AAUP Speech
The American Association
of University Professors will
sponsor a speech tonight by
Duke Professor Edward
Taryakian on "A Sociologist
Looks at Student Unrest." The
speech wi3 be presented at 8
pjn. in the Faculty Lounge of
DevHalL
? ? -3 c:
Meeting Postponed
The meeting for students
interested in helping the
Biafrans has been postponed
until Wednesday in the GM
Lounge at 4 p.m.
76 Years Of Academic Freedom
Volume 76, Number 61
o
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1963
Founded February 23, 1893
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By OWEN DAVIS
DTH Sports Editor
GREENSBORO Charlie
Scott whipped the team home,
and Dick Grubar, riding
shotgun, picked off a few
When his teammates
couldn't do it, Scott did.
Oregon kept it close until the
last two minutes, and when the
Tar Heels needed a bucket,
there was Scott throwing in
5-footers with his
passes and points to open the crowd-appealing quickness.
Carolina basketball season here
Monday night with a tough
89-78 victory over Oregon.
Scott, junior All-Conference,
Olympic gold medalist,
and coach Dean Smith's
bread-and-butter, scored 34
points and grabbed 11
rebounds, in one of his classiest
shows ever.
Grubar meanwhile,
Carolina's play-maker in seasons
past, discovered point-scoring
is the thing to do when nobody
else can hit.
The Schenectady, N. Y.,
senior, getting most of his
points on the fast breaks,
scored 18 and made several key
steals late in the game.
It was not a team
performance which could
finish number two in the
nation again, but it was typical
of season openers.
Carolina made 23 floor
mistakes, and its defense was
not consistently good. The Tar
Heels also shot only 44.7 per
cent from the field, but in a
reversal of form from last year
hit 79.3 per cent from the foul
line.
Scott and Grubar did most
of the scoring, but Bill Bunting
was the clutch defender.
String-bean Bunting hit the
defensive boards better than
ever and grabbed 14 rebounds.
While center Rusty Clark sat
out part of the game in foul
trouble and did not have one
of his better nights, Bunting
played the tall defense and
took away the second Oregon
shot with his rebounding.
Carolina discovered Oregon
was for real early.
After taking a quick 10-1
lead, the Tar Heels found
themselves watching Duck
guard Billy Gaskins hit
everything he shot, whether
layup or 25-footer.
Gaskins went to work with
his team trailing 12-4, and
poured in 17 straight points
without missing a shot. That
narrowed it to 21-19, and it
seemed as if nobody could stop
Gaskins.
Oregon tied the score at
28-alI, but then Scott took
over. He hit two quick field
goals, and when the Ducks
narrowed it to 38-35, went
underneath for two more
baskets.
At the half spectators were
wondering whether the other
eight players besides Scott and
Gaskins were worth their
laundry money.
Gaskins had 23 points on 11
of 17 from the field while
Scott had 18 points and eight
rebounds. Smith found a
damper for Gaskins in the
second half, and the
Washington, D. C, junior
attempted only six shots.
But the Ducks kept it close
anyway, mainly because a
senior reserve with the unlikely
name of Glen Campbell (he's
not from Wichita) controlled t
the offensive boards and
carried the scoring load.
It was Campbell who
narrowed the gap to 60-58
with just over 12 minutes left
to play. Again it was Campbell
scoring to pull the Ducks closer
at 6S-64 and 75-72.
But Oregon could never get
the lead.
When Oregon came within
two, Scott put Carolina out
front again by four, then six.
And it was all in Charlie Scott's
style.
N. C. University
Central Agency
Needed - Report
By TOM GOODING
DTH Staff Writer
The State Board of Higher
Education recommended the
establishment of an agency to
supervise the State's 16 public
universities and colleges in a
massive report issued last
Tuesday.
The report called for the
general assembly to enact
legislation to create "a single
agency to plan and coordinate
higher education, with
authority to review budgets
and prepare a single budget
request for higher education."
The board said the current
system of higher education is
Bound but, "The lack of clearly
assigned authority and
responsibility has been
extremely damaging to higher
education."
The recommendations of
the board would extend to
1975 and cost nearly $300
million. This is in addition to
the regular expenses of the
institutions which are
estimated to double during this
period.
It is not enough, the board
said, "for the educational
institutions to raise their sights;
the people of the State must
raise their expectations of the
system of higher education.
The recommendations
included:
Increasing faculty salaries to
meet national standards and
equalizing salaries in Negro
universities and colleges with
those in white, at a cost of
$145.4 million by 1975.
Major upgrading of
traditionally Negro colleges to
give them ''a form
and . . . spirit quite different
from anything they have
known in the past."
Expansion of library
facilities at all institutions at a
cost of $19.2 million.
An increased student aid
program, including greater
appropriations for scholarship
at a cost that could reach $60 :
million for the six-year period.
Concentrating the training
of doctors and dentists at the
University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, at least through
1975.
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Then Grubar, with two
quick layups put the Heels
ahead by seven when they had
led by only three with five
minutes remaining.
The UNC fast break was
off-and-on, and Grubar turned '
it on at the right time.
With 2:30 remaining,
Carolina went into its usual
four-corners offense with an
81-74 lead.
The Ducks chased the ball
around the spread offense, but
were always too late.
rove
new
Campii
DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnabel
PRE-REGISTRATION activities in Hanes Hall kept-secretaries knd students busy. Maybe these
early students will get what they want. Otherwise, drop-add as usual. But who ever heard of
administrative efficiency anyway?
By WAYNE HURDER
DTH Editor
RALEIGH The University
of North Carolina Board of
Trustees Monday approved a
plan to make Asheville-Bilt-more
and Wilmington Colleges
members of the Consolidated
University.
If the North Carolina Board
of Higher Education and the
General Assembly endorse the
proposal the two colleges will
become the University of
North Carolina at WTilmington
and the University of North
Carolina at Asheville.
The proposal is the result of
a study of the colleges and the
possibility of including in the
Consolidated University that
was begun last May.
At the. meeting a special
subcommittee of the Visiting'
Committee that came to
campus Sept. 20, headed by
Tom Moore, recommended
that the Trustees establish a
committee to investigate the
Chapel Hill parking problem.
The committee that made
the study, headed by Trustee
chairman of the North Carolina
Board of Higher Education.
Hill offered a substituted
motion calling for the two
institutes to be designated
Asheville College of the
University of North Carolina
J.A. Prevost of Waynesville, and Wilmington College of the
concluded, in their report, that
the merger "would , be in the
best interest of . . . (1) higher
education in North Carolina,
(2) the areas in which the
colleges are located, (3) the
colleges themselves, and (4) the
University of North Carolina.
The expanrion move is the
second made by the University
since it was organized on a
consolidated basis. In 1965
Charlotte College was made a
part of the University.
The motion approving the
proposal was passed over some
opposition primarily that of
Watts HilL Sr., father of the
ToMlA Over AiQoMim
Campus SDS Organization Has Become Greatly Decentralized
"The
Carolina
standard that North
must insist upon is
that its best be as good as the
best anywhere in the world."
Governor Moore said the
recommendations of the board
"have merit."
While calling the report "the
beginning of a new era in
higher education," Governor
Moore said, t4Careful
consideration should be given
them (the ideas) and amply
provision made for full public
discussion before any specific
recommendations are made to
the General Assembly."
By STEVE ENFIELD
DTH Staff Writer
Columbia University the nation's hotbed of
student activism last spring has gone pacifist
for the winter.
Hamilton Hall, Lowe Library, and other
seized buildings are now liberated and the
fading letters "S-D-S" are scrawled on several
statues scattered about the uptown New York
City campus. But these decaying symbols are all
that remains of the famed May-June revolts.
Anyone who visits the campus (as this
reporter did for two days prior to the
Thanksgiving break) expecting to feel the spirit
that made the phrase Columbia style revolution
a byword in the vocabulary of the student
radical will be completely faked out.
"Total apathy" is how one Columbia
freshman characterizes the mood of the
campus. And from what this reporter observed,
he wasn't far wrong.
The Students for a Democratic Society
Dubos Will Deliver Annual
Merriman Lecture Wednesday
(SDS) have had no major demonstrations since
orientation week. The main leader of last
spring's revolt, Mark Rudd, has been expelled
and is now on a college speaking tour. Some 70
other prominent participants are awaiting
administrative verdicts on their status as
students; the first case this year will be tried by
the Law School Judiciary Tribunal next week.
The actual organization of SDS has greatly
decentralized. The lone strike committee of last
spring has been replaced by seven different
groups called Radical Action Projects (RAPs).
Each RAP is semi-autonomous and focuses on
such areas as expansion, education, imperialism,
and revolutionary theory.
The entire Columbia student body (only
14 voted in a campus-wide election two weeks
ago) seems just as lethargic as SDS. In fact, SDS
activities have alienated several Columbia
scholars causing a reaction to the spring riots.
"Everybody's tired of rhetoric, we want to
get back to studying and the weather isn't
conducive to holding outdoor rallies, either," a
student explained.
On the surface, it would seem that the
transformation of a university from policies of
confrontation to hibernation is not that
surprising.
Columbia dorm residents make their own
rules and they impose no self-restrictions on
their unlimited visitation.
Across Broadway at Barnard College, the
coeds have eliminated curfews. They also have
parietals program which allows male visitors in
their rooms until 2 a.m. on weekends.
But despite this abounding liberalism, the
two major issues of the Colubia revolution have
not been resolved. The Institute for Defense
Analysis no longer has formal ties with the
university but it still carries on research in
Morningside Heights and the original site for
the construction of Columbia's controversial
gyrmasium has not been ruled out by the
administration of Acting President Andrew
Cordier.
"The administration," asserts Oren Root,
Managing Editor of The Columbia Spectator "is
playing a waiting game."
"They can see the apathy in the
restructuring programs and are remaining mute
on a lot of the issues. By not provoking any
confrontations, they'll eventually be able to
manipulate the restructuring, leaving them with
most of the power," Root said.
Root feels that the student body, which he
says is more apathetic than he has ever seen it
in his four years at Columbia, will quite
possibly allow the administration this
manipulation.
He added, however, that SDS was weak at
this time last year and was still able to act as a
"catalyst" for many of the students.
About the possibilities of another revolt on a
scale with the last one, Root said:
'Tf anything gets going it'll be in April, but
no university admnistration in the country will
allow a duplication of the paralyzing revolt we
had here."
Dr. Rene Jules Dobos,
Professor of the Rockefeller
University will deliver the
annual Merriman lecture here
Wednesday night.
Dr. Dubos will speak on
"Civilization and the Man of
Flesh and Bone" at his address
in Carroll Hall at 8 p.m.
A microbiologist and
experimental pathologist, Dr.
Dubos is a pioneer in the field
of antibacterial research. He
discovered the first antibiotics,
throthricin and gramididin
almost 30 years ago.
From his work, the way to
the development of penicillin
and the multitude of
now-indispensible antibiotics
Death Ruled Suicide
The death of a first-year law
student at the University of
North Carolina on Monday,
Nov. 25 has been ruled a
suicide, according to Carrboro
Police Chief John Llewellyn.
Philip L. Oldham, 26, died
of self-inflicted gunshoj
wounds at his apartment at
306 Shelton St. in Carrboro.
Oldham, a native of
Ramseur, was found by police
f a n m. Monday. Llewellyn
said he had apparently
died
three hours earlier.
Oldham was an
undergraduate student at UNC.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Joyce Gaines Oldham; his
father and stepmother, Mr. and
Mrs. Van Oldham of Coleridge;
two sisters, Mrs. Edward J.
Neumeier of San Anselmo,
Calif., and Mrs. Phil
Yarborough Jr. of Sanford; and
one brother, Jerry Key Oldham
of Greensboro.
that followed was opened.
Dr. Dubos has Won several
awards during his career,
among them the Lasker Award
in Public Health of the
American Public Health
Association in 1948 and the
Arches of Science Award given
by the Pacific Science Center
in Seattle.
That award, which was only
the second given, consists of a
gold medal and a $2,500 cash
award. It has been termed, the
American "Nobel Prize."
Most of Dr. Dubos work is
concerned with the effects that
environmental forces both
p h y s i o c h e m i c a I and
biological exert on human
life. He also has become
involved in the socio-medical
problems of underprivileged
communities.
Following the talk in Carroll
Hall, there will be a reception
given in . Dr. Dubos honor at
the faculty lounge in the
Morehead Building. All are
invited tc attend.
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WORK CONTINUES on the Bingham Annex. Workmen took
advantage of the holiday lull in student activity to put in some of
their own. And it didn't stop when the students returned.
DTH Stag Photo By Tom Schnabel
Although it may be a bit more difficult to get to Lenoir or the
Pine Room now, sometime in the future there will be better
facilities in Bingham.
Universitv of North Carolina.
He wanted the two schools to
be limited to just granting
bachelor degrees and no
doctoral degrees.
He contended that the state
could not afford to develop
doctoral-degree awarding
institutes at the two cities, that
not enough planning had been
made, and that there might be
better cities in which an
additional branch of the
. University could be placed.
He also said that the
General Assembly might be
reluctant to grant university
status to the two places
whereas it would probably be
more favorable if the two
institutes were to be strictly
undergraduate schools.
Prevost, however, replied
that UNC-A and UNC-W will
remain undergraduate
institutes in the foreseeable
future but that the members of
the committee didn't want to
put any statutory limitations
on the two colleges, rather
leaving it to the Board of
Trustees to decide later
whether they want it to begin
doctoral programs.
Hill's motion was defeated
overwhelmingly, getting only
eight votes from the 100
member Board of Trustees.
The committee, in its
report, offered the proposed
merger as a solution to the
"serious shortage of graduates
of superior undergraduate
institutions in North Carolina."
"These campuses," the
report said, "would appeal to
students who prefer
institutions of moderate size
and with less traditional and
more experimental approach to
undergraduate education.
Both Wilmington College
and Asheville-Biltmore College
had sought entry into the
Consolidated University earlier,
in 1962, but were turned
down.
Moore, besides
recommending a study of the
parking problem at UNC,
recommended that more
communication take place
between faculty, students, and
administration; that a
committee study retirement
plans for faculty; and that
graduate students get given
reading rooms in the library.
He said that a majority of
the students are happy with
the University, but said there
were a small minority of
students urging social and
educational reform.
"The majority of them," he
said, "if they had to go to
heaven tomorrow would find
their crown too tight, their
robes ill-fitting, or something
wrong."
He complimented the
Administration "for handling
the problems of growth in a
fine way."
t
He told the Trustees that it
is necessary to develop for the
students "a life not only
gratifying to themselves but
one which will contribute tc
their future growth."