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GUERILLA WARFARE-Nazis, hoodlums, muggers and other
assorted deviates? No, this group of odd looking people are really
just typical UNC students who are about to present another act in
se
By J.D. WILKINSON
DTH Staff Writer
Experimental College
courses are still open to
persons who may wish to
register and have not yet done
so, according to Experimental
College coordinating
committee chairman Roger
Thompson.
Thompson said Tuesday
that the course registration
rolls are being held open and
that students may sign up for
courses by contacting the
course leaders.
The following list contains
the names and times and places
of meeting for courses whose
times and places of meeting
were not specified in the
Experimental College
Cataglogue.
Course number two:
Ancient Oriental Poetry
Forms; the first meeting was
held last night at 7:00 in the
Parker Seminar Room.
Course number three:
Interpretive Reading of
Contemporary Poetry;
Monday, November 4, 6:30
p.m., in the parlor of the
Episcopal Church of the Cross
on Franklin Street.
Course number eight: The
"Dirty Book" in America;
Tuesday, November 5, 7 p.m.,
in the Council Room,
Westminister Presbyterian
Student Center.
Course number nine: The
Novels of Hermann Hesse;
Monday, November 4, 7:30
p.m., Council Room,
Westminister Presbyterian
Student Center.
Course number 14: Ervin
UNC Sandwiches Lose Tesi
By BILL LINDEN
DTH Staff Writer
"Made-Rite sandwiches
taste like Mother's." Such was
the consensus of most students
nart in the UNC vs
"Rranrf Y" sandwich taste-test
. BJ?ndJLf L.Out Day
neia u""6 . ,
Tuesday. The commercial
brand won the test by two to
one ratio.
The test, financed by
Student Stores, offered a
Lnpling of sixty Mdwwhj.
of each brand. Students
faculty, and "anyone who
V offfdechLL
hnire of ham-and-cneese,
cMcken Ud, or pimento
cheese sandwiches.
Am
.Reg
Experimental College
Non-Renewal League; Tuesday,
November 5, 8 p.m., in the
Parker Study Room.
Course number 22: Creative
Expression in Photography ;
4'-
ELECTION DAY, UNC
STYLE-UNC student faculty
and staff Tuesday made known
their preference in the
s
Two-To-One
Of the 346 samplings made,
the results were: for Pimento
Cheese-UNC, 43 votes (33);
Brand Y, 87 cotes (67); for
chicken salad-UNC, 32 votes
(25), Brand Y, 95 votes
(75); for ham-and-cheese-
UNU, 44 votes i4Hj;
46 (52). Because of
UNC, 43 votes (48); Brand Y,
a mistake
in
delivery of the commercial
sandwiches, the Brand Y
sandwiches were on rye bread
and UNC sandwiches were on
white.
Totals were: UNC, 118 votes
(34.1); Brand Y, 228 votes
(65.9).
A Raleigh newspaper
reporter tasting two kinds of
sandwiches chose the
commercial brand to be far
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, : WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30,
DTH Staff ttioto By Crant McOWoct
the continuing series of performances of the guerilla theater. The
acts were presented at various times throughout the day in Polk
Place.
istratioB
Vacancies Remain
Thursday, October 31, 6 p.m.,
at the Silent Sam statue.
Course number 23: No
Bullshit; Monday, November 4,
8 p.m. , at Silent Sam. v
t 1
.V
'V.
If
J- ?
DTH
presidential and North Carolina
gubernatorial race at elections
held at Y Court and other
spots on campus. The results
Ratio
superior to UNC sandwiches.
Ken Day, student body
president, also favored the
commercial sandwich. Tom
Shetley, head of Student
Stores, sampled the
sandwiches, but would not
comment on the grounds that
he "could tell which is which."
The director of UNC
sandwich facilities kept
surveillance over the test all
day.
In view of the fact that the
A. A. . a a
iaste-iesi was ohtlv
conducted by Jim Glass,
Director of the Student
Government Consumer
Services Commission, and a
representative of the Food
Service, I am firmly convinced
76 Years Of Editorial Freedom
NSA. SSOC
1
Ben
Course number 38:
Prospectives in Current
History; Tuesday, November 5,
7 p.m., basement parlor of
Parker.
1 V.
d
Staff Photo By Crant McCLintoclt
were not completed until late
last night,
the results are of great validity
and should receive prime
consideration at the Student
Stores Committee meeting
today. Glass, Bob Manekin,
and Harry D if fendal, the
student representatives, should
press the case strongly at that
time."
Comments on the
sandwiches ranged from
"These others have too much
mayonnaise!" to "Neither
tastes like the typical UNC
sandwich. Are you sure they're
different brands?'
The UNC sandwiches
succeeded in winning in one
aspect: three bones were found
in UNC chicken sandwiches
whereas the commercial brands
had none.
1 11 ..i
m V
1
Combined
New Group To Seek
B
road Base Move
By BRYAN CUMMING
I TH Staff Writer
A new statewide
organization combining the
National Student Association
(NSA) with the Southern
Students Organizing
Committee (SSOC) has been
formed to involve students in
University reform and
community action, announced
NSA President Robert Powell
Tuesday in a Time-Out Day
news conference.
Powell, president of the
UNC student body in 1965-66,
stated that the hope of this
new coalition is to establish a
"broadly based student
movement" in North Carolina
working in a "common
direction."
The new coalition will hold
a statewide conference at Duke
University November 8-10, to
discuss plans for student
participation.
; Powell reported the
acitivties of Time-Out Day on
some of the 120 other
campuses across the country
where it was held. Time-Out
Day is a national NSA project
designed to -stimulate student
dialogues on pertinent issues.
At the University of
Chicago, the topic was
Vietnam; at Notre Dame, the
role of the Catholic Church in
higher education; at City
College of New York, students
discussed the role they had in
making decisions.
Powell commented that
,many student ; groups have
become unified because of
"growing hositility . . . against
students." He termed UNC
"one of the most active"
campuses.
Powell gave an account of
student activism at Colorado
State, an agricultural school.
Three thousand students
occupied the student center
over the primary issue of beer
drinking on campus.
The larger issue which
mobilized the students,
according to Powell, was their
right to determine their own
social policies.
Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sitterson stated at the press
conference that Time-Out Day
was "indispensible." He also
voiced his agreement with a
statement made by Dean CO.
Cathey Tuesday morning in the
JHlinl laeceiYeg
McCarthy
PITTSBURGH
(UPI)-Hubert H. Humphrey
Tuesday jubulantly welcomed
the support of Eugene J.
McCarthy and said it would
have a "decidedly good" effect
on his campaign in the last
seven days before the election,
Almost bubbling over with
enthusiasm, Humphrey
received the good news from
his old Minnesota colleague
early in the day before starting
out on a long swing through
Pennsylvania from Pittsburgh
to Philadelphia in an effort to
win the state's 29 electoral
votes.
At two points during the
trip, Humphrey underscored
his intention, if elected, to be
his own President instituting
new ideas on Vietnam policy
and divorcing himself from
personalities in the Johnson
administration.
During a taped television
interview, Humphrey was
asked whether he felt he had a
obligation to the Johnson
people who have helped him in
the campaign.
"None whatsoever,"
Humphrey said. "None of
them would expect it and they
will all offer their
resignations."
1968
had called the law regarding
mar ij una in the state and
nation "entirely too rigorous."
Time-Out Day was
coordinated by two campus
NSA members, Buck Goldstein
and Charles Jeffress. Goldstein
is the regional vice-chairman of
NSA, and Jeffress serves on the
national supervisory board,
representing the Southern
United States from Texas to
Virginia.
Powell mentioned the role
that Time-Out Day should play
in stimulating student
participation in politics.
According to Powell, there
is widespread cynicism on
college campuses today
because students have been
disillusioned with the influence
they thought they had in the
political system.
The new coalition of NSA
and SSOC is designed to "pick
up momentum" from last
years's student concern. Powell
says that students must decide
whether they should particpate
in politics at all In the new
organization, students will
"reassess" their role in politics.
In addition to SSOC, the
state wide NSA has assimilated
the University Christian
Movement.
Cathey Terms Marijuana
Laws As Too Rigorous'
Dean of Student Affairs
CO. Cathey stated Tuesday he
felt that laws concerning
marijuana are too rigorous in
the state and nation at large.
, Speaking to a crowd of
approximately 150 at an open
forum as part of the
'Time-Out" activities, Cathey
stated, "I personally feel
that .... the laws are entirely
too rigorous in this state and
pretty well across the nation
governing marijuana. I think
that concerning hard narcotics,
they need to be very rigorous."
When questioned about
visitation on campus, he
replied that he didn't know
when the committee on
visitation would report its
findings and make its
recommendation, but he would
Humphrey took his
campaign to East Pittsburgh
and McKeesport, both only a
few miles from Pittsburgh. He
spoke to several thousand
workers at the Westinghouse
Corp.'s East Pittsburgh works
and again at the National Tube
Works of U.S. Steel Corp. in
McKeesport. In between the
two stops, he paused to reflect
for a few moments at a
memorial statue of John F.
Kennedy.
Humphrey, hatless and
coatless despite the cold and
wind, told the Westinghouse
and U.S. Steel workers Richard
M. Nixon "has become the No.
1 doubletalker of all times."
He said Nixon "had the gall
to come here yesterday,
Monday, and call for federal
aid to parochial schools when
he voted to kill it"
Humphrey, who long had
hoped for the McCarthy
endorsement, said there was no
way to measure how much it
would mean in votes.
"But the senator has many
supporters and friends
throughout the nation,"
Humphrey said.
"I believe that these people
who have listened to him on
other subjects will be willing to
listen to him on this subject."
ft i -
I"- s VJ
J 4
t iri i 1 1 - '
DTH Staff Fhoto By Grant McOintock
Dean Of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey
Spoke At Open Forum On Time-Out Day Tuesday
have that report to the
Chancellor within a day after
he receives it.
In further discussions,
Cathey stated he felt that
prices in the Student Stores are
too high. He noted that he had
purchased an object in Chapel
Hill which he knows he could
Local Dems
The Chapel Hill Democratic
Headquarters consider the
whitewashing of their window
front on East Franklin Street a
prank, according to Mrs. Alice
Welsh, chairman of the
Headquarters.
Mrs. Welsh said that the
window had been covered with
Mrs.
ATLANTA (UPI)-The
widow of Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr., in a decision "I have
the feeling he would give,"
Monday endorsed the
presidential candidacy of
Hubert Humphrey, saying she
hopes he can
"create one
community of
Americans,
black and white." ,
"I intend to vote for Vice
President Humphrey because I
think his opponents represent
too many of the forces in
American life that are
insensitive and antagonistic to
racial and economic justice and
peace."
She called her endorsement
"qualified," and expressed
disappointment Humphrey
"has not separated himself
resolutely from administration
policies on Vietnam and that
he has too cautiously
confronted racism as a national
disaster."
But Mrs. King, dressed in an
orange dress with black beads
and seated in front of a
portrait of her slain husband,
said "I believe an
administration headed by Vice
President Humphrey will be
more responsive to demands
and more resistant to repressive
measure than will his
opponents."
Big
Charlie's Bach
Charlie Scott, UNC
basketball star, returned from
the Olympics and spoke about
the trip to DTH Staff Writer
Art Chansky Tuesday. For the
story, see page 4.
Founded -February 23. 1893
have bought cheaper in
Durham.
In a statement made at the
forum by Dr. Caliborne Jones,
representing the Chancellor, it
was learned that there will no
longer be a security agent at
the meetings of SSOC or
similar groups on campus.
Whitewashed
white paint and peace symbols
early Sunday morning, and she
believed that vandals were
responsible for the paint job.
"If the defacers were
politically malicious they could
have damaged the headquarters
far more . . . like by breaking
the window," she added.
.Boost
King
Asked if she thought her
husband would have endorsed
Humphrey, Mrs. King replied,
"I have a feeling he would give
the kind I have a qualified
endorsement."
Mrs. King said she endorsed
not Humphrey the man as he is
now, but Humphrey the
president he could be. She said
good presidents are not
elected, but are shaped by
pressures from within.
"It will take
statesmanship to
great
create
reconciliation between the
races," Mrs. King said. "I
would hope that a massive
black vote will helpt to
strengthen and pressure a
Humphrey administration to
attain that goal and create one
community of Americans,
black and white."
Mrs. King's endorsement of
the vice president, came the
day after the Rev. Ralph
Abernathy, King's successor as
president of. the Southern
Christian Leadership
Conference, announced a
similar personal presidential
choice. Mrs. King said her
endorsement and Abernathy's
represented independent
actions.