Friday, February 5, JL965 Volume 72, Number 80 The National Observer I I in I 14 ft zpf& : ft SaUtj to Cfcri 72 Years of Editorial Fresdoza OfSces os the second floor of Grahaxa Memorial. Telephone number: Editorial, sports, news 833-1012. Business, cir culation, advertising 833-1163. Address: Box 1CS0, Chapel Hill, N. C Second class postage paid at fbe Post Office In Chapel mil, N. C, Subscription rates: per semester;. $8.00 per year. Published dally except Mondays, examination periods and vacations, throughout the aca demic year by the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina. Printed by the Chapel Hill Publishing Company, Inc., 501 West Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, N. C. A Rule Change Is Needed When Governor Dan K. Moore asked for a legislative commission . yesterday for the purpose of investigating the se lections process and the division of the University's Board of Trustees, his com ments were both timely and valuable. For there is little room for doubt that the current board, which includes only 12 alumni from N. C. State, is far from equitable in the representation which it affords the University's individual in stitutions. With the inclusion of the Charlotte branch next July, the prob lems of trustee representation will be come even more obvious and pressing. Ideally, of course, there should be no restrictions concerning the number of places which each branch is allotted, for the trustees are selected to. act for the entire University and not in the interest of any segment. Yet there are often occasions in which the realm of the ideal and the realm of the realistic come into conflict, and this is one of them. So long as the alumni or administration members of any branch feel' that they are being discriminated against in the trustee selection process, rifts and factions on the board can be expected, and the trustees almost cer tainly will be hampered in their efforts toward unity and concensus. While we certainly do not think that the domination of the board by alumni or patrons of the University at Chapel . Hill, has been detrimental to the Um y versity as a whole, there is more than "selfishness? in the reauests of our sis ter institutions that they be given at They simply want fair treatment. In light of this, a solution fair to all branches is obviously in order. We sug gest, for instance, that a . minimum standard of representation be adopted We'll Take The High Road, Too The Research Triangle, that lofty cen ter of learning and industry, has for many years been bounded by super high ways on two sides and a goat trail on the other. Yesterday the State Highway Commission finally recognized that fact, and unanimously passed a resolution call ing, for construction of a four-lane high way between Raleigh and Chapel Hill. The plans have been in the works for years. Practically every North Carolina map shows parallel dotted lines denot ing a planned highway between the two cities, but not the first ounce of dirt has been moved to start the dots on their way to maturity. Undoubtedly, the recent acquisition of the Federal Environmental Health Cen ter spurred the action. ,If the state had not gotten the huge Federal grant, it is unlikely that the road would ever be built. But now it is at the top of the pri ority list, and in four years Raleigh will be but 25-30 minutes distant, rather than the dangerous 45 minutes the trip takes today. Thank Heaven for the Environmental Health Center. It's already shown how it will make OUR environment more healthful, anyway. There's No Place For KRK . Nathan Bedford Forrest would hang his head in shame, and the small group which met in Pulaski, Tenn., one quiet night in 1867 would recoil in horror. For the child spawned .by these men of the Old South has become a horrible mutant a vehicle as pestilent, as de structive, as fearful, and as murderous as the fabled Four Horsemen. It is called the Ku Klux Klan. As the Chapel Hill Weekly comment ed last spring, "We need the Klan like we need another open sewer." We agree. It's time ''something was done about the KKK, and it should be done soon, if not immediately. Monday Rep, Charles L. Weltner (D.Ga.) introduced a resolution in the House of Representatives calling on the House Subcommittee on Un-American Activities to investigate the; Klan. It is Fred Seely, Hugh Stevens CoEditora Pete Wales Mike Yopp Managing Editor i?.,W MaTiaaer Jack Harrington IW - m-- , - Photo Editor ...Y Lauterer ivooay oooot Advertising Manager a good bill, and doubtless will pass the HoUse quickly. Getting through the Sen ate may be a bit more difficult, but it certainly should get by eventually. . But investigation should not - stop there. And when an investigation is made the findings should hot be tossed into the bureaucratic hodge-podge and left for dead. - - ' ' There are too many indications that the Klan, despite its lofty pronounce ments of peaceful methods, is responsi ble for most of the mischief that has occurred in the South in the past few years. We do not deny the fact that the Klan has the right to speak and the right to assemble. But after its assemblies and speeches the members scatter with the wind like the puff of the dandelion and infect the weeds of hatred and descruc tion upon the populace. Their theme is racial separation, but their method is death. Their avowed weapon is the vote, yet their true de vice is dynamite. The Ku Klux Klan has no place in pur society, and it is time" our leaders took steps to make the Invisible Empire truly invisible. The Weltner bill is a good first step, but it will take much more to do away with this blight upon our society. We hope it won't be the last step. which would allow each of the Univer sity's branches to place 15 alumni on the Board of Trustees. In this manner, 60 of the 100 seats would be equitably distributed and the General Assembly would be free to select the remained of the board without regard to previous connections with any individual insti tution. . Under such a system, a basic founda tion of the board would be guaranteed a judicious and equal division, while our legislators . could continue to exercise considerable options in the remaining selections. As the University becomes , more diverse and far-flung, it ( seems only reasonable to guarantee a basic rep resentation for each institution. Further, there is precedent for such a move in the existing laws regarding the selection of the trustees. GS 116-4, which sets the number of trustees at 100, also requires that no less than 10 of them be vomen. A law providing some selection on a geographical basis, then," could hardly be construed as a radical or" improper measure. In short, a basic provision insuring some form of equality in the selection of at least part of the Board pf Trustees would strengthen the unity of the board imparing its flexibility.; Any more stringent move,; such as one to permanently allocate all the seats on the Board, however, should be met with stern opposition, for it was not the ' purpose of the original statutes to have the General Assembly assign the bran ches a quota and thus destroy the flexi bility and all-encompassing quality of the board. Anything less, on the other hand, de nies basic representation to institutions which deserve it. (CHE. ATINGs Many see. m , . fc f - fi I '..-,1 , UV VV JUL H--L From The National Observer Cheating is, not usually a hot topic of conversation at Yale, but one night last week the talk in. Room 324 at Wright Hall was laced with anger as a dozen undergraduates debated the merits of "the honor 4 system." "You can be absolute about honor only up to a certain point," said an earnest young man in blue-flannel pajamas. "But it's also based on a sub jective standard. I can con ceive of a situation in which it would i be more honorable to . overlook cheating." A square-jawed freshman in dungarees and a T-shirt agreed; only a "fink" (the collegiate fad word to describe a non-conformist) would willingly report a classmate for cheating. An honor system, he argues, would only "institutionalize finkdom." Campus cheating is suddenly a .hot topic again, as a spread- ing investigation of cheating, (as the Air Force honor code defines cheating) at the Air Force Academy sharpens the concern of students,- teachers, and parents alike. Will It Touch 300? i Eugene. M. Zuckert, Secretary of the Air Force, late last week appointed a five-man commit tee to review the cribbing scan day at Colorado Springs, a scan dal that may bounce as many as 300 of the academy's 2,567 cadets from classes. Only about 10 cadets actually cheated, according to sources at the academy. The others (93 have actually ( ''resigned" so far), violated the honor code by not , telling t their superiors . they knew cheating was going on. ; . But is it, cheating when a stu dent declines to turn in his friends for,. wrongdoing? Is this the . result of obeying honorable instincts, . or merely, in. the words of the Yale undergradu ate, being a. "fink?" In a survey of collegiate at titudes froni New Haven to Palo Alto, National Observer report ers found that f most students more or less agree that it's wrong to cheat, but it's wrong also to tattle on the fellow who does. ' ' ' ; 'System of Informers Says Donald - C. Frazier, a first-year law student at Tulane, in New ..Orleans: "It smacks of a system of informers." Oc-. casionally, successful cheatersf even attain a measure of re-1 spectablity. . "Most kids Ejust brush cheaters off," Jane Beit scher, a senior at Pennsylvania State University, says. "It's part of the accepted thing. I s think this is partially due to admiration of 'beating the sys- Paul Selby, dean of the. law school at the University of West Virginia, sees this attitude as a throwback to "the law of the West." Explains Dr. Selby: "According to this law, nobody rats on a buddy." Parents of the Air Force ca dets agree. Roy Etnyre, ath letic director at the huge New Trier Township High School in the Chicago suburb of Winnet ka, 111., was particularly bitter. His son, Scott, a player on the academy's basketball team, was charged with tolerating cheating although there was no accusation that he himself had cheated. "My boy didn't cheat," Mr. Etnyre said. "He just refused to be a stool pigeon. Ever since he was big enough, to walk I've taught my boy he shouldn't snitch on other kids now this." A Seattle Father's Reaction Archie Greenlee, a Seattle lawyer whose son, Fritz, left the academy", for tolerating cheat ing, called the honor code "im practical and unrealistic. It's a fantasy." Students generally agree and often, in articulate terms. "Most of the unpopularity of the honor system arises from its require ment that all students are oblig ed to report any suspected hon or offense," says another Yale student. "The unpopularity may also be attributed to a distrust of the honor council, which stu-' dents feel would judge offenders .in oversimplified terms . . "There seems to be a vague feeling that personal integrity, like religion, should not be leg islated." Nearly everyone who discuss ed cheating on his or her cam pus concedes the problem exists. Yet, there's almost unanimous agreement that it's impossible to say how widespread it is be cause it's all but impossible to agree on a precise definition of cheating. Few defend the cadet : who, according to the stories from Colorado Springs (where offici al sources refused to discuss details of the cribbing scandal), broke into a locker and took several examination papers, then recruited about 10 col leagues to help him peddle them to undergraduates. The Academy's Honor Code Under the honor code in force at the academyy any stodent who knew of the incident, or any cadet to whom an offer was made, was duty bound to re port it. This is the section of the code that stops most stu dents, and that's why relatively few schools try to operate such codes. The U. S. Military Academy at West Point operates under a code almost identical to that at the Air Force Academy; in 1951, dozens of cadets, including the son of the football coach, left school in an incident similar to that at the Air Force Academy. Midshipmen at the Naval Academy at Annapolis, . MeL, are put on their honor, too, but are not required to report those who cheat. They are expected to do so, however. "If X sus-, pects Y of cheating he is not bound by black and white to report Y," explains Lt. Comdr. Frederic J. Thomas, guiding of ficer for the dean of admissions. "But X is supposed to ask him self these - questions: 'Is this man worthy of wearing the uni form of the service? Would I want to trust my life in combat to a man who compromises his personal honor for his own bene fit?' ' .'. - . Three Categories of Cheating I 'If . he feels Y's i offense : has put him in this category," says Commander Thomas, ','then X is. pretty much obligated to re ; port him." This sums up the position of those who adminis ter and defend the honor sys tem; except that, at Colorado Springs, and West. Point, .Stu dent 'X' has no choice but to turn in Student 'Y'. . Cheating, generally, falls into three categories: Cribbing, or taking tiny, hidden notes to the examination room; looking over the shoulder of another student, copying the answers; and, final ly, learning the examination questions beforehand, either by talking to students who have taken the exam or; by studying a stolen copy of the examina tion. The first two kinds of cheat ing apparently go on nearly everywhere; the latter is less often seen, though students at some schools (West Virginia, Stanford, and Northwestern, for three examples) say Greek-letter fraternities keep file copies of exams given by certain pro fessors. Professors are often criticized for giving the same exam year after year. Moreover, some students sus- pect many papers "are never read; therefore, they reason, the grades put on them are ' phony, so why shouldn't they cheat? A Stanford undergradu- ate not long ago asked his pro- : fessor if he could write a paper on the system of scales as a , music-class theme. The profes sor agreed; the Student merely copied a chapter on harmonies from a physics textbook. " He got an A. "It's a big problem,", says 21-year-old Hines Boyd, a pre-imed-med student who is chief justice of the Honor Court at Florida State University in Tal lahassee. "I'm working now on a study concerning a lot of rumors about exams being stol en. The majority of these stories are just talk, but I know for a fact that some . exams were out last exam period. But we can't get enough evidence to bring the people . who stole them into (student) court. Stu dents just won't talk." Where There Is Little Cheating ..Mr..Boyd finds little cheating ....in courses where students are convinced they must learn the subject matter to master their f ieldSjt such as music, biology, or "physics. "There are lots of people just taking the course . . . (and who want) to just get through, and don't care whether they know the material." As chief justice of his honor court, Mr. Boyd worked on five cheating cases during the fall semester. All five violations were found and reported by pro fessors. "Most of the students here," he ". says, "will .choose friendship when faced with a choice between friendship and honor." Not all copies of examinations are stolen. At Florida State, for example, students have re trieved inky stencils of exams tossed into wastebaskets hy careless secretaries; ; another time, Mr. Boyd checked out the story that several students brib ed a janitor. "We even heard of one group of fellows who fol lowed a garbage truck to the city dump, where the garbage was immediately covered by a bulldozer. Those guys had shov els with them, and tried to dig up the exam stencils buried un der tons of dirt." Spacing the Students Cheating on exams, opce in side the classroom, isn't always easy. Most professors employ proctors, usually post-graduate student assistants, to help with administering the exams. Not long ago a professor at the Uni versity of Colorado assigned students to sit at every other desk for the final exam to make over-the-shoulder cheating more difficult. Many students were angered because he hadn't done this for less-important tests during the semester; they thought the change in procedure was a slap at their integrity. . Often the proctors are appre ciated. "I can't remember ever having heard any resentment," year; students would be author-. ized to try the system in classes where the professor agreed. The proposition was defeated by a wide margin. : says a student at Northwestern. "It's because the proctors are there to answer questions re garding the exam, pass out ex tra blue books to write the an swers in; they're accepted be cause actually they are there to protect the majority who don't cheat." Honor systems aren't easy to build. "You need a long tradi tion of honor system to work at this point in the - Twentieth Century," says R. Barry Far rell, professor of political sci ence at Northwestern. . "I think you'd have a hard time setting up one where none existed be fore." Honor System Rejected Northwestern students put a proposition for a limited honor system oh a student ballot last A sociology professor at Col umbia University recently poll ed students in a national sur vey of colleges and found two surprising statistics: More than 50 per cent of the students said they had cheated; this was twice the percentage of cheaters most students thought the poll would reveal. Eighteen coeds at Florida State submitted last week to a survey of their attitudes; all said they thought it wrong to cheat on an exam, 17 wouldn't resent an honest student who turned in a cheater but only 2 would themselves turn in a spy ing student. Ten men students, all holders cf scholarships, an swered similar questions; all 10 said they would respect a stu dent who reported a . cheater, but only 2 would themselves turn policeman. "I've known people who cheat and I'm not about to turn them E in," said one blue-eyed fresh man coed. "I think every per son is responsible to himself, and if he wants to cheat he's only hurting himself." Another girl, who sat listening to all this, agreed. "If I knew someone who was cheating," she said, "I wouldn't report him, either. Unless he cheated from my paper. Then I would." ?6T9' T 1 A rri V A in xxeauy iiiy J- mie iuu mc 'fSArrBn A ?- . ... . J"-...: .. - :-. . '' ' -A- -" V i - , l i s r- i A ' ; ' I-. Ac xisAiHyJiJ U V. " " " " 5 Tv-Vi. I II? .: i The Ph.D. And The Elegant Amateur The Christian Science Monitor Every day we hear about the increas ing percentage of undergraduates going oil to graduate school. Every day we hear about the exploding population of Ph.D.s. If each has to write a thesis involving original research, where will he find the topic? Apparently in the expanding sci ences, the possibilities are limitless. Or is there too much duplication in the scientific "information explosion"? And what of the literary scholar, struggling to discover some use of the comma in Jacobean prose that has not been ex plored or some unexpected ihumed poet that has not been "done"? He has already been the subject of satire. Now his problem and opportuni ty have been brought into sympathetic focus by the president of the Modern Language Association. With his usual light touch, Morris Bishop pictures a "revolt against unnecessary publication" and says, that "there are too many workers in a vineyard that has barely increased in size." Bibliographers will find computers doing their work, anoth er casualty of the automated age. What is the alternative? To turn from small analysis to "a larger meaning" of literature, ranging widely, bringing things together, perhaps establishing a "rap proachement between scholarship and journalism." Examples of the latter already are ap pearing. And we look forward with Pro fessor Bishop to more scholarly writing "directed not toward the fellow specialist but toward the elegant amateur." Freiich Still Hold Lead The London Observer PARIS Frenchmen remain the .world's hardest drinkers, but they are beginning to ease off alcohol and absorb . more mineral waters and fruit juices. The average French adult still imbibes the . equivalent of 26.8 liters of pure alcohol a year (almost 6 gallons, compared with the German's 11.3 liters and the Englishman's 7.1 liters. The bulk of this Impressive intake slips down Gallic gul lets in the form of wine, but brewers have been getting an increasingly large share of . the market since the war. French consumption of beer has jump ed 53 per cent in the past 10 years. At the same time, consump tion, o fruit juices has shot up by 85 per cent and of mineral waters by 34 per cent. One rea son for this change is that Vi. r m it n P I If I I k C2 LETTERS The Daily Tar Heel solicits letters to the editors at any time and on any subject. AH letters most be typed DOUBLE SPACED and mast be free of IlbeL The editors reserve the right to edit for length. Letters shonld be submitted at least two days prior to date of publication. t-i n II M B Frenchmen now coming of S drinking age often prefer soft drinks to the strong aperitifs gduu orcunary wine their fathers jgrew up on. (Also, firms bottling spa min eral waters have successfully (appealed to the hypochondriac that lurks within the liver-con- i"scious Frenchman. And more people can now afford fruit juice, which is more expensive ithan the cheapest ordinary' 5 wine. I , The whisky boom is another I sign of the French tippler's new affluence. French imports of S scotch doubled between 1961 and 1963, rising to an annual 1 10 million bottles. This made France second only to the Un ted States among Scotland's I foreign customers.