Box 870 "
C.
275U
W Moot in is
Day Opposition
Student Body President Ken
Dav oppose Administration
plans to require South Campus
residents in single rooms to pay
private room prices or find a
roommate. See page four.
There win k
meeting of ?f an executive
Monday at .eLniVCrsity Part'
'-ounge upstairs at CM.
76 Yean Of Editorial Freedom
Xue 76, Number
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DTH Staff Photo liy S tew A dams
On The UNC Campus, There Are Plenty Of Things To Do
. . . Such As Play Football Or Even Just Sit Around With Someone
By TOM SNOOK
DTH Staff Writer
A bill calling for the
boycott of breakfast at Lenoir
Cafeteria and the Pine Room
on November 6, 7, and 8 was
passed by Student Legislature
Thursday night.
The bill, which originally
called for approval of Student
Body President Ken Day's
appointments to the Executive
Branch of the Student
Government, was amended
with the proposal for the
boycott.
Representative Rafael Perez
(MD VII) introduced the
amendment as a protest against
the UNC sandwiches and the
University Food Service.
By BOBBY NOWELL
DTH Staff Writer
(Final in a series)
Carolina graduate students
separated intellectually and
socially from their graduate
peers by tradition rather than
by written rules have
themselves taken up thyfjght
against the laissez-faire attitude
which has created their
isolation from the rest of the
University. .
A recent survey by the
Hailv Tar Heel revealed that
faculty-administration is a
v
t
Okays Lenoir Bovcot
V
Plans currently call for a
booth to be set up in front of
Lenoir Hall offering coffee and
do nuts to students during
boycott.
A resolution calling for an
amendment to the student
constitution to permit the
establishment of MRC courts
in the residential colleges on an
experimental basis passed
legislature favorably.
Opposition to the bill arose
when several legislators
questioned the effect of
individual courts as opposed to
a standard court.
Representative Richie Leonard
then suggested that an appeals
court could be established
which by precedent could
overturn decisions of the lower
court.
GSA: New
prime cause of disquietude in
the ranks of the former.
That is where the Graduate
Student Association steps in.
The first group which attempts
to unite all departments of the
graduate . school, its success or
failure at attempted liaison
with South Building and
Student Government will
largely determine whether the
plight of the Chapel Hill grad
student will improve.
The individual departments
of the grad school have always
had their s.judent clubs, but the
GSA, which was . organized
only last spring, wants to tie
these together in order to (1)
The measure came up for a
vote and was passed. As a
result, a referendum will be.
called for November 12 to
Two Arrested In Scuffle
At Orange County School
HILLSBOROUGH,N.C.
(UPI) Two Negro youths were
arrested Friday in a brawl
between white and negro
pupils in the corridors of
Orange County High School.
Two white students
required hospital
treatment one for a slash
Weapon For The Graduate Student
reconcile the grad school to the
undergrads and administration,
and (2) to bring about change
in the overall programs of the
University.
Simplistieally speaking, the
problem at its origin lies in the
student-faculty relationship.
Every faculty professor at
Carolina is expected to be able
to teach both graduate and
undergraduate courses.
Although there is a "graduate
faculty" which limits itself to
conducting graduate courses,
the burden on those profs who
"go both ways" is tremendous
even if one considers only the
semester hours taught.
Bv OWEN DAVIS
DTH Sports Editor
AIR FORCE ACADEMY,
Colo A school whose moral
fiber has been questioned and a
rigidly-disciplined military
academy collide in a football
game here this afternoon, and
the winner will score a victory
for its educational system as
well as its gridiron record.
Carolina, which drew state
gubernatorial candidate Jim
Gardner's ire over its moral
standards this week, will test
its theory of free thought
against the Air Force
Academy's strict rules of
military conformity, which are
supposed to make men.
The teams will vie in the
ideological and football
struggle at , Falcon Stadium,
which rests - 6,000 ifeet above
sea level on the eastern slope of
the Rocky Mountains.
Gametime is 1:30 Mountain
time, 3:30 Eastern Standard
Chapel Hill time.
Air Force is probably the
favorite foe for North Carolina
partisans, because it was the
Falcons that UNC defeated
35-0 in the 1963 Gator Bowl,
the Tar Heels' finest hour in
the last 20 years.
But the last two regular
season meetings have been won
by the Academy, including a
10-8 victory here last season.
Carolina Coach Bill Dooley
discounts the altitude factor in
the thinner air of Continental
Divide country, which has
prompted some Air Force
opponents to use oxygen
masks on the sidelines.
"The altitude is just a
mental thing," says Dooley.
"Last year we were stronger in
the second half than in the
first, and we almost pulled out
a victory in the last quarter."
What worries Dooley most
is the wide open offense the
Falcons are running this
season.
"Air Force uses 38 different
offensive formations," he said,
"and has scored over 20' points
a game. In comparison we use
about a dozen formations."
But Falcon Coach Ben
Martin has similar ideas about
the Tar Heels, and he said
J
establish the amendment.
A bill to appropriate $363
dollars from the general surplus
(Continued on Pae 8
wound across the face and othe
other for a head injury. Both
were treated and released.
There were no reports of more
serious injuries.
Orange County High has an
enrollment of about 800.
About 20 pupils joined in the
fight
which lasted only a few-
Last Of
6 At Least. We Don't Have The Extreme Forms
Of Isolation Here As They Do At Berkeley . . .
Where The Student May Never See His bi
stuetor More Than Once A Semester.9
Thus the problem of
accessibility to the faculty is
very real for some.
However. Dr. James C.
Ingram, Dean of the UNC
Graduate School. says,
"Comparatively speaking, my
impression is that we're better
Thursday that "Carolina runs
more offensive sets than any
team we have faced this year."
Air Force has a 4-2 record,
including a victory over
Wyoming, undefeated last
season. Carolina sports a 2-4
slate with two wins over
Southeastern Conference
teams.
Mercer
Attend Foram; Hits
By TOM SNOOK
DTH Staff Writer
Student, body
Vice-President Charlie Mercer
urged Friday that all students
attend the open forum with
the student members of the
visitation committee to be held
Monday afternoon.
Noting that the Southern
Student Organizing Committee
(SSOC) called off their march
on the visitation committee's
meeting Monday night, Mercer
stated that SSOC does not have
the interests of students
foremost in their mind.
If they did, he noted, not
only would they hold the
march, but they would also ask
the students to come to the
forum Monday afternoon and
question the student members
of the committee.
Mercer said, "SSOC has
tried to make the students
-believe that SSOC is
responsible for the ultimate
policy that will come out of
this committee. By calling off
the march, they have proven
that they aren't. Student
Government, by representing
the students, is responsible."
In describing the history of
the formation of the visitation
committee and the talks to
date, Mercer noted that it was
student government leaders
and interested students who
began meeting with the
administration in the summer
to urge the adoption of a
visitation policy. He added that
SSOC had not even been
formed at this time.
Secondly, he noted it was
student government that did
the research and obtained the
facts from other universities
about their visitation policies
which convinced the
administration that they
should work with
minutes. About
were negro.
12 of them
Two unidentified
negro
youths were arrested by the
Orange County Sheriff's
department. Niether attended
the school. They were arrested
for respassing.
A Series
off than many large universities
in this respect. Our graduate
students can get in touch with
their profs when they need
to they get good exposure by
and large."
"At least," he concluded,
"we don't have the extreme
The Tar Heels and Falcons
are very close statistically.
Both teams have rushed over
1,100 yards and passed just
over TOO, and there is only 52
yards difference in their total
offense.
The two styles of attack
also emphasize the rushing
game, but the similarity ends
Asks
representatives of the student
body to obtain a visitation
policy.
Mercer added, "Ironically, it
was Bill Darrah who SSOC
criticized at the first march last
Monday night; he is responsible
for compiling the information
Which spurred the
administration to consider a
policy."
"In regard to the petition,"
Mercer continued, "it was a
joint effort by student
government and SSOC-not
SSOC alone. At the insistence
of the students on the
committee, this petition
Visitation March Aimed
At Si iter sou Says SSO C
By BRYAN CUMMING
DTH Staff Writer
The proposed march for
visitation will be directed at
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson
rather than his advisory
committee, the University and
Student Committee revealed
Friday. This marks a new
strategy in the fight for
visitation.
The University and Student
Committee, in a mass meeting
of Southern Students
Organizing Committee (SSOC)
held Oct. 31, released a
statement explaining the new
strategy. A march for visitation
was held Monday, Oct. 28, in
support of the meeting of the
student-faculty committee on
Coed Visitation.
It was decided that student
attention should be directed
toward the Chancellor, since
the cornmitee is responsible to
him, rather than to the
committee. The statement
listed its grievances as follows:
1) WTiat probably angered us
most at the walk last Monday
night was that the
student-faculty committee on
visitation refused to relate to
us the particulars of their
discussions. In essense what
they were doing was assuming
the same role the
administration assumes when it
decides a policy that will affect
the students and yet faiis to
consider the overall students'
opinions. This type of action
forms of isolation here as they
do at Berkeley, for example,
where the student may never
see his instructor more than
once in a semester."'
Many graduate leaders feel
this is' begging the question
somewhat, but the fact is that
the University is still becoming
acclimated to the onrush of
graduate students into its ranks
in the past ten years.
The real issue, these leaders
believe, is breaking up the
centralization ?nd lack of
flexibility which characterizes
the current education process
and is the major reason that
"education is just not what it
there.
Air Force features a quick,
explosive offense with many
end sweeps by speedster
halfbacks Curtis Martin and
Ernest Jennings.
Carolina on the other hand
relies on the bootleg runs of
quarterback Gayle Bomar and
the tough inside game of its
4 Till
All
weighed heavily in proving to
faculty and administration
members that the student
wanted a policy on visitation."
He noted that other
petitions such as thyones
collected at James and
Morrison were done
independently of SSOC and
have been important in urging
immediate action by the
committee.
He said, "It was students
outside of SSOC who enabled
the committee's proposal to go
straight to the Chancellor and
thus by-pass normal
bureaucratic channels."
seemed to indicate to us that
2) the committee did not
represent the students and was
not responsible to the students,
but was in fact responsible to
the Chancellor.
3) W7e also discussed the fact
that the committee was only
an advisory board and the final
decision rests with the
Chancellor.
The statement further states
that a walk on the committee
would "be of no value."
Instead, the group plans "to
walk to the Chancellor's house
as soon as he receives the
recommendations of the
Committee."
"At that time we will
present our own
recommendations to the
Chancellor. Our
recommendations will be
determined entirely by our
belief in the right of the
student to self-determination."
"We will also include a
demand that in the future all
committees of this nature be
open to general student
attendance and participation."
Other issues that were
discussed at the general SSOC
meeting were the statewide
conference to be held Nov. 8,9,
and 10, the petition of the
Draft Resistance Union, a
street party to be held election
night, the new SSOC office in
Chapel Hill and the initiation
of a weekly newsletter.
The theme of the
conference, to be held in
should be."
To attack the problems
which concern it most and
which it feels are largely
underplayed by the undergrad
Student Government, the GSA
has committes actively engaged
in six areas.
The projected aims of the
Academic Reform Committee
are typical of the overall GSA
approach to reform.
Zan White, of the English
Department, believes "a lot of
things we're facing as grads are
directly related to the
undergraduate system."
"Your education at the
University for the first two
hefty wingbacks and tailbacks.
AFA Coach Martin said that
"Bomar is the best quarterback
we will face this year."
'Defense has been a problem
for UNC, and the Tar Heels
have yielded 165 points in
their six contests. Carolina has
been hurt mostly on the
(Continued on Pace 4
indents
SSOC
Mercer stated that there
were three primary reasons
responsible for the progress
made towards a visitation
policy. He said, "First of all, it
was the student body who has
shown that they want and need
it for a more wholesome social
and academic environment.
Secondly, it was the student
government that has researched
visitation and related students
feelings on it to the
administration. And finally it is
the administration that has
recognized the need for a
policy and is working at the
insistence of students to fullf ill
it."
Durham, is "The student as
nigger." According to SSOC
worker George Vlasits, the
(Continued on Pare 3)
SP Plans
Drug Policy
Discussion
A discussion on drug policy
will be held at the Student
Party meeting, Sunday, Nov. 3
at 7:30 p.m. in Gerrard Hall.
The Student Legislature will
vote on the drug policy on
Thursday, Nov. 7.
The meeting is the first of
the final series of judicial
hearings and discussions on
drugs before the Student
Legislature votes on a drug
policy.
Ken Day, president of the
student body, will join the
drug discussion at 8:00 p.m.
The medical implications of a
drug policy will be discussed at
9:00 p.m. at the home of Dr.
Clifford Rifler. Transportation
will be provided for interested
persons.
Legislative vacancies will
be filled at the meeting. These
vacancies are in Morrison,
Granville East, Men's District 1
(Victory Village and out of
town,) Men's District IV and
the Joyner-Winston-Cornnor
District.
years is de-personalized and
computerized. When you
become a graduate student,
still very much a part of this
system, and when the job of
teaching falls to you, you have
to question the merits of the
existing system.
"For example, we're trying
to break away from the idea
that a particular course must
be taught either in lecture or in
seminar. It should vary with
the professor, because many
cn teach well in one of these
ways, but not both.
"Also we are fighting
against students, especially
(Continued on page 3)