Thursday, August 10, 1961
THE TING NEWS
Page 7
Malayan Student
(Continued from Page 2)
Texas, New Orleans, Little Rock, Atlanta, Georgia, and
North Carolina.
Mr. Paramsothy said that young Negroes were now
setting the tempo in the fight for equal treatment with
whites.
Small groups of whites were also admitting the need
for integration, he added.
"But it will take a long time before all these people
can break down segregation," he said.
Mr. Paramsothy will submit a report to the internation
al students' conference, which sponsored his trip.
The above story gives an indication of how foreign
colored students and the nations they represent, look at
the racial situation in the South. The terms "gradual,"
"Southern way of life," and "the courts are trying to legis
late morals when they force integration down the South's
throat," mean absolutely nothing to the foreign visitor;
all he sees is that the Negro is being discriminated against
and that the majority of the South is attempting to con
tinue the tradition of discrimination as long as possible.
Southern arguments about "Northern agitators," and
"Northern hypocrisy" sound like simple evasions of the
issue and cruel relationalizations to the foreigner unused
to our glorious way of life.
On the other hand, Mr. Paramsothy appeared to be
slanting the interview somewhat. Why was nothing said
about Chapel Hill? Why was nothing said abut Atlanta,
where the buses, parks and golf courses, the libraries, and
Georgia Tech are all integrated, and next fall will come
the public schools and al major stores' lunch counters. What
about other towns in North Carolina, and in Texas ?
We feel that Mr. Paramsothy went out of his way to
make the southern United States look like a region of
racial bigots not that he doesn't have plenty of justifica
tion, but it appears he puffed and puffed, blowing up the
truth, until it was no longer the truth, but only an indis
criminate mixing of facts and stereotypes.
The South must change rapidly, and it cannot af
ford to discourage criticism from "outsiders" merely be
cause they are outsiders. But the aim of speedy integration
will not be served honorably by reports such as Mr. Param
sothy's, which take certain areas of the South out of con
text and by these areas, paint the entire South the color
of blood red.
66
Ecfae On Fashion"
IN CHAPEL HILL
it's
The House of Fashion
Contemporary
STUDIO CARDS
Remember your friends with hilarious STUDIO
CARDS . . . Choose from hundreds Birthdays
Friendship Illness . . .
University Wins Award For Gaining Financial Support
The University has won a prize
and recognition tor sustained per
formance" in gaining financial sup
port from its alumni.
The American Alumni Counci
lists the University at Chapel Hill
as one of 67 public and private
colleges or universities in the na
tion as winner for distinguished
achievement in the development of
alumni support. Over 2,000 institu
tions of higher learning in the
country are in the competition for
awards.
This is the third consecutive year
the University here has won such
an honor. It coincides with the
three times "over hundred thou
sand dollars" successful campaicn
for funds in the Alumni Annual Giv
ing Program at Chapel Hill.
E. J. Evans, mayor of Durham,
has been chairman of the unre
stricted giving procram at Chanel
Hill in 1959, 1960 and 1961 each
time it has gone over $100,000 a
year.
Annual Giving
Tom Bost Jr.. of Chapel Hill, is
director of the Alumni Annual Giv
ing Program in the University.
Top prize for sustained perform
ance was won by Georgia Tech in
Atlanta. Among public institutions
recognized for sustained perform
ance were Ohio State University
and the University of North Caro
lina. Each institution receives a
Watch Repair
WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIR
Our guaranteed work is backed
by craftsmen with years of ex
perience. We use the latest electronic
and ultri-sonic equipment.
T. L. Kemp Jewelry
135 E. Franklin St.
certificate and cash prize. UNC's
cash prize is $100.
Members of the University's
Alumni Annual Giving Executive
Council, besides Evans and Bost,
are Ben C. Troter, Leaksville; Har
ry H. Montgomery, Wilmington;
Henry N. Patterson, Manhasset, N.
Y.; William B. Harrison, Rocky
Mount: Voit Gilmore. Southern
Pines; Howard Gray, Winston-Salem;
Dail Holderness, Tarboro; Dr.
James Davis, Durham; Chancel
lor William B. Aycock, Dean James
L. Godfrey, Kenan Professor E. D.
Palmatier, Dean Charles Hender
son Jr., Charles M. Shaffer, and
J. Maryon Saunders, all of Chapel
Hill.
FIERCE
It is Generally regarded as One
of the Fiercer Animals. I am not
frightened of Fierce Animals in the
ordinary way, but it is well known
that, if One of the Fiercer Animals
is Deprived of its Young, it becomes
as Fierce as Two of the Fiercer
Animals. In which case "aha" is
perhaps a foolish thing to say.-
A. A. Milne.
UNITE
Workingmen of the world, unite!
You have nothing to lose but your
chains. Karl Marx
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