Page Two The Chapel Hill Weekly Chapel Hill. North Carolina 15f E. Tfirphonr •»-1271 or MSI Published E'rry Tue< »nd Frida* By TV*e Ch*j*rt Hill Publi'tunr Company, lot. Louts Graves C nTnbutinc Ed: tor Joe Jose „ Mauapmp Editor Busy Arthur Asjonatf Editcr* Chuck Hauser Am •c-x.it Lditcr Ofvtuij Cav.pbel; ur.r;. Vz r x?c~ O T Watkins Aavc~:x ne D.-tcio * Chari.ton Camtsi"-: N V •'•• Suy. i..- iu -- V ' UK • ' * K" m V- •• ' * ~ >i Bs ianioy rates lr. Orsr.jre ,'C. x:> tar U.W> ■ • : 1 v s ■ •' ran** « : ' » r . , Bum ' N C . \* * ■ ' f-*’ I OiTit-r a.: >- 1' * ' e* -"•.:*** 1 Canada kexi i> iU An* • 2*®? E-r,;* -* 1 ’ Three-Rinir Ciiru p.-rr.u; - '*••< ~*• a ..Mi* *'•*-•' but at ft**, tr.at *: *.ri * pro posed Pr* '! ; tvi .ar, 1 - .‘-y- *■'• v.a-* .ay’ a lot • • ■■ .•*:•''' Uot fork» h t Ub- past several weeks • « differ* ■ ■ n noir Eastern N rtl Carohi ' J - t-ff’-r - *. .ait : * *.*- . '>?•■ ■ Offer- PPa':- Ihf '•'•* r a n.:.dollars plus what* - - been r Frankly. ;t - turned int< a 'three* ring' circa.-. ( orr.m unity after com munity has been burmng the midnight * (i. , king inti* * • div.duals to contribute their time and money. Before itali over. Hi of those communitier ar- going to be extremely disappointed. Not jus* for the moment, but for a iong. long time. And human nature being what it is, the chances ar*- they wiii be working against the college ii. the future. The, old philoso phy of "]f you’re not good enough for me then I'm not good enough lor you" v.... i>* expressed tun* and again. Jt would seen; to u that the trus tee- would have acted more wisely il they had made their own ,-urcey. They could hav* vu-oted ail j*o.-.~ible sites, and then 3 the three or four that seemed to o* most suited to their > need*. In tnis manner the public would not nave be«*n let; to f»> oevye that the almighty (foliar was the most irnjiortant thing—even when it c<>rn**.s to educa tion. j ’ . - our wi h 1 hat a electibi w'-i be made soon, and we congratulate th<- community which does eventually get the college. One only has to h* in business in Chapel Jlill to know what £g» <. . v ? a comn nit y Here, t h«- University is the comm unity --OBJ’. Always Rains on Monday and Thursday One of tin young men who deliver the Chapel Hill Weekly, remarked re cent !v that ht didn’t realize it rained > c, ever , Monday and Th .t. day until he started carry ing our 'new-paper. (For the benefit of reader.- who get the Weekly by mail it should be pointed out that the paper is delivered by carrier on those afternoons.; The youngster had a very good point, for it seems that the weather has been pretty awl d on Mondays and Thursdays of recent weeks. It certain ly reminded us that carrier boys on all newspapers dc.-< rve a lot of praise for their time and effort. Whil* other boys their age are out playing Hall or engaged m some other recreation, the carr.'-r is making certain that your favorite new-paper is delivered to your front door. Jf Chapel Jlill is typical of the rest of the country, parents of carrier boys also deserve a lot of credit. Mothers, especially, take time off on a busy day ! to help. J a-\ it rain or snow, and, re gardless of the work at home, they often home down to tin* Weekly in the car to help the youngster with his route. If they don’t carry him around in an automobile, they see to it that ( he has his raincoat or overcoat. They make certain that the papers are de livered properly and on time. We can’t help Cut feel that this makes for a better relationship be j tween parents and their children. It’s a matter of teamwork that will bring dividends in later life. How do we know? Well, we were fortunate enough to have such an ex perience when w'e were a boy. And like the Weekly carrier, we always felt that the weather was bad on the days that we had to deliver our newspaper.-—0.8.C. (>ut-of-State Offers of Cheap Insurance Suspicion is naturally aroused when I commodity or a service is offered at a price far below that which generally prevails. When I read such an ad vertisement in a newspaper or maga zine or hear it over the radio or get i* by direct mail my thought is either that 1 have ts'cn paying an i; n reason high prici for the commodity or sen iiv in question »r. that the pre* .-erf effort to p.*■ erf i'/ing ami extrava g..:f .. nguag* in who- r* the cut-price ■ ffer i- made. 1 ha'- * 'been .g* tt.r g • '>r- from -of-staU f then •**. Middit West urging rru t*. buy .*,•■. • • ins .ran • ; be.**.- and qu'fing w ;*••* n •*:. price- La-* w**ek I sent ■ : •*.*•-> r- :*r the accom ; "if.erat ur*' t th- hospital : : ■ ■ ass iation . whicl 1 * u-id a j>o!ie\ f<>j -* '* ra * ar- /'and a ’ * i: r ' • •. r*-.rr Scott is ■ m 1 a ways called k ; 'liher. , and Sam uel J. hi", in a> 1 i-; t i. * . Tiiis align ment would hav * to be r*-v *-r.-<*'i il th<-jr vote*.- on tin- natural gas bill v**re tale-n as reflecting their perman ent attitudes. ("Liberal” and 'conservative” are of course not exact descriptions. There are many shades of liberalism and conservatism. J am using the terms th *i i con m< i v a* ce.pted sen.-e.) All tin* editorials and other <*x pn ssions of opinion on tie* natural ga- liill have assumed that, tin* con serv ativ< - were for the passage of the bill because it relieves the pro ducers of natural gas from federal price regulation and that the liberals were against it for the same reason. But in liit* vote tiiis week Scott was on the conservative side and Krwin was on the liberal side. Ordinarily J am much mor* sym pathetic with Krv in’s views on public issues than I am with Scott'-, but on tiiis question of the federal regu lati I.yn Overman Officir Herman Stone lean **.: Pari- 'run: th* >•!» of one trapped. * i • t .. * * ab liati fin .-h*-'.: tr, -* f< aturer.” he -aid, trying t. get out of it. “I -:ar.'t ar* m . h f>r publicity n't i t \A* 11 * "(."nitin, niw." I saai. “A ■ • . a n’t hurt you . I hop* " St. *.(:* ■• v* a: -* '!«. officer gracii'U- y -* r .**»•■; to tel! all, • po.-t* t'-y—'t**" a use he did not wish, in ary way. to con tribut* ; a r* . . tion in the Weekly' i * maybe be cause i * fig . t was the best way ’ get nd of a* nosy reporter. \f , ", . , \ . 1 1 )w*‘ }• . . r. » !'*4 . TTlilTi ... • • • v. ? k 1 uk * . -.r.F P • him. a t did not portui ... 4 ... in f, * r -♦ » <, * I kri»*w 1 * a -ike the * r,* : i.T .-:ed w r.y .-.* ;e . ;*. , • , • t' * force. T*..-*-f i.a*.<• ■■ ;»*.rtunities for Mr '.*•:.* ' > 1 vnge his err.piovn,* f.t :'' ■ * , *. *.e s<*\ en j*ar - *.* r.a *.**-* .an off: ' ' hi- I'* '-' 1-' oved to ■ . *.* ' V 'i J ■ -•< • r.i-.r third w* *:*: r.g a*:r.. -»*• - -.*> at . then r*.n,e r. logv. • Acres. At . ej ■ - * • ■ childrei hit as the “ • ■ -a d so * -houid plan - •'• **nt- now a*:a>.- arc: n> ar -i hi.- wife nave tb**ir ‘-' ’* in Chapel Jlill w*-!i planned. ()ff duty. Mi tone finds time to gj\*- younger broth el !'.;*• Peiping hand on # Like Chapel Mlill By Hill} Arthur Norman 1 ordon went <>ut lo < alvin Burch’s shop the other da\ to -*•** how well ( alvin wa.- jjrogressing on * ome furnit ui * . "Hav* you h«-ani the radio?" Calvin a-ked. "Ike’s g*mna run for | r**.-ident aVain, and wants* Ferris for hi- run, ning mate." "Who Ferris?” Norman demanded. "Oh, just a big wheel that got - round and round." Calvin replied. Norman Icouldn t wait to get ba<*k to town to break that "off ify/someon** and even the score. His target wa- Y. X. Cannon. But. he didn’t rush it. H<- took a seat in W. H. Foglernan's barber chair and sat there a f*-w minutes, hefor** asking: "You fellows heard the news on the radio? Ike',- going to run again and wants Ferris for his running mate. “Who’s Kerri.-?" Y /. bit th«* bait. And Norman hooked and landed him. All the fellows in the shop got. a hang out ot the gag, even Y. X Bui Norman thought -o well of it that In* started throwing his hulk-around in th** chair and giving it such rough treatment that the joke ceased to be tunny to Y. X. “Now, hold on then he cautioned, “You’re gonna break .my chair." . , „ * + Bud Perry observe: that if 1 had a crew cut like Bilh .Jr., the Missus would have to mark one of us to tell us apart. * V * * Starting to leave the barber shop, I remarked. “Well, I guess I’ll go over to the coffee club and see it 1 can learn anything." “Sow that’s really an insult, Y. X < laimed. “Ix*av ing a barber simp Irags about knowing everything and dispensing the dojie, that’s really .something"’ * * * * * The slowest way to become a millionaire is to work for the money. * * + * When one reaches *lO, he stops reaching for the moon and begins devoting all his efforts to getting the earth. a well-washed nation is necessarily a great nation we will not venture, ex cept to note that psychiatrists know a thing or two about excessive bath ing. But what if people'-simply don’t want, or don’t think they, need, more baths? • Mr. Johnson has an answer to that too. His answer (taken completely out of context, because il is more fun that way) is this: "1 don’t think you can rely entirely on consumers telling you what they want or ’Jvhat they need, because their needs, their motives, are based on con cepts derived from past experience.” I^. i^l PnotO b> i-dvK.fc.tr H l iiM \ N STONK # * • * * r.: mot he! I Stone. His wjfe, ;' - • . "•! ...**-} Overby of ; - • emj yed as a tis ** *.* , ar at' ,North Cur* - .* . M**;: *a- Hospital. J.... w .r.g r.i- graduation fr !!: B* ■ High School, about r. • * ■*. - - •*..*.*. of here; Stone * • -e*. ; the arn.ed force- and .->'*•■: a***.,’. Id months in Ji.* a* -w * - • • *.*• acquired aome evt.er.er.***. :n retail selling r ,v.. r.g r - discharge, he -* * . *:*--.* * 1 rape. Hill and .- • *. * *. 1 1 Iw>ng M* a *;* w f* urn - The young < fficer ended by r.g "Not much of a story, I didn't answer the ques t *r Thought I would let his, f* *.*.■■.- answer ;t for him. per , - *.;:..>. I *r ;r.k it’s the kind • ( 'that indicate.- why < hap*-; H . a good place t'> !Yff. Chapel Hill Chaff (Continued from page It Within an hour or so after this conversation the five Powes entered Battle Park at the corner down below the Forest Theatre. This where the branch enters the park. too. after having risen in a spring in the Coker Arboretum, cross ed the spread of grass below the M elver dormitory, and passed through a culvert unu* i the intersection of Cameron avenue and Battle lane. What 1 mean is. that is where the branch enters the park when ,o,ie is branch. I*l I on t: is day there wasn't a:;... n. ie t.aun't been any l'n a long time and the: wa.-n - : a (ii p of water in s.gl.t. J I.e August -un beat .down ar.d t*u uay was t *rri : 'ine f.-imiliar path along th** .-'p i.:. . ':*.*.t was passable a’c-ng , : »•*.': it* r* *» I ‘'tcrif >. but ctiorUpT "t!.- t*i it .> covert'd with a tar:* « g.e ot undergrowth that had to be* grimly detoured. All . hat with the a * ot tv * . durnenial and n: water. * deterioration ot pain, nr, two children to gui*:*- and , : .* and a tnird child * tote, th* Powe parents fouiei tr*< wa.p:.: g ji.**ng the' bran* : lr. Hn '.’.** I aI k vastly differ'*!.', from what it iiaiJ used t*> ic on a merry -.bring day bef*.**■ they na*i become parents. After they had gone alot , 'the si r**an.-bed for a wm.** th* y * amt* to a connecting path. "Pet's go up the r. her**, ' - .ggested 'Mr. P*/w,* They (iitj. an*i when they had g ,n« virne fifty yards th**y f'juß-'.i a big tree, a victin* of the latest hurricane, ai ro tn<* path Other ohsitacies f,i . ther ai'ii.g decided them t«< n ave ’*>..* -oa*a|;ed path an l crash ’M" ,gh the woods. They came out ori the high way neai the (jimghoul * *,. oriy, t.* the pavement ba* n to tne cntiance to the pai r climbed into their *ar, an; w **nt. ha* k home. The Pones have evident,y 10.-. t their enthusiasm foi treat ing tf.i-,l* children t'< stream j„uij ■■. but 1 h(,pe to revi.i it. 'lr,* p.a* e where the bian*n i.i any i <*nters Hattie I’.iir. •i- (,* y f*, ii <c ■Meanwhile, 1 wish there < *.*ii,*> B .r the driver alio registeis 10,00*) year n down ' * ati. o * cost ** f ti.o cents a m.le Am**ri can Aufomohile Aiation Ik** London tell- the story of the man who wa.- advising a mournful friernl t<, cheer up arid go drown his sorrows, "Hut I can’t," the other man moaned. "She’s stronger than 1 am.” Stanley Moore in the Morganton News-Mi lal*l “The fellow who draws those tomatoes for the covers ~f th* seed catalogues has a broth er. He’s the one who writes the lipstick ads.” < A. Paul in the Elkin Tribune. Mr. Johnson, wo feel, lias perform ed a public service in telling us that oui pa.'t experience of baths, or any thing else, lias little to do with whether or not we are going to get a hath, or anything else, < We feel further that we can per form a public service of our own by explaining what a quartile is. It is de scribed by Webster, as “designating a-point so chosen that three fourths of the items of a frequency distribu tion are on one side of it and ■ one fourth on another.” i hat, we trust, helps to clarify our readers’ picture"of their bathing future. 'OSVo.- * ' v - u', *• ■■■■-•*? Ok C ,**t «*. «y * t .* ..» . . On thv Totrn Hy Chuck Hauser * ' .•*.; ■■ . -ft. NORTH CAROLINA HAS LONG BEEN sort of a blitck sheep in the Southern family of state*?. Its leaders have been far more progressive than the lead ers of its Southern sisters, and, unfortunately, far more progressive than tin* mass of its people. When I say “unfortunately,” 1 mean that it is unfortunate not that the leaders are so, far ahead, of the people hut that the people are so far behind the leaders. The only saving thing about the situation is that our people are not as far to the rear in the march of human progress as are the citizens of many of our neighboring states and those of the Deep South. * The political leaders of North Carolina’ at one time could have been called “liberal" and no one would have been embarrassed hy the use of the word. Such is not the case today. Things changed, you see, on May 17. 1951. when the United States Supreme Court consigned a doctrine known as "separate but equal” to tin- juridical ashcan. Since May 17. 1954? race and question of segrega tion versus integration have become powerful jxjliti eal issues. We have gone back to th*: red shirt days. Not all the way hack, to he sure, hut far enough back to make me sick at my stomach. Because I had to sit in the halls of the General Assembly last spring and listen to people like Byrd Satterfield of Person Uountv preach the supremacy of the white race. Happily, there is hojs; for the future. The college generation has proven itself far more tolerant than its elders. It has proven this, in the majority of cases, in a negative way, But it has proven it nevertheless. Using the University as an example, we can easily see that some of the campus leaders openly defy the political stands of their counterparts on the state level by solidly aligning themselves with the proponents of a gradual program of integration in the public schools. The large majority of students have proven them selves to he tolerant simply hy NOT making fools of themselves and disgracing the state hy staging flu sort of riots which have occurred in the last week at the University of Alabama. At Alabama, the University administration admit ted a Negro student on court order. Jn a matter of hours, the riots had begun. A thousand students (if the press reports are not exaggerated) gathered to throw eggs and rocks and mudballs at the colored girl, at her escorts, and at the automobile in which she was being carried away from the campus. At the University of North Carolina, three under graduate Negro boys entered classes along with hun dreds of other freshmen last fall. There were no riots, no friction, and no “incidents” of any kind. According to Associated Press reporter Bryan Haislip, who was on the campus, a week ago to look into the situation, The hoys said they haven’t had a hit of trouble. Bryan is writing a story which will be released hy the AP probably jwithin the next week or so describing the easy and painless process of integration which has occftred at the I Diversity here. How different is the North Carolina campus from the Alabama campus. The North Carolina problem, of course, is not as simple as it would appear from the campus reaction to integration. There is a world of difference between integrating three colored hoys into a white student body of (5,500, and integrating, say 800 colored chil dren with 200 white children in a high school in Bertie County. Then* are serious problems to he solved here, and it will take many years to solve them. But look aU Alabama. If integration of one colored girl in a large white college student body incites a thousand persons of college age and college-level intel lect to riot, what will happen when integration on the lower levels is attempted? I’m afraid it’s liable to be bloody. I can offer no answer to the problem. I can only thank God that i live in North Carolina instead of Alabama. A kN' nl-•* '! l *T *.' Jll *.f the Hr . *