EDITORIAL & FEATURE PAGE ! > I * r 1*^ 4 '1 , ; iV Chapel Hill News Leader Ltoding With The News in Chopef Hill, Corfboro, Qlen Lennox and Surrounding Areas im VOLUME II, NO. 64 THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 195S a * $64,000 Question Is Bargain to Spo (LEONARD BUDER in New York Sund Can Separate Be Equal? Dnc w(;aknes.s of the Governor’s emotional address Monday night was that it consisted cliieliy of an ajrpcal to colored citizens to maintain separate hut equal schools in the lace (jl the US Supreme Court’s ruling that sej)ar;ue scliools ol the races are “inherently” unetpial. Aiujther weakness was his addressing the N'egnjcs of tlie state as if they were an alien people, and his putting the state in the posi tion of making war on the National Associa tion of Colored People. Me was on stronger ground when he argued that time is needed for a change in social m mores and customs, and when he suggested that studies of local conditions be carried out by local committees consisting of members of both races. Something can be gained by cooperation and mutual help, but nothing but loss and futility are to be expected from an intention al collapse of the State’s public school system. If that temple is pulled down, the. white children are liable to suffer worse tlt^’ the ' Negro children. The Governor’s appeal was negative where affirmative leadership is the thing needed.' * ■ I A 1 * mm iiiSiia i An Avalanche of Babies THE MEN WHO MADE THE HIROSHIMA DAIRY: Left to right. Dr. Warner Wells, Michihiko Hachiya, author; Neal Tsukifuji, editorial adviser. translator; Dr. A new birth record was established in the US when in the first four months of this year more than 1,000,000 babies were born. If that rate were maintained the popula tion would be increased by 3,000,000 this year while in three years and four months the pop ulation would be up ten millions- In six years these new avalanches of babies will be knocking at the doors of schools while in another ten years a large part of them will be ready for the colleges and universities. Yet almost nothing is being done to meet the s( hool needs of the nation’s main asset— its children. riiere is no jilan, no money, no purpose. 'I'he richest nation on earth stands helpless in a rising sea of children. Congress looks another way while the administration at Washington prepares to get itself reelected next year. Yet the government has 60 nations on its payroll and drops billions upon billions into the maw of war preparation. A large part of the blame for this miserable treatment of the nation’s children falls on Southern members of Congress. They are afraid to back bills for more and better school buildings and equipment because of the seg regation issue. So once more is the South conditioned and palsied by the race question. Every people may expect to pay a penalty for its failures, but there is no good reason in this situation why the children should pay the penalty that should properly fall on adults. Are we to look upon a million new babies as a million new victims of a false situation? Who Were the Hiroshima's Victors in Destruction? Chips That Fall The Last Summer of "Longs // 'file present humid summer may be re- mendeered in history as the last in which “longs” received complete .social acceptance. riie whole trend and compulsion is toward “.shorts ”, whether Bermuda or suburban. For exam|>le, (he mayor of St. Louis pro- jco.ses (.0 put his police force hereafter in Bermuda shorts, ojx-n - collared shirts, and with helmets. The' hc'lmets can wait, but the shorts and the shills as specified are, we think, destined to become standard apparel throughout tliose ptirts of the country where the summer hc'at is C)C) or more. .A.ncl cvhynot? The coats and jackets, the necktie's, the stiff colla'r, the long trcjusers, are oidy the' handovers from F.nglish habits and English customs which so long staped the American social scene. The Fhiglish climate in summer is chilly enough to make even straw hats unnecessary. But the USA is covered in the summertime with a -blanket of hot dry air that is not far from .semi-tropical- The chief cities of the East have suffered from one heat wave after another while in the Midwest temperatures of too degrees or more have ben common. To wear coats and long trousers under such conditions is patiently absurd. 'The women long ago emancipated them selves from winter clothes in the summer- By DORIS BETTS In its years of publishing, the University of North Carolina Press has made many valuable contributions to man's knowledge and culture; but it has probably seldom had the opportunity of making so large a contribution on an international scale as it does with the publication this week of “Hiroshima Diary” This journal of a Japanese physician, which has been trans lated by a yqung Tarheel doctor, spans the brief time between August 6 to September 30, 1945; but these are memorable days in the history of man and the Jap anese physician who lived through them, Michihiko Hachiya, who has recorded them not only faith fully but very movingly. “Hiroshima Dairy” appears ten years after the day of the first atomic explosion. Dr. Hachi ya wrote on that day, “The hour was early; the morning still, warm, and beautiful. Shimmering leaves, reflecting sunlight from a cloudless sky, made a pleasant contrast with shadows in my gar den as I gazed absently through wide-flung doors opening to the south.” Seconds after those half-drowsy observations came the stropg flash of light, the dark sky,” the victors. One has only the feeling that here are men and women, much like men and women we know, faced with strange and terrible dangers. We find them doing all the things we would have done. When they rise to real courage and heroism, and they do rise to such heights, it is impossible not to be proud to be one of the race of man. time. But the men wilf not yet acknowledge that the American summer is semi-tropical sudden collapse of buiildings and and should be met with semi-tropical apparel, gardens everywhere. Dr. Hachi- Menaced by a New York Cop By HUGO GIDUZ (Cmiiinued) After the close of the Harvai'd commencement exercises there was the meeting of the Alumni Association. This was like most Alumni Association meetings at all institutions of higher learning; not too exciting, nor too inter- eling! After this meeting which closed with the singing of “Fair Har vard”, we reluctantly broke up. The “Fiftieth Reunion” was over! But was it ended? Not quite. There was gatherings of groups of us who had come from far and near for this event. It meant bidding farewell to many whom we would never see again. The conviviality, and congeniality, of the four days together at Har vard had been wonderful. And so we went to our rooms to pack our bags and one by one, slowly drifted away, each glad of the contacts made, but .sad that they were so soon ended. It was a glorious highlight in the life of each of us. But thei'e must be an end to all good things. And so we left Cambridge, richer and happier in spirit, perhaps, but sadder of heart. Our Fiftieth Anniversary is over. But we shall never forget it! * * * Chapel Hill News Leader Published every Monday and Thursday by the News Leader Company, Inc. Mailing Address: Box 749 Chapel Hill, N. C. Street Address—Main bixeet, Carrboro Telephone: 8-444. Phillips Russell Roland Giduz Editor Netps Director L. M. Pollander Advertising Consultant E. J. Hamlin P. E. Barrow Business Mgr. . Cir. Mgr. SUBSCRIPTION RATTS (Payable In Advance) Five Cents Per Copy. BY CARRIER: $2.60 for six months; $5.20 per annum. BY MAIL: $4:50 per annum; $2.50 for six months; $1JS5 for three months. Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Chapel Hill N. (’., wnder the act of March 3. 1379. Yes, it is over.' However, there still are some matters that I must mention, which may be of interest to any who have been reading these reports. I was much interested in a pic ture in the Crimson of June 14. It was of three Harvard men; Charlie Mason, our secretary; Charles E. Mason, Jr., his son, class of 1930; and Peter Mason Gundei'son, grandson of Charlie, and nephew of Mr. Mason, Jr., a senior: three generations, twen ty-five years apart at this cele bration! * * * There is an incident that oc curred while I was in New York that had slipped my mind which I think will be of some interest. It provoked me a great deal, to put it mildly. One evening I left my hotel to saunter about in Times Square. As usual in the square, there was a crowd gathered in front of a window. Of course, like all the rest of the curious people, 1 had to see what was going on. I succeeded in getting close enough to find out that there was a baker in the showwindow mak ing pizza pies. He was a real artist. He took the large piece of dough, covered it with flour and patted it out into a large round flat surface. Then, when it was of the correct size, he tossed it in the air and caught it on his fingertips as It came down, with the edge curled up. Then he put the ingredients on the dough with a large wood en paddle and when ready for (he oven he placed it inside with his paddle. That looked interesting enough to me to warrant a brief account for my series in the News Lead er. So, just imagine my shock when a policeman came up ask ing what I w'as doing, telling me that I could not hang around there like that! I e.xplained what my purpose was. He told me that I would have to move on! However, I continued to write until I had finished my notes. I was so engrossed in getting this all down that I did not realize I was hopping mad about the in cident. I strolled on a block or two, thinking of what I had written, looking for more news. Suddenly it dawned on me that I ought to go back and ask the policeman what law I had broken. I was almost boiling by this time. * * » Alas, when I got back to the pizza pie bakery, the officer was gone. Maybe it was just as well, for it is possible that.the “coun try boy in the big city” might have gotten into more trouble with the law. That same evening I went to one of the best-looking cafeterias in New York, Hector’s. Again, speaking of foods, here was a place where one could get, at a reasonable price, many unusual foods. And what is more, one of the faucets gave seltzer instead of plain water! ya found his clothing completely and bewilderingly gone, his body inexplicably wounded, a fragmentof glass embedded in his neck (like a good doctor he first removed this, matter-of-factly, before speculating.) After that was the long night mare, beginning when Dr. Hachi ya ran out into the street and fell over the head of a dead man (“Excuse me, excuse me, please!” he .said) to the silence of after- math. “The streets were deserted ex cept for the dead,” he writes. “Some looked as if they had been frozen by death while in the full action of flight; others lay sprawl ed as t.hough some giant had flung them to their death from a great height.” Dr. Hachiya, at the time of the A-bomb blast, was head of an important Hiroshima hospital. The diary is the story of that hospital during those days, the men and women who worked in it and who died in it. ‘^Hiroshima Diary” is a stirring book because of the heroism of ordinai'y men in extraordinary conefitions. It is impossible to read it with any sense that these were the enemy and we were the One even forgets the early bitterness Americans felt toward the Japanese during the war when one reads Hachiya’s ac count of the Emperor’s broadcast on August 15. “Bear the unbear able,” the emperor said, and told them that the war was lost. The wounded men and women hud dled around the radio at the hos pital burst out in sorrow and in anger at the loss. “There is a limit to deceiving us!” quotes Hachiya. “I would rather die than be defeated,” said another listener. And one man cried out, “General Tojo, you great thick-headed fool; cut your stomach and die!” Later that nigiht as he sat on a ventilator looking out over the ruins, Hachiya thought to him self, “Even in a nation defeated the rivers and mountains remain the same.” Because the reader is, for that minute, so much in sympathy with all the wounded waiting in the hospital for the news of de feat, he almost forgets that was day on which he so much re joiced here in America. This is the real contribution Hachiya’s book will make, it will remind us of that trite but beau tiful phrase, the brotherhood of man. This is the week of shoot ing stars. They began last Monday night when the earth passed through the heart of the cloud of meteors known as the Perseids. An- other show is due tomorrow night and still another by the Draconids on August 22 and 29. The Perseids appear in the northeastern sky about 10:30 p.m- and at first make five to ten streaks per hour, increasing to 20 or more an hour around midnight. The Draconids are to be looked for in the north. A pad and a pillow out on the lawn make for comfort, and a good glass helps, hurricanes permitting. In the two months that it has been on the air “The $64,000 Question” has caught the inter est of the nation’s viewers in a way few other television shows ever have. Making its debut on June 7, at the start of the supposedly slack summer season, the progi-am quickly jumped to the top—or very close to it—of every major audience survey. The American Research Bureau estimates that the show has been seen by as many as 47,560,000 viewers—al most one-third the population of the United States. In attaining such popularity, the program currently is making a national celebrity out of Gino Prato, the opera-loving cobbler from the Bronx. Last week he answered the $32,000 question. Earlier, the program gave fleetfng prominence to Mrs. Catherine E. Kreitzer, the spe cialist on the Bible, who quit with 32,000, and to Redmond O’ Hanlon, a New York policeman, who stopped with $16,000 after a bout with questions on Shakes peare. “The $64,000 Question” owes its tremendous audience appeal to the human drama inherent when an individual decides to risk all—or nearly all — for a greater fortune. But, in addition, its format permits sustaining the suspense over several weeks. And perhaps most important, the program manages to obtain re markable contestants — seem ingly ordinary persons who pos sess an extraordinary fund of knowledge. The man who conceived “The $64,000 Question” was Louis Q, Cowan, produced of such radio and TV shows as “The Quiz Kids,” “Stop the Music,’ You Go,” and swer to the this beginflL “"W aS Paid out ak to date by Hr, 4 Panson some .100.000 ,,,, “3t has an aa* smaller size, The questions 01 ■f e prepared h headed by 86®. erator of “Dowj v, are about fo* and the somewhat each, In selecting c Cowan and his certain qualificjtij, sonality, geograpij ability to stand hdi phone and camen coming fiusterej ■stage “amnesia,” others. tnltl Contestants get 0,' three ways: they for a chance to app, out an applicatiojj tending the telecast recommended by 1 studio. The first has brought 30,OOt ters to the prograi ■Only 10 per cep cations survive thi tial screening. Aa basses is asked akoil knowledge of any psii ject, his marital life, and plans to i prize money shojld ld Some people were arguing the other night about celes tial phenomena, particularly the books by Charles Eort which contend that above the earth’s atmosphere are strata or pieces of other worlds that contain forms of life similar to those on earth, whence rains of frogs, fish, and other things ordinarily supposed to have been transported by whirlwinds. A supposed rain of blood in the Chapel Hill area years ago w'as cited. On this the scrapbook kept by Dr. K. P. Battle, postTlivil War president of the Uni- versity, contains this uniden tified clipping wdiich might have come from a Raleigh paper about 1884: Farmers paid Down ■principal and interest J Conversation.” hank loans ( He began where the old “Take January 1,1955, h It or Leave It” quiz show left 000 land bank loans« off—with $64 for a correct an- $iy3 billion. NEW 1955 MODEL NOW FEATURE PRICEOI at only C)C” Hachiya’s journal has been translated by a Chapel Hill phy sician, Dr. Warner Wells, who went to Hiroshima in 1950 as surgical consultant to the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission and became a personal friend of Dr. Hachiya. He has translated the book with care and with sym pathy. He, too, sees the book as having more to offer than a doc umented bit of history, or a study in ney medicine, or an approach to the psychology of a wounded and defeated people. As he writes in his introduc tion, “All of us will be repaid be yond measui'c if this diary helps to refresh our memories, stimu late our imaginations, and tem per our thinking about war, and especially the horror of atomic war. For if we cannot enliven our humanity, we are doomed.” 'IT DROPPETH AS THE Washington Report GENTLE RAIN' By BILL WHITLEY 'The summer night comes in with fragrance and with tenderness Of coolness, and of quiet, and of rain So merciful that I remember Portia in her lawyer’s dress Declaring, “The quality of mercy is not strain’d...” And think how rightly mercy was compared to rain; And wonder if those words were written of a summer’s night As earth grew fragrant with rain’s kindliness again, And Shakespeare thought again of mercy’s might. —Adelaide Fitzpatrick in the Christian Science Monitor RUSH. Now that Congress has adjourned, the mad rush on Capi tol Hill is over until next Jan uary. Within a matter of days after will attend a dairy cooperative meeting in Goldsboro and travel from there to the Young Demo- cracts’ “Report to the People” rally scheduled at Winston-Salem August 27. Later, the Squire of Haw River “Professor Venable of the University (chemistry de partment), having tested some of the matter that re cently fell from a cloudless sky in Chatham county de termines that it is blood. Such an incident happening in old times would have been deemed a prodigy. Indeed there* have been many cases recorded in history of a sim ilar fall or rain of blood—al though we have heretofore regarded it as altogether im possible for such things to oc- cur. There can be no doubt, however, that live fish have been deposited from the clouds, that showers of frogs have fallen, and that other living things have been rain ed down to us from above. The explanation of these wonders of nature is not easy —for ^ And Your Old Refrigerator J- e There are more things in heaven andearth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of ’ your philosophy’. Model SDV.9t SPCL m Congres ended its business shortly ...will be on the West Coast for aftei mid-night last Wednesday, about two weeks holding hearings most Senators and Representa- with the Senate Interior Com- tives had left for their home ' mittee. states. Although the formal work in Washington has been completed for the year, there is still plenty of work to do for most members. Several committees have sche duled trips for their members in Europe, and others will be hold ing hearings in various parts of the United States. WORLD'S SMALLEST DAILY On Tuesday, July 19, the Tryon Daily Bulletin, Seth Vining, pub lisher, which had gained national renown as the “world’s smallest daily newspaper”, practically doubled its size. The page is now the same as an ordinary busi ness letter, 81’i x 11 inches. SCOTT. Senator W. Kerr Scott doesn’t have an overseas trips scheduled, but he has a rigorous series of speeches and hearings. The Senator is spending most of this week in the Piedmont'.and Western parts of North Carolina, and next week he will be at At lantic Beach attending a farm meeting. The following week he RALEIGH. On Tuesday, No- . Vember 15, Scott, along with other members of the Senate Agriculture Committee, will hold hearings in Raleigh on the gov ernment's farm price support program. The session in Raleigh will be one of 'about 20 hearings the Sen ate Agriculture Committee will hold throughout the country this fall in its efforts to come up with new farm program legisla tion next year. Accoi-ding to Senator Scott, “We are trying to find out what the grass roots thinking is on this subject. We want to talk to .as many farmers, especially small fanners, as possible.” HAWKS OFTEN MISS Modern day hunting with hawks is fascinating, but puts very lit tle meat in the pot. Hawks, both wild and trained, miss more of ten than they hit. The author had the opportunity to observe a family (two adults and two ju veniles) of sharpshinned hawks one day last fall from daylight until noon. They started hunting as soon as it became light and one of the adults took a bluejay during the first hour. The other adult took asmall bird about eight-thirty and one of the young caught another bluejay just be fore eleven o’clock. The other young did not make a kill during ^«spits numerous chases. These birds circled and swooped repeatedly during this time, apparently putting fort^h their best efforts. _ Wildlife in North Carolina, Fuil-widfh Freezer Full-width Chill Drawer Rust-proof Aluminum ShefvW Butter Compartment Exclusive Quidube Tray* Full-width Porcelain Hydros for fruits and vegetables Frozen Juice Can Dispenser Removable Door Shelves Tilt-down Egg Server Famous Meter-Miser hvai Hurry 8 Quontity U BENNEH & BLOCKSIt 105 E. Franklin St. ■I .