WEDNESDAY,, FEBRUARY 26, 1958 THE DAILY TAR HEIL FACE TWO Board, Trustees Pitted One Against The Other North C.arolin.i's jm-ss toM the st.ttc I iumI.ix l a ;4Hin'4 breach hctxxccn the I'liixcrsity of North C.molin.i loaid of ' l'nistifs anil l he Slate loanl of 1 1 i 1 1 . v Icluca- 1 ion and Hie reason is that old familial piohlem of who should have the most powei. The cleavage came to loie when the loaid ol Higher l'diuation acting against the recommenda tions ol the Iioaid of Trustees slashed horn ,oo to ;;()( w num ler ol housing units to he huilt .if State ("olle-e with self-licjuidat-iii4 honds that uutals will utile. Now. it aptKMis th.U a strong liht m.iv dce!o in the next Lt'K islatuie oev xxhuh of the two hodies the Hoard of Higher Kdu . cation, netted hv a in;,", leisla . tie ai t. or the Uoaid of I nistets, eluted hy the legislature w ill have ultimate untiol oxer the Consoli dated I'liixcTMiy. It should he made tlear here that when it was treated, the Iioaid ol Higher I'iIik ation was ( nx isioned as a Ixxlv to haxe Iho.mI aulhoiitx oxer the "functions ami actixities' ol tin- state's i ' insti tutions ol higher learninga rath er hroad tleleiialioii ol aulhoiitx oxer the trustees themselxes. Meanwhile, howexer. tiustees of the Consolidated I'nixersitx kit then ol lives lariied some control oxer the institution and now haxe arisen apparently in unanimous op position to any iisiupatiou of th.it power hx the Hoatd of Higher Yd iK ation. It is likelx that tiu.slies ol the oihei nine state-supported institu tions cm hiding I NC. at Chajel I till. . C. State Colle-e in Ral eigh and Woman's College, (ireeus-loio--liki-wise uill uphold the re spot ol their oll'ues a ttaditional uspevt wliidi has loivj, y.ixen the n is .'- .i v,ii-.it lc.l authority in the opeiation ol the institutions. I . k i 1 1 4 into c oiisideration the nnmlx-i ol colleges suported hy the state, it heuunes almost ncccss- wheie the merits of one can be weighed against the merits of an other. And that, in a few words, is what the Board of Higher 1. du cat ion does. Hoxvcxer. the question arises as to whether that board-appointed and not elected should haxe a veto jxnver oxer the recommenda tions of the trustees who are elect ed members of the legislature. It is oxer this veto poxver ex pressed when the Board of Higher I duration disregarded recommen dations of the trustees and State College administration lor -,oo housing units instead of ;o at the Raleigh institution that the cunent rift betxveen the two boards has been brought to fore. II the Board of Higher l.duia tion is intent on performing the functions of the board of trustees, xv i t.h the applause of Cox. Hodges, then the former should replace the latter in the operation of our edu cational institutions. Hoxvcxer. we don't beliexe the education board is equipped to serve in that capaci ty The xery natuie of the trustees and the fact that thex are limited to the single Consolidated Univers itx or, in other cases, to only a single state - supported institution in the ir olfices would ' jm idc them with closer insight into the needs and ptoblems of the insti tutions oxer xvhich they haxe con trol. l or these reasons it is easy to ap preciate the sentiments ol the trus ties in their general opposition to trespassing on their functions bv the Board of Higher I.ducation. It now bet onus the duty of the legislature to define xvhiih ol the two bodies the Board of Higher Idiuation or the Board of Trus ter? will make the uioniiiiciHU lions lor dexelopmeut ol our edu cational institutions. So long .is the txvo are xvorking against one another, neither can atx to biiug their xarious jnogiams serxe the purKse for xvhich it xvas .mil inpiists t a single bodv established. BUT WHAT ABOUT CAROLINA? Aristocratic Or Obsolete The Daily Tar Heel Thf official stulent pubncar.on ,f ttat Publication Boaid of the University of North Carolina, where if is published daily except Sunday, Monday and exam ination and vacation period and sum mer terms. Entered as econd class mat ter in the post office in Chapel N. C. under the Act of March 8. 1870 Subscription rates: mailed. $4 per year, t2.50 a semester; delivered. $fl a year. $3 50 a semester. Editor DOUG E1SELE Associate Editor . FRAXK CROWTHER Managing Editor ALYS VOORHEES News Editor PAUL RULE Asst. News Editor ANN FRYE Coed Editor JOAN BROCK Feature Editor MARY M. MASON Sports Editor BILL KIN Q City Editor BILL KINCAID NEWS STAFF Dax is Young. Prinze Pipkin. Surah Adams, Dave Jones Taikcr Maddrey, Charlie Sloan, Ed Rowland. Eddie Goodman. Wcstbrook Fowler, Stan Black. Virginia Sand- Business Mana-er JOHN WIUTAKER Advertising Manager FRED KATZtN Subscription Mgr. AVERY THOMAS Librarian G LEND A FOWLER EDIT STAFF Whit Whitfield, Curtis Gaiis. Jonathan Yardley, Barry Win ston. Gail Godwin. SPORTS STAFF: Rusty Hammond. Elli ott Cooper, Mac Mahaffy, Jim Turks, Jim Harper. lit'SLNESS STAFF Walker Blanton, John Minter, Lewis Rush. Kt Sports Editor DAVE WTBLE PHOTOGRAPHERS Normia Kmtw, Buddy Spoon. Nizht Editor PELXUY BAEilOW A nexvs story reardin ltula lions allcctin.; Iraternities at State and Carolina brings out othei in teiestiii' Luts. Ol the " . 7 1 ir stu dents at Chapel Hill only i.ifc: are hatetnity men. At State the number is Soo out of Vl'-.V Ome upon .1 time this miht haxe seem ed ex idem e ol a restricted aristo cratic taste in democratic colleges. Maxbe it still does. Apparently, hoxvexer, the oxerxvhelmin ma jority ol students in the txvo State colleges are ;.cttiii alon xery xvell xvithout benefit ol jins. Ate Iraternities more exclusive or out-ol-date? I'ndoubtedlx some youn; men j;et ninth pleasme out (( the associations and facilities pioxidcd by their Iraternities. Some certainly take from them a sense of social prestige. Kvidently, hoxxexer, in a day xhen hardly any student can Ret aloiiR xvithout a car, a dub is a luuiy xvith xvhich many can dispense. Ome theie xvas a time xvhen only fraternities prox ided t lub like RatheiinR places at our col-. Icrcs. .oxv no Iraternities cm fur nish Midi a loafing and ;athenn; place as the State College Union lor instance. In stuh a building all ffr fue or for small lees all stu dents must pay non-liaternity men at State haxe quarter une qualled by the richest and most ex clusixc Iraternities in the past. All colleges should haxe such build ings. And in such buildings all .students should haxe all the prixi lege of hospitality xvhich in the just only . Iraternities could oiler to their members and friends. Rakish rs'evxs k Observer VIEW FROM THE HILL Bias Clauses, Hazing Should Be Eliminated By CURTIS CAN'S This observer went to a lot of trouble to build a sound argument against bias clauses in fraternity charters, and, then found to his dismay that the headline above the column in the paper read: Bias Clauses Should Be OK'D. What it should have been was: BIAS CLAUSE SHOULD BE KO'D. While on the subject of fraterni tie. there is another problem that presents itself in fraternities. Every year freshmen come to Carolina and are told in no un certain terms that there is no haz ing permitted on the Carolina campus. They find for the first few weeks that freshmen are indeed treated as equals on the Carolina campus. However," some of them have the misfortune of pledging fraterni ties and find out that this rule does not hold true in the ease of pledging of fraternities. Many times students are forced to get their sleep during class time .either in class or out. Many suffer acadniically be cause of last night's scavenger hunt xvhich has taken them to Greensboro or Raleigh at 3 a.m. Other are forced to suffer thta loss of pride that accompanies pledging in being personal valet without pay for some twenty or thirty people xvho are fondly call ed brothers, end xvho have gone through this same type of hell be fore. This in itself is contrary to the spirit and letter of the cam pus rule against hazing. It is indeed unfortunate that stu dents, for the privilcdge of becom ing a member of a Greek letter society, have to sacrifice both the time and energy that could be ap plied to their primary responsibil ity in college study in order to participot in a meaningless prank or to serve as slave labor. It is equally unfortunate that the fraternities haxe not realized yet the immaturity of this type of pledging, which perhaps serves as a release for their sadistic urges, but. serves no other real function, and can. although it does not al ways. serve to breed dissension. It is hoped that fraternity mem bers themselves will be able to tea!i7c that they xvill profit by elimination of hazing in pledging. It is hoped that the emergency fraternity committee will find some way of cutting all forms of hazing from the UN'C campus. "I'll Have The Law Qui Y011" THEY LEAD TAME LIFE POLITICAL PERSPECTIVE If s Student Reform -Or Else Couldn't Wait In Plant City, Fla.. Mrs. Lizzie B. Morgan took a direct route to reach the automobile licensing bureau lor her driving test. She stepped on the accelerator instead of the brake and crashed into the building xvhich houses the bureau. By PKINGLE PIPKIN The emergency committee on social fraternities has the responsi bility of realistically considering its problems and of making appro priate reforms. The University Administration is concerned aobai the existing soc ial regulations regarding fraterni ties. The xvidely publicized Lamb da Chi Alpha incident focused this concern on the matters of off campus parties and rules dealing with visiting in fraternity houses. Unlike other ' universities, here the Administration itself has not sought to combat these conditions by declaring a number of arbit rary regulations. Instead the responsibility of re form has been placed in tho !ajids of the student gmenrment. The Administration is, in the words of Director of Student Activities Sam Magill. '"laboring under the assumption that self government is the best govern . ment." "We are looking to the Student government to solve the problem itself," he said. The Administra tion has tried to convey its con cern to the students and to make fraternity members recognize that whatever they did, for good or bad, affected the whole university, lie explained. Director Magill said he xvas hope that the committees, reforms will be something that "xve. as the Administration, can defend to the people of North Carolina with some conviction." He asserted that the University was concerned with maintaining and strengthening the good will of the people of North Carolina be cause it was their university. Director Magill felt the student leaders "were responding realistic ally" and xvas "very encouraged by their whole attitude." In 1954 the present visiting agree ment was established and a great deal of talking xvas done about the fraternities and their relationship to the rest of the University, but. no olher action came from the discussions. The present discussions will probably touch on the standards of conduct and 'the conduct of a fraternity as a unit. Undoubtedly the Inter-Fraternity Council and its responsibility and relationhip to the rest of the uni versity will have to be examined and perhaps revised. The question of drinking and the problems related to mixed parties xvill have to be reviewed. It is probable that the method of getting parties approved and the enforcement of these regulations will have to be altered. If Student Body President Sonny Evans follows his State of the Campus Address (presented short ly before Christmas vacation, discriminatory clauses in fraterni ty charters and term papers in fraternity files will be discussed. Director Magill expects the com mittee to do a "real rethinking" of the problems related to fraternity life. It is evident that the committee must take its xvork seriously and must be willing to compromise when compromise is necessary. Any feeling of disdain or un concern is likely to result in disaster. The fraternities must be xvilling to receive the recommenda tions which the committee makes. I believe the present system can be altered so that the fraternities can retain their independence if they are prepared to accept more fully the responsibility xvhich goes along xvith it. The public of North'Carolina has been aroused; changes can no longer be deferred. If the fraterni ties are not xvilling to make the necessary changes, then someone else xvill have to do so. I think it xvould be in the interest of the fraternities to seize the initiative. Dorm Men Eulogized By P. W. CARLTON The dorm man leads a tame life in comparison xvith those gay dogs of the campus, the Greeks. But still, there is a kind of quiet gentility about their attitude xvhich makes us admire them all the same. The next lines are a memorial to these stalwart souls, who daily storm the battlements of educa tion xvithout the backing of brotherly ties. , Their breed is a tough, resilient one that over comes hardship and failure with agility and, for the most part, certainty. Let us illustrate some of these hardships by studying a cross section of dor mancy, or rather dormitory life. Our hero is Sam . Studious, fourth year General College major. He and his faithful roommate, Calvin "Bunko" Coura geous, third year freshman, occupy a cubicle on the fourth floor of Joyner Dorm. Cal is a worthy young soul, arduously engaged in working his way through school by operating the floating crap game for the dormitory. As we join these young stalxvarts, we find them blissfully dreaming of home and mother. Dawn is peeping through the xxrindow, when the alarm clock explodes into action, falls over on it's side, gyrates across" the desk and lands face down against a bev erage can from last night's party. For a minute nothing happens. Then a hand emerges from be neath a pile of bedclothes, crawls across the desk, futilely feels for the clock, and, having failed, sub sides into a relaxed position. The clock blasts away. Soon, there is a sigh and then an upheaval of cov ers. Sam's furry physiognamy appears, his eyes flash bloodily as he snares the pffending "clock and snaps off the alarm. He then attempts to step out of bed, tangles a foot in the covers and hits the floor with a crash. Cal, meanwhile, has tucked his head under his pillow to shut out the noise. Now he leaps from bed and tramples Sam as he rushes to the closet. He has an eight o'clock class in Integral and Com parative Mechanics of PTiotosynthetic Trivia. He and Sam mill around for a time, finally getting dressed and fall downstairs to head for Lenoir Hall. At seven forty-seven Sam "and Cal appear out of the gloom in traditional track style and clatter into the main dining room. Outside, a campus policeman has set his stop watch in motion, to check their form. In exactiy three minutes Cal and Sam leave the door of Le noir and charge by the policeman, xvho gix'es them the thumbs up and yells encouragement. The room mates separate, Sam to pursue his studies of An atomical and Phylogenic' relationships between the Androecium and Pseudo-carpellate Amoebae. (A highly edifying course) and Cal to his mech. class. Sam roars into class, plows to a stop, eases pain fully onto a xvooden bench provided for students and listens eagerly to the lecturer, xvho is mumbling something about tardy students receiving automatic flunks. After losing two pages of notes due to a dropped pencil, Sam proceeds to his next class. Lunch is always a thrill for Sam. It is at this time that he meets his virtuous, fun-loving girl friend, Mary Smith (Sam feels that her name is a little common), a self-help student who is working her xv ay through college. They speak rapturously to each other, Sam gazing over Mary's shoulder at a good looking D.A. and she ogling a football play er. It's true loxe, obviously. They pass a pleasant hour playing 20 questions, she continually replying "no", io his queries. Parting with the fond assurance of a highly rewarding academic experience in the arboretum that night, the two wend their separate ways, he to the dorm, where he spends a profitable afternoon sleeping, and she to a course in Aggra vated Psychology. At seven that evening they dine sumptiously on the stu-special. At eight, they are in the infirmary with acute gastric maladjustment, xvhich spoils their projected experience. Oh well, they'd haxe fallen in that hole Dr. Snarf dug foi the new Polypodium accrostichoides anyway. The xvriter is a graduate of Weybeloe Normal College xvith his M.R.S. Degree. (Master of Rural Sanitation.) He has recently come to the Univer sity as assistant to the Curator of the Grease Pit at Lenoir Hall. Z 25 o. (VP PERISCOPE r3 2-26, M 3 JZ j CO ) JO to J U JQ DC LU z pSsrr-SAIRiJr rS ME, CARYff SHES O o o o. IV C COT A HAVf- J V I I tFm i F" l V V - ' - j . wmm I V-' . M . ig Tfc V - if It h 1 m . ... 1 . i. s-.- ..... AsPZ-ah DIDN'T MAKE. IT.1'-THrS-GuLP.r-CAINT BE HEWIN, BECUZTH LATE rAOV ADI 1UT K. UTIDC r a. a u JQ ah ?i$Ae e ko ocoo Y you ta& a pg& what ff&LObVfZO"' NOT GOT A Mil CP HBM NUY TMAT 3UT THgV i AN'ltL6H0V YOU A V03 & TWO WK&WKG ; VHAT A:NTOt HO PRIVACY ANP .THGeg j " i nKwnp. a J3 LETTERS TO EDITOR 7Thanks For Service7 To Uie Editor: 1 Ham writing on behalf of the Presbyterian Con gregation to express our appreciation to the many students xvho rendered heroic service during and after the fire xvhich destroyed our sanctuary. There xvere many who assisted the firemen in fighting the fire, and many others who, when it became possible to enter the rear structure, quickly remox-ed all moveable equipment. Through their efforts the church records, all books and equipment in the church office, and almost all of the furnish ings in the educational structure were saved. The next morning sereral students appeared and worked most of the day, helping us to restore some order from the chaos. We feel that the University students are a vital part of the life of our Church. We are always con cerned for what is happening in their lixes and we are proud of the splendid qualities which this emer gency revealed in them. Their reaction in this situ ation has written another fine chapter in the al ready grand tradition of the Carolina student. We know "that, in time, our Church xvill be able to provide new and completely adequate facilities for students and for the local congregation. In the meantime, our Sunday Worship Services will be held at 9:45 and 11:00 a.m. in' Carroll Hall. The West minster Felloxvship will resume meetings in "The Hut" this Sunday. We invite all Presbyterian and other interested students to join us in those places. Vance Barron, Pastor The Presbyterian Church