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Wednesday. February 11, 1970
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
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Report Om ROTC
To Be Released
1 By HARRY BRYAN
: DTH STAFF WRITER
Recommendations on : the
Reserve Officers Training
Corps "(ROTC) accreditation,
report will be released Tuesday
by the administrative boards of
the General College and the
College of Arts and . Sciences,
according to the office of the
dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences. .
: The recommendations will
then go to the Faculty Council
meeting in March.
The report, released in
December, proposed the
establishment of a Curriculum
on War and Defense within the
College of Arts and Sciences.
The committee also
recommended continuing
current ROTC programs.
..According to the
committee's plan, ROTC
students would receive credit
for no more than 12 hours of
credit for ROTC courses and
be required to take four
non-ROTC courses of the
curriculum, one of which is a
projected course on Moral and
Political Philosophy.
Another committee
proposal would urge the armed
forces to postpone the time
students are committed to the
services to the beginning of
their senior year.
If this proposal were
accepted, the University would
ask the services to establish a
"pay-back system" so that
students could withdraw from
ROTC if they paid back all
monies received from the
services.
The committee also
proposed that the services be
asked to redefine what
constitutes an attempt to evade
military obligations.
"The fact that a cadet's
educational and personal
development has made the life
and work of an officer
incompatible with his values
should be justifiable ground for
disenrollment without
obligation to enlisted service,"
the committee stated.
By STEVE PLAISANCE
DTH Staff Writer
The greatest eyesore on this
campus today axe the muddy,
crosswalks of the lower quad,
and the litter which abounds
everywhere, according to
Professors James A. Devereux
of the English Department and
Charles E. Bowerman of the
Department of Sociology.
Devereux, a Jesuit Priest
and popular instructor of
Shakespeare, said Tuesday the
physical condition of the
campus here has deteriorated
over the past few years mainly
because of lack of concern by
the University community as a
whole.
"I remember only a few
years ago when there was grass
covering the entire lower
quad," Devereux said.
Devereux stressed the
beauty of the campus as an
"educational asset" and stated:
"ecology begins at home."
He indicated that the
problems of littering and
walking on the grass cannot be
solved by rules or penalties
imposed by the University
administration, but rather is an
issue which must be acted
upon by each individual in the
University community.
"Students now are more
intelligent than ever before,
but it seems that today a
certain amount of sloppiness is
more acceptable than in the
past," Devereux noted.
"This sloppiness is not
peculiar to this campus alone
but is exemplified on a
national basis by the condition
of our national parks and
forests.
The problem of litter and
trash on the campus, according
to Devereux, is the second
most important problem
threatening the beauty of this
campus. He described the
general condition of the
campus as "shoddy" because
of the amounts of litter
scattered around.
"The fraternity court facing
Columbia Street looks like a
sea of trash, and I would be
afraid to walk through that
place for fear of catching the
plaque," Devereux quipped.
"The solution to the
problems of campus
beautification here are rooted
in the willingness of the general
University community to exert
a little control over its abuse of
the campus in general,"
Devereux said.
"I have experimented with
the amount of time required to
walk across the quad on the
grass and that required for
Student tickets for the
Maryland game will be
exchanged at Carmichael today
beginning at 5 p.m.
..'..'.kw;w
Navy Info Available Today
A Naval Aviation
Information (AI) team will be
at Y-Court today and Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. .
"College men having an
inclination toward flying will
be able to obtain information
on the various programs
offered in Naval Air,"
according to Ensign John
Letter.
W.VAV.W
Along with programs for
pilots and naval flight officers,
the AI program allows
qualified applicants to pursue a
career in air intelligence.
The team will also be
available to administer the
Aviation Qualification Test to
interested men to determine
their potential ' for Naval
Aviation, Letter said.
walking around on she
sidewalks and found that only
three or four seconds were
saved by cubing across the
grass Eowem-.an noted. '
Untramp'ed grass, he said is
a natural resorce of beauty and
is part of the larger concept of
environmental pollution and
conservation of natural
resorces.
Bowerman outlined a
possible approach to the
problem as an agreement
between the student body and
the administration in whkh the
administration would construct
additional wa!ks if the student
body wo'Id promise in good
faith to refrain from walking
on the grass.
Bowerman also complained
of students who litter
classrooms with papr and
drink cups.
"Littering, not only of the
Fuller, 2 Students Cleared
(Continued from pae 1)
declared the arrest warrants
had used language which did
not specify what actions the
defendants had taken to break
the law.
The attorney added, 'The
warrant does not say that a riot
did exist. It jusU included
words which appear in the
state riot statute."
When Horton rejected the
motion, Pearce entered another
motion to declare the riot and
disorderly conduct statutes
unconstitutional. The motion
was also rejected.
Fuller said after the trial the
decision did not "vindicate the
system.
"A number of people could
have been convicted because of
a lack of good (legal) counsel.
There can be no victory,"
he said, "as long as oppression
continues."
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