Wsst 3Batt tEar Heel In its sixty-ninth year of editorial freedom, unhampered by restrictions from either the administration or the student body. The Daily Tar Heel is the official student publication of the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina. All editorials appearing in The Daily Tar Heel are the personal expressions of the editor, unless otherwise credited; they aremot necessarily representative of feeling on the staff. April 4, 19G2 Tel. 942-235G Vol. LXIX, No. 132 Whether Here Or In Russia We Aim At Ourselves Stephen D. James, an advertising copywriter in New York, has come up with refreshingly original ap proach to the knotty problem of how to prevent nuclear war. James and his wife believe that the attitude of suspicion and dis trust that can trigger a nuclear the first step toward overcoming war is to establish a common de nominator between the Russian and American people. Acting on this idea, the Bronx couple has drawn up what has come to be known as the Hostages for Peace plan. The idea is that hundreds of A mericans, including relatives of members of the Administration and Congress, should take up tempor ary residence in the Soviet Union, and the Soviets, in return should send a corresponding number of Russian citizens to spend an equal period of time in the United States. Such an arrangement, James con tends, would deter war since these people would be in target areas. The idea, he says, is as old as Alex ander's hope that his conquering soldiers would marry the enemy's women and settle down in Persia. According to the New York Tim es, the plan has received considera tion from the State Department. Although it was reported about two weeks ago that some 150 per sons have already volunteered to participate in such a project, we personally do not foresee any great flurry of applications forthcoming. James himself says he does not ex pect any "massive" migration this year or next. It was reported after James' suggestion, however, that White llGuse Press Secretary Pierre Sa linger has thought of sending his children to Moscow for a time, but there appears to be no connection with the hostage plan. Aleksei Adzhubei, Premier Khrushchev's son-in-law, was said to be consider ing sending his children to the States this summer. Regretfully, we see no great fu ture for James' plan. To begin with, we can foresee no great de sire on the part of State Depart ment official's relatives to stand in front of American missiles and try to wave them away from Russian EDITORIAL STAFF Wayne King. . Editor Mike Robinson. Associate Editor Harry Lloyd, Harve Harris Managing Editors Lloyd Little Executive News Editor Jim: Clotfelter, Bill Wuamett News Editors Jim Wallace Photography Editor Chuck Mooney Feature Editor Ed Dupree Sports Editor , Curry Kirkpatrick Asst. Sports Editor Garry Blan chard Contributing Editor BUSINESS STAFF Tim Burnett.... Busin-ess Manager Mike Mathers Advertising Manager Jim EvAms.JSubscription Manager Jim Eskridge Circulation Manager Tnm Daily Tab Heel Is published daily except Monday, examination periods and vacations. It is entered as Becond class matter in the post office In Chapel Bill. N. C pursuant with the act of March 8. 1870. Subscription rates i $40 per semester. $3 per year. Tex Daily Tab Hm is a subscriber to the United Press International and ; utilizes the services of the News Bu- , reau of the University of North Caro- . Una. 1 Published by the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill. N. C soil, nor any corresponding upsurge of feeling on the part of relatives of Russian higher-ups. James proposal is similar to a chess move which puts one's own queen in danger to stave off a check-mate. War is hell any way you look at it, and nuclear war par ticularly so. Relatives of high state officials or no, 150, or 200, or even 1,000 Russians on American soil aren't going to stop any buttons from being pushed for any appre ciable amount of time. The game goes on whether the pieces lost are pawns, knights, castles or kings. As Alistair Cooke pointed out re cently in an article commenting on Jame's plan, "the chief snag seems to lie in the contradiction between goodwill and the mechanism for procuring it. 'Diplomacy,' said Machaivelli, 'is a method for secuf ing goodwill. However, if goodwill exists, there is no need for diplom acy.' The same may be said about the base on which the United Na tions was built: that 'unanimity of the permanent powers' which, if had existed at all, would have vit iated the need for a United Na tions." Still, even , ifive -jaccept Cooke's pessimism, and give just heed to all contradictions and shortcomings in the Peace Hostage plan as out lined by James and his wife, we still should be heartened by it. The very fact that James thought of it at all demonstrates that not all of the American people are do voting their energies to devising a way to build a better bomb shelter. Some, like James, are putting in some time trying to find some way to cut through tne pall of imminent destruction with ideas designed to help prevent it. Too, the idea points up some of the ridiculousness of war. Would high state officials here, or in Rus sia, be willing to loose a rain of de struction at the "enemy" if thaT enemy stood alongside members of their own family? Perhaps not. But the truth is that whether these same men give the signal which will plunge the world into war, they have done so at the ex pense of their own families, whether those families are killed in Russia by our own weapons or killed here by theirs. Either way, we aim our weapons at ourselves. Injustice One of the sadder observations facing students at this time of year is that warm weather brings not only green leaves and an almost overpowering desire to lie on your back and look at nothing, but also a corresponding desire on the part of professors to 'cover the mate rial before the semester is over." There seems to be some kind of inverse proportion between student ambition and professorial sense of duty at this particular time of year. It's one of fate's great, in justices that the days get warmer as the spring semester gets shorter. Newspapers Play Down Racial News The same night that Dr. Crane Erinton opened the Carolina Sym posium with a talk on the "Con cepts of Revolution," a small group of people, hear.d Fred Reed, a vet eran reporter, describe the effects of the greatest social revolution facing the South today integration in Augusta, Georgia. None of us knew the story because it had not been carried in any North Carolina newspaper. It is fitting, in a week devoted to the study of rev olutions, that we ask why. As a rule, Southern newspapers are owned by local capitalists. There is no town with competing news papers south of Louisville, Ken tucky, so they are generally mono polies as well. The newspaper own ers are likely to have very strong voices in the local chambers of commerce, and are almost always interested in attracting new indus tries to their cities. The lesson they drew from Little Rock shows plainly that industries are unwilling to establish them selves in cities where the local chamber of commerce cannot assure them "our Negroes are happy." The newspaper owners also know that as Dr. Brinton pointed out, "revolution is contagious." Integration news, which is largely played down, usual ly receives its rightful prominence only when it is possible to project the image of a strife-torn city. An example of what happens if the local gendarmes permit Yankee agitators and uppity niggers to combine forces, no doubt. Since the pattern of integration in Augusta has not followed these lines, it has not received newspaper cover age in the South. Norwood Pratt A Toast To The New Algeria Durning Proposes 'Fair' Plan To Replace 80 Pet. R ule The desire, if not the ability, to present a realistic plan for admin istering fraternity grade averages, to offer some reasons for the plan, and to challenge some previously printed ideas about fraternities and fraternity-University relations im pels us to submit this essay. By answering, some of the ques tions and challenging some of the ideas expressed recently by Mr. Ken Toppell and Mr. Bill Waumett, thereby arriving at different con clusions, we shall lay the basis for a plan more satisfactory than any yet advanced. We wish that Mr. Toppell's analysis were as reason able as his rhetoric is rousing. If he were less resentful of what he chooses to call "discrimination," he could perhaps be more objective. The Eighty Per Cent Rule requires only that four fifths of the member ship of a given house make a "C" average or better, not that, as Mr. Toppell asserts, the fraternity aver age must be higher than the cam pus average. Indeed, the over-all average of the chapter is of no con cern, though it would be better to employ such an average. To pro claim the absurdity .of the Eighty Per Cent Rule by devising a compar able, even more absurd requirement for the faculty is merely to dodge any real issues and to indulge in petty bickering. There are differences between a fraternity and any other organiza tion on campus, and if Mr. Toppell were able to see more precisely what they are and why they exist, he could perhaps accept more read ily both the benefits and obligations which attend these differences: These real differences do not result, to use MrJ Waumett's words, from think ing oneself or his' fraternity superior to "niggers, jews; un-sharp guys, or poor 'people." On those criteria we would1 'be"the last' to claim any such superiority for ourselves, but on grounds f bur r,own choosing we would be I the first to practice the privilege: of associating with whom we please. We r would extend the same right to a group of individuals freely associated; of their own voli tion, in friendship. Fraternity Demands Time and Energy The differences between a frater nity and any other organization lie in the natures of the respective groups. A fraternity tries to become a larger and more lasting part of a member's whole life than does any other group. Involvement and com mitment to a fraternity can become more significant and can last longer than any ties with a group having a less permanent and more local structure. Not only does the frater nity demand a great deal of time, money, energy, and ability from a pledge or member, usually greater demands than those of other organi zations, but also the fraternity at tempts by its dormitory section, din ing room, social calendar, and athletic program to serve its mem bers over a wider range of activities. The most important difference is the initiation ceremony, a ritual which marks differences between pledge Profs Give Quizes During Symposium To the Editor: For several months numerous stu dents on this campus have labored to organize the present symposium. The visiting speakers are probably the most learned and informed in their various fields, yet a great many students are unable to attend the lectures because instructors are giving quizes. (How can we hope to have a suc cessful symposium when we have instructors who pretend to think their quizes are as important as any one of the symposium lecturers. A quiz can be given any time. These speakers will probably never be here again. It seems that the faculty could be a little more cooperative in this matter, not only for the remainder of this symposium, but in years to come. Pet West You people who write to the Tar Heel and complain about the dis crimination on our campus. You people who write to the DTH and attack the fraternity system be cause it's unfair. You people who write to our campus newspaper and criticize the faculty, South Build ing, the Carolina co-ed, Poli. Sci. 41, your neighbors, Lenoir Hall, your political opponents, and the Ken nedy administration, put down your sarcastic pencils, get off your smug, complacent rear-ends, and step wag gin your tongues long enough to listen to: Good music, somebody else, or, better still, your Carolina Sym posium. You might pick up some facts to reinforce those flimsy argu ments; you might be inspired or in terested by intelligent people; or you might even learn something. And it's free! J. N. Irvine and member and between a frater nity and all other groups, and which gives meaning and permanence to a fraternal association which other groups lack. Either the inability to see these differences or the unwil lingness to admit them can cause a person not to realize that stand ards applied to a fraternity must be different from those applied to any other organization. If a fratenity is demanding in its requirements, it can also be gener ous in bestowing its benefits; but both should be undertaken by only the young man who can meet extra requirements and enjoy extra bene fits because he has extra time, extra money, extra energy, yes, Mr. Top pell, even extra ability over and above what are required by the academic departments and the ad ministration of the University. Un fortunately these ideal conditions do not always exist, and there is all too often ample justification for Mr. Waumett's assertion that fraternities are "so hedonistic in nature that they must be curtailed and harras sed (sic)," though we would ques tion harassment as an effective solution to any problem. Too many times fraternities become mutual admiration societies devoted to per petuating a group of the same kind of person, prejudices, narrow-minded attitudes, unnecessary restric tions, and most of the other per versities known to mankind. "Raison d'Etre" Bearing in mind the nature of a fraternity as it can and should be, the differences between it and other organizations, the extra demands and benefits conferred by a fraternity, and the requisites which the frat ernity member should possess, we gladly acknowledge that the Univer sity does have a right to exercise control over a fraternity on the basis of its grade "average. And the frat ernity member should neither resent such control nor think himself dis criminated against. If he must, he may consider it part of the price he pays for membership. Better, he should realize that the scholarship average is an excellent index to the health and strength of the frat ernity chapter at all levels of op eration, and should work to improve the fraternity average for his own sake primarily, but also for the chapter's sake. The differences be tween a fraternity and any other or ganization justify, even require, that the University enforce scholarship standards and administer penalties for violations. It is only right that the fraternity prove itself worthy of respect, indeed prove its "raison d'etre," by remaining in good stand ing academically. Having shown some reasons for a neccessary control over scholarship, we are now faced with the problem of formulating an effective plan. The Eighty Per Cent Rule seems to be both unfair and ineffective, though we shall not enter another in the long list of diatribes against it. Since an entire chapter is penalized, each member feeling the punishment to the same degree, it seems only fair that an arithmetic average of the whole chapter's grades should be use as the criterion for judgment, each man's grades contributing" equally to that final average. The average could be determined by taking the grand total of each man's grade points weighted with the num ber of semester hours and dividing the sum by the total number of the semester hours represented. This average would reflect more ac curately than any other measure the level of scholarship of the chapter as a whole. The administration might then require that each chapter's av erage be in numerical value the equivalent of a "C." If a chapter should fail to meet the required standard, some members would still suffer for the failure of others, but there is a chance that the high grades of some members would counterbalance the low grades of others. Of course the grades of every member wouid have to be tal lied. To work properly, this method of control requires accuracy, pat ience to smooth out difficulties, and mutual trust between the Univer sity and individual chapters, but the system is feasible and fair. In answer to . Mr. Toppell, Mr. Wuamett, and all other interested persons, there is ample justification for University control over a frater nity chapter based upon its grade average, and the arithmetic average of everyone's grades is the best measure of the real level of scholar ship. Russell Durning Ted Kennedy Learns From His Mistakes "Well that should finish him!" remarked one person on reading in the newspaper that "Ted" Kennedy had been asked to leave Harvard, during his freshman year, for asking a friend to take his examination for him.' I said not necessarily so, every body should be given at least one chance to learn from mistakes No body is perfect, and most of us have to learn by trial and error The Greeks said centuries ago.-'Man learns wisdom only through suffer in" " For most people, one lesson is sufficient; for some it takes several lessons; a few incorrigibles never learn and they wind up permanent residents of our penitentiaries. It is up to parents and to society to see that the lessons are learned, for it is no kindness to anyone to let them go through life thinking that because they have not been caught that lying, cheating, and stealing was all right. Recently it would certainly seem that many of our men in the highest executive positions in the financial world, never learned that lesson. How they must regret that the rod wasn't applied when the suffering would have been much less and the disgrace not so humiliating. The purpose of discipline is to form character, not to destroy people. I am sure "Ted" Kennedy profited by his mistake committed in his youth. He is, undoubtedly stronger for having suffered for his error. "He that is without sin among you, let him cast the first stone." Oetlia Connor Women Are Tightwads, Study Shows CHICAGO (UPI) One study shows it's the wife who's the tight wad in most families. The average man would happily give his wife more money to spend if she would only let him, says a counseling firm. A pilot study by the Public Re lations Board shows it's the little woman who looks upon going to the hairdresser, new hats and sirloin steak for dinner as extravagances. This is not to say most husbands have acquired the wisdom to un derstand that mink is no luxury. But if husbands aren't quite that easy-going, the study still indicates they would rather buy something for the wife and children than for themselves. Not so the ladies! Most are ready the study indicates, to cut out their husbands' beer and cigar money when the budget runs low. Husbands' bowling and spending for home work shops also come under the heading of extravagances in most wives' books. More evidence that men are more generous: most of the husbands studied wanted more labor-saving household appliances for their wives, but the women saw little need for such husband-savers as power lawn mowers. FAMILY WITH PULL ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Two broth ers are dental school deans. Dr. Edward J. Forrest is dean of the University of Pittsburgh School of Dentistry. His brother. Dr. Stephen P. Forrest, is dean of the St. Louis University School of Dentistry. 1 Robinson's Rambling 11 s That the American girl is a good healthy one I will not argue, but the unmarried one, according to my ob servations seems to be prone to cer tain slight maladies. These I have enumerated as follows, along with my surmise as to their causes: Headache: This generally comes on when she has a date with you and is going out with someone else. Deafness: A temporary affliction usually brought on by such remarks as, "Let's walk instead of drive." Itching palms: Caused by the sight of a handsome bachelor with a little money, or any bachelor with a lot of money. Hallucinations: She thinks you want to marry her. Say, what in the world was it you said to her last night? Cold feet: A condition which de velops all of a sudden a little while after she answers yes to a marriage proposal. Music Logic Maurice Abravael, maestro of the iJtah Symphony Orchestra can think as fasf as he can whip his baton. Not long ago, a young music lover tackled Maurice in a friendly debate. The young man bragged he never attended concerts. "Why should V" he asked. "I got all the great music on records at home. When I want to hear it, I just turn on the phono graph." Maestro Abravael pondered a min ute. "You remind me," he said, "of a boy who spent all of his time in his room admiring his collection of Pin-up girls, never realizing that the chic chick next door had something which the pin-ups didn't have. Mike Robinson Woman is a charming creature who changes her heart as easily as she changes her gloves. -Balzac t,