Page Two The Chapel Hill Weekly Chape! Hill, North Carolina IJ* E. Roewearr Telephone 0-12T1 or Peblwtwd Every Toends? «nd Friday By The On pel Hill PeMwhmg Company, It Lons Goaves Contributing Editor Jot Joves Managing Editor Billy Afthc* Associate Edito* Or.TLLI Cavpwl-L Genial Manage* O T Watos JKive-tirmc Dr-ect or Fwc Dale Crculatwm Manager Charlton Campbell Mechanical Supi r«: At Mcood-cteM Frontarj m *> Irx partofi'.sr *: Chape HiL Non;. Carc-ho*. and*# tft« a s . a! Mir; 3 IrY SUBSCRIPTION RATES It Orang* County, Year ICO© It month# 12-25. ■' month#. 51.50> Oat*of Orange County by the b ea* State of N. C- Va.. ar.c S C *-&<•' Other State# ano bit", of Columbia 60© Canaoa. Mexict, South America T OC' Europe V " M Case- of Negligence The taie# of deatr />r. the fr *r.t page of your newspaper —< f death in automobile and airplane accident.-, in ship and tram wrecks, in cave-in- and bridge and building c iliapse.-. ir, hurri canes and fiood.-. from fire, from dr wn ing, from the murder u# acts of vicious and irresponsible men and women—all these, frightful as they are. follow so steadily upon one another, become such routine ii Kir r< ading thst after a moment of horror we pa-.- or, to other part# of the paper or to absorption in our own tasks and pastime- Nobody is to be blamed for this. i* i- not ir. hu man nature to be deeply grief-stricken about the trouble- <•{. people who ar* strangers and far away. But now and trier, one of these chronicles has in it ar. element of tragedy a p ignanc;. that make- it linger in the mind. .such was the article aoout the hon eymooning couple. Mr. ar.d Mr- Or* r. A. Pruitt, who were g'-.r.g from ir.ar lotte to Ashe - ..be las* W«-dnesday by airplane to vi-it the yr;d*\- parents. M rri« ir s th Cai fore they had planned to go by b-s, but 1 n • th< bu tickets na ; lan< Then th< t had tran ■ - 1 erred from. th*.r ' r-t-ch - r. j .a.’.* to amithef lhat would get then to Ashe •• .!.*• sooner. About * wei.ty minutes, on’. <4 Char lotte Pruitt go*, p and won’ to th* rear of the plane to get hi.- wif* a drink of water, She ne.er saw him again. What hap;>-neu .*. a- that he opened the ooor into the open air when r.e thought he was opening the door into the men's room. He f«-l; C.OOO feet and hi- isoy was found near th* /-.or. C march ceme tery .- ix miles .north of Shelby. At her parents' home in Asheville the heartbroken bride said: “We were having the time of o ,r lives. New lives and starting all over. We d been laugh ing and I know e.erybody knew we’d just been married Oren said he’d be back in a minute. J heard a shoosh, the wind screaming in bom* body said the door had blown off. I was afraid to look back there A stewardess came to my -eat and sat down beside me. 1 knew then.” b'onsideripg all that airlines do for the safety of passenger*** it seems in credible that any line could fail to take such an obvious; precaution as to mark a dangerous door so as to distinguish it from a safe door. Such marking to pro tect people’s lives has been required by law at exit doors in theatres for gen erations. Surely nothing could be sim pler than to put a red light on a door leading to the open air and beside or under the light some such warning as DANGER—DO NOT OPEN. If Pruitt’s death was due to failure to do this, i call it criminal negligence. The day after I read about this fatal fall from a plane I read about the kill ing of six children by a cave-in in an excavation of an expressway. It oc curred in a crowded section of Brook lyn, and the cries of the children who barely escaped brought a crowd of peo ple, including parents, brothers and sis- Iters, and friends, running to the scene. The police estimated at 5,000 the num ber of spectators around the rim of the excavation and on the roofs of the sur rounding buildings. Policemen and fire j | men worked for hours to get to the it children. The use of machinery would have been dangerous, so all the dig * ging had to be done by hand. The at | tempts at rescue went on for hours. Police orders put the excavation off limits for children immediately after work on it began several weeks ago, and | policemen chased children away again v and again, but there are many holes in the enclosing fence and the ramp for About the Choice of Books (B» Sidney Swain R#>*>in»i An unforgettable piece of advice from Horace Williams, long teacher of philosophy at the Hill and a philosopher in person to hear many people tel! it. was "to deal at first hand with great men." This advice has come to seem in creasingly appropriate in a:, the recent years since the swelling spate of new books from the press ha~- been or.. “Don't read books about Shakes peare. read Shakes pear* Dor. t read hi-* ries of philosoph; read P.ato. tot It Hegt D• • ■ aspiring ;*iograpr.ie; of Washing* n. Frank;:n. Jefferson until after yhave consulted the original sources of :.gr.t and lead ing in person. Havt c-or.: -nee ir. y *r wr; mind and dor; : plaj around with the second-hand me:.. G t the very p wer-house itself, put y->ur he&a in v. .-,* re the lightning has been flashing a long time and see i ‘ y>u don t get a .-park yourself That .- the way (>*d Horace wouid talk t * r.i- class. Sometimes, by talking endless.y : , graj • ■ as M< rlt "Gladstone." or Beveridge's “John Mar sha!;.’ e*r Allen’s **Ph;l ;r - Brooks, he did get his student? ad w *rked up * j -. . . migl * ca! • ■ 1 !-ha books. But perhaps he thought of J' hn Morley. Senator Beveridge and Alex ■ er V. G. Allen as grt at men tht r selves. ();,*- thing .- c* rta.t: ;f the variou* kind- - f of th- M *nth. and all the familiar way- of choosing our reaa irg for us. out 'f boo * - . ust come pant ing off the pres.- had been as developed in his day as in ours, they would have been objects of the most w ithering scorn he could command. H- would have said: "Whv let seme bod v else prescribe read ing for you? You ought to be able to f.nd the right books * r read for your -e!f te ’ter than some commercial agent. And why not r-ad book? that you know fire f.rst-line materia. for the human race’ If you think you have a mind, ypj can at least treat it ha.f're.-pectfully.” N< doubt th*- 0 i Mar. - view on -orn* n'fAa repre-er.* :;.g new fields in .-* ;odbye present. I fee- ■ a cent U these old ix,y# that I want them to know about it. They haa more class a teacher.- than haif the edi tors going." Mr. Ruark's column follows: It wa- J 2 years ago this week when I was shoved, a ruffled fu-ugang. from the cory nest of learning into a wor.d wr.ifh evinced no particu lar interest m now I intended to eat. Er.- .ft. to say. 1 miss ed very few meals early on, and for some time have fed h.gr. - n tne hog. I take no. credit; the credit is due to two gentieme-Ti who were formally pa-t-red last week by the University of North 1 arolina, after about a h-ndre/j years of combined ser vjr*. The names are Oscar Cof f :.. known a.- .'kipper, who ran •he Journal.-m School, and Phi..R.--*.. who looked af ter creative writing. If you think this .- going to be an .1. *-r.*:n.er.ta. piece, -top here. |H i lAUv Chapel Hili jj| By Bill* Arthur Add things 1 would have liked to have done: Call Bill Cherry while he was vacationing in Nassau and teJl him HLS account wa;- overdrawn. * ;C 9 * * Sol Lipman cam* into th< 1 offee Shop the othei morning looking for hi.-'•brother Jack who had just come up from Carolina Beach. “Have you seen th*.- ’Big Fisherman’ today?” Sol asked. * * * * * Joe Bobbin.- tells why he ha so t had a vacation in more than 40 years. “When i fir-1. went to work,” Jo*- said, “I took a man’s place who had gone on vacation. When he got back, they put him on another job and let me keep his. Then, another man went on vacation, and I got his job for good. In 14 months, I had J1 promotions to better jobs, aJI because folks went on vacation. And J made up my mind J was never going to Lake one, because someone might come in and while I was away do a better job than J, and keep it. So I don’t want to go away and take that chance.” n * * » We went in Danziger’s the day Erwin was to get married. Dad E. B. Danziger was®.all dressed up, and we kidded him about it. “First time in my life I ever changed clothes three times a day,” he replied. “And all because I’m getting rid of a son. IBooks like he could go on away without my having to change clothes, doesn’t it?” • ♦ * • Noel Houston has been putting a prime coat of paint on bis house preparatory to giving it a real going over. * “Hard job?” he ask* e.. had a magnificent ability bestow knowledge without ’ patronage. Coffin was the < / 3 Jess space N o bulky projection inside S< MQ 9S * or Two or Three OHrV Room Size ★ New Simplified Comfort-Control ★ New Automatic Temperature Control A New Air Freshener clear*, air ★ Cool*, Dehumidifies, Filter*, Ventilate*, and Exhau*t* ★ Rotator Air Director* for No-draft Comfort JAW 4 WINDOWS ■ *»**"*"* W.N&OW, VM oh KM YEAR-ROUND COOLING with the NEW, AUTOMATIC # Iwin-fart ventilator Here'* a fan you'll want to own-the fan with a brain. Automatic Fontrol give* you jutt-right cooling comfort. »Set it and forget it! See the new O-l Twin-Fan Ventilator at GENERAL ! *59” ELECTRIC j —-Others. ■fans j WINDOW FANS $39.95 j 8” DESK FANS $ 9.95 OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS TILL NINE CLOSED WEDNESDAYS AT ONE 422 W. Franklin St. —l’hoo, g. 451. Tuesday, June 19, 1956