uosr G7o
life
I,
tor
Vandy-VNC
o Wini Lt J
Owen Davis, the DTH
expert on Southeastern
Conference footgal, writes
about the upcoming game
between the Tar Heels and
VanderbiHt. See his column on
page 5.
m r
2
76 Years Of Editorial Freedom
52f3 Number 16
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATUDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1968
Founded February 23, 1893
idle
7
Coll
. A ... , " i'; - i , . . . s - ' i
mm - $ Amidst
;' til .M-'' , A RvnwEN DAVIS undefeated
. " 7 3 1 DTH Sports Editor
Battle over the
Experimental
Deadline For
By J.D. WILKINSON
DTH Staff Writer
Persons wishing to initiate
experimental courses should
turn in their course description
sheets by Sunday, Oct 6, if
they wish to have their courses
included in the college
catalogue, Roger Thompson,
experimental" college chairmsrr,wA
announced Wednesday.
The original deadline of
Oct. 4 was extended because of
Carl Younger Named Head
Of Administrative Affairs
Student Body President Ken
Day has announced the
appointment of Carl Younger,
as Director of Administrative
Affairs.
Younger, a junior from
Winston-Salem, is a Morehead
Scholar and has served in the
student legislature.
As Director of
Policy On
Clarified
Too many studets have had
to pay late registration fines
reports the Department of
Traffic and Car Registration.
The most frequent offender
is the student who brings a car
to Carolina before checking his
eligibility. Alonzo Squires,
director of the office,
explained that students must
always check their elibibility
before bringing their cars.
ThP student planning to
have a car here only
temporarily and not concerned
1 :ruP k;o oiitfihiiitv for
permanent registration is also
Sred to receive permission
jcuuvu
from the traiiic aepanmem
prior
to the arrival oi nis
automobile. j
If a student feels that he is
entitled to special privileges
besides the normal zoning
allotted to him, must first
register his car. Then he can
petition the University Traffic
and Safety Committee for any
extra permission.
Squires final advice was to
any student dissatisfied by a
decision from the traffic
office- "He should first abide
by the decision of the office;
then he can appeal the decision
by submitting a petition to the
building."
Eligibility
Bud
oh, a dog's life!!
College
a delay in the distribution of
the course-starter sheets.
The sheets were placed
under doors Monday night in
every dormitory on campus.
. Course-description sheets
should be placed in the deposit
boxes located in Y-Court,
Lenoir, Granville, Chase,
Graham Memorial, and South
BtriMmg.
Anyone may initiate a
course on any subject he
desires. Examples of past
Administrative Affairs,
Younger will act as a liaison
with and coordinator of a
number of various student
government committees. He
will also be a liaison with the
student representatives serving
on various university
committees.
Working as a special
assistant from the office of the
president, Younger will be. in
contact with those people
working in the following areas:
Student Consumer Services,
Orientation Commission, Fine
Arts Festival, Carolina Forum,
Carolina Symposium, Toronto
Exchange, International
Student Center, National Merit
Weekend Committee, Carolina
Talent Search, and the NSA
coordinator.
The faculty
which Younger
contact with
Student Stores
committees
will be in
include the
Committee,
Traffic and Safety Committee,
Scholarships and Student Aid
Committee, Buildings and
Grounds Committee, the Space
committee and the University
Day Planning Committee,
In announcing
the
appointment, Day said of
Younger "Carl comes to this
rtef with a ctrnncr harkcrrnnnn
f- t. --? -
in organizational ana
administrative experience. I am
sure that he will do much to
aid efficient operation of the
student government this year."
Bus Schedule
South Campus buses will leave Chase
cafeteria for downtown daily except
weekends at the following times:
12:10
12:25
1:10
1:25
DTH Staff Photo
By
Tom. Schnabel
Courses Is
experimental college courses
include psychic experience,
auto repairs, electronic music,
Marshall McLuhan, and
criminal law and social change.
Thompson emphasized the
fact that the experimental
college offers students and
teachers the opportunity "to
explore a countless variety of
topics that cannot be offered .
or are not offered in the
regular curriculum."
Following the precedent set
CARL YOUNGER
f " -.1
Change Comin
Dynamic Reorganization
By STEVE N. ENFIELD
DTH Staff Writer
The Board of Governors of
the Men's Residence Council
took a long, hard look at itself
Thursday night and proposed a
dynamic reorganization of the
residence college governing
concept.
The Board, composed of the
eight residence college
governors and the officers of
the MRC, met long into the
evening after it decided that it
had been exercising power
(e.g., creating a senatorial
2:10
2:25
3:20
4:20
NASHVILLE, Tenn.-While
banjo pickers and fiddlers
perform uptown at the Grand
Ole Opry for the ears of
millions, Carolina and
Vanderbilt play a football
game here tonight before the
eyes of about 30,000.
The scene is Music City,
USA, where more records are
cut than anywhere in the
world.
Few gridiron records have
been established here, however,
and tonight's battle features
two teams which have
wandered off the victory trail
in recent years.
Kickoff time is 7:30 at
cramped and aging Dudley
Field.
The 10th Carolina-Vandy
clash pits a team of surprises
against one of disappointments
thus far in 1968.
The surprise outfit is the
host Commodores, who are
by an experimental course last
spring, students may now use
an ungraded experimental
college course to plan a course
which can be offered for credit
during the 1969 spring
semester.;
Anyone interested in
initiating such a course should
contact Buck Goldstein 'Or
John Kelly for details
The experimental college is
also sponsoring a cover contest
jointly with student
government. Proposed covers
for the experimental
college-action government
catalogue should be turned in
at the GM Information desk by
next Monday. One cover of the
catalogue will feature the
experimental college and the
other will be concerned with
the new action
government
program.
In a letter passed out with
the course-starter sheets,
experimental college leaders
called for more student,
involvement in the education
process and told students that
the opportunity for change is
open to them.
"For students who want to
get into the nitty-gritty of
working for institutional
change," the letter read, "there
is much work to be done.
Progress on this campus has
been token when compared to
school) it did not, in fact, have.
This realization came when a
copy of its old constitution
was dredged up it had not
been amended since 1965.
A further reflection of the
Board's sense of confusion was
the disclosure that the Student
Legislature's total
appropriation to it was $2.50
(to be used for postage).
Student Body President Ken
Day, who has long advocated a
clearly defined relationship
between Student Government
and the residence colleges, told
the Board that "the structures
of power have not kept pace
with the tremendous growth of '
the residence colleges over the
last four years."
In urging the governors to
reform the existing system,
Day stressed that an improved
central body should
concentrate on four main
areas:
Leading and directing the
development of the residence
college idea,
Administering and
coordinating group activities,
TT) i q
Irickm
Vandy has already won as
many games as it did all last
season, and the Commodores
are favorites tonight.
It would be the first time in
memory that the Vandy
tootball team has 3-0 record if
i t gets this win.
The Commodores, usually
conference doormats, lead the
ooutneastern Conference
passmg and total offense.
They have rolled up 372
yards per game totally,
averaging 4.5 yards a play.
Vandy has thrown for an
average of 261.5 yards a
contest, including 40
completions in 60 attempts.
The disappointing team is of
course Carolina, which has
failed to win in two starts. The
Tar Heels were awful in their
first game and lost big to N.C.
State, but then looked
wonderful for three quarters
against South Carolina only to
blow a 27-3 lead in the final
period.
6
the sweeping curricular changes
made by Pfeiffer, Davidson,
and our next door neighbor,
Duke.
"Students who are uptight
because of the rigidity of the
General College, frustrated
because there is little or no
student participation in
departmental curriculum
decision-making, who want to
challenge the relevance of the
A, B, C, B, F grading system,
or who want to organize and
plan a course for credit are
encouraged to take advantage
of the services which the
experimental college offers,
especially group formation
through the use of the
catalogue."
The student organizers of
the experimental college are
Ptimistic that this will be the
ucsi scuiebtei ever ior tne
college.
Thompson said they are
looking for involvement from
students, faculty members, and
townspeople, both in terms of
the variety of courses offered
and the number of people
participating in the seminars.
"The experimental college,"
he said, "has been a success in
the past because of grassroots
enthusiasm, participation, and
ideas; and there does not seem
to be a lack of any of these
factors this year."
For
Oct
Planned To Solve Problems
Representing the views
and the welfare of every dorm
resident,
Making rules which are
acceptable to all
constituencies.
"The new system should be
flexible enough to facilitate
better communication," wras
the suggestion of MRC
Water Consumption
Tn Resnonse To Official Plea
1 -
By EVIE STEVENSON
DTH Staff Writer
. Daily water consumption
continues to decrease as
students and townspeople
carefully heed warnings issued
by the administration
concerning drought conditions.
Consumption for Thursday,
Oct 3 was 3.35 million gallons,
a reduction of .21 million
gallons from Wednesday's
amount
be
trying to stay on top, an
unfamiliar position for them,
while Carolina will attempt to
climb into the victory column,
in which it has been perched
only four times in the last 24
games.
Vandy has defeated VMI
25-12 and Army 17-13 in its
two encounters. The VMI win
was expected, but the victory
over the 15th-ranked Cadets
was not.
Commodore success has
largely come from a
super-charged passing attack,
which rests on the thin, but
accurate arm of quarterback
John Miller.
Miller, a sophomore, is only
5-9, 158, but he has completed
two-thirds of his aerial
attempts. He beat out senior
Chuck Boyd for the starting
slot in the VMI game, and
dazzled Army at West Point
last week.
His chief receiver has been
Curt Chesley, another
pint-sized player at 171.
Chesley has grabbed 19 passes
so far, reminding Vandy fans
of Bob Goodridge, who led the
, nation in receiving in 1967.
When thetommodores run,
they go to the tight side behind
mammoth Karl Weiss, 6-4, 240,
at end and Bob Asher, 235, at
tackle.
Vandy's defense is
experienced and has several top
individuals, but it is little
better than average for major
college standards.
All-SEC linebacker Chip
Healey at 224 is as good a
defender as the Tar Heels will
face in 1968. He and the
football are usually at the same
place": "
Middle guard Bill McDonald
isn't big at 194, but his
outstanding lateral movement
prevents most end sweeps.
The secondary has a
The Commodores will
Faculty Fellows Enjoy
Tremendous Success
By STEVE N. ENFIELD
DTH Staff Writer
Faculty Fellows,
an
experimental program that has
eight UNC professors taking an
active part in residence college
life, has been a tremendous
success since its inception this
summer.
The profs, under the
direction of Dr. Harry Smith,
Special Assistant to he
Chancellor for Residence
College Development, have
MEC
President Len Tubbs.
Libby Idol, President of
WTRC, added that her group
had come into being "before
the residence college idea ever
came to Carolina." She said its
role could be improved if
"there were joint
representation by men and
(Continued on Pace 5)
J.A. Branch of the
University's business office
warned there should not be a
let up on these conservation
efforts.
'There-is a chance we will
not receive significant rainfall
until December. If we exhaust
the Chapel Hill water supply
we will have to rely on the
Durham pipeline completely
which will not be sufficient"
The Durham City Council
Thursday approved a proposal
to construct a 12-inch pipe
And.
letterman at every position
except safety. It hasn't faced a
top passing offense yet,
however.
The soundness of the
defensive crops will probably
not be known until Vandy
plays its next three
opponents Alabama, Georgia
and Florida.
Carolina retains the lineup
which has fallen to two
opponents. There are no
serious injuries, except full
i w :; -
Professor Jay King
... in
been "absolutely fantastic both
in informal discussions and in
organizational meetings," said
Ben Taylor, governor of Scott
College.
The profs, located in James
and Scott residence colleges,
receive $1,000 per year for
serving as Faculty Fellows. The
extra salaries were made
available from the Chancellor's
Discretionary Fund. .
Working in Scott College are
Dr. E. Maynard Adams,
professor of philosophy; Dr.
Townsend Ludington, Jr.,
assistant professor of English;
and Dr. Peter G. Filene,
assistant professor of history.
Faculty fellows in James are
Dr. Richmond Crihkley,
assistant professor of english;
Father James Devereux,
assistant professor of English;
Dr. J. Frank McCormick,
assistant professor of botany;
Dr. BJ. Pettis, professor of
mathematics; and Dr. Paul
Pinckney, assistant professor of
history and modern
civilization.
According to Dr. Smith, the
Faculty Fellows have four
main duties:
Teaching sections of
Decreases
between the towns which will
carry two million gallons of
water a day to the Chapel Hill
community.
Earlier plans were to
construct an 8-inch pipe which
would only supply supply one
million gallons a day. The
12-inch pipe will run from the
Durham city limits to Pope
Road on the eastern side of
Chapel HilL Existing pipelines
run from Pope Road to the
Chapel Hill water supply.
(Continued oa Psge 5)
SO O Q
Magna
back Tommy
hasn't played
Dempsey who
this year. He is
'doubtful' for tonight
Carolina and Vandy won't
draw the interest that Roy
Acuff and Stringbean will
attract down at the Opry, but
with Vandy trying to prove it
is worth its 2-0 record and
UNC attempting to disprove its
0-2 mark, the action may be as
fast as Earl Scruggs whippet
fingers on the Ove-string banjo.
DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnabel
residence college classroom
courses wherever possible in
the dorms
Keeping regular office
hours in the residence halls
Leading discussions of
films, lectures, and seminars
Working with residence
college officers in planning
more effective programs
Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sitterson, expressing unbridled
praise for the program, said "it
(Faculty Fellows) gives the
impression of uniform
enthusiasm and confidence
that would have a constructive
effect on the total life of the
student. There is not a single
negative note in it."
Morrison and Ehringhaus
also have Faculty Fellows but
they function on a more
informal basis. They are
Michael Katz (law); Paul
Brandes (speech); John
Schnorrenberg (art); Kenneth
Reckford (classics); Rollie
Tillman (business
administration); and George
Daniels (French).
Coed Given
Probation
By Court
A woman student was given
one semester's probation by
the Co-ed Honor Court
Thursday, Sept. 24.
The student turned in a
term paper previously graded
for another course as a
semester project. She did not
tell her second professor that
the paper bad been used
before.
The court felt that this
displayed a breach of academic
conduct and of faith with her
professor. She was found guilty
of an Honor Code violation.