n I tee L7 mew BOJl ICY JL IU TVQTf "71 J by Evrms Witt Stiff Writer The Executive Ccrr.m-ilt: Consolidated University 'CU Trustees voted Erid-iv to chancellors of the six CL' sweeping new powers ? possession and use of aLoholi on their campuses. The committee voted t . chancellors to determine when liquor can he consumed on campuses in the greatest University alcohol policies tr. The thane ellors w'i --ho Vol. 80, No. 64 j cnTin ! i.rTv7 3 IlIULCiIGIII by Evans NVitt The Faculty Coup til returned to committee Friday a proposal to restructure the dean of student afiairv. oft ice but approved recommendations lor a campus forum and some student input into academic decision-making. On the motion of !I. Stanley Bennett, a professor in the Medical School, the Council returned the recommendations on the student affairs office to the Committee on Student Involvement in University Administrative Structures for further work. In the regular meeting I rid3y afternoon, the council also received several reports from the standing committees on scholarships, registration and admissions. Following Ue acceptance of the reports from tpe standing committees. Dr. Gordon B. Cleveland, chairman of the Committee on Student Involvement, presented the .ommittee report to the group. i. ;.' r 4 i. it ' 1 '- , No. it's not a portable fun house visiting It's actually just a parked truck which Carolina can clinch ACC tie by Mark Whicker Sports Editor CHARLOTTESVILLE. VA. -Although Carolina Coach Bill Docley says he's worried, there doesn't seem to be much reason for the Tar Heels to fret about today's engagement with Virginia in Scott Stadium. Carolina, at 7-2, can clinch a tie for the ACC title with a victory today. Virginia, at 2-7, can only hope to give first-year coach Don Lawrence some needed encouragement. The most dangerous Cavalier is halfback Kent Men-it, a sophomore who can run the 100 under 9.5. "He's probably the fastest halfback in America," Dooley says. p' wvr to tike v. h ;t ever affirr s - e e sz v to :.v-rr I h : - :-.;'-ee a.!:- n 'eg -1 ar ov e ::, ' e: nr.v - - u .. u e n the:; Tr i -r ! : .. y. re:-, of ' J - '.n the.r .am 1 ) o nM t i Saturday, November 13, 1971 n f 1 0T! TI TH) it After a hnet ,h i ! V o....-r ihr eheti-.n process and the coii'ipom!;--:i the propoNed tariipus foru-: ;!ie council iitreed by a vr.ice v . .te to uvt the formation o! .:ioli a Li.iup to the ch.i r.c el ' jr. I he torum is desisined .is .1 group representing .1 U'-h .' ri ! li.. l.'niveisity comtnumty whu li unjIJ serve as.T- a channel for . omp'amis and recommendations to the cfianct llor. C I eve l.i ml said. I lie council the n took up ;S:e committee's recoinnierivI.it!. m to estjbl'sh a board of directors over the Student Health Service. Student I'nion. student judiciary and Office of Reader,: i lie. This move uoudd have taken these agencies out of the or lice of the I)ean of Student Affairs. The proposed board wvu'd !i;jve direct access to the chancellor. The main argument directed against the proposed changes was that it vvav an inappropriate administrative structure. "I am deeply worried about this - it is an unsound arrangement that can't 4 I V - a 1 0 i. Franklin Street. captured some interesting reflections bv Leslie Todd) Merritt, who was recruited fiercely by the Tar Heels but decided to stay in his home town, has a 4.4 average and 67 yards. His longest run is 71 yards. "And what a good time for a Kent." Lawrence must be thinking. His other runners, Gary Helman and Jim Lacey. have been hampered by injuries. The Cavaliers may pass more than usual because of the on-again, off-3gain quality of the Carolina secondary, bolstered in last week's 2b-13 win over Clemson by good coverage from returning linebacker Jim Webster. Larry Albert appears to have won the Virginia quarterback job over sometimes spectacular sophomore Harrison Davis. Albert's best receiver is Bill Davis, who leads the ACC with 3f catches. A Z. 4 ..u A.. C ... - fc 4i . . . C The ch-n::::.n. : ne:s c-f the d jr.T.-.ior.es, have to rr.a.e the dec::;-r. cf S- - f r. ,w the r : t.'tere a request u r event sen e where h.rd S.. h::; beve the char.ce'lur n req t 'he : 2v. :t he -.;l:. BeV--:iH: P"wih! v. . irk." Bennett said. "To mterpove a board of this kind will give n-e to eontiivion and lack of control." C. Carroli Mollis, a professor of F.nghvh. voiced concern over taking these functions completely out of the office of the dean of student affairs. "It's clear if we do this that we wan! to set up a b-pass for the whole dean of student at fairs oUice,"' Mollis said. "We're a4.ing the students to take over." Cleveland defended the proposed structure by saving the services which were put under the new 20-m ember board were s 1 1! d e n t -oriented and primarily student funded. He added the intent of the committee v. is for the board to be a policy-making body, not an administrative one. The council agreed by voice vote to s nd the recommendations on the student affairs office back to the committee for reconsideration. The issue of student participation in decision-making in both curricular matters and personnel affairs was the central Point of debate over the proposed H w. -v r c I . . . . Til . . . O T .CM ' r -" W- J Ci - . " ', ir i 4 r V - I Hi 1 ( of the downtown scene. (Staff photo Second, and probably more prone to break a long touchdown, is junior Dave (Silky) Sullivan. Sullivan made a sesnational diving catch to beat State two weeks ago. The other Virginia win was a 27-26 upset of Vanderbilt. Another fast Virginian is defensive back Gerry Mullins, who has a 70 -yard punt return and a 57-yard kickoff return to his credit. Defensively, the Cavaliers held VP1 to six points last Saturday. Their best player is All-Atlantic Coast Conference candidate Andy Selfridge at right tackle. Selfridge is 6-5, 212. Teamed with right end Stanley Land, at 6-3, he can put formidable pressure on any passer. Billy Williams, at left end. had a Ccn--;: B:-ird tc- gra: ? (-" - -. e ? r t . a 1 ' c e r ; e f ui:ize r - v i:ea; : i r j R " : r. 2 d . . : r. in: CI' Premier.: ." '. vi:d the execute e c?" he vend the adr.tr.t-tra:: -m 1 . ave the cr.ar.c: :r:tv Founded February 23, 1893 7 i. J changes in academic structures. There was very little disagreement that students should be included in curricular decision-making to some degree. I he degree of participation should be left to the individual departments, council members agreed. The input of student opinion into the personnel decisions on academic affairs was debated at length by the council. Most of the discussion centered on the rigid nature of some of the suggestions which were made in the committee report. Bennett also took a leading part in the discussion of this issue, citing his poor experiences with student evaluations of processors on a structured basis at another school in 148. The council passed several iTiendments which eliminated the specific recommendations of the committee on gathering and reporting the student evaluations of faculty. One such deletion passed by a 25-16 hand vote, while the other deletion was approved by voice vote. TODAY: Sunny and mild; highs in the upper 60's. lows in the mid 40' s: near zero chance of precipitation through tonight. Says Bella Abzug a ' Congress imreBresentative' bv Lynn Lloyd 'Staff Writer Rep. Bella S. Abzug ( P-N.Y. ) said Thursday night "the United States Congress doesn't represent the needs and desires of the American people." In a speech in Memorial Hall sponsored by the Carolina Forum and the Association of Women Students. Mrs. Abzug urged all women, young people and minority groups to join a movement for equal representation in the government. "I see the unreality of Capitol Hill and the reality of my district," she said. "It's popular to criticize the government for doing nothing. This is wrong. The people are working hard, they just aren't representative of their districts." A native of the Bronx of New York. surprisindv eood sophomore vear in 1970. Mullins and Bob McGrail key the secondary, which intercepted two early passes last year for a 15-0 Virginia lead in Kenan Stadium. However, the Tar Heels came back to win 30-15. The Tar Heels must win this game to retain a good shot at an undisputed ACC title, to get into their second straight bowl game, and to post the best UNC record since Jim Hickey's Heels went 9-2 in 1963 and won the Gator Bowl. However, Carolina has already put two winning seasons back-to-back - and Charlie Justice was still playing the last time the Tar Heels did that. The great success of Lewis Jolley at tailback may allow Doolev to brins: Ike with R.--:n.i,-n priented - :eo'ut::n and '-fd -e- -t .vr:"? ''.th th: f - - Th.e . Cf id-:n:t:it The c- r - J - rr. Th.e :u:de::-.e hid h-ecr. wr:.cJ out ;n a : t :v c t Fhe'c .-n.:l i mad :x (1 rr, p.ed gu;de!:ne now amhuo-v. Fhe cuidehnes p:eent! have no t.;: e or an.t:on. m.l-dinc v: -iuv ... v v . . . a ; i . . . i i.:. u.i,.vU..', - de viMv - - on h v,eve:ace u-e o -amp'-N. he viuh B..t the gj-.dch.n ti'.: w .11 erv e a an o the .han.ehorv a p'ihle vet of p:Ked..:e to ue making th vC deviMon. Robmon :d I v 7 v .0 t 4 ocJ:": r" P -cj- - I.. Workmen steady a cement-pourer which crew is working on the new addition to the Leslie Todd ) Mrs. Abzug has been in Congress since November of 170. She represents a district in lower Manhattan. "The average age of members of the House is 51 and those who hold the real power are over 70." she said. "We need the questioning spirit and ideals of youth in Congress. "Three out of four people live in cities and metropolitan areas, and the people with power in Congress are from rural areas and the South thanks to seniority." she added. "It vt-ems that they lead fights against what their people want, like an end to the war in Vietnam." Mrs. Abzug said she thinks the U.S. will be clinging to Vietnam indefinite. "Nixon has no intention of withdrawing his forces." she said. "We are going to have to set a time limit for him to get us out. victory uglesby along gradually. Oglesby ga.ncci four yards in has only play last week after staying out with muscle injuries caused by leg cramps. Senior Bill Sigltr was effective at wir.gback. Paul Miller continued his bid for conference player of the year with another great performance, leading the Heels to more than 400 yards total offense. The Heels played defense again Sjturdav after letting William and Mary have 35 points the week before. Clemson enjoved only two plays in Tar Heel territory in the first half. Part of this can he attributed to the punting of Nick Vidnovic. Bill Brafford dumped CTemson's quarterbacks twice and blocked a punt tor a touchdown, and : .. I i ; sjy-- nxr. sj . v 7 - I . 4 . - i . mmmmt nr. ' ' " i-t::i,''ii I " '" The new pohcy rfTckes the poiicv pt forth ta by th? CI" Administration which vtated. "The Umrvrrv.ty -dl not sanction any u of a'coh.o'oc hrverajrs " If the char.cer.ors do not exerns the:r power?. Romn.von ?a:d, tat? ,a -.d govern the con.vumpt:on of all tvpe of a'coho'oc beverage. ?uh;ect to !os.a'. ordinances For example. :f a chancellor dec-.ded not to take anv action or. the conump:ion of soft alcohohc bofraceis. the state permits consumption under 1 ! ,M t:ons. uncludm; Rohir.sor. said Chapel Hu do have a local ordirar.ctf which proh;h:t? the consumption of any alcoholic heveracev on puhhc roads or public places The executive committee also, formallv denied a request h Thomas N'as? for a charge ir residencv statu.- for tuition purposes, a move cleanr.g the wa for a court suit to decide the re r.c v requirement's iegahtv . The committee a'oo formallv approved the necesarv action to increase out-of-state tuition for the "2 lo school vear as required hv the NC Cereral Avsemhiv n it ii - - 1 t " 7.7 V 7 Hili hangs tenuously from a crane above. ITie Morehead Planetarium. (Staff photo by "People seem to be satisfied if our casualties keep going down. They don't know that Nixon has killed more people in this war than Johnson. We drop 200,000 pounds of napalm per hour on southeast Asia on people, not bridges." She said the U.S. has turned Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam into "a laboratory of death. Unless the Americans make Congress set a certain date to pull our troops out, the war will never end." Mrs. Abzug said there should be a "fundamental examination" of the U.S. foreign policy. "We should take another look at SEATO and NATO and strengthen the United Nations," she said. She thinks the new economic program "makes the poor carry the burden of See Congress, p. 3 today linebackers John Bunting and Ricky Packard continued their aJl-star play. And defensive back Rusty Culbreth had one of his best days. His 5 5 -yard punt return touchdown was called back, but he later intercepted a pass to set up one of Ken Craven's four field goals, which set a school record. Terry Taylor, a sophomore who is filling in well for injured linebacker John Anderson, also picked off a pass. Carolina enjoyed its best all-around performance since the third game of the year last week, and just in time too. The post-season honors are within sight, which should insure psychological preparedness. That's about all they should need at Virginia today. 1 1'

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