fl iir £DITORIAL & FEATURE PAGE "Touche' Chapel Hill News Leader Leading With The News in Chopel Hill, Corrbofo, Glen Lertnox and Surroiinding Areas m ■ VOL. 11, NO. 74 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1955 mm m aiiiii ifcMHiiii** iPB mmm jr / Time But Little Else The University trustees will, by appealing from the three-man court decision that race and color of skin must not determine under, graduate admissions, gain some time but lit tle else. by taking this non-compliance attitude the trustees have obliged the University to join those Southern .school authorities who have allowed themselves lo be forced into a de fensive position. 1 he University can gain no ground in this situation or any other by acting always on the defensive. This cannot fail to be a weak position. If the University loses this appeal, its de- feat will be all the more humiliating- Friends of the University cannot help feel ing that the University had an opportunity to take a magnanimous, gracious, and digni- field position, but has lost it by taking refuge in technicalities. It is to the credit of Federal Judge John J. Parker, who like some of the other trustees is a University alumnus, that he dissented from the decision to appeal. Judge Parker realizes that the words “university” and “un iversal” come from the same stem. S ■ ■ li lA mM m 'K A Long Way to Go "toUiliiii liberty is not yet secure in the USA. Waldo frank, author, has been refused a passport to go to Asia, including China. And although Dr. John P. Peters, professor at Yale Medical School, has been cleared by the US Supreme Court for a classified govern ment jiroject, he has not been accorded the riglit of facing his accusers, as demanded by the US constitution. And neither has Frank. I'hus the State Department and the Justice Department, which are supposed to have the .special duty of upholding the Constitution, have been taking the leadership in ignoring it or breaking it down- So it cannot be said that the American Dark Age, through which we have been pas.s- ing, is Vet done with. We have rolled up some ol its edges, but publih Officials all sworn to uphold the US Constitution, are obstinately clinging to the cloud that smothers it. In part this situation is the result of ig- norance ol the US Constitution on the part of the average citizen. He does not know its chief provisions, especially the Bill of Rights, and there exists no agency ready to teach him. *. :s;v . V' ^ / I • / t' Hence he can be bullied by any petty of- ficial clothed in a uniform and a growl, and is liable to find his rights canceled by any Washington office-holder who can wall him self off from public by a secretary and a door guard. Fhe schools are already heavily burdened, but if they could take on the task of acquaint ing every pupil with his fundamental rights as an American and a citizen, there would be fewer of these impudent encroachments at Washington and elsewhere. I Nf'- iaV 1 • Inviting a Reaction el is Baptist Favorite The following from the Richmond County Journal about the recent auto race at Darl ington, S.C., .should receive consideration by all citizens: “A .sportewriter’s comment that if all the empty beer cans .seen at the Darlington race Labor Day were stretched end to end the line would surely reach Milwaukee, was no exaggeration. The drink ing before, during and after the Labor Day race was such as this writer has never seen, and that includes other trips to previous Darlington races, innumer able college football games, and a trip to the In dianapolis “500” not long ago. The race started before lunch and did not end until late afternoon. By that time many of the 50,000, drinking on an enipty stomach, were in an ad vanced stage of drunkenness. Because of this, ihere were many fistfights among the spectators, and driving on the highways after the race was over was dangerous indeed. Po lice walked by obviously dead drunk men and wo men because it would have taken hglf the jails in all South Carolina to hold them all.” No people will forever allow their roads and public places to be thus converted into a unholy spectacle of the kind described here. If this sort of conduct continues, we should not be astonished if a reaction sets in and an other movement toward national prohibition is started. We should remember that a totally dry country resulted once from just such displays and excess, and what was done once cen be done again. I'he beer and liquor peo ple c:‘‘n help the police by doing some polic ing themselves. Belier Cadillacs or Better Classrooms? . (Sanford Herald) at; every crossroads in the leng|h -apd breath of our State (is) j\he inscription: “This way to Beth El Chapel,’” So ohee wrote Harry Golden, editor of “The Carolina Israe lite,’! in discussing the influence of the Jewish people, as a con tinuing cultural and religious group, upon the consciousness and day-to-day living of North Carolinians, Mr, Golden’s impression of the pletJiOi'8 of Bethels was correct. The iname, according to a recent study,by ‘^Charity and Children.” is thg rndst popular among Bap tist eljurches in the State. There are 33 Baptist Bethels (and cer tainly at least a scattering repre senting other Protestant denomi nations). lory. At Bethel Church on the Virginia . Peninsula, Confederate troops from this state “were first” in an early Civil War en gagement. Other names dear to the Bap tist faith likewise have a grisly place in records. Shiloh might as quickly bring to mind a blood bath as a river baptism. Country churchyards were a frequent arena for the God-feai-ing men who fought the war of the ’six ties. Chips That Fall NOT AN ULCER VICTIM (By EDWARD P. MORGAN, AFL Radio News Analyst) The kids are back to school and in the ensuing quiet, parents may be templed to limit their thoughts about education to prayers of thanks for that handy invention which reduces household bedlam at this time of year. There never ceases to be something new to learn on the subject, however, and perhaps the problem of edu cation has never needed such full, serious, sober and intelli gent public attention as it needs right now. The building shortage Ims not been eased. The teacher shortage has not been eased. One of the cores of the question, the quality of leaching, remains below par because for some strange, irpnic reason our flowering civilization is more willing to pay for quality in a Cadillac than in a classroom. itable. The person who attends college, according to statistics, may expect to earn upwards of $100,000 more during his lifetime than the one who does not. Even so, he notes, parents com plain of the “current ‘high’ cost of higher education; yet the rise in per capita income has been rough ly three times as great as the rise in college tuition.” “During the past 25 years,” the Harvard president reveals, “the salaries of teachers in col leges, measured in terms of stable purchasing power, rose less than about one-sixth as much as the rise of per capita income meas ured in the same way.” Financially, one could argue from that, teachers are not sec ond-class but sixth-class citizens. education in the next quarter center, he says, is training the exceptional few drawing out fully the talents of the ablest inem- bei's ol each age group. “For it is the exceptional person — ob serves Pusey of Harvard — one might almost say the eccentric- person—who all along has been opening the way toward a fuller life for all of us. We ignore him at our cost.” Where do you find these ex ceptional people? You never quite know. They live on every side of town. 90 MEDICAL SCHOOLS The people planning the No vember White House conference on education, and the rest of us for that matter, would do well, I tliink, to grasp a few fragments from “The Exploding World of Education,” as an article by Hai'- vard University President Nathan M. Pusey is called in the Septem ber issue of Fortune Magazine. Education, Pusey says cannily to a profit-minder nation, is prof- KEEP PETS CONFINED We would like to make two suggestions which might go a long way toward the total elimi nation ol stray dogs and cats: 1. Expand and improve the dog warden system. 2. A public education campaign to discourage the cruel practice of dumping kittens and puppies out in the woods to fend for themselves. We are now in the time of year when game species are most vul nerable to stray dogs and cats. Somewhere near half the prob lem would be solved if pet own ers would keep their animals con- hncd~WiUllife in N. C. Cities and states are burdened now: where are the funds ade quate to education’s soaring de mands going to come from? Pusey predicts a'growth of “mixed sup port,” that is more goveramerit funds but more contributions too from individuals, alumni groups, foundations and industry. Paren thetically, along with big busi ness, organized labor is giving more and more attention—and money—to education. Unless sup port scores of individual scholar ships and some months ago the American Federation of Labor made its first grant to Ohio State University from the William Green Foundation —$100,000 in scholarships. The money may be wasted, Pusey implies, if our objective is not quality. Quality in teachers to inspire the appreciation of hu man values that are always get ting lost, or obscured or under valued, in a workaday world. Quality in the sj-stem: getting competence doesn’t mean, neces sarily, we are also getting wis dom. Training the millions is a vast challenging chore, but the hardest problem facing American While the population of the nation has approximately doubl ed since 1910, enrollment in ap proved schools of medicine has increased more than 125% — from 12,500 to 28,200 students. In 1910 there were only 3,165 phy sicians graduated from approved medical schools, as compared to 6,861 in 1954, an increase of 115%. Within the next five years there will be 10 new four-year medical schools in operation, bringing the nation’s total to 90. — Elmer Hess, M.D., president of AMA. TOBACCO BALLOTS Just hovz strongly the (tobac co) problem may affect North Carolina is indicated by the Agri culture Department’s final tabu lation on the flue-cured tobacco growers in the marketing quota vote. Marketing quotas for the next three years were approved by 95.5 per cent of the flue-cured growers who voted. Total ballots cast in North Car olina reached 134,046. Of the farmers from four other states who voted. South Carolina had the second highest. Its total vote was only 28,454. — Greensboro Daily News This “Charity and Children” studjy is limited to Baptist churehes'. and in the main to names shared by 10 or more “There are a number of surpris es,” 'notes editor Marse Grant. “For, example, there aa-e only four! Grade churches. Temple, an other Well known name, missed out in the “10 or more” list, with only eight churches bearing this name, Immanuel is the name of only four churches. Here is “Charity and Child ren’s” list of churches which ap pear 10 times or more in the North Carolina convention an nual; Antioch, 25; Bethel, 33; Beth any, 12; Beulah, 15; Calvary, 25; Corinth, 15, Fairview, 13 Mace donia, 18; Mountain View, 16; Mount Carmel, 11; Mount Olive, 12; Mount Pleasant, 14; Mount Zion, 21; Oak Grove, 30; Pleasant Grove, 21; Pleasant Hill, 13; Rivetside, 11; Shady Grove, 10; Shiloh, 11; Southside, 11; Taber nacle, 10; Union, 12; and Zion Hill, 11. Bethel, the favorite name of North Carolina Baptists, means House of God. At the original Bethel, on the watershed of the' Judean hill country, in Palestine, Abraham pitched his tent and built an altar; here Jacob had his vision; and here was found the Aric of the Covenant. It was visit ed yearly by Samuel when he went on circuit to judge Israel. Jeroboam welcomed the oppor tunity to exploit its sacred asso ciations for political ends, and Bethel became a royal and na tional shrine for the northern kingdom. Situated on the fron- teir between the two kingdoms it passed eventually to Judah. Jos hua destroyed its altar and de secrated its site. It was one of the strong places of Judah forti fied by, Bacchides. Contrary to the generally held belief, the big business executive is not plagued with ulcers and does not suffer from overwork leading to an early death. This is one of the conclusions drawn from Mabel Newcomer’s new book, “The Big Business Execu tive;. The Factors That Made Him, 1900-1950.” From Hie data compiled/ by Professor Newcomer we can put togetlier .a ‘composite big busi ness exiecutive” that will apply, of course, to no one man but glar ingly illuminates the whole mat ter. The composite executive is 61 years of age, and he will retire at 70. His investments in his com pany are less than 0.1 percent of the total stock outstanding. He is a Republican, an Episcopalian, and he served the government as an adviser during the war. He is a native American and the son of a small independent business man. While relatively young and inexperienced he obtained a minor position with the corpora tion he now heads and was pro moted to the presidency at the age of 52. — Pleasures of Pub lishing, Columbia University. tvell hidden in high grass just where their four chil- dren ivere likely to play. Fortunately t h e copper head is sluggish and rarely attacks unless stepped on or frightened. Its bite can'make ai victim sick but is seldom mortal. It can be recognized by its brownisly coloring. irimage of (FRANK P, GRAHAM «f dedkiHon ef kUnd, 18.) -Haynie in Atlanta Journal The North Carolina Garden Club has not only set aside these ten acres for the flowers of this region but also has chosen to honor the name of a queen who gave to history the name, Vir ginia, and gave here ngme to one of the great ages of history. In six of the historic ages of our western history which have taken their names from rulers, the Age of Pericles, the Augustan Age the Elizabethan Age, and Age' of Louis Xiy, the Napoleonic Age and the Victorian Age, two have taken their names from women. The Elizabethan Age was the age in which the earlier Italian Renaissancse came in rich mean ings to England. The Renaissance was the recovery of the ancient classical culture, the fulfillment ol the later middles ages, and the beginning of the modern age. This efflorescence of the human spirit came to full flower in the Elizabethan Age with its Mar lowe, Spenser, Ben Jonson., Wil liam Shakespeare, the defeat of the Spanish Armada, the dreams of Sir Walter Raleigh the vast enterprise of the commerical companies, and the struggles and hopes of simple men and women who founded oversease the do minions, which, in their separate ways, became the United States of America and the British Com monwealth of Nations. Symbols and Leaders Today noble women, Eleanor Roosevelt, Queen Elizabeth II, Queen Juliana, Helen Keller, Margaret Chase Smith, MadamC Pandit and Begum Ali Khan, as symbols and leaders represent the present chapter in the long pilgrimage of women from the status of chattel property to per sonality to spirituality in the leadership of gre at humane causes in the modern world. The humanitarian crusades against slavery, economic exploitation unfair»■ the ■ "'Oman’s 5, mem all Along 1 churches health, "slfareaj *^'’6 Women ” ® past i land ! and spi,”" hands and hea, themselves rooi America^ane, that 1 “ ''■I'at fi. have its roj natural soil a, of the people, Freedi Here lom j J tkii iiJ tolJ Mtail Cars roaring up Franklin Street. Cars roaring down Franklin Street. Congestion and traffic tie-ups opposite the Carolina Cafe. Jams and standing lines in all the eat ing places. Last-minute search for rooms and apartments. The University opened its fall term today. ★ A ★ where meet tit the earth, a 500 North CaroliB; ■as thej; tend tk” fhe mountains the, and all the coIhIb In remembrance dedicate the El den with a across the Elizabeth the fIri, Elizabeth the S«n ..seas once tendei h Haleigh, In thespa ious young Queejid ly President m fc tones of the prayen pie and our pea* two peoples, everywhere, i er for the fn all peoples, icco Farmers' An English setter’s rescue of a small boy from a copper head snake, related in Mon day’s issue, is a reminder that copperhea'ds are likely to he stirring around at this time of year, possibly looking for a place to bask in the sun- They are most likely to be found in dense weeds and un dergrowth, or a quiet corner. The John Alcotts recently found two in their garden. By JOHN E. PILAND Johnston County Farm Agent I met a very interesting fellow American the other day. His namer was Joe Eschelman, and he was from Weehawken, New Jersey, a portion of that metro- plitan mass that lies , just Wept of the Hudson River adjecent to New York’s borough iof' Manhat tan. ■' Mr. Eschelman was on his way down in Dixie to spend some vacation time and stopped in Smilhfield to see the safe of to bacco about which he had heard so much. , I Iwantedtogelsin. red back -to Dial fit] tobacco and toMli ■true that manyl $750.00 worth oi i acre. I told him 11 700 acres of tobici tj’, and it brougkt ■money but into were some things know. We share! among 38,000 fan f county living in IIS family units, 11 it requires W to produce one ani We entered the warehouse where the familiar chaiit of the auctioneer was being heard across golden rows of tobacco leaf. He listened for a moment and turned to me, saying, “I do not understand anything they say, but these farmers seem to be understanding all that is go ing on.” " I told him that was nut un usual, since many people seeing a tobacco auction for the first time had no idea what was going At this he was! quickly did some lip head. “Why that is dollar and for their labor. Tie ( in my shop gets* dollai'S per I informed Joel culations were wroK one dollar and li hour. I things as plant Wi .ers, fertilizers, ii* ing equipment ings necessary of the crop. ‘ " poisonous snake that quents the Chapel Hi neighborhood. ★ ★ ★ NO TOWEL Little Ebby, who had a talent for getting into mischief, ran into the kitchen with a brighter-than- usual gleam in her eyes. “Mommy,” she announced im- portanely. “I gave the kitty a bath.” “But what towel did you use?” her mother asked anxiously. “I didn’t use any,” she answer ed, “I just wrung him out.”— Sniithfield Herald . ^ -—»> on, but the farmers, though years . with saddle shaped markings, of experience in listening, were Jpe,” I said to to tiiangular head, and pits be- well awaie of the progress of the tiy primming ft® fore its eyes. It is the only sale. es on a hot da) ’ ’ fre- ' We looked at a few of the should try hreaft 1 tickets that had been marked, ers. You shorn and we saw them marked at 12 falling of over cents a pound, 37 cents a poUnd, rain in a montt 46 cents a pound, and 57 cents a was maturing. T j pound. He picked up a ticket off preeiate, Joe ft* , a pile selling ^t 53 cents and said .are not so hrigM’ to me -rather excitedly, “Why that seems like a wonddrful price. How many pounds of this can a farmer make per acre?” I told him about 1500 pounds in a good year. He quickly fig ured in his head and said, “Hy goodness, that is $750.00 per acre. These farmers must be doing all right.” I said it was hot quite that way—^that I wOiild explain later. After watching the sale i little more and answering his many There’s been a strong hu man reaction against snakes, all snakes, since the time of Eve. Yet most snakes ip these parts are harmless and even beneficial. Recently a car stopped on a country road just as a black snake glided by. The occupants got out and pounded the snake to death. They had just as well been destroying a five-dollaT bill. The black snake IS wouh that much a year in its destruction of rodents and inc/:» t T 41 aiivic «iiu aiio ‘ c s. t does exact a toll,' questions, I asked Joe to come o\\ e\ er, by raiding hen and sit oh a pile of tobacco with FOURTEEN MILLIONS nests. We’ve even seen xh' egg- stretching itself over a goose it me—that there were a few things Ijre name of Bethel has mili- tai-y implications to North Caro lina as well as to ancient his- The August 13 issue of North Carolina Facts reveals that at the end of no fiscal year since 1942- 1943 has sm'plus money in the General Fund been less than $14,000,000, and yet we are told each year that the General As sembly is “scraping the bottom of the barrel” to do all it can to help meet the apparent needs of our schools. Wolf! Wolf! Wolf! —JY. C. Education . community is suffer ing from the worst blague of mosquitoes, midges, and gnats seen since carpetbag rtavs. The mosquitoes don’t wait for nightfall or sound a war cry, but silently attack by daylight. Recent wet weather and standing .water are blamed. We wonder how much empty beer cans are Even if we escape the insect plague, we run the risk of being submerged tinder beer cans. ★ : ' :★ : contributing to the scourge, with We had just heard that i recent bride received 23 trays as ts'edding gifts and sup posed this was tops when we learned that a previhus bride had received 47 trays- Yet wives say they never have quite enough bowls to do Published evW Thursday Company, I® Street CarrW Telepi®*' Phillips Roland GiduZj ETTHafflli^ SUBSCBlf; (payable Five Cent? fe'l by .MAp; Entered««fdl at the 3, 1S79.