Two ' Sun3ay de-comber 4, 1CC3 1 if ' ... -i ..r atlp tar Jeel Budget Head If -; I itssixfyeightb year of editorial-freedom, unhampered by restrictions II . fromeitber the; administration or the student 4?ody. ,. tv '. - Si II II 1 I! The Daiiy;Ta&-Heel is the official studeir publication of the Publiea tions Board of the University of North Carolina, Richard Overstrcet, Chairman. All editorials appearing m -The -Daily' Tar Heel, are the personal expres sions jof, the ifditoryjintessptjierivissfdjled; they areJnot .necessarily represen tative of feeling on the staff, and all reprints or quotations must specif y thus. - sv; 4 December 4, 1960 Volume LXIX, Number 65 The Sons Of God At Work Again ALBANY (UPI) The Appellate Court Friday upheld the state edu cation department's recommenda tion that the phrase "under God" be included when school children give the Pledge of Allegiance,. v v The phrase had been challenged as unconstitutional oy two New York City area men who said i required non-believers to take a pledge in something they did not believe. Today America, or a good per centage of her citizenry, goes to church. Before the altars of many denominations these : citizens bow low to worship their God. With reverence and obedience they fol low the prescribed forms of their churches. This is, indeed, a godly nation. Believing firmly that the Lord chose America as the Land of the Free and Favored, we rest secure in our churches and in our homes, confident in the knowledge that the Heavenly Hand will guide us on ward. ; There are, however, those in our blessed land who do not place their trust in the Lord, who recognize neither the 23rd Psalm or the Lord's Prayer as anything more than documents of the Christian folklore, ...-...,;.. ,-T Two of these people dared to challenge the right of the State of New York's education department to include the phrase "under .God" in the 'Pledge of Allegiance given daily by school-children. v . The ; populace,, rushed to, their persecution How could any man question the fact that this nation is, indeed, "under God"? And how could any. man fail to believe the Christian religion? Yet these men challenged the in clusion of the phrase "under God," surely a slap in the face of Chris tianity. But they also challenged a good deal more: they challenged the long-standing American sup position that.this is a Christian -land and that all its doings are conduct ed under the aegis of the Lord. It was a brave challenge, t but it has been made before,. Only re cently a group of Jews challenged the teaching of the Bible in Florida schools. Their argument was the same: must this religion be forced on all mankind? Today, our Christian day of wor ship and reverence, might well be spent; in contemplating .the role, of Christianity and Christians in the nation and the world. , We have come a long; way since Calvary, yet there are- those who think we have lost much in transit. For all practical purposes.. Chris tianity is the world's dominating religion, and the members of its churches number in the millions. , . Yet, perhaps, we have lost more than a touch of the humility, that gave us our greatness. We force ourselves on the peoples . ? of the world as the only true and lively speakers of the word, as the chosen few, as those whose example is best followed. : Surely the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag of the United States is no place to let the majority sup press the minority. We are a na tion which prides .itself on major ity .rule with tolerance for the minority;, is it tolerance to make the children of the minority mouth phrases in which they and their parents do not believe? Or do we think we are .being tolerant merely by not forcing the minority to join the majority in the first place? 1 1 it 5 s 'in-- it -fro improvea There -are, increasing -signs - that the international financial com munity is taking a calmer and more optimistic view of the, dollar's fu ture than a few weeks ago. Cer tainly the kind jol t alarmist .and panic-stricken sentiment. that sent the price of gold in London. to $40 ann ounce for.; a tbrief period has abated considerably. But rthe im proved outlook for the dollar rests on firmer and more fundamental bases than the movements in the relatively smali, and perhaps over- publicized, London gold market. One factor in this improvement is the recognition that much of the recent balance of payments deficit ar Outlook i 11 1 . ' U II 0. I 11 JONATHAN YARDLEY Editor Wayne King, Mary Stewart Bakeb Associate Editors Margaret Ann Rhymes Managing Editor Coward Neal Biner - " " Assistant To The Editor Henry Mayer, Lloyd Little Hews Editors Susan Lewis Feature Editor Frank Slusser... J Sports Editor Ken Friedman...... Asst. Sports Editor John Justice, Davis Young ' Contributing Editors , . s Tim Burnett .. . -. , . 4: ' Husiness Manager 4 f ' Richard Weiner Advertising Manager John Jester . Circulation. Manager Charles WsepBEZSubscription Manager The Daily Tab Heel is published daily except "Monday, examination periods and vacations. It is entered es second class matter in the post office in Chapel Hill. N. C, pursuant with the act of March 8, 1870. Subscription rates:, $4 per semester, $7 per year, . - The Daily Tab Heel is a subscriber -to the United Press International and utilizes the services' of the News Bu reau of .the University of North Caro lina. ; ; - -" ' - Published by the Colonial Press, Chapel Hill, N. C, ; f . I a P I i II iff. I! 1 II II has arisen from the flpw of short term capital funds to Europe, par ticularly to London, where higher interest rates have been available than here. Now every close student of .the financial markets recognizes that a question mark, must, be at tached to the future of London in terest rates. The growing signs of weakness in , the British economy; particu larly , but not exclusively in its automobile industry, have in creased the likelihood of moves being taken soon to lower the in terest rate so as to supply needed stimulus, for the, British economy. If that Should happen then at least some of the "hot money" that has run to London would be flowing out again. .1 Another factor involved is the growing realization of the great and diversified arsenal of , weapons available to this country in defend ing the dollar. Many of ; these are governmental in nature, but others are open to private industry as well. The London Economist prop erly points out the grave implica tions for Europe of any really ener getic American Government action with respect to interest rates, re cording the shock inflicted last week by London rumors that our discount rate might be jumped to 5, per cent. And the implications of our current very favorable balance of trade seem to be getting more attention than a few weeks ago when the panic-mongers had a field day. From the New York Times. SpotligmM "We Extend Our Hand, To All Still Strucaline Under Colonialism" . 9 tr r9 David Elliott Bell, the new budget director, is a man with vigorous drive. He seldom be comes flustered. Bell, 41, is a man of simple tastes. He.likes. .plain- foods-imd i. an occasional scotch on the rocks. He and his family have traveled extensively.; Bell has been so busy taking part in and lecturing about gov ernment since he came east from Pomona College, California, in 1941 that he has had time for few hobbies, other than a little bowling. Bell vaulted into the top pre cincts of President-elect John F. Kennedy's administration with out participating in Kennedy's campaign for nomination or elec tion. He has been a lecturer on economics in Harvard Univer sity'si t Department '. of . Economics and Research. since, i957. ; : t , ' Borrij Jan., 10,. 1919 an James town, N. D., he received a bache lor's (degree from. Pomona Col lege in 1939 and a. master's de gree in economics from Harvard in -.1941. ; ' ;.- i ,;. After the war he returned to the Budget Bureau tand became an executive . assistant I ; in the White House office in 4947. He became an administrative- assist ant to President . Harry S.. Tru man in 1952 and in 1953 and 1954 was a Rockefeller Public Service Fellow at Harvard.: (. From 1954 to 1957 he was an economic ' adviser to; the govern ment of Pakistan, then! came to Harvard, where he is now. a lec turer in the Graduate School of Public Administration. U. P. I. t .i-f :t U rrt 'T -''' r . LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: tj&toA- - I 'nr.-'- i"k .... J B&aders SOUTHERNERS, ! SPEAK OUT! To the Editor: Lately I have been sickened by the constant ridicule that the great men of the South have been receiving. When I read the Daily' Tar Heel's article concerning "Damn Yankee Liberals," I was over whelmed withjoy to see there was one last Southerner . at the University of North Carolina. I did not agree with all the author's views; however, I did agree that it is high . time the few remaining Southerners at the University of , North r Carolina speak out against the ever-present carpetbag rule here. It is time the great men of the South who are fighting for Southern Rights receive praise and admiration for fighting for what they and the people of the South believe" in. D. S. Kmck Mickey, Lewis, Liberals et al . , SUSAN LEWIS, SICK? Arrrghi . .. . It's getting cold again ... so you know what that means . . . get .your goodies for FROLIC TIME. The Frolic Club, led . by its queen, can go into the snow with, their goodies and FROLIC, FROLICr FROLIC. You -are SICK, SICK, SICK, Susan Lewis.- Phil Ordway DUKE'S TOILET BOWL BID To the Editor: , I am concerned about the sportsmanship of. the : Carolina students who were quoted in the Durham newspaper as having shouted at the defeated Duke football team, as it left Kenan Stadium: "What bowl are you going to play in, the toilet bowl?" , As a matter of fact, the Duke team (notwithstanding its close loss to U.N.C.) is scheduled to play in the Cotton Bowl on Jan uary 2, this completing the cir cuit of all the major bowl games in which Duke had been invited to play football. Even after U.N.C. had edged Duke out by one point and had overpowered mighty Virginia, Carolina still was listed as being No. 77 in the nation in William son's Scientific Rating System. A team which plays poorly during most of the season cannot expect by pulling itself together for one 1 two-hour period to send to the "toilet bowl" a team which during the season has soundly deefated Navy, Georgia Tech, Clemson, Maryland, N. C. State, Wake Forest and the U. of South Carolina. If the U.N.C. students who shouted this insult and. they were probably a small minority would reflect upon the above, they could have a more pure enr joyment of Carolina's deserved victory over Duke on November 19. They also would promote bet ter sportsmanship. ; James Kirby Ritchie, III A WORD AGAINST HICKEY To the Editor: t Your article entitled "A Move in the Right Direction," which ap- peared in the "Tar Heel" on Tuesday, November 29, is an in sult to the gullibility of even the average reader. It drools with newly-acquired sentiment (acquired, undoubtedly, immediately following the Duke game). Less than a month ago, Mr. Hickey's coaching career was in a very precarious position. Now he is acclaimed as a hero, if not a minor god. What is respon sible for, this change of popular opinion??? Contrary to the ridi culous assumption of one of your writers, it was not brought about by "good sportsmanship"; it was the, direct result, of winning one single football- game." Yes, win ning is very important. .The mob is fickle; their emo tions are easily changed. It seems that at least one writer on the "Tar Heel" .staff had also a rather sudden change of heart.. This same writer appears to have several misconceptions about college football. Big-time football is not played for "good sportsmanship" or any other such noble or lofty concept. Our team exists for only one pur pose to win. Big-time football is not a good, clean sport. Jn fact, it is not a sport at all; it is a highly compe titive business. Either you win or you don't. You don't lose grace fully; you just lose. There is no room for sentiment. It matters quite a lot whether you win or lose, and it doesn't particularly matter how you play the game (as long as the referee isn't watching). Good sportsman ship is a term dreamed up for the consolation of the loser. One rarely hears a winning team talk about good .sportsmanship. Concerning the idea of giving Hickey a lifetime contract, we must realize that this would pro duce a tremendous change. As I said before, sentiment and top notch football just don't mix. If Hickey is given a lifetime con tract, we can say goodbye to the big league, cancel all athletic scholarships, spend athletic ap propriations for some sensible purpose, turn Kenan Stadium into an outdoor concert hall, and sign an agreement to . hold annual games with Podink U., Vassar, and the Third Grade All-Stars, just for-the fun of it. Perhaps this would be a great improvement after all, but I think we ought to consider just what we're getting into. Robert Hassele 315 Ay cock ANOTHER FIGHTER FOR TRUTH Dear "Fighter for Truth": You said "I" twelve times in nine sentences. Are you too self- centered to have any thought for the other 180 million people in this country? Probably. This, you know, is where sectionalism starts. And sectionalism, Mr. Fighter; is just about ' the last thing this country needs now. The world is too small, in this century of 'nuclear warfare and Khrushchev, for civil wars. ' I was born and raised in , the North, and now my home is in the South, and the South's ; busi ness is my: business. v I am , in favor of the individual, whether he is black, white, green, or purple. Your precious . "truth" rests in ideas, and ideas come from individuals, not from races. Integration is for truth and for the individual. I am for integra tion. w Mr. Fighter, take a look at the truth. No, not what was the truth a hundred years ago,., but what the truth is today. Open your eyes and take a look at the world and' if-you have enough' courage to admit the truth to yourself, you will realize that we can't af ford to be "Yankees" or "Rebels" any more. We have to be Ameri cans. Our house is divided", Mr. Fighter,1 and a divided house cannot stand. I will hot, 'as 'you say, go home and never,come back;, I am at home, here in America. . - ., Admilter of the Truth yowd-Wiimc Poor Pitch jComposer-pianist Franz Liszt was born in 1811 and died in 1886 at the age of 75 and if that seems like a, long time try sit ting through the motion picture about his life. "Song Without End" is not a bad motion picture in i all departments just in most departments; the acting is awk wardly amateurish, but even this shortcoming cannot hide the beauty of Liszt's composing. The musical score alone because it was taken from Franz Liszt's works and not Holly lwood's makes the picture worth seeing. The plot, however; drips with Movieland tinsel: Purple - cur tained concert halls; Liszt's inane "concert manager". looking for all the world like a tuxedoed Gabby Hayes; constant flinging open of doors and srtpping off of gloves; all of this complicated by the fact that Dirk Bogarde, who plays Liszt, cannot play the piano. This becomes painfully obvious after an hour or so of head-and-shoulder camera angles. Other embarrassing moments show up as Bogarde spends more time on stage tossing his head about in an attempt to get that hair-in-eyes look (as if he is really working at it) instead of really working at it. Franz Liszt was a man torn between many loves: three wom en and concert work, composing, and orchestra direction of many of Wagner's musical scores. This combination would have driven many a lesser man to a monas tery as it did to Liszt. ' The picture opens with Liszt ready to try a comeback as a concert pianist he had retired earlier to compose, but things weren't going too well with Maria (Genevive Page) and he still hungered for the applause of Eu rope's society elite. Howe're, waiting in the wings is. Princess Caroline of Russia, who is soundly smitten by Liszt's talent and mainly his good looks. She persuades him to tour Rus sia and ; Eastern Europe and he is soon banging high C with her emotions. f : Princess Caroline is married, an awkward situation at best, and so cannot accept Liszt's pro posal: Liszt forthwith realizes that God has the only cure for his; emotional confusion and enters a ; monastery to meditate and compose. It is sad that the only thing capable of . holding together the picture is the music, which is not a product of the movie at all. The actors speak their lines per fectly, emote when directed to do so, and the only bright spot in -the casting is. Martita Hunt, who splays the Grand Duchess, Carolina's aunt. .. The. picture is in dire need of two things primarily: a piano playing male lead and a director who can tell his cast what to do with their hands as they con verse. Attending "Song Without End" is by no means a wasted evening; but don't watch the picture, just close your eyes and enjoy the musical genius of Franz Liszt. Chris Farran Peter Pan And Friends On T. V. TMs Week NEW YORK (UPI) The third presentation of the musical , ver sion of "Peter Pan" starring Mary Martin dominates the network TV fare next week. Many of the principals of the previous showing; ' including Cy ril Ritchard as Captain Hook, will be back in this NBC presentation in color Thursday. It has been recorded on video tape for the first time, which means that it can now be shown at any time without the necessity of a new production. v Highlights Dec.. 4-10: SUNDAY "CBS Television Workshop" has a new play called "Flight of Fancy." Margaret Truman plays a young wife whose loss of her only child causes her to live in an imaginary world which she peoples with characters of her invention. .. ..;,. ,:; The CBS "Twentieth Century" has a documentary entitled; "The Doolittle Raid", story of the first U.S. air attack on Japan in World War II. . , u : . Mort Sahl, Jane Morgan, Rickie Layne "and Joselito, 11-year-old Spanish singing star; ap pear on Ed Sullivan's CBS Var iety Hour. "The Loretta Young Show" and "This Is Your Life" give way on NBC to a special of music and dramatic vignettes about children called "Something Special." Rob eft Young is host. Performers in clude Janet Blair, Nat King Cole, Arlene Francis, Ernie Ford, Dave Garroway, Sam Levenson, Art Linkletter, Garry Moore and Jane Wyatt. MONDAY A Mexican bandit captures the crew and boat in "Chicota Land ing" on NBC's "Riverboat" ser ies. , :: Betsy Von Furstenburg is guest star on ABC's "Adventures in Paradise." In "The Big Surf" she plays a willful heiress who tries to use the jealousy routine to cap ture Captain Adam Troy. TUESDAY ..... i .: ... ' ..-,. The "Thriller" drama on NBC is "The Big Blackout." Jack Car son plays a reformed alcoholic and ex-con who finds he is mark ed for death when he answers a call to help a fellow member of Alcoholics Anonymous. . ; r . t. Comedians Joey Bishop, George Burns,. Jimmy - Durante, Buddy Hackett and Groucho Marx are the guests on the NBC "Open End" special. An unrehearsed, spontaneous discussion of varied topics. WEDNESDAY Perry . Como's . guests on his NBC hour are Juliet Prowse, the Kingston Trio, and singer Steve Lawrence. The CBS "Armstrong Circle Theater" offers "Memory of a Murder," factual account of a young man who seeks to become a Florida sheriff so he can track down the man who killed his re formist father 16 years earlier ABC has a one-haur, documen tary about our present situation in Latin America in ."Yanki, No!" "Naked City", is off for the' night. .THURSDAY,. . NBC's "Peter Pan" gives "Out laws," "Bat- Masterscn'" . and "Bachelor Father" the night off. "Kiss of : Death I Girl? is u the story of ABC's "The- Untouch ables." Jan Sterling plays a gang moll who becomes suspect when successive boy friends meet unT timely ends in the bootlegging FRIDAY . "Agnes Moorehead and :. Gigi Perreau are guest stars on, the CBS "Rawhide" show. They play nuns in "Incident at Poco Tiem po". in which they are forced by outlaws to carry loot to an ac complice in order to save a priest. The "Bell System Science Ser ies" on NBC is "The Thread of Life," a documentary about gene tics. ; A search for a missing husband in "The Affairs of Adam Gal lante" leads to discovery of a bevy of wives married to the same man on "77 Sunset Strip." SATURDAY I "The Case of the Red Riding Boots" engages Perry Mason on CBS. He undertakes defense of a hired hand accused of slaying a girl about to wed a rancher, i The "Checkmate" hour on CBS is turned over to the "CBS Re ports" special, "Rescue With Yul-Brynner." This documentary on the plight of the world's 15 million refugees has the star as narrator of film footage taken in Europe and the Middle East. H "The Nation's Future" provides another debate on an important problem on NBC. ' World: welterweight boxing Champion Benny Paret defends his title in. a scheduled 15 rounder against Federico Thompson on ABC's "Fight of the Week." lih,, ,l)H JHHliii4fTliiiii'ft'iiil'1 "f Hft-i All A A A A A.. A A MK.Ai