Page 2-B The Chapel Hilt Weekly "If the matter is important and you are sure of your ground, never fear to he in the minority." ORVILLE CAMPBELL, Publisher JAMES SHUMAKER, General Manager Published every Sunday and Wednesday by the Chapel Hill Publishing Company, Inc. 126 East Rosemary Street, Chapel Hill, N. C. P. 0. Box 271 - Telephone 967-7045 \ Subscription rates (payable in advance and including N. C. sales tax)—ln North Carolina: One year, $5.15; six months, $3.09; three months, $2.06 Elsewhere in the United States: One year, $6.00; six months, $4.00; three-months, $3.00. Outside United States: (hie year, SIO.OO. One Characteristic Chapel Hill Has In Common With The Mill Villages Chapel Hill’s public school teachers are low down on the professional totem pole, according to Superintendent How ard Thompson. They are not respected as professional people as highly as they might be. Teachers here, according to Dr. Thompson, are often made to feel like “second-rate citizens, not a part of the community.” Os the teachers who have left Chapel Hill in the last year, twenty per cent departed because of what they felt to be the community’s attitude toward them as professionals. The reason for this feeling of pro fessional inferiority results from the long shadow cast by the University. Ph.D.’s, if not a dime a dozen in Chapel Hill, are at least three for a quarter. But we have a notion that the degree syndrome is not at the bottom of the trouble. Public school teachers here, we be lieve, are simply faced with one of the facts of life in a one-big-industry town. The one big industry in Chapel Hill happens to be higher education. The ef fect is the same you find in a North Carolina mill village where life is dom inated by the mill. A man who says, “I work at the mill,” is automatically identified as a member of the in-crowd. It doesn’t matter whether he is a looper or vice president. Anyone who doesn’t work for the mill is looked at askance and with a certain amount of condescen sion, whether he is president of the local bank or the village idiot. Question: Who Is Right Or Wrong? No matter how it starts out and who is involved, conversation in Chapel Hill these days seems always to work around somehow to Topic A, which is integra tion. Perhaps it’s like that everywhere in the South now, and everywhere in the East, if not throughout the Nation. A Franklin Street restaurant operator and a couple of his customers had work ed their way around to Topic A one day last week and were bearing down hard when one simple question closed out the talk. The question was put by the restau rant operator: “Who is right and who is wrong?” After a couple of false starts everybody gave up trying to answer. There has to be an answer to this de matically declaring, "You are wrong.” < thought, it would seem that the logical answer is everybody’s right and every body’s wrong. i It seems to us that unless a man were willing to deny his American heritage, the brotherhood of man, and our basic Beverly Lake & The Foreign Invaders The Greensboro Daily News In his unsuccessful 1960 campaign for governor, Dr. I. Beverly Lake raised the goblins of race and taxes. Since North Carolina refused to quake with fright, Dr. Lake is turning now, it appears, to the oldest of goblins—the “foreign in vaders.” These “foreign invaders,” Dr. Lake darkly informed the Wilson Jaycees the other night, are “deeply entrenched in our classrooms, pulpits and editorial rooms.” Their objective? It is, accord ing to Dr. Lake, to “capture the minds of your children for a faith in the social ist welfare state . . Really now, Dr. Lake knows that this is the purest fantasy. It has the dull ring of some of the more bizarre pages Sunday, August 11,1963 The only non-University people who consistently escape this sort of con descension in Chapel Hill are those with a direct connection with the arts and those who don’t work at all. A foreign accent will often give temporary im munity, as will an impressive title, but neither carries any long-term guarantee. Dr. Thompson thinks something should be done to improve the profes sional status of our public school teach ers, and so do we. But we would balk at razing the University and the only al ternative seems to be the infinitely more difficult job of changing human nature. / Ongoing (?) Perhaps you noticed that after Presi dent Kennedy put a new gloss on it, the word ‘vigor’ (vigah) became a part of the working vocabulary of nearly eve rybody in the administration, including some part-time mail carriers. The same sort of phenomenon has oc curred in Chapel Hill, with another word and on a somewhat less exalted level. The word currently in vogue here is ‘ongoing.’ ‘Ongoing’ didn’t come from a dictionary; in fact, we don’t know where it came from. But ‘ongoing’ has been used to describe everything from the campus greenery to the University’s grandest dreams. ‘Ongoing’ is meant to indicate, we are toid, continuing progress. This is a good thing to know. For a while there we were afraid it was something subversive. matically declaring, “You are wrong.” tfien he would have to agree that what the Negro is struggling for is right. If you grant the Negro the right-ness of his goal, then it follows that those who are trying to deny him are wrong. It seems equally apparent, however, that some of the means now being used to attain that goal are wrong. Even granting that demonstrations, picket ing and sit-ins were necessary in the be ginning, any reasonable man would have to agree that irritants are hardly con ducive to a permanent solution. Direct action has served its purpose remarkably well. There is no better proof of that than that our National conscience has become virtually saturat ed in one way or another with integra tion. The time is now at hand when the hope for solution lies, perhaps entirely, in negotiation. And any negotiations will have a much greater chance of success if the parties concerned enter asking them selves, “Am I right”, instead of auto- of Robert Welch’s Birch Society Blue Book, a gospel of suspicion and discord which has not sold well in North Caro lina. If we are mistaken in this, then per haps Dr. Lake will supply the names of these “foreign invaders” who are subtly working their craft on the minds of Tar Heel children. Until he does name names—and we venture to predict that will be a long time off—the ghoulies and ghosties Dr. Lake is drumming up in these speeches should not be mistaken as “conserva tism.” There is plenty of room in North Carolina for reasoned, factual and per suasive conservatism. But even in the palmy days of McCarthyism and Birch ism, the foreign devil theory has not marketed well in this State. Letters To The Editor Demonstrations And ‘The Old Well’ Dear Editor: Re “Blood on the Old Well” and its author whom I have not met: One day when I was 9 years old my playmate in whose yard we were playing used a bad word and his mother heard him. According to the prevailing custom, she called him in and washed his mouth with nice soapy water. As he came down the back steps after the ordeal he mutter ed angrily what seemed to me to be a very pertinent question. It was: “And how did she know it was a bad word?” Yours very truly, Robert W. Hudgens Dear Sir: I joined the protest demonstra tion in front of South Building on July 7 for a few minutes, but withdrew after reading the signs carried by some demonstrators. Several signs in the group de manded the passage of a public accommodations law, a measure that I oppose. The civil rights of the Negro or any citizen are no more sa cred than the right of the small businessman in running his busi ness as best suits his purpose. If a law is created that forces the private businessman to serve all persons without discrimina tion, he may find it impossible to remove any undesirable hum ■gfUZXr Jjjj£ v -flB- " - : ■ Ik JUI j i■ jUSEi Mr rs , JBK3* Ms . .«sf - *mm • ** ' M - f . Mi «9WF,' wKh&m* msk. JMBL 1 A .. iZjr : i *jr- ■*? jtjA - *f'Wi it- - *-r --/ * - 'skF" i._ *- / •• BrYrf r y g iSffl4r*ffßH •-■■■• x j y 2?- y^BKjBTVVi - ■ ■ |T * KgBjBF 3 " f .‘ ~ , Morgan Creek Winding Through A Chapel Hill Dell mMmmmmmmtvr mmmm - mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm I Like Chapel Hill By Billy Arthur The leanest man I know of has just left town after having spent the first part of the year here. He was a frequent visitor in the Carolina Barber Shop and never told Y. Z. Cannon he was deaf. * * • Picked up a couple of good stories in Washington. Accord ing td The Star, Congressman Jack Shelly tells of the aesthetic and somewhat severe old Irish Catholic pastor and his young as sistant who were opening Christ mas presents in the rectory be fore midnight mass. The young priest was delighted when he came upon a pair of thick Turkish towels but, when he unfolded them, was dismayed to find them embroidered “His” and “Hers.” “Perhaps we had better give them to the next couple that comes to the church to be mar ried, Father,” he said sadly. But the pastor said: “No, let’s keep them till we see what the Ecumenical Coun cil is going to do.** • • • The other story was told by Charlie Clift of the FCC, and it was about the lady superin tendent of a borne for unwed an element from his premises, no matter how damaging to his business, without fear of facing suit or trial for discriminatory business practices. Further, eco nomists claim that small busi ness is already smarting under legislative restrictions. Each further restriction further re duces the attractiveness of priv ate business as away of life and, in reducing the number of small businessmen, weakens the buf fering effect of the entrepre neur between the very rich and large corporations and the poor. Non-violent demonstrations by Negroes and sympathetic whifes should continue until equal treat ment is realized, but public ac commodations laws, while a seeming easy road to victory, may cause greater long range damage to private enterprise than the Negro will suffer in the next few decades if such laws are not passed. Accommodations laws would do no more than in crease the rights of one group at the expense of certain rights of another, and would thus hard ly increase the common good. Certainly the attitude of bellige rent white segregationists in the deep South, who have already announced that they would dis regard national accommodations laws, will not be changed through legislation. Persistent attrition is the only way to re duce their deep-rooted "bigotry to compromising levels. If na tional accommodations laws are passed, and are not struck down mothers. The Junior Chamber of Commerce made the home its pet charity and made the lady superintendent an honorary mem ber of the Jaycees. She became so infected with the Jaycees’ enthusiasm for pro gress that she started bragging about her establishment while showing it to visitors. When the visitors would con gratulate her on how well kept they had found the home, she would reply: "Thank you very much, and furthermore I want you to know that we are getting a- higher type of girl every year.** * « * Last summer little Stevie Zunes swam across his tt-foot pool 31 times. He was so proud of it he asked his father John Zunes what he would do if he swam it 100 times. "I’d put it in The Weekly* father replied, never thinking Stevie could do it. But last week he did. Now forth across the pool 101 con secutive times, and he’s been looking for the write-up in The Weekly. So here H to. Daddy is no promise-breaker. • • • When Commerce Secretary by the Supreme Court, bloodshed will probably be averted at many places in the deep South only by the imposition of Fed eral martial law. Negro leaders should remem ber that 40 years of non-violent noncooperation were required to achieve equality in India. Had Gandhi deliberately followed a course that he knew might lead to bloodshed, thousands of his living countrymen would not be alive today, and the remaining million might still £e under Brit ish rule. Sincerely yours, H. D. Wagener Department of Geology Chapel Hill Dear Editor: Teachers, preachers and edi tors of North Carolina had bet ter start packing their bags. Dr. I. Beverly Lake, North • Carolina’s self - styled political savior, announced to a group of Wilson Jaycees that “foreign in vaders” are about to take over the state. He pointed out that these four eyed demons of destruction are already entrenched in our class rooms, pulpits and on the edi torial staffs. In 1960 Dr. Lake attempted to excite our emotions with the ra cial issue. Recently, another at tempt was-made with the “com munist under every rock” gim mick. Now this. Luther Hodges wants “Love” all he has to do is press a button, according to a capital newspap er. But it’s not the love you or I are thinking of. It’s Jim Love, the secretary's expert on textile matters. I had remembered that our townsman, when he became sec retary, went all over the sprawl ing Commerce Department build ing, and it was reported that some workers said they had been there for years and never before seen one of their top bosses. So when we went to the Aquari um in the basement, just for the sake of conversation I asked one of the employees if Secretary Hodges ever got around to bis department. "Who?” he asked. “I don’t know who you’re talking about. I never get out of this cellar.” Donald Bishop, University grad and public relations expert, has moved from New York to work for the Secretary. He sends regards to Chapel Hillians. • • * Camp Pow Wow is loyal to the Tar Heels. Chief Joe Hilton teaches the youngsters to sing: “You can’t gut to heaven in a red canoe “Cause the Lord's favorite col or is Carolina blue," A Greensboro Daily News edi torial called the good doctor’s hand on Sis latest gubernatorial attempt. It read: “Really now, Dr. Lake knows that this is the purest fantasy. It has the dull ring of some of the more bizarre pages of Rob ert Welch’s Birch Soc.iety Blue Book, a gospel of suspicion and discord which has not sold well in North Carolina.” The editorial points out that Dr. Lake’s philosophy should not be mistaken for “conservatism.” It continued: “There is plenty of room in North Carolina for reasoned, fac tual and persuasive conservativ ism. But even in the palmy days of MeCarthyism and Birch ism, the foreign devil theory has not marketed well in this state. Dr. Lake knows that. And we cannot imagine why he is dis playing this tattered line of goods.” Sincerely, David C. Daughtry Goldsboro Dear Editor: We, the players of the Chapel Hill All-Star baseball team, wish I —Looking Back— | From The Weekly’s files: IN 1923 “Out in the section of town behind the old Baptist Church, Church Street, the colored people are anxious to have wa ter mains installed. The Univer sity, which provides water for the whole community, is plan ning to make the installation as soon as th§ new water supply system, for which the last legis lature appropriated funds, complete. “Chapel Hill’s health officer, Dr. Nathan, has found that near ly all the surface wells, upon which the dwellers in that section depend, are polluted. Os course, there being no water supply, there are no sewers. The conse quence is that the conditions of life are extremely unsanitary, an encouragement to typhoid and other diseases . . . “The new supply is to come from Morgan’s Creek, across which a dam is to be built about a mile and a half from Carr boro. Careful calculations by the en gineers show that this will give the University and Chapel Hill a bountiful supply for many years to come. ‘We ought to be able to get enough water there,’ said J. S. Bennett the other day, ‘for a city as large as Durham.’ ’’ IN 1933 - “Henry Horace Williams, pro fessor of Philosophy in the Uni versity, will be 75 years old next Wednesday, August 16. “Mr. Williams has a vigor not ordinarily associated with the age of 75. He rides a horse with the same enjoyment, and with the same erect posture, as forty years ago. He gets up early in the morning, prepares his own breakfast, and often does odd jobs about the house and yard. Usually, when he goes uptown, he prefers to leave his car at home and travel afoot. He retains his lively interest in talking, upon all manners of topics with whomever he hap pens to meet on the street or in the stores—fellow faculty mem bers, students, merchants, visit Those Little Foundations THE LONDON DAILY TELEGRAPH We are always reading about the millions given to the great foundations which play such an enormous role m American life but little is heard of the small ones. F. Emerson Andrews, director of the Foundation Li rary center m Newton, Mass., has been telling about some of them. There is, for example, the Benefit Shoe Foundation in Providence, R. 1., which is dedicated to the sole pur pose of collecting single shoes from manufacturers for the use of one legged people. In Boston there is the Lollipop Foundation of Amer ica, which adds another hospital to its list of bene ficiaries whenever its income is increased by 114 pounds a year; each hospital receives 25,000 lollipops—a year’s supply for child patients. In Vermont the State Cribbage Foundation is de voted to playing the game on Palm Sunday in Burling ton, Vt., and at Framingham, Masa., the Research Foun dation for the Study of Heaves in Hones exists in the hope that equine research may lead to more knowledge of human disorders. One odd foundation is the Henry G. Freeman Jr., in Money Fund, established to provide the wives of Am erican presidents with $12,000 a year to spend as they please. to thank all those people who helped support us and shewed Interest in us when we traveled to the State baseball tournament in Charlotte. We want especially to thank Mr. Wiley Franklin, Mr. Miles Fitch, Mr. Ted Talbert, Mr. Wimp Carroll, Mr. Coy Durham, Mr. Grady Snipes, Mr. Earl Wal ker, our coaches Mr. Jimmy Farrell and Mr. Albert Brinkley, our manager Tommy Williams, Dennis Osborne, and Tim Riggs bee. v - We don’t know how to thank any of them enough. . (Signed) Eddie Talbert Rodney McFarling Jimmy Andrews Marvin Talley Billy Martin Donnie Pendergrass Pat Thompson Bari Ellington Eddie Skakle Graham Burch Cliff Patterson Dave Harrison Donnie Carroll Joe Snipes Eddie Durham Phillip Walker Price Heusner ing alumni, whoever comes along. He is as alert and keenly interested in discussing the Na tional Recovery Act in 1933 as he was in discussing the cur rency question in the McKintey- Bryan campaign of 1896 ... He joined the University of North Carolina faculty in 1890.” IN 1943 - j “If you heard somebody re mark that the squirrels were /raiding his vegetable garden, you might take it as a kind of joke; anyway, as nothing much to wor ry about. “But squirrels have become a serious pest to vegetable garden ers, and in some cases to fruit growers, in Chapel Hill. Rab bits are doing damage, too, and there are complaints of rats by some gardeners; but just now it is the squirrels that are caus ing the most trouble. They are winning a great victory over Vic t tory Gardens. “‘I have planted corn five times this yew and haven’t bad an ear for myself yet,* said John W. Umstead, Jr., yester day. ‘The squirrels have got it all. “ ‘l’ve shot three recently. I’ve always liked to see the little things playing around, and I wouldn’t shoot ’em ’til I actually saw ’em in the act. I killed one when he was going up a tree with a small ear of corn in his mouth, and the other two I killed while they were sitting on a com stalk and eating corn. We’ve had some good squirrei stew, but we’d rather have the ro’s’n’ ears . . ” IN 19W - Two polio cases have been re- P°rt«i in Chapel Hill, according David Garv >n. district health officer. “They are Mrs. John Persh- Mfa/rinl 18 '® Glen Lennwt “ d Mbs Gladys Worman of San Di- f g0 ‘ Ca f tf ‘ who has been visit- i nend here ’ 8001 were reported in ‘good’ condition at JJ en^ ,a ‘ Hospital. According both ° Spital adnd ® J ’ s tr a tia», both cases are non-paralytic.”