Newspaper Page Text
THE MAROON TIGER
March 26, 1954
VETS ORGANIZE
(Continued From Page One)
to us as students of the college.
3. To entertain a constant in
terest in student issues and to
be concerned about the conduct
of student affairs and about pro-
' I
per exercise of representative of
fices of the student body, and
4. To promote a spirit of uni
versal brotherhood.”
Mr. Chandler futher adds that
it is hoped that some day in the
future the personnal of the group
wil contain more than Vetrans.
“The organization expressly
stands in student affairs.”
DR. LAWRENCE
(Continued From Page One)
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Clifford, special
teacher, Henry Training School,
Georgia.
Also included in the program
were Professor W. R. Olivers,
chairman of Morehouse Sociology
Department and director of the
Institute; Mrs. Carrie Gartrell
Chivers, co-director of the Insti
tute and Assistant Professor- of
' Sociology; Dr. Melvin D. Kenne
dy, Dr. Me*hnn H. Watson, Dr.
Edward A. Jones and Dr. Edward
B. Williams of the Morehouse
faculty, and Miss Jean La Rue
Blackshear of Spelman College.
Censorship Blues Sing
Out From The South
(ACP)—At Tulane University,
the Hullabaloo, student newspa
per, haS received a letter Of “re
primand and admonition” from
the student council because
“opinionated material” was pub
lished without the consent of the
paper’s faculty advisers.
The council voted unanimous
ly to admonish the paper on the
grounds that it had violated one
of the amendments of the stu
dent constitution—an amendent
that requires the editors of the
Hullabaloo “to meet with their
advisors e.ach week of publication
before the final proof goes to
press.”
“This is exactly what the Hul
labaloo did,” replied editor Ro
bert Warren. “The usual edito
rial material was seen and dis
cussed.” But the article to which
the council objected Was not dis
cussed, Warren said, because it
was written “on deadline” after
the advisers had approved the
editorial matter. The article ap
peared in the form of a signed
column, “which had never before
been considered material for the
board’s perusal,” 'Warren said.
“The Hullabaloo senses in the
council letter a direct threat of
censorship,” Warren said. “This
fear resulted from the fast line of
the letter which warns to ‘well-
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consider the welfare of Tulane in
all (your) efforts to bring about
the best in college /reporting. We
ask, who is to judge the intent
or competency of our articles?
The council or the Hullabaloo?”
IN HIS KINGDOM
IN THE SEA
HICKMAN
I gazed in a pool of water one day
With my eyes so bright and so
round
And to my despair, I saw lying
there
A being so lustrously brown.
I asked him his purpose lying
there
In his kingdom in the sea
He answered “My existence was
only made
Tq exult your ingenuity.”
He related the tales that happen
ed there
Of things ending with just fate.
He told of, the joy that always
was
Among the inanimate.
He. hated the beings who were
The main source of his birth,
He never smiled, he never grin
ned.
He never laughed with mirth.
He told of love that nestled dear
For his home in his heart so true.
He related of love that lives dboy
Beyond the mystic blue.
He told of his kingdom in the
sea;
Of the kingdom without strife
That all being there add to their
world;
There, there was no prejudice.
«
He told me of Earth with its
million faults;
Of the deag, the dumb, and the
mute.
He told of the men who of the
above ^
Would mercilessly presecute
He told of the minority’s fight
against the majority;
The fight that soon o’er will be.
There was no fight like this, he
said
In his kingdom in the sea.
I raised my voice, he raised his
higher
I called him an infidel, he hie
a liar.
I was incensed and then my face
blushed;
And just at tl^at moment his face
was flushed.
So truly he Told the story that
rose
Within my heart still to be;
And that there was no strife like
that in that world
In his kingdom in the sea.
—Donald Louis Hickman
McCarthy's Methods
Like Hunting Rats . . .
(From the Bacon, tjniversity
of Portland, Organ
. . . . The situation could be
likened to the difficulties of a
farmer in ridding his barn of rats.
Now a farmer knows it is one
thing to detect the presence, of
rat infestation and point ont in
dividuals, but quite another to
exterminate the pest. Poisoning
and trapping them seem the only
alternatives to the absurd ex
tremes of waiting for them to die
or burning down the barn, but
unfortunately both methods are
liable to injure innocent animals
as well as guilty rats.
We believe the senator from
Wisconsin has the best rat ex
terminator yet in sight, but we
feel he might be more careful
how he uses it.