c
m mi?
'urn I J J
GM Publicity
11 1"terYiews for the GM Pub
licity Committee Hill be held
this week. See Campus Calen
dar on page 6 for details.
Volume 74, Number 17 "
v
UNC Won't List
Biased Housing
?L5ILL amlong Cofield will meet with Sit
DTH News Editor terson at 3 p.m. Monday and
The University Saturday has said that he will then pre
took a stand against racial sent him with specific . in
discrimination in off-campus stances of housing discrimina
housing. tion both on and off campus.
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitter- Housing Director James
son said that in the future the Wadsworth said Thursday,
omy on - campus housing list-
W 4.1. TT 1 mm
ed with the University would
be that whose owners sub
scribe to a non-discriminatory
policy.
The announcement came
only three days after campus
NAACP president James Co
field charged that "there is
discrimination in housing and
the University supports it."
Sitterson told the DTH,
though, that the NAACP's
charge which has still not
been presented to him formal
ly was not what prompted
the statement.
He said he was contacted
informally by both Student
Body President Bob Powell
through his Administrative As-
sistant Eric Van Loon last
spring and later by a faculty
member whom he declined to
name.
There were also formal in
quiries filed by both a group
of several younger faculty
members whom he also de
clined to name and by the
Students for a Democratic So
ciety. "It was three groups," he
,said, "students, faculty and
the SDS."
"They all brought it to my
attention," he said. "I did it
because I thought it was the
right thing to do."
Sitterson said he "couldn't
say that there is or that there
is not" discrimination in off
campus housing.
"All we're trying to do is to
assure that the University is
not a party to it."
"No one has cited me a par
ticular case," Sitterson said.
Rudolph Pate
Named Aide
ToFri
iday
President William C. Friday
announced Saturday the ap
pointment of a general admin
istrative assistant.
Rudolph Pate, associate
director for development of
the Southern Regional Educa
tion Board, will take the post
November 1.
Pate, a native of Lmber
ton, is a former North Carol
ina newspaperman, a grad
uate of N.C. State College in
1943, and was director of in
formation services at State
from 1943 to 1962.
Pate will be particularly
concerned with the develop
ment of a program of public
information on the total Univ-
ersity program ot teacning,
research and service to the
state, Friday said.
"Mr. Pate has gained wide
and valuable experience dur
ing the four years he has serv
. . J iL
ed as associate director of .the
Southern Regional Education
Board," Friday said.
"He has worked directly
with all of the major state-
supported institutions in the
southern region and he has
participated in many of the
significant regional cuiuccu
ces on matters affecting the
future of higher education. He
has also planned recent legis
lative workshops sponsored
by the Southern Regional Ed
ucation Board."
A member of the American
College Public Relations As
sociation, Mr. Pate has been
an ACPRA director embrac
ing the states of North and
South Carolina, Virginia, West
Virginia, Maryland, Delaware,
and the District of Columbia
He is a member of Kappa
Phi Kappa, national honorary
educational fraternity.
however, that "there is defi-
' . m
nitely no discrimination in the
Housing Office."
At that time, Sitterson de
clined to comment, saying
he'd rather wait until present
ed the specifics of the case.
In a prepared statement re
leased Saturday, though, Sit
terson said he was "glad for
the opportunity thus offered to
reaffirm the University's pol
icy on housing."
"It is the University's pol
icy to make all University
housing assignments without
regard to race, creed, na
tionality or ethnic origin of
applicants as is also the
case with respect to the treat-
ment of applications for ad-
mission and for employment,
the statement read.
He said that the listing of
off - campus housing is wel
comed by the University be
cause "for some years, Uni
versity enrollments have sub
stantially exceeded the capac
ity of our housing facili
ties . . ."
Sitterson said, however, that
the University cannot police
off-campus housing.
"Nevertheless," the state
ment said, "it is clearly the
University's responsibility to
fts students to insure so far
as possible that students
availing themselves of Uni
versity services be spared un
necessary embarrassment, ef
fort and disappointment.
"In order that we may dis
charge this responsibility
more effectively ,the Univer
sity will henceforth adopt the
practice (which is in effect at
many other institutions and
which is the announced policy
of the National Association for
Foreign Student Affairs) of
listing privately - owned prop
erties only at the request of
the property owner and only
when the property owner sub
scribes to the same non-discriminatory
policy which is
in effect for assignment of
University housing."
The statement said that it
did not mean to imply "that
the University has either the
right or the intention to sug
gest limiting the freedom of
property owners to select their
tenants according to their own
standards consistent with law.
"Instead, this is intended to
make it clear to all that the
University will not be in the
position of appearing to 'rec
ommend' or 'suggest' privately-owned
housing for its stu-.
dents except on the same non
discriminatory basis used for
assignment of University-owned
housing."
Sitterson told the DTH that
the University will "send a
communication to renters who
would like to be listed in ac
cord with this policy."
Those who decline to com
ply, he said, will be dropped
from the listings m the Hous-
m2 office.
Cofield, when advised of the
statement, said he was "very
pleased to hear it."
He called it not a major,
but a significant victory
against discrimination,
God
At
3
ege
See Page 4
7 I m '71
jr.. " " -i " i ft " ;
x : s - " I j
v t .x -s It- L
i -. - u y - - ,
f lit - x
Sociologist Says 'Racial ' Vioiemeel
I Will Hinder Civil Rights Move
By JOAN PAGE
UNC ..News Bureau
The Negro civil rights move
ment is currently in a "crisis
stage," says a noted Univer
sity sociologist and authority
on race relations.
Mommting Death
jf omows inez
MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Hurri-.
cane Inez, crippled but still
dangerous after raking Cuba
for 48 hours, readied for a fin
al run at the United States as
deaths mounted in her wake.
Behind the killer storm, in
the picturesque islands of the
Caribbean, hundreds were .
ftared dead. Thousands were
injured and. homeless.
Inez, which once boasted
fury of 175 miles an hour near
her calm eye, had dropped to
just bare hurricane force to
day. Her top winds were es
timated at 75 as she staggered
inland from the south Cuba
coast between Trinidad and
Cape Cruz.
The towering Sierra Maes
tra mountains of Cuba, where
Fidel Castro hid while he plot
ted his Communist revolution,
were responsible for Inez'
temporary downfall.
"We underestimated the ef
fects of the Sierra Maestra,"
said forecaster Arnold Sugg.
"Inez is in pretty sad shape."
Although she probably will
grow stronger over the Florida .
Straits -Sunday, forecasters
weren't too concerned. Spokes
men at the national hurricane
center told south Florida's
storm-wary residents Inez
could come within 35 miles of
their homes without inflicting,
any damage.
Chief forecaster Gordon
Dunn said the storm would
make its closest swipe at Mia
mi about noon Sunday. But it
was impossible to tell how
close that would be until Inez
resumes an orderly course, he
said.
The estimated death toll
zoomed as officials in the
Caribbean islands made their
CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY,
"T TT o r o
Danny Talbott Passes Through Rushing Guard9 s Arms
. . TAs Carolina Marches To 21-7 Win Over Michigan
Advocates of "black pow
er" and racial violence have
dealt the entire movement a
severe blow, says Kenan
Professor Guy B. Johnson,
and have stimulated a con
servative revolt in the form
way to remote villages to cou
nt the victums. Lt. Bartleby
Cozeau of the Haitian Army
said he feared "perhaps as
many as 5 0 0" had died in
Haiti's countryside.
But Cozeau emphasized his
figures were not estimates and
not official.
More than 100 others perish
ed on the French island of
Guadeloupe and in the Domin
ican Republic where Inez st
ruck at the height of xher fury.
Cuba so far has reported only
one victum.
Besides the dead, great crop
and property damage lay be
hind in the . storm's path and
hundreds of injured were in
hospitals.
A Navy ship standing off
Cuba with a radar fix on Inez
reported that her eye wall,
half over land and half over
the sea, was growing steadily
weaker.
After stalling for a short
time, Inez began moving to
ward the north-northwest and
Florida, but if she gets here
Miamians may not even both
er to put up the s t o r m shut
ters. Inez still would have 75 mi
les of Cuban land to cross and
land is poison to a hurricane
that draws its power from the
heat and the moisture of tro
pic seas.
"Hopefully," said Sugg,
"we'll be able to drop Inez in
to the tropical storm class la
ter today."
But it could be only a hope,
not a certainty. The hurricane
has baffled forecasters since
she made a sharp left turn to
westward in Cuba last night
when she was expected to g
north.
W
OCTOBER 2, 1966
' m v
of a "white backlash" which
is rapidly gaining momentum.
Mr. Johnson's remarks came
in a recent interview.
"Negro reliance on protest
power is eliciting a severe:
backlash. If prolonged, it will
Sixty-seven were known dead
in the Dominican Republic
and 33 in Guadeloupe.
The only Cuban victum re
ported was Army Sgt. Bias
Garcia, who drowned in flood
waters, but Cuba is slow to
announce storm deaths. It
was several days after Hurri
cane Flora went through in
1963 before Castnfwent on the
radio to disclose that 2,000
Cubans had perished.
Forecasters were severely
handicapped Friday night and
Saturday in their efforts to
keep track of Inez, because
reports out of Cuba were spot
ty and hurricane hunter pilots
shadowing the storm may not
fly in Cuban air lanes. .
WUNC-FM
To Resume
Broadcasting
WUNC FM Radio will re
sume broadcasting activities
for the current academic year
at 6 p.m. Monday.
The student-operated station
has planned a number of new
programs this season, includ
ing 'Two On The Aisle," host
ed by Cheryl Walcroft Satur
day nights at 7:00, "The Con
ductor," Sundays at 7:00 with
Mike Gray, music director,
and "Feiner On Folk," Mon
days at 10:30.
WUNC FM encourages stu
dents who are interested in
joining the staff to visit the
offices and studios in Swain
Hall any afternoon or evening.
" f TTTT I
2 t
(UPI Telephoto)
continue to alienate white
allies and may eventlly pro
duce an unsympathetic fed
eral government," Mr. John
son warns.
"It could be that what we
have in the White House in
1973 will make Goldwater look
like a liberal. A national re
treat from liberalism to a
'get tough' policy toward the
Negro is a possibility. There
may even be a move toward
Constitutional revision which
would undo much of the prog
ress we have made."
Mr. Johnson points out that
white resistance is no longer
confined to the South. It has
moved into suburbs of the
North and West and there is
now a "real danger" that
whites are going to respond
to "black power" with a
countervailing "white pow
er." "With a strong enough
swing to conservatism," he
notes, "the Negro's vote may
be nullified by white candi
dates' trying to outdo one
another in being anti-Negro."
Mr. Johnson believes that
by simple virtue of numbers,
the Negro stands to lose in
any organized conflict of vio
lence with the white race.
"Already some militant Ne
gro leaders are trying to out
do one another in being anti
white," he explains. "Some
Negro revolt leaders, such as
Stokely Carmichael, are say
ing 'If we can't join them,
let's lick them. My old
fashioned mathematics tells
me it won't work, but they
may be desperate enough to
try it."
A sociologist and anthro
pologist, Mr. Johnson is co
editor of one of the coun
try's leading sociological jour
nals. He is a research profes
sor in the University's famed
Institute for Research in So
cial Science and has done
numerous studies on ' r a c e
problems.
Eleven years ago, Mr. John
son predicted it would take 25
years for Southern wThites to
adjust to elimination of legal
sanctions for racial segrega
tion. He is satisfied that his
prediction on adjustment to
the law is coming true, but
does not see any likelihood of
total social acceptance among
(Continued on Page 6)
jr.
Rush Invitations
Rush invitations for those
who have not picked them up
will be given oat tonight from
7 to 9 at Beta House. Rashees
should come by and pick
op the invitations.
J
Tar Heels Stage
Incredible Upset
By SANDY TREADWELL
DTH Sports Editor
ANN ARBOR, Mich. It was incredible. A Cin
derella story with one of the happiest endings in North
Carolina football history.
Carolina's Tar Heels ignored all the rankings and
all the predictions to produce the nation's top upset,
convincingly defeating the University of Michigan
21-7.
It was almost impossible to believe that the white
shirted players were the same team that stumbled at.
Kentucky only two short weeks ago.
The Tar Heels found them
selves yesterday before more
than 88,000 stunned Michigan
fans in Ann Arbor.
Carolina found that it could
pass beautifully and when
necessary that it could run.
It found a defensive unit
which kept the Wolverines
ranked eighth in the nation
from moving out of their own
territory and limited them to
only two first downs in the
second half.
Danny Talbott finally reach
ed his potential Saturday as
he successfully passed and
scrambled during almost eve
ry key third down situation.
Talbott maintained control
of the ball enough of the first
half to" limit the Wolverine' at
tack to only one touchdown.
He allowed the Tar Heels to
completely dominate the sec
ond half.
The Tar Heels began the
contest as a passing game.
Then Talbott and his backs
Pre-Game
Blast Rocks
Iowa Field
AMES, Iowa (AP)-A home
made mine exploded Saturday
on the 46-yard line of Clyde
Williams Field about three
hours before kickoff time for
the Nebraska-Iowa , State foot
ball game.
Nobody was injured when
the bomb was set off by the
pressure of a sod rolling
machine operated by an Iowa
State maintenance man, Beryl
Taylor, making final prepar
ations for the game.
No arrest was made imme
diately. .
Iowa State Athletic Direc
tor Gordon Chalmers said if
a player had stepped on the
buried mine he might have
been killed.
Police took possession of the
remains of the mine, describ
ed as two pieces of board ab
out a foot long connected by
pieces of metal and wired to a
battery.
The device did not explode
until after the rolling mach
ine had passed over it.
Dirt and grass were thrown
several feet into the air. The
blast left a hole about six in
ches across and less than one
foot deep in the playing field.
Authorities said they did not
know wfiat explosive was used.
The hole was hurriedly pat
ched by the grounds crew, and
preparations for the Cornhus-ker-Cyclone
game went ahead
as usual.
The explosion came about
10:30 A.M., before many of the
expected 30,000 fans had en
tered the stadium.
Chalmers said police were
making an intensive investi
gation to find the person or
persons who planted the mine.
"I'd like to get him myself,"
the angry athletic director
said. "I'd kick his teeth out.
Somebody might have been
killed."
Chalmers compared the dev
ice to a military antipersonnel
mine. It was concealed be
neath the turf.
The field was repaired by
game time. Nebraska won
12-6.
Founded February 23. 1893
7
Si
attempted to run the ball. The
ineffectiveness of the running
game was apparent on each
set of downs.
The powerful Wolverines
took the ball on their second
series of downs and marched
58 yards in 13 plays for their
only score of the day. With
third and 17 at the Michigan
48, Quarterback Dick Vidmer
hit end Jack Clancy with a 17
yard pass and a first down,
for the key play of the drive.
Fullback Dave Fisher bulled
over from the one a few plays
later.
Carolina got on the score
board in the -second quarter
thanks to a Michigan fumble.
The Tar Heels took the ball
oin the Wolverine 14 and two
plays later, Danny Talbott hit
Tom Lampman in the end
zone for the TD.
In the second half, for the
first time this season, the Tar
Heels began to move on the
ground. Carolina's sensation
al Canadian Dick Wesolowski
entered the game in the third
quarter and made all 88,000 in
the Michigan stadium aware
of his presence.
Wesolowski went into the
game after Gene Link recov
ered Michigan halfback Carl
Ward's fumble on the Michi
gan 16-yard line. Three plays
later Wesolowski took a Tal
bott hand-off and weaved his
way through right tackle for
seven yards.
Weslowski repeated the play
two more times, resulting in
a, key touchdown and the lead
in the game of 14-7.
In the fourth quarter after
Carolina's tough defensive
unit stopped Michigan cold,
Talbott engineered the drive
which resulted in eating up 14
minutes off the clock. And
which resulted in Carolina's
game clinching touchdown.
The drive began on North
Carolina's 45 yard line. Tal
bott began the drive by em
ploying halfbacks Dave Riggs
and Dick Weslowski when he
had to, then scrambling and
passing for first downs.
In the game's key play, with
about five minutes remaining
on the clock, the Tar Heels
found themselves in a third
and five situation on Michi
gan's 28 yard line. Talbott
rolled around left end and
found 16 important yards of
running room.
Five plays later Talbott took
the snap from center and
plunged over the goal line
with 65 seconds remaining in
the game. Michigan took the
ball and desperately tried to
get on the scoreboard but in
their desperation Billy Darnell
intercepted the second pass of
the afternoon and North Caro
lina's dream had been re
alized. Final score North Carolina
21, Mich. 7.
Yardstick
UNC Mich.
First Downs 19 14
Rushing Yd. 167 113
Passing yd. 1 80 115
Passes 10-20 11-26
Passes Int. By 3 0
Punts 3-33 444
Fumbles Lost 1 2
Yds. Penalized 20 62