Pasre 2 THE DAILY TAB HEEL Tuesday, September 24, 1968 QFlj latlg (Jar tM 76 Years of Editorial Freedom Wayne Hurdcr, Editor Bill Staton, Business Manager Dale Gibson, Managing Editor Rebel Good, News Editor Joe Sanders, Features Editor Owen Davis, Sports Editor Scott Goodfellow, Associate Editor Kermit Buckner, Jr, Advertising Manager The First Five Days Ready For A Change: By now you've been to your classes. You've sat in them for one or two hours, heard from the prof how many cuts you're allowed, and heard his first lecture. The first lecture, like the rest to come, where the prof repeats what is in the book that you're supposed to have read and asks you, as if you were still in high school, to define such-and-such term, as you sit there flinching and your mind rejects everything he says. Any discussion that is attempted is usually artificial and dominated by a few students shallowly trying to impress the professor. All others, so totally imbred in them is the attitude that they are ignorant and should not argue with the prof, sit glumly at their desk waiting for the bell to ring. By now, also, everyone has had to write home and ask for more money since it is costing more money to buy clothes than they had originally planned. Ghapel Hill's style conscious businessmen have raised the prices of their clothes which could be bought back home for a few bucks but which cost dozens up here. In addition, the merchants, always glad to do the students a service, have started subsidizing the bus system so South Campus residents won't have any trouble getting up to Franklin St. , The apartment builders have pocketed the money given to them by students as deposits for rooms for fall and now, grieving deeply over the inconvenience they are causing the students, must tell them their apartments will not be ready until October or later. From every direction the students begin catching it. And by now the students have begun to bitch, as usual. The merchants and the administrators, the ones who rob the students and the ones who decide that this dorm or that should be an office next year, are preparing their stock replies to the objections of the students. Inside their minds they are telling themselves, as they have in previous years, that they needn't worry about having to make some beneficial changes in students lives or in the services they provide students. The students who have been here over two years, they probably tell themselves, are too cynical to do anything. They have become too turned off by campus life, academic and social, to think about anything but bitching and drinking. As for the ones who have been here less than two years, they can be tricked into thinking that relative to other campuses, UNC is well off, they say. "We can always find some place worse than UNC that we can use as an example to gull the students into satisfaction and lethargy," the economic, social, and academic rulers of students' lives say. Lastly, if this fails, they resort to the problem of relations with the state. "We admit that demand of the students is right and necessary but we just can't do that because the citizens of the state would rise up and smite us off the face of the earth," they explain to the students. That's the way it was in 1967, 1966, 1965, 1964, . . . That's the way it could be this year, but NOT NECESSARILY. Students have to forget that little has been accomplished in the past, they have to forget that there are other schools worse off. They have to realize that even though they are going to be here only four years, those four years are very crucial to their whole lifetime and that they deserve to have their social and academic needs met Having rejected the baloney of the past and having decided that their needs .to demand a solution, they should pressure the University Administration and their Student Government to produce more than glib explanations of why things can't be done. Students, if they will stick together and if they . will accept no false excuses for inaction, can get something done this year. Y Needs Your Money To Continue Its Activities Cansler's Hard Bargain Ivory. Towers For Sale Cheap ay "It is common knowledge that German universities in the 30's stood by merely as observers when totalitarianism was emerging in their land." President Leo Jenkins of East Carolina University. "The University cannot allow itself to become an agent of social change in the community"-UNC Dean of Men James 0. Cansler speaking to an all-men's convocation of new students. Commentary By Steve N. Enfield These are the words of two very different men espousing two very different philosophies. Nonetheless, their speeches illustrate most emphatically the major debate going on in higher education today. Dr. Jenkins, head of a university which much less renown than ours, has recently been engaged in making speeches concerning the current gubernatorial campaign and was just last week in Wiston speaking before a Democratic fundxaising rally. His efforts is this arena have led a local paper to condemn them as "bad academics and uncalled for politics." Dean Cansler, a former Baptist minister, is in roughly the same administrative position as Dr. Jenkins, but he is not actively involved in politics and, hence, is not under fire from the local press. However, he is a very sincere man, and although his words were not politically oriented, they were, I am positive, just as deeply felt Umbilical Cord In the speech of each man one can see evidences of two opposing rationales behind which a university is intended to operate: (1) That a university should be a community bound to a larger community by an umbilical cord of involvement and action, (2) That a university should be an island unto itself, a place xkt HRNDBoofc COOL Lesson 3 V an j i r our 3-V.t- V- drinking Surdau J Ukes t c 2. nnu5 Sr)ll c.iuiv VHri Y o4 sfo h "4-e a. ion 0 ho nie; -W Mi Mr -frcf- y oo Scott Goodfellow .None Off tie weFg UNC's YM-YWCA, one of the campus' more productive organizations, is starting a membership drive this week to raise the money it needs to carry on activities for the next year. Committees. The Racial Dialogue committee has already started planning for a symposium on the racial problem and has lined up big name speakers such as Julian Bond and Dick Gregory. All money these and activities take that's what Y Unitl last year, students were able to join the Y and pledge money to it as a part of registration. Starting last year, however, the organization has had to conduct its membership and fund raising drive separate from orientation. The result last year was that the Y made only $3,000 from membership when it had figured on getting $6,000; This year the Y, which usually gives the students more for their money than does the Student Government which operates with student fees, has another impressive schedule of seconds without any lines and events. any waiting? He is really off if he thinks this can be done. In previous years we have had to Besides the regular tutorial wait in lines which were program, Murdoch committee, certainly longer than these, but International Bazaar, and there is no one. save "Hero of members will be asking for from you these next few days. Give to them. You'll be financing many good activities and you'll know the money you give is for some activity, not for some inactivity like much of the money you give to Student Government is used for. Letter To The Editor Editor: Dick Levy's column "Burn Down Book Exchange!" in today's (Sept 21) DTH was the most outrageous piece of junk I have ever read in the paper! Does he expect 16,000 students to be whizzed through ANY book store in just a few Scholarship Center, etc., new have been added. These and include Racial Information the Masses" Levy, who does programs not expect SOME crowds. As big as Kenan Stadium is, why can't 47,000 people get in and out in just a few minutes? Peace Corps And like Kenan Stadium, the Dialogue Book Store is only used several times a year by everyone at once. Sure, they promised more efficiency with a new book store and I think they have achieved it am glad that we now have such a modern and ADEQUATE book store. They cannot be expected to have 400 check-out lines twice a year. And with that, you would even have to wait! Things aren't going to change they will not build you a new book store so it seems that your only alternative now is to stage a one-man protest at the door. (But I wouldn't try it until you had bought your books!) Richard Reynolds Mike Sobol 1026 James Aside from the cliff-hanger thrills of waiting for a small plane to go ramming through the "Jesse Jones Sausage" streamer that cruised over Kenan Stadium Saturday, there was one totally intriguing process marking the first week of school Registration. The first event happened when I picked up that long white card and started filling it out. "Notice: This section is for survey purposes only and will not be used otherwise." Fascinating, I thought, stifling a yawn. But immediately the form asked me to indicate my race. I scanned down the columns . . . "American Indian", no. "American Negro", no. "Spanish surname", no. In fact, I finally resorted to checking "other" in total exasperation and scribbling "Caucasian" after it Flustered, I began sauntering around the room, peering over shoulders to see what other people were doing. Some were obviously scanning their family trees for a trace of Swedish blood, or perhaps they remembered a cousin with distended lips like an adult Masai I noticed one girl groan and write "Normal American" into the blank area. Several chuckled sinisterly and wrote "WASP" (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant). Some ignored the problem altogether. This little hang-up set the scene for the rest of my registration. In a dither I finished the form, remembering how much trouble I got into by checking "Yes" to "Do you plan to operate a car" and "No" to "Is it registered" (the car hadn't arrived yet). I completely missed the Selective Service booth and then went to the beautiful Tin Can to register my car. Turns out that the Administration has finally done something about "The Great Secret". I first heard about The Great Secret in a meeting with William Long, former Dean of Men. The Dean lowered his voice and said in hushed tones, "Never reveal this, but we made a purchasing mistake and traffic stickers are the easiest thing in the world to remove." Awestruck, I thought of how simple it would be to swipe the Chancellor's B-Sticker then I could park in the lounge of Graham Memorial and no one would ticket me. At any rate, the new sticker goes inside the window and doesn't come off. (I tried putting it on my bumper no one told me not to but it read backwards). Actually, the whole scene in the Tin Can was a little ludicrous. Here were about 15 people, selling stickers at high prices and knowing that only about 1 out of 2 buyers would JL where men go to examine in an objective and detached manner, what other men have done. The implications of this first philosophy are fairly evident Dr. Jenkins and others like him believe they have a commitment, a responsibility to comment, to criticize, to become involved with the affairs of the world outside the classroom. A man like Dr. Jenkins would have undoubtedly agreed with the students at Columbia who had something to say about that gymnasium that fronted on Harlem, although he would not necessarily agree with how they said it So deeply does he feel this commitment that he warns us of the dangers of disagreeing with his opinion. Cansler's Ivory Tower Dean Cansler, on the other hand, feels that although we live in a "world of unrest," the university, and particularly this university, should be literally an institution of higher learning. It should be a world above that which is daily described in the headlines on a plane where the mind is exercised; But it is also a society which doesn't recognize any other but itself. Dean Cansler also attacks the methods by which social change is effected. He maintains that in .order for any tiling to be done, the university must act as one body a move which would cause dissidents to come in line with the majority and thus surrender their freedom. At this same time, however, he recognizes that there is an "ideological tug-of-war" going on on this campus. He gives us no method of resolving this if, in fact, he feels it should be resolved. Follow Jenkins Admittedly, it is far easier to follow a Jenkins than a Cansler. To act in the world in which we've been living is much simpler - than; to contemplate in a world totally divorced from everything we've ever known. To reach out and find a place to park where they help a starving M or prevent a third world war is a much fn e" hood . envis-fs of liow . . iv -frejk wat 4. (f o m. r tr- 111 - - ! f Fit were supposed to. At 9 in the morning, Memorial Hospital looks like LaGuardia Airport at rush hour. And wait till the Student Union opens (It has nine parking spaces). So I considered registration a fabulous success. Between being utterly stymied by a question on my race and watching the parking sticker machinery rust, it couldn't have been more entertaining. Perhaps they'll do something next registration to keep anyone with a 1912 ID card from just flashing it and being handed a validation sticker. more automatic action than ignoring responsibility altogether. Great ideas, like the men who preach them, are supposed to transcend time and place. But one .cannot help but conjecture that if Dean Cansler's comments were made in 1933 and if UNC were located in New York City at Harlem's front door, would Dean Cansler's comments have any less believability or any less attractiveness than they do in 1968 Chapel Hill which borders on Carrboro? .Nixon's Guide To Pussyfooting Around r n 1 is TV VI The W inner s Circle By WILLIAM G. ALLEN For nearly a decade, Richard M. Nixon has sought to be the President of the United States. Eight years ago, Vice President Nixon trod that treacherous in his home governorship state for the of California against Pat Brown. Here again, he was favored to win. But disaster and lightning both struck in the same place. Richard M. Nixon lost again by nath to the White House on a a minute per cent of the vote. sure mark for victory. Crushed by a humiliating His story is somewhat like loss, and angry at an that of the "Hare and The unfavorable press, he made a Tortoise". Nixon did not very human decision to actively seek to build national withdraw from politics and support until the election year return to his law profession in arrived. He went into the one of the top ten law firms in election unaware that JFK, the United States, who had been laving intricate But quitting was neither in .me cards nor in tne nature oi The Dairy Tar Heel is published by the Unh ensty of North Carolina Student Publication's Board, daOy except Mondays, examination periods and vacations. Offices are on the second floor of Graham Memorial. Telephone numbers: editorial, sports, newt 933-1011; business, circulation, advertising--933-1163. A dress: Box 1030, Chapel Hill, N. C 27514. Second dass postage paid at U.S. Post Office In Chapel K3.N.C. Subscription rates: $9 per year; $5 per semester. groundwork throughout the nation for four years, was to be his opposition. He had no conception of the highly organized and financed Kennedy blitz that was about to appear on the American political scene. Nixon had such a vantage point that few men doubted that he would be elected. Yet, to his dismay, and the astonishment of the nation, JFK sprinted into the winner's ;rrip leavine Nixon iust one LliV- o w Richard Nixon. In 1964, he made speeches for Republican fund raising dinners acrdss the nation, and for many Republican candidates. Of the ones he backed, a significant percentage was elected even though the party split and crashed with such force that it was doubtful it would revive for years. In 1966, Richard Nixon revitalized the Republican Party and led an assault on the dD short. Nixon was defeated Democratic Congress. He spoke by onry one-ienui ui uue percent of the popular vote, though the electoral vote was more distinct. Baubles Calif Two years later, Nixon ran on Denaii oi nepuDucan candidates everywhere he stopped, singlehandedry pulled the Republican Party from the abyss of defeat, and, in less than two years, organized it for the battle that is to take place in November. Nixon's Horserace George Romney first sought the nomination of the "New" Republican Party. His campaign fizzled, so Nixon accepted the lead after Governor Rockefeller hesitated to accept the challenge. Nixon consolidated support for the nomination at a rapid pace. When Governor Rockefeller finally convinced himself that he could win, he jumped into the race. Until then, Nixon had gone unchallenged. Rockefeller avoided the primary route by allowing Nixon to run alone, thereby taking much significance from his victories. Governor Ronald Reagan never announced his candidacy until his hand was forced by his own delegation just prior to the convention. Reagan tried to undermine Nixon's support in the South while Rockefeller poured millions into a campaign to label Nixon as "two-time loser" in the North. Loser Comes Thru Richard M. Nixon certainly won a magnificent victory when he captured the Republican nomination for President this year. He is probably the first American to win the nomination of a major political party lose the election and come back two terms later to win the nomination on the first ballot again, after defeating his image as a "loser", and a ten million dollar campaign launched by his opponents. Yet, the most phenomenal aspeci of his victory was that he could hot even claim a home state. His oponents were governors of the states most needed to obtain the nomination. Reagan held Nixons previous home state of California, and Rockefeller held his new home state of New York, as well as most of the other large Northern states. A first ballot victory under such circumstances is indeed a political miracle. Four years ago, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon rescued a distraught, divided, and thoroughly smashed Republican Party and unified it into a highly organized and streamlined political machine which is favored two to one to carry him to victory in 1968. Should he win this final and most foreboding test of political endurance, his election will surely mark "victory over death', and a political first in the annals of American history.