Page 2-C The Chapel Hill Weekly Founded in 1923 by Louis Graves “If the matter is important and you are sure of your ground, never fear to be in the minority.’’ ORVILLE CAMPBELL. Polisher JAMES SHUMAKER, Editor Published every Sunday and Wednesday by the Chapel Hill Publishing Company, lac. SOI West Franklin Street. Chapel HIM. N. C. P. 0. Box 271 - Telephone SO7-7045 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; One year, SIO.OO. Gag Law: Delicate Political Question The University's assault this week on North Carolina’s Gag Law was impres sive in many ways. Taken as a whole, the case presented by the trustees, ad ministration and faculty was not a frontal attack so much as it was a sur rounding of the problem. There were appeals based on academ ic freedom, North Carolina tradition, freedom of speech, administrative con trol of the University, faculty morale, University prestige, the handicap to faculty recruitment and retention, the effect on students, and the long-range damage to the entire State. Many of the appeals made by trustees on the floor, in resolutions from the faculties, and by University ad ministrators were stirring. The res olution ultimately adopted by the trust ees was couched in strong language. But withal the oratory and the rea soned appeals to democracy and academ ic freedom, it became clearly evident at last Monday’s meeting of the trustees that the University considers the Gag Law as much a political question as any thing else and the keynote of its drive for repeal or amendment will be gentle persuasion. Almost every speaker went to great lengths to emphasize what a friend the University has in the Legislature and that the Gag Law represented only a momentary and un-considered devia tion. One speaker suggested that a small minority in the Legislature was respon sible for the Gag Law and had been able to work its will by selling the ma jority a bill of goods. If such were the case, the prospects for repeal or a substantial amendment in the 1965 General Asssembly would be “extifemely bright. Unfortunately, such is far from the case. Larry Moore of Wilson, a former Speaker of the House of Representa tives, told the trustees an all-out at tack on the Gag Law would be widely interpreted as furthering the aims of Loren Mac Kinney: Vivid Was The V/ord It is both easy and hard to mourn the passing of a man like Loren Carey Mac Kinney —a complexity entirely characteristic of him. It is easy because in 72 years he had achieved a rare inimitability of human value. But at the same time, it is hard to be doleful about his death last Sunday because even his memory, quite aside from the man him self, leaves you in anything but a mourn ing frame of mind. At 72, Dr. Mac Kinney looked a vigor ous 55, and vigorous is a word you would quickly attach to him. Vivid is another; smiling is still another. He had not been physically vigorous in recent months be cause he was suffering from paralysis following a stroke. But he was one of those unquenchable men whose charac ters have so many tendrils reaching out into so many nooks and crannies of life and the world that the elimination of one tendril hardly daunts the others. In away, Dr. Mac Kinney was some thing of an, iconoclast. He followed his mind and his heart, both of which were much too probing to be compressed into conformity. His mental and physical muscles flexed in all directions. He loved to write letters to the editor. The 'walls of his study were covered with a couple of hundred pictures of people he liked anybody he liked, from movie actress es to his friends’ grandchildren. He lik ed Gilbert and Sullivan .songs, and could sing them, he liked limericks and could recite them, and he enjoyed jokes and told them well. As a conversationalist, he could bring out both the best and the worst in other people both requiring talent. He loved to argue, too, any side, Wednesday, October 30, 1963 communism. Mr. Wilson thinks the Gag Law, at least in part, is good legislation and he would like to see what he consid ers the good retained. This seems to be suggesting that poison be broken down and its elements neatly separated in stead of throwing out the whole bottle. But he was looking political reality squarely in the face when he said that a frontal attack on the Gag Law would bring in return a frontal attack on the University. The political delicacy of the issue is such that the University must not seem to be opposing the Legislature but working hand in hand with the great majority of the lawmakers to correct an error committed in haste by a com parative few. That is why the trustees’ resolution, for all its strong language, actually does ver> r little. The resolution does not call on the General Assembly to repeal the Gag Law, or to amend it, or to do any thing for that matter. It simply calls on a special trustee committee "to determ ine and implement measures to remove this legislative impairment of intellect ual freedom and preemption of the au thority and prerogatives of the Board of Trustees.” With the next General Assembly fif teen months away, this is undoubtedly the politic approach. It will fall far short of satisfying many opponents of the Gag Law, and it fell short of satis fying some of the trustees last Monday who felt that a stronger stand should have been taken. Those responsible for the University’s approach want a solution rather than an issue, even at the cost of frustrating what they would really like to do. This is a matter of working quietly for what is politically possible instead of loudly demanding what would be emotionally satisfying. There is, of course, a very good possi bility that the soft approach will turn out to be a whisper the legislators can pretend they never heard. If so, the hard-nose issue will still be there. any question. “He could be the devil’s advocate on anything,” said one of his friends, trying to estimate the com plexity of Loren Mac Kinney. But he was also a simple man, in ways (which contributes to his complexity). He was not an active sportsman, but he liked football. He wasn’t hooked on phy sical fitness, but he felled trees and chopped wood. He and a friend, with no other help, added a study to his house in Maine. “He was a splendid carpenter,” said his colleague in the effort. Dr. Mac- Kinney’s son played football for Har vard, and the two of them used to pass footballs around the yard in the late afternoons. Dr. Mac Kinney was, of course, best known for his highly respected scholar ship in the history of medicine, partic ularly medieval medicine. But he was too active to be cobwebby about his scholarship. He was not the type who retires farther and farther, year by year, into a cocoon of conquered knowl edge. There were too many students around for that, and too many people who needed things that he could give subtle, curve-ball humor; his car for a fast trip to a hospital; his time, for students who wanted to understand more, or who needed more time to un derstand at all; himself generally, for everybody from his neighbors to his grandchildren. Dr. Mac Kinney had a pet remark his friends remember him making often when something nice happened to him. “Who are we to be thus privileged?” he used to say, a question that may well be asked now by those who knew him. The Last Rays Os Indian Summer I Like Chapel Hill Arriving day after tomorrow, November in North Carolina is many things. It’s convincing the kids to throw away that Halloween pumpkin or sneaking it in the garbage your self. It’s football coaches being hung in effigy and, as the Greensboro Daily News says, “when the frost is on the pumpkin and the alumni are on the coaches.” November is when the fish stop biting. , It’s when the winter rye grass needs mowing every four days because you put too much .ferti lizer on it. 1 j —Looking Back— From the files of the Weekly: IN 1923 The Easy Way to Own a FORD ONE-TON TRUCK Here is a chance for you to get started toward greater profits— or to build up a business of your own—and it costs only $5 to make a start. Everywhere. Ford One-Ton Trucks and Light Delivery Cars are saving more than this every year for their users. So, as soon as your truck starts running it will quickly take care of the purchase price and add new pro fits as well. It will widen the area in which you can do business, enlarge the number of customers you can serve—and keep your delivery costs down to the lowest point. Start now toward the ownership of a Ford Truck or Light Deliv ery car—use the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan $5 Enrolls You Under the terms of this Plan, we deposit this money in a local bank at interest. Each week you add a little more—this also draws interest. And in a short time the truck is yours to use. Come in and Jet us give you full particulars. STROWD MOTOR CO. IN 1933- Armistice Day Parade ‘'There is to be a big parade in Chapel Hill on the morning of November 11, the 15th anniver sary of the day when the Armis tice ended the World War. “L. J. Phipps, commander of the local post of the American Legion, is directing the arrange ments. "The parade will form on West Franklin Street, and the route It’s thinking about going to Flor ida for the winter because it’s Indian summer in North Carolina. It's hot oatmeal tasting good for breakfast. It's hog killing, backbone and crackling bread one morning and “skeeter” killing the next. It’s when long underwear is a necessity in the morning and a nuisance in the afternoon. November is the closing of the tobacco markets and the open ing of toylands. It's Santa Claus and Christmas trees appearing before Thanks giving and the Pilgrims. of march will probably be down the street through the business section, around the corner at the President’s House, along the Raleigh Road, into the campus at the east gate, and up Camer on Avenue to Memorial Hall. The Armistice Day exercise in the hall will begin at 10:30 . . IN 1943 From Chapel Hill Chaff: "Rhodes Markham, the Negro man-of-all work at the W. C. Cok er home, has a terrapin for a pet. After he named it Jimmy he learned from the hatching out of a gang of little terrapins, that Jenny or Jemima would have been more appropriate, but he held to the original name. Jimmy’s home is in the grass near the garage. She starts out early every morning and crawls a distance of about fifty yards to the little tool house and gen eral utility building where Rhodes makes his headquarters. This trip is for the breakfast he has taughfher to expect, bits of meat and other things suitable for a terrapin. When she has eaten her fill she goes back home.” IN 1953- Peter Garvin Library Will V* Be Dedicated Monday Night "The dedication of the Glen wood School’s Peter Garvin Memorial Library will be held at a meeting of the school’s PTA . . . Monday. Robert B, House, Chancellor of the Univer sity, will make the dedicatory address. The presentation of the Library will be made by Harold Weaver, chairman of the trustees of the Peter Garvin Library Fund, and the acceptance will be by C. W. Davis, superinten dent of schools. The Rev. W. M. Howard will deliver the invoca tion. "The Library is a memorial to the son of Dr. and Mrs. 0. David Garvin who was killed in an accident in 1951 when he was nine years old . . . By BILLY ARTHUR It’s United Fund leaders plead ing that quotas be met. It’s children bringing home their report cards which show progress. Or, lack of it. It's persimmons ripening and Pete Ivey, Bugs Barringer, Burke Davis and John Parris telling how to make persimmon beer. November is a reminder that the Uth is not a celebration of the end of the war to end all wars. It’s the opening of the quail, rabbit and deer season and a re minder that people who look like quail, rabbit and deer will live longer if they’re careful when they commune with nature. It's the philosophy of Ike Lon don's Richmond County colored friend, who said, "In the spring I’se an optimist, the summer a pessimist, but, praise God, in the fall I’se a possumist.” It's leaves to be raked when there's sewing and darning to be done. It's azaleas to be mulched and bulbs to be planted for spring. It’s treating chapped hands from working in flowers, and yet it’s said November has a “Na tional Save a Wife Week.” November is when a fat turkey or hen should roost higher or make itself scarcer. It's relatives eating up the Thanksgiving turkey you’d hoped would last three meals, includ ing turkey hash. It’s women wearing little boy britches instead of skirts on warm days. And it’s women wearing long black stockings that make them look as if they're in mourning from the waist down. It’s adopting a needy family for Christmas when you wofter if it should not be your own. November is subscribing to magazines through the junior class to pay for the senior ban quet next springs It’s buying Christmas cards from one little fellow and apolo getically turning down another who also wants to make some money to buy his mama a Christ mas present. It’s Christmas lights strung across streets but purposelessly hanging there till after Thanks giving. It’s wrapping up children to go outside only to have them stay no longer than it took to bundle them, and then have them come back inside to be unwrapped and suddenly decide they want to go outside again. It’s the beginning of colds, run ning noses and trips to the doc tor. November is building a huge fire in the fireplace and discover ing you’ve forgotten to open the draft. It’s waiting till the end of the month to start your Christmas list and then wishing you’d start ed a Christmas savings account last January. Yet, November in North Caro lina is simply wonderful! BILL PROUTY How long will it be before it rains real rain again? The soft drizzle which fell here through most of Monday night and into Tuesday morning lent premature hopes that the long drought was at last at an end. By mid-morning Tuesday the overcast coming from the west had broken up into sky-rimmed, off-gray patches which anxious ly nudged the solid dark rain clouds toward the east. Radio weather reports audibly confirmed these visual observa tions: The big drought was with us still, and there was no im mediate relief in sight. You know, we urbanites, liv ing in small cities with their plentiful water reserves, their paved streets and, their flow er and shrubbery-watering facil ities, have almost forgotten the real curse of droughts. Oh, we commiserate as best we can with our farmer brethren, whose crops are withering under the summer’s rainless skies, and we listen with considerable atten tion and some trepidation to re ports of the tinder dryness of the forests surrounding our towns, and during long drawn out droughts, we reluctantly submit to the inconveniences of voluntary water rationing, such as limited car washing and no grass sprinkling. But do you remember when, your city was a town, or a vilj lage, and a drought was some thing else again? Our Town was just like yours was during those summer and fall droughts back in the 19205, when the roads were unpaved and the water supply was either from wells or from water sys tems which depended upon small creek dams and tiny reservoirs. After a week or two with no rain there was dust, dust every where. You could even taste it. In our old ißaibee House home in the middle of Town, you could dust the furniture in the morning and it would be cover ed again by afternoon. You could smell it in the boxwood A Letter T>-The Editor To the Editor: Many of us on the University Library staff are shocked and saddened by the sudden death of Professor Robert J. Getty last Thursday night. Mr. Getty was well known to us as one of our most constant patrons in the Lib rary among the faculty. We would see him about four days a week all the years he was here, either ordering or checking on both old and new books for the Classics Department in our Acquisitions section, or taking out many per sonal loans at the Circulation Desk, or just browsing studious ly in the Stacks. Through his rare kindliness and solicitude for peo ple, and with his vast scholarly interest and knowledge of books, he became one of the Library’s best faculty friends. Never to be forgotten will be: his unique way of speaking in a slurred Irish-British accent and j the happy lilt of his voice; his old-world type of gentlemanly courtesy; his quiet, dignified manner combined with an out going friendliness, a ready smile and a youthful sense of humor; his obvious sincerity, his real en thusiasm and his love of beauti ful things; his steady but kind University Library 1 ' - Aid For Forgotten Vice The Norfolk Virginian Pilot Poet Archibald MacLeish was exulting the other day in Bogota, Colombia, that at last he had found a land where poetry was appreciated. In Colombia, it seems, the streets ring with rhyme, laws are written in iambic pentameter, and every man is his own versifier. Mr. MacLeish finds all this heady stuff. “Someone told me once,” he repeated for the North American press, “that if you need a poet in the United States, you go to the FBI; in Argentina you go to the intellectuals; in Colombia you go to the telephone di rectory.” Mr. MacLeish concluded none too happily that in the United States the writing of poetry is often re garded much as a vice that is better overlooked. It is all too true. Mr. MacLeish might perform a serv ice for his native land by asking for help from Colom bia, perhaps in the name of the Alliance for Progress. We do not need shipments of poets from Colombia, heav en knows, but we could use some technical knowhow on the care and feeding of the ones we have at home. Per haps one Colombian senator would be useful to teach some of our own the brevity that is the soul of poetry as well as wit. But, Mr. MacLeish might like his native land less for all this. It is not true that one must go to the FBI to obtain poets in the United States. Some the Certi fied Poets can be obtained at the White House now adays. It is as a Certified Poet, as a matter of fact, that Mr. MacLeish is in Colombia. Sec. of the Interior Udall brought him along just to prove we had one. In Colombia, the secretary of the interior probably writes his own. bushes, which would powder like a puff if you bumped into them. It covered the leaves of the trees and the grass turned gray ish-green. And after a month of rainless skies the creeks were at a gur gle and the water from your kitchen tap came in an ever thinning trickle, and finally you began boiling all your drinking water before you drank it, as an extra precaution against dreaded typhoid fever. And now the old Model-T street watering truck had given up its hopeless task and the young’uns plopped barefooted up and down Franklin Street, fine dust ally ing with their feet and sticking all over their sweaty bodies. And back home again where footprints followed them across the open front porch right into the house and onto the rugs and floors. And finally the youngsters got so they didn’t even care about playing anymore, and adults would gather around in serious groups, asking each other if it would ever rain again, and com ing to the dire conclusion that indeed it might not. Tempers became edgy, faces drawn and apprehensive', nerves taut, and souls all but dehydrated. And then came the rains! And with them, uplifted and grateful faces, and bounding creeks, and fast-running water taps, and filling wells and flow ing springs, and rain-dappled 1 dust turned into mushy mud, and the young’uns ran out into it all to see if it was really true. Have you ever known the gloriously fresh odor of falling rain as it washed away the pungent lingering odor of dust from the air, and erased the gray from the green leaves, and trickled unabated down a joy ous upturned young face? If you have, you will under stand how soothing were the soft sounds of Monday night’s long night’s long drizzle, and how glaring were Tuesday morn ing’s bright blue skies. look right into your eyes, and the feeiing he Igave of his per sonal attention to each indivi dual or subject at hand. In the physical bulk of this large man there was the grace of something soft and light and tender, which he never tried to hide. I have been personally fond of Mr. Getty for years and he would always give a jaunty wave if he did not have time to stop and talk. Last Thursday afternoon’he did have time and stopped to talk with me for about ten min utes. He had been interested in my vacation trip to New York in September and I had brought some of my color photographs to show him. He slowly examined and commented enthusiastically about each one, and he particul arly liked my pictures of the bridges. He said that he hoped to go back again someday soon to see them and he talked of other world-famous bridges, some of which he had seen and some he yet hoped to see. That night he died suddenly of a heart attack —a very young man at heart, de spite his 55 years. I miss him al ready. Myra Lauterer Circulation Desk