Page 2-B E The Chapel Hill Weekly I "// tAe matter it important and you are sure of your ground, never fear to be in the minority.” ORVIIiJE CAMPBELL, PaUUher JAMES "SHUMAKER, General Maaager MhM eroty Saaday aad Wettaeaday by (he Chapel BBH Publishing Company, Lae. Ml Weat Franklin Street. Chapel Hill. N. C. P. 0. Bex m - Telephone *B7-7*15 fbManliilinn rates (payable In advance and including N. C. sales tax)—ln North Carolina: One year, H.IS; six months, $3.09; three months, $2 08. Elsewhere in the United States: One year, sß.o®; six months, $4.00; three months, SI.OO. Outside United States: One year, SIO.OO. Thc Odds Are Long, But The Time Is Ripe For The Governor To Lead There is an old joke about the col lege student who turned up at the end of the semester with four Ps and a D. When his parents demanded an account ing, the student blandly replied, “Well, I guess I concentrated too much on one subject.” Something like that happened to Gov ernor Terry Sanford in the 1963 session of the General Assembly, although his saving grace was considerably better than a D. The Governor’s prime objec tive in the 1963 session was progress in higher education. That was a highly commendable objective and one worthy of all the influence the Governor could bring to bear, but his overriding con cern for it cost North Carolina a decent minimum wage, Senate redistricting, and other major Sanford proposals. Now we have a special session of the Legislature coming up which will be de voted to Senate redistricting. This is the way Governor Sanford wants it, because if other issues were cut loose, the legis lators might jump the traces and re districting would be jeopardized*. There were political realities the Gov An Unintentional Blow For Democracy Assistant Attorney General Ralph Moody, in confiding to the citizenry of Harnett County that the real purpose of the gag law was to force the University to function as the “political agent” it actually is, probably had no wish to hasten the law’s repeal. But, by saying that “the University is merely a political agent,” presumably serving no purpose but to buttress the political philosophy of the state in which it exists, he has argued as cogently for repeal as any of the law’s liberal op ponents. It would be pointless to tabulate the number of demagogues, past and pres ent, who have said the same thing about other universities. The statement could have been lifted intact fj-