Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 2, 1951, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO TEE DAILY TABHEEL TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1051 ie Dailv M The official newspaper of the Publi cations Board of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is .published daily at the Colonial Press, Inc., except Monday's examina tion and vacation periods and during the official summer terms. Entered as Isr Hee second class matter at the Post "Office of Chapel Hill, N. C, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: mailed $4.00 per year, $1.50 per quar ter; delivered $8.00 per year and $2.25 per quarter. Nonplus by Ha try Snoo?; Editor .. ...: .........,..... Glenn Harden Managing Editor : . Bruce Melton Business Manager: ..: Oliver Watkins Business Office Manager ..Jim Schenck Society Editor ; Ilary Nell Boddie Sports Editor .................. Billy Peacock Subscription Manager....Chase Ambler Associate Editors ......... Al Perry, Beverly Baylor Feature , Editor Walt Dear Advertising Manager Marie Costello - Staff Photographers . . Ruffin Woody, . .Hal Miller Circulation Manager Neil Cadieu Sitting Measures?- : Tp A total of 16 administrative and student officials have been .invited, to a meeting in the office of the Dean of Students to" discuss a problem which has previously seemed insoluble. . The officials include the Dean of .- Women, the Business Manager" of the University, the Director of Operations, the President, of the Student Body, the chairmen of, the two honor councils, and the Manager of the Book Exchange. As the inviting letter says, "We have tried a good many things, but nothing seems o work. President Gray has notic ed it and even discussed it with some of the student leaders. We all know that it is a source of embarrassment to the Uni versity., It seems to me entirely unnecessary." And what weighty problem is this? Trash around trie South Building steps. . . -' . p "' 'S'": By mid-afternoon, the place looks like a city dump. Burial mounds of used coffee cups are supplementedby minor debris . cigarette butts, celophane scraps, and half-eaten cheese crackers. The more monumental milkshake cups compete with crumpled newspapers, discarded, class notes and for gotten books. - . .' . V ; Sound revolting? You should see it when it rains! Students . trudge through oozing ice cream, disintegrating papers, and slippery celophane. . .... . Some sort of solution is expected to come out of that meet . ing. Perhaps it will become the task of the honor councils to act as police in apprehending offenders of a new rule. Per haps it will be necessary to close the Book Exchange fountain. Perhaps it will require an administrative ruling of some sort. That such a meeting should have to be held, and that severe action may-be the result of it seems inexcusable. Cannot stu f dents and: employees, enjoying sunshine chapel this week, take reasonable action on the matter? -. ICinvolves so much-7-putting a coffee' cup in a waste can, instead; of just down. ' v e . O . r V by PaufBa rwic k ne Vote With the women's judiciary system under constant surveill ance and" criticism as it has been for: the past" few months, surely it cannot be ignorance that is re sponsible for ; the . continued ab sence. of justice and constitution ality in that system at .present. The caer: the :coed : was late twice, once 45 minutes late. The coed did not sign the traditional , pink slip when she came in. The house-, president -informed this coed that shefwpuld be ; expected: .to .appear, before - Women's Coun-, cil at its next meeting. We should , be interested to know on what . grounds this jcase is being arbi trarily sent to the ' Women's Council.' Not only has it not been tried by the Dormitory House Council under whose jurisdiction such violations of house rules comes; the members of the. House Council are apparently unaware of the case or its automatic refer ence by -their, house president. ' The women's handbook speci fically states: 'Tf .iate a girl is to report herself to the house -president. She will be brought before the House Council for appropri ate action. The Women's Council is consti tutionally delegated to try only Honor and Campus Code offens es, and rules not delegated to the , jurisdiction of another- council. j SoeiaL rules were only establish- ed as a separate classification last ypring in a two minute action of the Coed Senate. As chairman of the Dormitory Council it is one of the house president's responsibilities t o guarantee each person charged with house rule violations- a fair t . trial, an impartial Atrial! Her pow er - is '"great but . cannot legally transcend the supreme law of ;the campus the I "student framed, ' studentt4ablished Constitution. The Women's Council in ac cepting this case must do so with the knowledge that they have no legal right to try the case. An ap peal was made from trial by "that council last year on "no jurisdic tion" grounds and the Women's Council was found in error. Again it will face the very clear, Very specific provisions of section 2 of Article II of the Student Constitution. There can :be little misunderstanding of the provi sion that the, House Councils ;"shall have original jurisdiction in 'all cases involving infraction -of House Rules." 'Paradoxically, .; in the same dormitory, under the same ad ministration, another resident guilty, of the same, offense that of being late and failing to report was tried and judged by the House "Council. ' It is a small thing, the case in itself. The coed is obviously and admittedly guilty as charged. The danger in the situation is none less obvious. The rules have been pointedly ignored as in instances when 'the . house president sug gests that .violations be ignored, "not worried about." The law is being more I seriously " violated, more dangerously misused when, it becomes impossible as it pres ently seems to-be, for 'a woman student to expect or receive a fair and. lawful bearing unless phecan get her case heard by the Student Council. Every person elected to judici ary of fice in students government accepted the responsibility of his office with an oath to uphold the law, to contribute as best he can to a better, more perfect govern ment. The system of self government that is- so much a part of student life at Carolina; cannot survive in the f aee of such flagrant disre gard. Think before you act. Sex is the most talked sub ject: Yet it probably is the least understood subjectancTthe most over-rated. While sex is thought consuming, its practice as an ac tivity probably is the most inept. why? ... .-- - - Because sex is the Big Mys tery, the Grand Prize, the Real Thing. And as the .result of the traditions, superstitions and ta boos of centuries, people have . succeeded in obscuring sex be hind countless artifices. When a basic mattersuch as sex " is misunderstood, a whole series of human relations is dis torted. : - - Sex has been diluted and pol luted to the point that it is now the Great Sickness rather than . a Splendid Zenith among people. The beauty of sex as a natural thing nearly has been destroyed; in its place there is only a func tional sex that is gross and ugly in its bareness. Largely due to the perversions " of sex, the in stitutions of love, marriage and " the family' have lost much of "their potency in our regular affairs. This is not to say that the loss is one of impaired sexual per formance. It is that, of course, but it's much more . than that, too. The greatest loss is lack", of harmony in other human rela tions because of the misunder standing on such a -basic level as sex. . . . . What is sex? Sex is the popular sense of the word is the relation be tween men and women. This re lation is a personal one that should be . consummated in a union of physical and emotibnai pleasure of deep significance. Only one $our-letter word really covers this kind of relation: love. Sex is not essential to love or marriage. It is necessary for re production and it's a beautiful and desirable pleasure, but sex is only a small part of the vaster love and marriage. Unfortunately,- it is impos- Letters . " ' '-. , - .- J ,-: . 1- FOR RENT v- 6A SMALL " FURNISHED ; r APARTMENT. ;-. for rent. 159 feet from post office. Heat ' and hot water 24 hours per day. Rea sonable rent. Phone-2458 or 25G58. . . (Chg lxl) HELP WANTED S STUDENT SXPERIENCED JN ; SELL ING clothing to work mornings; 'Apply J Mgr. The Sport . Shop, ; K.:" Columbia : , St. TMChg. 31) sible for many to ignore sex as a primary consideration to love. Curiosity especially . that tin dered by the romance of . the bodydenies ignorance. It seems ' that most people place sex in the proper perspective only after it .becomes a personally familiar "act. If the teaching, thinking and talking of sex were open and honest and realistic, sex would assume a-less commanding and demanding role. Thinking, and the resultant decisions, would be on firmer, more lasting ground. And there would be less ruin ed marriages and broken fami lies. , SPECIAL TOZ7ITE. Carolina Du!cc DRIVE IN THEATRE CHAPELHILL BLVD. Between Chapel Hill and Durham mw...smr- ' i 4 1 msiKPmmai Za PLUS SHORTS Cont. From 7 p. m. Madame Editor: . . To Persons using the term "Social Recognition" in regard -to Ne- groes in the Year of Our Lord 1951: : ' '"?' ' "Societies and cultures, like animals and plants, are creatures of specific time and place. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 2, 1951, edition 1
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