/'■’It
■ f,''
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Loyalty Kit $]
It's the 1st of September
I'oday IS one ol ihc most iin|)oii;uH claws
'I'
ol
C'.an boro, in lac i lor ilic' csholc cDimnomly.
wliic li rinds its loriiincs c loscK linkod cvilh
lliosc ol iIk‘ I ni\crsil\. I'c>r ScpKinhc’r be
gins a new coIIcl'c year.
i'lic' I'nivcrsils' b('L>ii;s lids new collej^e
\car under a liandica]). Il most lace an c\er
I'isiii'a Hood ol ineoininii sindents willioni ihe
acconnnodalions or llic means to lionsc lliein
ade(|naiely- \nd il is ciiicpled in more tban
one cleparlineni because ol scant resources
and e(|nij)ineni.
riie lale lei>islai m c' was I nlly iiilormed ol
llie I bii\crsiix 's needs in lionsim> and e(|ni|)-,
meni. but il did little icj liel|) in cither le-
spec 1.
rite (onmnmily can come lo the lesc tie ol
siudcnls and insiriiclors by proxidin,” them
tx'ilh (lean and iliraelixe looms at reason
able rentals, and listin'’' them with the I'ni-
\'ersit)''s lIousini:> Ollicer.
(loincident with the growth ol the I'ni-
\ersit\' in enrollment and enlarged depart
ments is the giowlh ol the coimnmiiiy, par-
lieui: ly in outlyiii'g arcais. I'nixer^sily ])eoole
no longer li\e on the edge of the campus, but
ha\c spread lar into new suburbs and rma!
pints.
I here w;is a lime when this growth threat
ened lo become ,i mushrocmi sort, and when
the iilliiiclion ol ;i cpiickly made dolhir nien-
iiced an old and orderly 11 iislit ion,
A hasix and oxer-eager connnerciali/alion
has no phice in a coninuntilv like this. It is ;i
rnix'cisit)' cc.nmnunitx', has its p;u'ticular dis
tinction as such, and should be tdlowed to
dex'clop its oxxii lile without imitiilion o!
low Its lull ol ' boosters.”
Ilistory has lormed it'c lose rehitionship be
tween the community and the rnixersitx'- Il
should remain ;i helpful and Iruitful partner
ship.
The Ultimate Power in Government
I’resideni l■,isenho\x'er's recent speech be-
loie ilm .\mci ic.m biir .Associiil ion lauded
|ohn .\laishall as the first chief pisiice ol the
.S. Supieme (iourl ;md iiscribed lo iiim the
the xiriues ol the lb .S- constiiiiiion as the
dynanne charier oi our liberl.ies.
It was enough to m; ke I'homiis (elfeison
tuiii oxer in his graxe.
In |ellcrson's exes .Marsh.dl was no up-
buildei Ol benelaclor. Inn ;i perxerier. I'or
M.'U'shall at one blow demolished |el leison's
carelull)' wrought siruciure of coordinate
powers—legislal ixe. exec iilixe and judicial —
and deleriiiinc (1 that a sla'iute could not be
come a law until it had been passed upon
anci interpreted bx' the 1', .S. .Supreme (lourl.
I’his doctrine was later stated by (Ih'ief Jus
tice Iliighes in this simple form:
I he law is what the I'. S- Supreme Ciouit
says il is. ’
Such a {lociline made the judges supieme,
and in this hut leller.son saw grc..i danger.
no .gam to esciipe rule by mon-
’nix'e it fall into the hands of
I le thought It
archx' only lo
the judiciarx'.
Ifut lot a long time the Marshall doc-
iijiie was not only not, objecLed to; il was
praised as the lomidation stone of ,\nicrican
safeix' from mob or popular rule.
Since the Supreme Caiurt’s decision, how-
exer, in the segrc*gaiion case, there has been
a change ol xiew'. I he (lourl is not onlx'
criiici/ed but furiously assailed, and in the
lower South there liaxe exen been miilterings
ol defiance and lhre;ils of withdrawal if not
of secession.
i.Marshall was no democrat and he thought
idong with thc‘ kederalist.s that goxermiieiit
should be administered bx- the '‘rich, xxise,
and well-borii.” l.arge portions of the popu
lation would add "and white."
Which was right, Jefferson or Marshall?
riie nation must soon decide in faxor of one
or the olliei-
Washington Repori
Chips That Fall
Truman vs. Eisenhower
target
hi sen-
is not
souiid-
l',\-l*resi(lenl 1 runi.m missed the
xvhen he tried to conxicl Ibesidcnt
bower of demagogiierx. I'lie latter
fniilt that xxax, -"id rrmnan's charge
ed holloxx will 11 he Inmie it.
I’mi I 'im.m stood on lirmer ground when
he r : ol the adniinisiration ol being ded
icated to ilu' serx ice of big business. It was
exideni Iroiii the moment that I'.isenliow t'f
named his cabinet of magnales that the gox-
ernnieni xeas being groomed to run errtmds
lor big bu.siness. and nothing that has hap
pened since has done anx thing to alter that
impression.
It was ,ds() plr.'in Irom the beginning that
such huge iiidnstries as oil and power wire
not coniribuiing great sums to the Republi-
ctm treasurv just because they liked the Cen-
eral's genial smile.
I'lider the .New Deal the goxernnu-iit be
gan lo operate in lields xxhicli prix ile eniei
prise had
pi ol itable
thing in the eyes of big business since W'. j.
l>rx: II tried years ago lo xx iii tlie presidencx'
either ignored or
I his trend w.is the
lailed
most
lo find
larming
on a tree silxor plaiform- ('.onsecpiently il
spared no ellort or ciolhir to get rid of Rciose-
\ !!:'iii ail’d install a saf.- and liarnessec^ ad
ministration like th'il of hisenhow'-r.
but C'xi'ii ihongh 'Ifumaii is right in his
diagnosis ol the maladx at W’ashiiiglon. the
Democrats cmniol expect Ic.i win on the hru-
nian accusations alone, hiiey xxill haxe to
bring out soinelhing far more diamalic and
posilixi- il ilie xolers are to be warmed up,
1)111 they are handicapped bx their support
of the hisenhower program during the jiast
se.ssion of ('.ongress. It is a fa.cl that the Re
publicans could not haxe pul through their
major polic ies without the help of the Dem
ocrats in (longress, particularly the Southern
1 femocrats.
I his knoxx'lc'dge will hamstring the Dem
ocratic orators all through the coming cam
paign, and not excii rruman can remoxe the
guilt ol c ol la bor;i t ion.
Standards, Not Prices
(AGNES De MILLE, in the Atlantic)
A collc'gc’ should not be con-
.siclert'cl chielly a iiiari-ia.ge bu
reau, nor an eniploynient a.gi'iK'V,
nor a social club, nor an arc'ua;
no. nor yet a leelinieal school for
eralls and skill: and if xvc force
llio lacullics lo think of unix-ers-
ilics primarily in these terms, xx'o
are perpeti-.,ting a perxersion.
and a x'cry graxe one. It seems lo
me in our pre.seul world a col
lege is the one place where
.standards arc' cousidei'ed and
not prices, Ihe line place that is
not a niaiket. Mver.x'wliere else
for I he rest of our lix es we vx'ill
be called on to justily ourselves
anci render account.. Ikve we
only reco,gni/e.
Here it gains us nothing to say
a thing is sound il it is not. Wc'
can have the ,io\' of thinking for
the intoxication ot tliinkiii.g and
for no other purpose -not be
cause, for in,lance, il will enable
us (o buy a more expensive din
ner. Here we can ask, "Is this
tiiie'.’" wilbont Ihe withering cau
tion as to what might or might
not accrue to Hie answer. \fe can
s.'i.x', "'I'liis is beautifui-- my hetirt
turns to it," in ptire love.
and they ask that the student do
file best he can with no thought
of immediate profit. It seems lit
tle enough, but in actuality it is
x'ory much. It will not be demand
ed again of us in a liuiTv. This is
the point of view of the artist
and of the pure scientist, ol me
true scholar and of the (rue
friend. This is an important moral
experience and one xvhich we
certainly cannot afford to miss.
x’our spouse, but the one who
looks you in the face when you
are young, calls you by your true
name, and says, "Go forth.”
By BILL WHITLEY
STEAKS. Sometime in the not-
loo-distant future, you may be
able to keep steaks and other
meats in the house almost in
definitely — without freezing
them. In fact, without even re
frigeration.
The Joint Committee on Atom
ic Energy has .lust released in
formation concerning extensive
work by the Army in the preser-
xmtion of food through atomic
energy.
At recent hearings before ihe
.ioint committee, top quartern-ftes-
ler and research officials of the
Armj' told members of Congress
that amazing developments have
been made in the field of radia
tion sterilization of foods.
MONTHS. Flor ccxample, the
Army men brough a potato to
the hearings that had been "ir
radiated” or treated, some 10
months previously. It had not
been under refrigeration or any
other preservation care and was
still “like new.”
The officers also brought along
samples of bread, pork cuts, beef
roasts, cottage cheese, spinach
and corn that had been given the
atomic sterilization treatment
about a week earlier)
Even after a week without re
frigeration, the meats and vege
tables looked like they .just came
from the grocery counter, and,
according to the experts, they
would taste just like they were
fresh.
COSTS. The basic research work
ill this field was launched by the
Army, but private industry has
been intently interested in its
progress and has started work on
its own in the field.
One of the main, long-range
interests of the Army in the de
velopment of such work hinges
on the tremendous savings that
could be made in food costs.
Testimony at the hearings
.showed that it costs the taxpayers
1.5 billion dollars a year to feed
the armed forces.
This figure could be greatly
reduced through lower handling
costs, fexver refrigeration facili
ties, and lower food losses.
OPERATION. Although the
workings of atomic energy in
preserving foods is for the more
scientific minds, here, in a nut
shell, is hoxv the operation works,
according to Army officials.
Radiation sterilization employs
nuclear ionization instead of heat
to destroy inactive micro-organ
isms. In this process only a small
rise in temperature takes placie
over a matter of a second or a
minute, as contrasted to heat
sterilization, which requires about
240 degrees F. for an hour or
more.
Radiation sterilization can pro-
..vide a fresh sterile product or
a cooked sterile product xvith far
better taste and textures than
eonx'entional canning or other
preservative methods.
JAPAN'S LOW DAY
Hiroshima
(Michihiko Hachiya in
Diary")
Tile questioii.s asked during
tlu'se .rears are luiidainental
questions and llie ansxvers gixen
are classic—that is, tney are eii-
cluriiig and pa.ssionate. .Xnd the
people who dedicate tlieir lives
to lu'lpiiiL: us ask and answer
are set apai't tiom otiu'rs.
'reaebers exist and work not
xxliolly for Ibemselves, but in
lar.ge part lor others; and lliey
seldom haxe axc's to .erind, Tlu'.x
ask only attention. Tlie.x ask this,
Remember that tree Ihou.ght
ii.'is alwa.vs been kept alive by stu
dents in cloister or university,
thal the university is always the
first line cif battle. Remember
tiiai Hitler liit the universities
first and destroyed their (rec-
dom. .And until he had done thi.s,
he could do little else: and once
he liad (lone this, all else he ac-
complisned tolowed as a matter
of course. It vx'as the unix-ersities
in Poland that gaxe tlie tirsi
evid'.'iiee of the breach within the
stale as it was the I'olish lacul-
ties that were murdered tirsi.
Bear in mind tlie gallant and,
most important, the elleetivo
stand taken by laeulties ol tlie
t'liixersily of California in the
matter cit re regents' oath and b.x'
tlie president and I'aeulty of Sarah
Lawrence college in Hie cpieslion
ol Iree speech and .Amorican
Legion strictures — and be
gratelul for their enlightened
courage, Reiiunilier al'wa.X) most
solej'iiily that tiie pcj son who de
termines your way ol living .mci
.xcnir eliaiiee of salvation is not
the m;m who pa.xs your wages,
nor xour president, iioi’ your doc
tor or polieeman, nor xet ixen
The one word — .surrender —
iiad produced a greater sliock
than the bombing of our city.
'I'be more 1 thought the more
wretched and niiserjble 1 became.
But the order to sunender xvas
Hie Emperor's order and to this
xxe could not object. His injunc
tion to bear tae unbearable could
moan but one thing. As a nation
xve must be patient. I repeated
his words again and again to my-
scll, but no matter how hard I
tried I could not rid m,x' mind ol
despair. Finall.x- I found myself
thinking of something else.
To m.xsoU' 1 began denouncing
the Army: “What do you fellows
think about Hie Emperor? A’ou
started the war ;it ynir pleasure.
When the outlook was good .xcm
behaved wiili iniportanee: but
when you began to lose ,\ou tried
to eoiieeal your losses, and when
you could moxe no more you
turni'd (o the Emperor!
A.s: il echoing m.x- Hiouglis,
someone snouted: "General To.io,
you great, (hiek-hoaded fool; cut
your stomach and die!"
CONSIDERATION
Betty Ann IVilliford, education
al director of SmiHifield’s Cen
tenary Metliodist Church and a
gal with a real Southern drawl,
went with her mother recently
to visit a sister, Mrs. Glenn Hart
well, and family in "West Barn
stable, Mass.
The Hartwells have a two-year-
old daughter named Betty Ann
after her aunt. Before the arrival
ot the guests, little Betty Ann
was told by her mathc:: “Noxv.
when your grandmother and aunt .
arrive they will not talk quite
like we do and you may have
trouble understanding them."
Little Betty Ann interrupted
her mother to say, "I won't laugh
at them. Mother." — Smithfiekl
Herald
GOOD REASON
Julian Seheer had a good rid
dle in the Charlotte News (he
other da.x'. He says txvo ladies
met at the door of a rest room.
One xvas going in and one xvas
The doctor had examined the
patient from head to toe but had
been unable to find the cause of
his complaint.
"I'x’c examined you thoroughly,
but 1 can't sem to find the cause
ol trouble, lloxvever, it's prob
ably due to drinking,” said the
doctor.
" that's O, K, Hoc,” said the
patient, 'I'll come back sometime
when yoii'ie .sober," —Jim Parker
hi Chatham Neirs
UP IN THE AIR
(Raleigh News & Observer)
That new Board of Higher Ed
ucation may not have noticed it
but its problems arc extending
from college campuses lo the lim
its of telecasti.'ig.
tVith some reluctance the leg
islature gave the Consolidated
University less money than it
needed to its education televi
sion piogram. Now East Carolina
College, on its own and presum-
•ably without cost to the Slate,
is offering courses for college
credit over station WNCT in
Greenville. No criticism of that
enterprise is voiced here. If peo
ple all over an area in Eastern
Noi'Hi Carolina can stay home
and take for college credit a
course in Shalcigspfare that xvould
seem to be very nice, indeed.
The news creates interesting
possibilities, hov/ever. If this edu
cational T'V business really gets
going, there may be need ot less,
not more, dormitories, dining
halls, etc., at Greenville, Chapel
Hill, other college towns. Cer
tainly East Carolina's entry into
the educatronal TV field, in xvhich
the Consolidated University has
had lairly rough going, raises
questions as to the coordination
of education in the air as well
as on the campuses. If credits
for course.« in one State-support
ed college are negotiable in oth
ers, as they should be, credit
courses in educational TV might
make it po.ssible for a man to
stay home and go to two oi- Liree
collcge.s at the same time decid
ing only at the last which col
k'ge he wanted lo be a graduate
ol.
Drs. W. F. Ja((Kk.s and
llcnn (Hark and (ierald Bai-
I'c'tt ileiv up to Xeix' \’ork
to see the Dax'is Chip tennis
niatclies in xvhic;h the Aus-
tralians bested the .Vineri-
eaiis, including \'ic:tor Seixas,
ioriner C’Xd star athlete.
Thev thought Seixas at g2
years, though ;i loser, played
a top game, but xvas beaten
by Doad. a xcuinger man who
was better that day- Hoad
xvas in unprecedented form,
aceing Seixa's six times and
hilling the dialk lines again
and u'gain. I'liey liked Seixas,
sporismaniike speech at tlie
end xvhen lie declined to
make excuses.
lhabert, partner to Seixas
in the doubles, was not ecjiial
to his Australian opponents,
and neither was the junior
liope. Ham Richardson ot
I ulane. I'he tennis outlook
lor the I'S.A is dismal, lor
no new stars aie visible on
the horizon, while in Austra-
ba young players arc encoiir-
aged bv rabid Ians.
^ ★
J he lork in rhe road Irom
Carrboro ro Chapel Hill,
ahom opposite the Riggsbee-
Hin.son store, is clear enough
lo most residents, hut is con-
Iusing to strangers xvho are
entering Ciiapel Hill Irom
the west anci are unaxvare
thai (he right lork leads to
Franklin Street and the lel'r
In Rosemary, The conrusion
ntay and does lead to trall'ic:
bIcK.'ks. ' Tw(.mld do no harm
to haxe a sign there.
★ ★ ★
'^otes ot a tourist: Prolia-
oi) the best toxvn in the US-V
iov tl.e om-ot.toxvu motorist
to .tfet thi'ough
'S, C. The
the
coming out. AVhiit wa.s
nationality of each woman?
tlie
One certain thing is that higher
eckicalion in North Caroliii:, j, n,,
in H’.e air.
IS Columbia,
stieet.s,are broad,
■‘’■S'lis aie easily read, the
tS'Lts are oxerhead in plain
''. important
crossing eleciri,- ,
o '-wciuc xvarnuiD's
Latt" and "ou"
likable tinno-
alxHit Coluinbia is its shaded
'’’ttts A row of trees is not
^XTirdcd as abomination as
nianv Southern towns
U'w tie --
orVlm "'-en
''^"Bthern Hnvnt Xou‘‘R a'
btuT
J^’^SressjmilUike a emlT
M’l ^ ★
\\hen txvo cai-s aro
"'I- ml e
''"i-nion, ,1,, 1, :
'im-,
■ ii.nu.iid iiiiii,,;. I
'■>' ( .|» lm«. l„„. ,i„.
A i,
(Shelby Daily Star)
Are you worried that you may
some time or other be investi
gated for loyalty?
Do you object to signing a
loyalty oath?
If you are worried, and if you
don’t mind affixing your signa
ture to a document declaring loy
ally to the country, why not sign
one now. Do it yourself! That’s
the come-on being boomed in,
California today.
An enterprising firm in Los
Angeles has produced a "loyalty
kit.” They are selling like hot
cakes.
For one dollar you may pur
chase one of the kits xxTich in
cludes a certificate, suitable for
framing, and containing pictures
of Lincoln and 'Washington and
the statement, that the signer is
f ctions to orderi;
Royalty liits, I'
^■"^etyoTstS/Sj
Movement for
Cartiiys could p,
ranks of y.
Oath Signers. Tli
citizens mi,
suspected of gm
But the main i
interested in tip
dires and the poi
and Washington
to prove one’s
Bobert E, Lee ,
equestrian tel
Bowler or Derby
Washington Post
(JOHN ALLAN MAY in
London—A friend of mine in
Georgia has asked me to explain
English hats. He is constantly
reading references to different
types of hats in foreign corre
spondence of the newspapers and
realizes hats must be significant.
So he would like to know xxdiat
the names mean. He would also
like to know what the hats mean.
And I would like to comply
with his request. But there are
so many hats, and so many mean
ings, that it cannot be done all
at once in this space. Perhaps
we can run a series here on hats
that w'ould last until December.
So we will have to take thinks
one at a time. And there is no
doubt that of all the hats of
England—the Anthony Eden, the
Trilby, the Porkpie, the Swal'ler.
the Boater, the Cricket Cap, and
the rest — precedence must be
given to the Bowler.
Christian Science
"(elders and bats«i|
who delivers the i)ai"
ter is, of course, in
bowler. Many 19,^
ers and txveakeis „
modified Billycock,
Be that as it m,
probably too late
about it now, the Bmid
veloped^ into the di^'
bat. It is a manly stvli
be worn by ladies lA
horseback.
The Bowler is called a Derby
in the United States, a fact that
puts unnecessary strain on An
glo-American relations. We don’t
even pronounce Derby the same
way over in England. We certain
ly don’t apply the word to a
Bowler, xxdiieh is demonstrably
a Bowler and nothing else. (In
Italy it is called “the melon hat”,
but you know how Italian Italians
are.)
The Bowler, is a primitive
form, was invented by a farmer
called William Coke. He was fond
of riding and was thinking in
terms of a crash helmet. The
Billy Cok'e, as it was called (later
contracted to Billycock), was a
rigid hat with plenty of air in
it. It gave a man a solid, depend
able, masterful appearance. It
was soon in tremendous demand.
There is''Some argument as to
how a Billycock became a Bowl
er. One story is that it was re
designed by a hatter in St.
James’s in a moment of' inspira
tion. A second is that it was a hat
that when it blew off would go
bowling along under -its own
steam for miles.
A third is that as cricket de
velop^ from the leisurely and
almost stationary game it once
was into trie leisurely and almost
stationai'y game it is today, the
traditional top hat became out
dated for all players except the
The black BowIoHd
is cie rigueur. In oUim
business district is.
then:. The black Bui]
hat to broke a ge
With a greater curl ill
and more sqncerei,,
the City Bowler is alsiL
' .suitable for the lei®]
about-toxvn.
The language ot til I
full of nuance,
the bridge of tie ml
“I am a .junior parlisj
tilted breezily to Ik
means “I am takjn;
noon off.” Wornasiil
here it means “We iJ
same restaurant bat 1']
ly do not know escii
I don’t know w
your way, but in Eiil
brown Bowler is W
even if it means tiiil
who wear brown Boia
masterful, but tlieyiiiij
ly dependable.
COSTUME AND CUSTOM
(Christain Science Monitor)
Mayor Tucker of St. Louis has
proposed that the summer uni
form for police shall henceforth
consist of Bermuda shorts, open
collared sport shirts, and pith
helmets.
Why not? North America seems
to be on the hot side of a tem
perature cycle. Whether that
cycle is one to be measured in
decades or centuries no one
really knows. But the middle of
the country has the "continental”
climate—extremes of heat and
cold St. Louis, Kansas City, Oma
ha, Dallas, and other metropolises
lying in that heart land have
seen their thermometers break
the 112 mai’k during the last few
years. Why shouldn’t their uni
formed public servants as well
as their casually attired private
citizens be allowed to adapt to
it?
Some can remember when the
prevailing police uniform was
patterned after the London “bob
by’s”—wool coat buttoned to the
chin and felt-covered helmet.
One wonders how the early
colonist got along, coming from
chill, misty Britain, where 73 de
grees is a “heat wave.” Or later
the supposedly acclimated citizens
of the young republic. For warm
cycles are not new. A sequence
of searing summers swept the.
Mississippi Valley and the plains
over 100^ years ago.
^ It’s not so much the climate a.s,
in this case happily, the customs
and the costumes that have
changed.
CALORIES COME
The average .Amc
about the same anioiil
mea.sured in potindiiil
years ago, but he bis 1,
changes in the kinlsd
eats, says Marguerite!:'!bin
U. S. Department oil)?!fa.
In a recent food coiiaip re
view of the AgriciiltaKr
ing Service, Miss Burin
figures from 190!
She reports signL
in the following M
Dairy products (ewl
eggs, meals, fish, fill
fruits, lomafoes, trS
leafy, green and !'^-t
sugars and sirups, b
contrast, only half H
tatoes and sweet ptb
half as much flour
are eaten as in ®
The average Ana
supply is 8 per
calories than in W
proportion of cal®
comes from fal, paib)'
the greater use ofljlii
salad and cooking, ^
cause of the so-caW
fats in w'hole-milk
and in meat, po*'
More of the cai'bobyJ
comes from sugars aal'
potatoes and grai®
Many of the did
shifts from lower-pW'
er-priced foods.
inf
Inst
icnis liio'hxvay patrolman
probabix siaxs in .1 .simmer
H'g state excry working day.
Chapel.
published every »^eti
Thursday by the h! ■pjg
Company, Inc. ■ Spi
Ian
Chapel Hill, * T
Street Address^®”
Carrboro
Telephone;
ErTTHamlio
p, E. Bari'O'V
(Payable B
pive
BY CAKBlE^j^l
months,
Cue
for three :
Entered as
at the VO' ,
N. C., under
,r IS7P
^stiip