Foreign Trav
Any foreign
planning to leave the
during the Christmas hou
who has not yet checked v
the Internationa! Stun
Advisor (Uo carr Buildii
should do so at once. I'asspor
are needed so that the prope
Papers may be issued.
Volume 70. Number 67
Star
X V
Orientation
Interviews for Men's and
Women's Orientation
Co-ordinators will be held
Wednesday from 3-4 p.m. in
Roland Parker II. Anyone
unable to attend should call
Bruce Cunningham at
968-9215.
n
76 r.s of Editorial b'rvvilom
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY. DECEMBER Hi. lOGs
Founded February 23, 1893
SSOC 'Raa8i'
Sells Out Here
The first issue of the
"Radish" a weekly 10 rent
newspaper sponsored by
Southern Student Organizing
Committee, (SSOC) appeared
Monday, and the 1,000 issues
printed were sold out b 3:00
p.m.
The cover of the newspaper
showed a photograph of the
arrest of Brian MeKav at the
street party held Nov. 5. The
15 inside pages contained
articles about activities that
have involved SSOC, New
University Conference (NUC),
United Anti-War Mobilization
Front (UAWMK) and N. C
Draft Resistance Union.
According to Oeorge
Vlasits, the production of the
first issue cost slightly less than
S50.00. Next week, he plans to
print 1,250 issues, 50 of which
will be mailed out.
The first issue included
articles of local interest, such
as the UAWMK march held
Dec. 7; articles of national
interest, such as status of the
RIack Panther Party; and
one-sentence flashes such ar,
"Disneyland has banned
hippies from its grounds."
The last two pages of the
newsletter contain a calendar
of events that includes SSOC
and NUC business, activities
such as the Durham Boycott,
events such as the debate
between a representative of
Dow Chemical and Dr. Lewis
Lipsitz to be held Wednesday
at 8 p.m. in Oerrard Hall, and
entertainment like Alice in
Wonderland, the Dec. 14 Fret?
Flick.
Vlasits outlined the cost of
the "Radish" as follows: Two
cases of paper at $12 each, $8
for ink, $5 for the picture, $3
for the negative, $1 for the
plate, and $5 for the paper
used in the coyer.
A meeting for all who will'
help with the "Radish" wilt be
Law School Fund
Headed By Moore
Governor Dan K. Moore
Monday accepted general
chairmanship of a $1
million-plus fund raising
campaign to benefit the Law
School of the
University ot
North Carolina.
The campaign is called the
"Second Century Fund",
emphasizing the fact that the
Law School in Chapel Hill has
served the state for over a
hundred years. Ultimate
purpose of the campaign is "to
provide the margin for
excellence."
"The campaign will
commence today," said
Governor Moore, and will be
concluded by June 1, 1969.
"We embark upon it with
confidence and enthusiasm."
Now in a new building on
the campus in Chapel Hill and
with expanded enrollment and
enlarged faculty, the liw
School, of w hich Gov. Moore is
an alumnus, "stands today on
the threshold of true
excellence by any standard of
judgment of law schools," the
Governor said.
"We are not talking about
shoring up a faltering
institution," said Gov. Moore,
"but about providing the extra
which will now allow its
achievement and maintenance
of nationally recognized
excellence."
In order to accomplish that
purpose an "infusion" will be
sought from private sources, he
said. "At least" one million
dollars is the goal.
Law School Dean J.
Dickson Phillips attended a
conference in the Governor's
office at which the campaign
by the Law School Foundation
Council was announced.
A "campaign cabinet"
composed of Law School
alumni was disclosed, to be
aided by others working at the
county level. Ketchum, Inc., a
professional fund-raising firm,
is giving technical counsel and
direction to the campaign.
The campaign cabinet
includes also Paui Johnston of
Chapel Hill and New York;
James K. Dorsett, Raleigh;
Thornton Brooks, Greensboro;
Albert Ellis. Jacksonville; E. K.
held at 0:30 p.m. Wednesday,
at the SSOC office, on the
corner of Church and
Rosemary- streets.
One story in the "Radish"
told of the- formation of the
Chapel Hill Renters'
Association, which is
sponsored by the University
and Community Committee of
SSOC, in an attempt to
organize tenants for action on
rent rates.
In one article, Jack Hicks, a
faculty member of the English
department at UNC, give his
account of the street party
held Nov. 5. Hicks was among
the six persons arrested that
night.
The first story in the paper
concerned the UAWMF march
and rally held Dec. 7. Fifteen
of the participants went to
Fayetteville following the
march.
Henry Demies Charges
By JOE SANDERS
DTH Staff Writer
A charge by Black Student
Movement (BSM) Chairman
Preston Dobbins and two
representatives of the New
University Conference (NUC)
that they had been misled by
Howard Henry, Director of the
Carolina Union, was denied
emphatically by Henry
yesterday.
Dobbins said that Henry
told him on Nov. 12 that no
admission could be charged for
Stokley Carmichael's speech
Powe, Durham; Richmond
Bernhardt, Greensboro; T. A.
Uzzell, Asheville; Robert H.
Schnell, New York and Dean
Phillips.
Gov. Moore said that
vigorous solicitation will be
conducted among the law
school's alumni, and among
businesses, industries and
foundations.
Citing the necessity to
continue to strive for quality,
Gov. Moore said the Law
School at Chapel Hill in recent
times has been severely
challenged to maintain and
improve its quality while
handling the major expansion
demanded by post World War
11 pressures of enrollment.
"As an indication of this
pressure," said Gov. Moore, "It
is rather startling to realize that
in the last decade, the student
body has more than doubled in
size, and the faculty will
almost be trebeled in size as of
the end of this year."
IT
Is
Is UNC a racist institution
in comparison with other
universities? This is the
question three NSA delegates,
Alan Ranch, Howard Lipton,
and Alan Carpenter sought to
answer by attending an NSA
4 4I nstiiutional Racism"
Conference at Notre Dame
November 28-December 1.
"We have all the problems
of a Northern school,"
reported Carpenter. He
explained that UNC is a white,
middle-class institution with
courses taught from a "white,
middle-class point of view."
According to the delegates,
there seems to be little
realization on the part of the
students of the racism
problem. They noted that no
break is given to
underprivileged students with
regard to the admissions policy
of the University or to
scholarship grants.
It . " j 92 -..ww
(if ) - -T-' Si
' ; - ' I .
- , -r ...... ..-"
-- - -- - - 1 - '
DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnabel
Ann Wilson Solicits Buyers For 'Radish'
... A New Left Newsletter On Campus
CU, BSM Heads Dispute
November 21 in Carmichael
Auditorium. He was told that
collections only would be
allowed. As a result, he said,
the Black Student Movement
fell short of meeting
Carmichael's $1,500 fee,
collecting only $700.
Bob Konrad and Bernard
Gilman, representatives of the
NUC, said yesterday that they
contacted Dobbins after Henry
expressed surprise that the
BSM had not charged
admission to the Carmichael
speech. - - - '
"When reached in his office,
Henry told a DTH reporter,
"There was never any question
of charging admission when I
talked to Preston. The question
of contributions did come up
and we discussed it at some
length."
Dobbins, however, said that
he went back to Henry
yesterday after being contacted
by Konrad and Gilman, and
asked why he had been told he
could not charge admission.
Henry, Dobbins said, then
denied that he had ever told
Dobbins admission could not
be charged.
Dobbins reported that
yesterday's conversation went:
"Do you mean to lie to me
and say you told me I could
charge admission?" Dobbins
asked.
'There must have been
some misunderstanding,"
Henry said.
. Dobbins said that on Nov.
12 he had told Henry that
Carmichael was going to speak
and Henry asked if there would
be a speaker's fee. Dobbins
reports that Henry said, "You
know you can't charge
admission, don't you?"
Henry said yesterday that,
"The only time there is a
question of charging admission
is for a concert or speech that
UNC
Discussed At NSA Conference
"The administration is
geared to accept the, white,
middle-class students, for the
most part from only
predominately white high
schools in North
Carolina those that can
prepare the students
academically better than most
predominantly black high
schools," reported Howard
Lipton, another delegate.
Negroes are not given any
allowances or considerations
for attending a poorer high
school on the incoming
requirements.
As solutions, the delegation
suggested that orientation
"should serve to enlighten the
students to the fact that racism
and other similar problems
exist at Chapel Hill." They feel
that the University needs to
adopt a system similar to that
of N. C. "State: admitting the
disadvantaged students by
?
is to be held in Memorial or
Carmichael. For these two halls
the Carolina Union must
provide guards and
ticket-takers if an admission is
to be charged.
"We charge exactly what it
costs us to employ these
people if we provide them. We
cannot turn over these halls to
a group without providing
these services and without an
account of funds being kept."
Circulating
Referendum On Jeopardy
By BRYAN CUMMING
DTH Staff Writer
Over 1,200 students have
signed a petition calling for a
referendum to eliminate
double jeopardy which was
started Dec. 6 by the North
East Campus Constitutional
Reform Committee.
When the required 1,500
signatures are collected, the
petition will be presented to
Student Body President Ken
Day, who will direct the
Elections Board to conduct the
referendum on this
constitutional amendment.
Dale Sims, co-chairman of
the N.E. Campus
Constitutional Reform
Committee, says that the
petition is "more powerful"
than the student legislature "as
an instrument of student
opinion."
The amendment stated in
the petition says that any
student who is prosecuted by
civil courts "shall be immune
from prosecution and
acis
slightly bending entrance
requirements, with a summer
compensatory program to
provide basic skills bringing the
black students up to a
competitive level.
Courses at UNC need to
reflect contributions of the
minority groups, Ranch
explained. "We do not mean
that we need specific courses"
to deal with minority groups,
but the minority impressions
need to be incorporated into
standard courses." United
States literature, sociology, and
psychology were courses
named that are "devoid of
minority representation."
The delegates also returned
with the suggestion that ihe
student body at Chapel Hill
needs a bona fide legal
representative to handle
violations of students' rights.
In Decisive
TT
jnieei
By OWEN DAVIS
DTH Sports Editor
CHARLOTTE-It's called
the. Second Awakening in the
history books, that time when
19 th century Americans
rediscovered the faith.
But for North Carolinians
Monday night it was the Great
Second Half, a marvelous
20-minute period in which thr
Tar Heels rediscovered their
temporarily lost shooting form
and gunned with more fervor
than any Campground Preacher
could create.
The Second Half, which
buried Vanderbilt in a 100-78
UNC victory, was a runaway.
Carolina scored 61 points
after trailing by 1 at halftime.
The Tar Heels shot 58.5 per
cent from the field after hitting
only 31.3 per cent in the first
half.
"When I talked with
Preston," Henry said, "I
merely suggested where the
collections be made. I felt that
the collections should not be
taken in any way that would
make the guests feel obligated
to pay."
Konrad and , Gilman said
that publication of the rules
governing the use of facilities
.(Continued on page 6)
"Petition-. S eeks
punishment by the student
judiciary for the same act."
According to Sims, the
Committee is a group of
students living in Lower Quad
who have been concerned
about the Campus Code. The
group's co-chairman is Rick
Finger of Everett.
Much of the earlier work in
the student legislature on
Campus Code reform was done
by Raphael Perez, who
represents the Lower Quad. On
Dec. 5, the Student Legislature
voted to hold a referendum on
Tuesday, Dec. 17, but the
double jeopardy clause was
excluded from this
referendum.
Sims decided upon the use
of the petition "when student
legislature failed to act." Since
the double jeopardy issue was
Why Aren 't These Men
Is i
H
i
i f
100-78 Win.
fa
And it was run-and-gunned,
shoot-and-score all the way.
The slumbering Tar Heels,
who looked tired in the first
half, came alive for the best
half of the season.
"I thought it was a great
second half comeback for us."
said Coach Dean Smith after
the game. "I told the players at
the half that I was kinda glad
in a way that they were
behind.
"1 don't know if we had a
hard time getting up after the
great win at Kentucky, but a
good team should not have
that problem."
Whether having problems or
not, Carolina got its fourth win
of the season against no
defeats. And that's against
some of the best competition
in the country.
The Tar Heels pulled a Dr.
Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde act
against Vanderbilt, assuming
the soft-mannered role of
Jeckyll in the first half and
then tearing apart the victim
Commodores a la Hyde in the
second.
It was close basketball early,
and the lead changed hands
nine times. In the first period,
the score standing deadlocked
four times.
Vandy's Tom Hagan, a great
guard, teamed with center Bob
Bundy to score 14 and 15
points respectively while
Carolina was flat.
Carolina did not shoot well
and was not dominanting the
boards as well as it should
against the smaller team.
Vandy led 40-39 at half
not included in the action
taken by the legislature, "they
have abrogated their rights to
working for the student body,"
according to Sims.
Sims hopes to obtain the
necessary signatures on the
petition by Wednesday, after
which it will be presented to
Ken Day. Sims hopes the
referendum will be held in
January before exams.
According to the
constitution, the President of
the Student Body is required
to direct the Elections Board
to conduct the referendum,
after the signatures have been
validated.
Among the members of the
N.E. Campus Constitutional
Reform Committee are Mark
Rodin, Bill Swink, Bobby
Crump, Dudley Whittaker, and
Bill Murdock.
t9Trr.W
fcr?M tineas a l
n rmn
asm
At Saturday's protest march and rally sponsored by the United
Anti-War Mobilization Front (UAWMF), the two men pictured
here, along with two others, were observed observing the
marchers.
Also pictured are the license plates of their cars, a gold 1967
Chevrolet Biscayne (I.) and a 1965 turouoise blue Ford Fairlane
(r.).
A check with the Motor Vehicles Department in Raleigh
revealed that both cars are registered to: U.S. Government, U.S.
Army, Region 2, 111th Military Intelligence Group, Federal
Building, Fayetteville.
When asked if he worked for the government, the man in the
left hand picture refused to admit it, but said he "might just be a
concerned citizen."
Later, the man in the right hand picture and another
"concerned citizen" tailed DTH columnist Mike Cozza, Chapel
Hill Weekly photographer Mike McGowan and free-lance pho
tographers G ene Wang and Woody Clark for about 30 minutes.
When last seen, these "concerned citizens" were heading in the
direction of Fayetteville.
Hop
time, and Srr.ith began to
squirm in his seat,
remembering the 89-76 defeat
UNC took from Vandy last
year.
But his hot-heeled team
allayed his fears at the outset
of the second frame,
outscoring the Commodores
11-2 from the tap and never
trailing again.
At one point UNC went
from a 55-52 lead to 79-60
advantage, a 22-8 point
increase including 8 straight
buckets.
When 6-9 Bundy fouled out
with 9:17 remaining and the
Commodores behind by 9
points, it wns a sure Carolina
victory.
The men who made it all
possible were several, but they
were especially Bill Bunting,
Dickie Grubar and Charlie
Scott.
Bunting, the thin forward
who has awakened himself in
the scoring column this season,
bagged 22 points, including 18
UNC Judiciary
Study Planned
By TOM GOODING
DTH Staff Writer
The entire framework of the
UNC judicial system will be
discussed and reevaluated in an
open meeting in Roland Parker
3 at 3 p.m. Wednesday.
The meeting was initiated
by Student Body President
Ken Day and will be chaired by
Charles Jeffress, a member of
the student legislature.
Jeffress said, "Ken hopes to
obtain a total reevaluation of
the judicial system by trying to
find out what we want and
what we expect and require of
students in terms of a judicial
system. Then we want to try to
decide how these things should
be carried out.
"The question is not
whether we should have a
supreme court, an Honor Court
and a residence College Court,
but whether we should have an
honor system with an honor
and a campus code. WTe may
want to abolish all existing
frameworks of the honor
system.
"We hope that the people
who come to this meeting will
scrap the knowledge of our
existing system and talk about
how an honor system should
be based. From there we can
begin to construct some norms
that will be adequate and
relevant to the University
community." 1
-oh9d
J!
anciy
in the second half.
He connected from
underneath, the corners, you
name it, and Scott set him up
on many an occasion.
Scott, who did not have his
best shooting night with 11
points, was a sparkplug with
his passing.
He was officially credited
with 9 assists. Nil appeared to
have many more.
Grubar meanwhile joined
Bunting in scoring 22 markers,
and he weakened the Vandy
1-3-1 zone with his outside
shooting.
Rebounding was Carolina's,
especially after Bundy foyled
out. With Rusty Clark, who
scored 18 points himself, and
Scott claiming 15 rebounds
each. UNC killed the
Commodores on the board by
a 51-36 margin.
But it was the running,
passing, hot-shooting second
half which did it. and what was
done was something only the
Number 2 team in the country
can do.
Although there is no set
agenda for the participants to
follow, Jeffress said that he
expected the meeting would be
especially concerned with the
problem of double jeopardy as
it relates to the honor system.
"I hope the people at the
meeting will grapple with the
question of to what extent the
student judicary duplicates the
functions of civil and criminal
courts. We need to decide why
student courts are trying or
should try anyone who has
already been tried by civil of
criminal courts."
Jeffress emphasized,
however, that the question of
double jeopardy is just a "small
part of the larger concern of
whether we should have an
honor system and upon what
principles it should be
founded."
When the meeting was
planned, it was also decided
that invitations should be sent
to people who are known to be
interested in the issue. Thus,
letters have been sent to
members of the faculty, such
as the members of the Faculty
Committee on Student
Discipline, to members of the
administration and to members
of various student groups.
Jeffress emphasized that
"the meeting is open to anyone
who wants to participate in the
construction of an honor
system for this campus."
J
t :
V
Smiling