it. I told him on the way home from school. He was the closests of all of us to the dog' and it was, in a sense, HIS dog. His immediate reaction to the news was "Can I get another dog?" Then the shock set in. Uncontrollable grief, heartbreak - ing sorrow, and nothing anybody could do to relieve the pain. But the adaptability of chil dren to pleasant or sad circum stances is a continuing revela tion to parents. Within a day or two the family was recon ciled to the loss. It became apparent that "How will we tell the children?" didn't need an answer. Group therapy in the family pulled the parents through. The children pulled themselves through. Children have a way of bouncing back. Gems of Thought Matrimony should never be en tered into without a full recognition of its enduring obligations on both sides. Mary Baker Eddy The secret of happy marriage is simple: just keep on being as po lite to each other as you are to your best friends. Robert Quillen It is necessary to be almost a genius to make a good husband. Balzac The ideal wife is one who knows when her husband wants to be forced to do somthing against his will. Sydney J. Harris Those who marry to escape some thing usually find something else. George Ade Editor's Corner Senator Neuberger The Wednesday morning death of Ole fin's junior Senator Richard I.. Neuberger brings to a close an extraordinary eareei devoted to bettering tbe way of lite lor all Americans. Lont a c h: :npion of the rights ol all peo ple, Senator .Neuber;er was one of the lew genuine liberals to serve in the l S. Senate in a number of years. The first Oregon De mocrat elected to that office in .jo years, he had planned to run for re-election until overcome with an untimely stroke late Tues day. His c ollemies. -nd liberals everywhere mourn the loss of a "Teat American. Of Teacher Recruitment Further evidence of what North Carolina is up af;.;nst in teacher recruitment comes from the lTniersity of .North Carolina School of F.ducation at Chapel Hill. Dr. lien Fountain, U. N.C. director of teacher placement, reports that out-of-state school sytems seeking teachers anions uni versity graduates outnumber T;.r Heel re cruiters bv more than two to one And that is only the half of it. The offers these out-of-state recruiters make, in com parison with North Carolina, arc what count. The Cdd .North State teacher salary scale ;uns from Sl'.cjoo a year for beginners to Sl.--.00 as a maximum. Onlv recently a team of teacher rec ruiters descended on Chapel Hill from Arlington County, Virginia. Its oiler wis a starting salary of $1,500. What Dr. Fountain termed a "typical salary" offered hv other states ranges from S 1,200 to S4.500. l.hat means that graduates are offered at the jry outset the most they can expect under the North Carolina salary scale. Dr. Fountain further points out that these other-state recruiters not only have more to offer but that they "get the jump"' on local school systems by arranging their interviews earlier. Since January 1. they have descended on Chapel Hill in record numbers. Fortunately for North Carolina, the ma jority of students have thus far decided to stay in .North Carolina, despite outside in ducements, largely for personal reasons, such as their marriage in Tarheelia and their de sire to" remain near home. lint these person:.' reasons cannot and Avill not prevail forever in the face of higher salaries and the living standards and family security which they assure. It is hard enough to attract voung people into the teaching profession and when they are, every effort should be made to keep them at home and to reap the dividends of their education for the state which paid for it. Higher pay, put ting this state on a competitive basis with other states, is the surest way we can think of to ivccomplish this dual objective. Crecnsboro Daily News any -iW dumb bunny knows f, Easter l Seals 1 fight crippling National Sorirtjr for Cripph-d Children and Adults 2023 W. Ogdcn Ave. Chicago 12, III. 7 -O r r Jr . : V : A fj ! littj lamb REMEMBER EASTER SEALS FIGHT CRIPPLING National Society for Crippled Children and Adults 2023 V. Ogdrn Ave. Chiton 12. III. a person Irom g:v;ng away h:s cohorts. As a con- IM&lltMw M I ' KST NISUT (0E ALLUNTT0 I ( 50 SHE STAVED HOME I I NO, (OE GOT A 3',z l6TAV(NS(0iTMl , ME -SHOO) EXCEPT' GRAMMA- V ALONE THEN, HUH? A 6RAMMA-5ITTER.' J vrr ( US FOR A FECO j SHE DOESN'T Ll 6H0Q)S.... - o L- - M friZi WAS A f!Mf A MANV'" w ' ft I Ui CN W:S 0AC AS'P .N Mjr 'frJF - y I UC0 AT T-g V ASP H ) -fV "s"jL3' 2 1 What About This? 1. The nation is at war. 2. The nation is losing the war, badly. 3. Why Sweat it? Cije ailj) Car Heel The official student publication 0 the Publication 3oard of the University of North Carolina where it is published daily C. except Mondaj and A L - A examination periods ISjr vJv and summer terms. i J Entered as second class matter in the post office in Chapel Hill, N. C, under ;he ac of March 8, iG70 Subscription ates: 4 00 oer se iipstr. $7 (K per eai , Thi I)ailv Tai iee i.x printed h h- N'w? Inc Carrboro K litnr Assistant Editor ir.riatp Editor u . N C. TVIS YOl'NC, RON SHUMATE FRANK CROWTHKR Managing Editors Editorial Asst. LARRY SMITH HARVE HARRIS M LOU REDDEN Managing Editors LARRY SMITH Featrre Editor Photo Editors Business Staff MARY ALICE ROWLETTF BILL BRINKHOUS PETER NESS SUSIE HATCHER TIM BURNETT Asst. Sports Editor C. J. UNDERWOOD News Editors Night Editor DEE DANIELS HENRY MAYER TOMMY WUITI-:

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