"C Library SoriaU'Dopt. Box 870 ' mm wmmmmt ,j,iIUi.mi J . ..... fr. rnwi-inr ,m,,J i 4 BWSBBW!B 7 v4d Manager Needed The Daily Tar Heel needs an assistant advertising man ager. See page 4 for salary and qualifications. 75 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75, Number 3, 1967 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1987 Founded February 23, 1893 rrn o 1 n T o , A-iff i . CAROLINA'S first blue power uprising was held Thursday night celebrating and militantly demonstrating about classes starting and the upcoming State-Carolina football game. The torch-carrying parade wound its way from Morrison Dormi tory to the Carolina Theater. Led by inside instigator Ray Rap Brown Remains Jailed ALEXANDRIA Attorneys for 23-year-old H. Rap Brown Thursday sought once again to get' Virginia authorities to release the black power leader on bond. Brown. ..Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordi nating Committee. . .is being held in the Richmond City Ja;l while awaiting an extradition hearing. Philip -J. Hirschkop. . .one of Brown's lawyers. . .deferred temponly plans to ask a federal judge to order Brown's release from jail. He said he would make a new effort for bond in Alexandria Corporation Court Thursday. Brown is wanted in Maryland on charges of starting a riot and arson. Moore Aid Resigns Post RALEIGH Gov. Dan K. Moore announced Thurs day the resignation of Dept. of Administration Direc tor Edward L. Rankin, Jr. Rankin's resignation is effective Sept, 30 and he will become executive vice president and secretary of the North Carolina Citizens Assoc. Moore appointed . Rankin to the administration post in Jan. 1965. As director he had been responsible for a biennial budget of $3 billion, a construction pro gram of more than $50 million per year and state purchases of $110 million per year. As part of the director's job, Rankin also held cus tody title for more than 400,000 acres of state-owned land and the operation and maintenance of 38 state buildings here. Rankin served seven years as private secretary to Govs. William B. Umstead and Luther H. Hodges. He has had more than 20 years experience in govern ment, public relations and newspaper work. Forrestal Readies Nor folic NORFOLK The Giant aircraft carrier Forrestal, its decks buckled and twisted by fire and explosions in the Gulf of Tonkin July 29, steamed into the Norfolk Naval Shipyard Thursday for six months of repairs. About 2,000 persons were on hand to meet the car rier, which ended a 14,600-mile journey from the wat ers off the coast of Vietnam, where 134 men were killed and 64 injured in the holocaust. Only limited repairs were made on the Forrestal's return trip. The after portion of the flight deck remain ed buckled from the heat and scarred from shrapnel. On the stern port side, no repairs were made, but woodenpatches had been placed over six major holes in the after section. Compartments immediately under the stern por tion of the flight deck, including the parachute shop where 14 men were said to have died, remained char red from the intense heat. 1 F?' v r. -14 rr" 'f4 v f-. . ... -A " '-"- - -V , ' . Blue Power Rally Dailn Ear rt World News BRIEFS By United Press International Lyles, the student demons arators brought out Chapel Hill police in full force. However, the officers allowed the dem onstration to continue to its planned finish. DTH Staff Photo by MIKE McGOWAN Memoirs (0nmire IK By OWEN DAVIS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Honors 36 is dead for the time being. , ::z:' The short-lived student-directed education program will not be offered this semester according to presidential " as sistant David Kiel, who was instrumental in setting up the course. The program became part of the honors and education curriculum last spring as a seminar for discussion of ed ucational philosophy and in novation. The three-hour cre dit course was directed by students with two professors serving only for resource pur poses. The program is being dis continued this fall but may be held again next spring. "Due to a breakdown in com munications between the Ed ucation School and Honors Program, there was a failure to keep Honors 36 continuing," said Kiel. Students who signed up for ithe program will have an op portunity to pursue study in some aspect of educational innovation, however. "Through the cooperation of Dr. Daniel Patterson of the Honors Pro gram and Dr. Norton Beach, dean of the Education School, options are being offered to those students interested in educational philosophy and in novation,' ' Kiel said. "If any student has some aspect of educational innova tion that he would like to umnae On Change In -Rules. By JULIE PARKER of The Dally Tar Heel Staff Replies are apparently run ning conservative in a wo men's Honor Council members mailed by the Dean of Wo men's rules poll of former Wo men's Office in late August, Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael indicated Thurs day. With about 90 replies in, the alumnae appeared to be much more conservative than the coed vote on the same issues last semester. Questions followed the for mat of the coed ballot and covered: Extension of closing hours. Setting 2 a.m. closing hours for various classes. Off-campus apartments for coeds. "We asked the alumae what sort of rules they would want for their daughters here," Miss Carmichael commented. "The questions are otherwise " Med Fbw study this semester for credit, he should apply to Dr. Pat terson Immediately in South Bunding; "If the person pre sents an adequate program, he will be assigned a profes sor to supervise his work and will get credit under the Honors 37 program which is the name of an independent study program." Several professors in the Education School have agreed to work with students in this area, Kiel said. Students par ticipating in the Honors 37 program are usually required to have a 3.0 average for ad mission. . Another option is also open to interested students. Kiel said the Experimental Col lege, a non-credit program, will aid students in organizing a seminar to discuss common educational interests. Possibi lities are also being explored for various excursions to ob serve experimental school sys tems in the area. Honors 36 was originated in form at the beginning of the last school year when Kiel and Jonathan Gibson present ed a syllabus to Dr. Beach for a course in the education cur riculum. Ad hoc seminars were held last fall and task forces were formed which implemented- the existing pass fail system and experimental college. ur. aeacn was ame xo in- elude the course in the school curriculum for last semester and supposedly it was to be ouestione basically the same as those on the coed referendum." : The total number of ques tionnaires mailed was una vailable because of re-organization of files and staff in the Dean's Office, Miss Carmi chael said. "Release of details on re- suits would be premature. I don't have all the question naires in yet, and we need to get a breakdown by age, married or single status, whether they currently have daughters at the University, and so on." Alumnae answers will be evaluated by computer and final results should be avail able in October, the dean said. 4T QI-tJinlTr frtnl f Viv TTnf Uni versity women should be a voice in University policy making but not the only voice," she added. "I need the advice of alumnae and other sources before I can make any decision on changes in women's rules." Q L 1. By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Director of Traffic and Mo tor Vehicle Registration A!on zo Squires Thursday defended the present motor vehicle reg istration policy, while at the same time student body presi dent Bob Travis was agreeing to present a petition protest ing the rules to Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. Squires admitted, however, "iJhere are some inequities in the system." Dale Sayille and Ray Saund ers, the originators of the pe tition, and iScott Goodfellow, the only student representa tive on the Traffic and Safe ty Committee, will also at tend the meeting with the Chancellor. The petition had about 900 signatures of motor vehicle operators by Thursday after noon. It will toe available for signing this morning in Y Court. Squires pointed out the fee the students pay is not for a FuM continued this year, gram, according "was composed of The pro to Kiel, basically wide ranging discussions in the field of education." Among topics studied were "The Role of Education in Society", "What is Wrong With Primary Education?", and "The Role of Sensitivity Training in Education". nn iro Flares In Ghetto CHICAGO (UPI ) More than 300 Negro youths roam ed through a south side neigh borhood Thursday tossing rocks and bottles at windows, automobiles, city buses and police cars. At least eight persons, in cluding several policemen, were injured in the melee. Police began making arrests and additional police forces moved into the area. Police commander C a p t. James Harness, a Negro, was struck in the back of the head by a rock when he moved into gang of youths near 43rd c- t r.o.v.t Street and Langley and sought to pacify them. Police blocked off the area around Forrestville High School and 70 policemen were called to the scene. Police said a black power rally was held at 4300 Lang ley Avenue ,near the school, at noon and the rally broke up about 2 p.m. just as many students were getting out of school for the day, H 1 iiDie Sporadic incidents of rock nal site on East Rosemary to throwing began. At. least two the new site on Justice squad cars - were reported Street there proved to be on damaged and police said at ly one problem a single tree least 20 window panes of the limb was in the way. school were broken A car in the teachers' park ing lot was overturned Goldwater Sets Foriim Talk Here Barry Goldwater is coming to Chapel Hill. The Arizona Republican, defeated by Lyn don Johnson for the presi dency in 1964, is scheduled to. address students here Oct. 10. The Carolina forum said Goldwater will speak approx imately 40 minutes with 20 minutes for questioning afterwards. E (3. parking space but is just for registering the car or motor cycle. . The inequity in the system, as Squires sees it, is that some persons pay $2.50 to reg ister while others pay $5 or $10. This inequity is something "we are inheriting from a Goodfellow For Parking Change By KAREN FREEMAN of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Scott Goodfellow, the only student member of the 17 man Student-Faculty Safety & Traffic Committee that rec ommended the T-sticker fee increase to the Chancellor, hopes the petition will stir the administration to a closer look at parking policy. "I would hope that the peti tion would bring about a re evaluation of the present pol icy that faculty and adminis tration cars are a necessity while student cars are a luxury. I also hope the administra tion will consider a praking pol icy in which fees are charged in accordance with the prox Fass-Fall Finally Is Comnm By STEVE KNOWLTON of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The Pass-Fail program, al lowing a student to take a non-major course just because he wants to, is finally a real ity. "It is an attempt to get the student out from under the pressure of quizzes and allow him to get down to what is supposed to be the real pur pose of education learning," said Student Body Vice Pres ident Jed Dietz yesterday. Any elective course may be taken on a pass - fail basis. Within two weeks after classes start a student will fill out a form stating that he is to be graded only on this average if the course is pass basis in this course. ed. "If there is a course he A grade of "F", however wants to take under the pass- will be figured into the over-- fail system, he must be in it all quality point average. Tree Limb Moves By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff What goes up over fire hy drants and down under power lines? Would you believe its a house being moved? It seems that Edwin W. Tenney had two houses on one lot in town. When he sold one of the houses to Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, the oth er had to be moved. In moving from the orisi- The house was one - story. Only one story, mind you, and moving it should have been about as easy as mov ing a house can be. But there was this one branch from a gnarled old oak that blocked the path. The standard procedure for any house-mover would have been to cut the limb off, but Chapel Hill has laws against defiling its trees, so Tenney's house had to go one and a half blocks out of the way, have the roof peak cut off and be jacked up over fire hydrants and lowered under power lines. Tenney would only say, "It's getting to be a right ex pensive operatiin." p man that has left here," Squires said, referring to former Dean of Men William G. Long. He added that "the regulations were made before the ' new traffic committee was set up." Long was head of the committee that ap proved the rules change. The petition cites the "T" imity of the parking space' paid for the central campus." Goodfellow voted for the T sticker fee increase when it came before the committee in May as a concession to the faculty and administration. In return, faculty and ad ministration had to pay a fee for the first time to obtain their F and A-stickers. ' This was the committee's only meeting last year at which minutes were not tak en. ' Goodfellow also said, how ever, that in many ways the T-sticker was a cheaper, bet ter sticker than the ones giv en to car owners living on south campus. True by the end of the present drop add period," Dietz said. He added that a student would ge guarenteed of get ting the course under a pass fail basis as long as he .fol lowed the rules, which are: NO COURSE in the student's major prospective major or allied course may be taken under pass-fail. NO REQUIRED General College course can be taken under pass-fail. A STUDENT may take only one pass-fail course per se mester, and no student may take more than four courses. Course hours count toward graduation, but the grade will not affect the quality point j - , i i . 1 VN "n"""""'"" 1 " , 1,1 mqp I ",t,-.. M ' tM J r ' MCTTll r , I ,,.r I TI -, -,r,r- J JL . ' Headaches of housemoving ... Ed Tenney. found that moving in was the easy part. DTH Staff Photo by MIKE McGOWAN Jiicy sticker as one of the main in justices of the system. This sticker, which costs $5 is giv en to "persons who live off campus and within 30 minutes walking distance of the cam pus. The owner can't park anywhere on campus with it. The main purpose behind registration, Squires said, is to provide a means for iden tifying cars. He agrees that cars could be registered for less than it costs now. The excess, how ever, goes into, a trust fund "to build some "multi-level storage decks," he said. The only other way to raise money for a garage would be to get an appropriation from the state legislature or raise tuitions. This first way is an extreme ly doubtful source, Squires added, and to raise all stu dents' tuitions to pay for a garage wouldn't be fair. A high rise storage would cost from three million dollars. place to 10 Squires said that the new committee didn't have time to review the decisions of the past chairman, but added that the rules past in May "were not something arbitrarily done"' The petition that will be presented requests that "the ,'T' parking sticker fee be eliminated and that a progres sive parking fee commensur ate with parking accomoda tions and proximity to one's , destination be instigated at once." V The present parking regula tions say that "a motor ve hicle registration sticker is for registration purposes only and is not to be construed as a parking permit. In no sense dees the registration guaran tee the student a parking parking space. "However, students residing in residence halls may have a reasonable expectation of finding a parking space with in the zone in which their registration sticker is valid." Call Sent Out For Baseballers There will be a meeting for all varsity and freshman base ball candidates in room 304 of Woollen Gym on Monday night, Sept. 18th at 7:30 p.m. The purpose of this meeting will be to discuss a schedule for fall baseball prac tice. ' Movers

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