u-'-T.C. Library
Sorialc Dept.
Box 870
Chapel Hill, ;;.c.
Clark Kerr
host UNaCVrcV' Ch' 4. will
. conversation with
administrator Clark
tonight at 9:30.
Volume 7G, Number 51
DTH Staff Photo by Tout Schnabcl
Former Governor William Scranton
. . . Spoke In Memorial Hall Thursday Night
D
ay Requests Consideration
Of Coed
By BOBBY NOWELL
DTH Staff Writer
Student Body President Ken
Day submitted to Student
Legislature Wednesday night a
resolution urging the
Chancellor and his Advisory
Committee on Residential
Colleges to begin evaluation of
coeducational living facilities
for those areas of campus
which are without them.
The resolution, introduced
by Representative Harry
Diffendal, will be considered
by the Legislature at its
meeting next Thursday.
Day, said the resolution
reflects student interest in
developing co-ed living
facilities, which was begun as
an experiment this year by
converting Parker into a girls'
dorm as part of Scott College.
"We feel such facilities hold
a great deal of merit for
residential colleges," Day said.
The resolution urges the
administration to take
whatever steps are necessary to
begin a full evaluation of the
advisability and feasibility of
developing co-ed living
facilities, especially on South
Winston
Winners of the "Dirtiest
Dorm" contest, held during the
severe drought period, were
announced yesterday.
Winston Dorm, which used
680 gallons per person from
Oct. 7 to Nov. 12, won the
coed dorm division. Winston
will receive a $30 gift
certificate from the Chapel Hill
Merchant's Association.
Kappa Delta won the
sorority division, using 1960
gallons of water per person
during the same time period.
The KD's will receive a gift
certificate for the
amount. .
Delta Upsilon, which
Q44 trallons per person
same
used
from
nrt 14 to Nov. 12,
won me
fratprnitv division
The DU's
will be given a keg of beer.
A keg will also be given to
Kings Residence College which
. u mon's dorm division.
Residents of Ruffin, Grimes
Manly and Mangum used 837
gallons per person from Oct.
14 to Nov. 12.
The winner were presented
thdr Pzes by William
Hwinen.president
artn rnp 1 1 it'll
Chapel
Association.
Association
The
Merchant s
sponsored
the
Sond.place went to Alpha
Kappa Psi ( using 956 gallons
pCrPPperson,) Davie Ueadence
27514
. LnArr.L mi. i
Living Facilities
Campus.
In addition, it calls on the
Executive Branch of Student
Government to provide all
assistance possible to the
administration inconducting
such research and evaluation.
- Day said he is "confident
those in authority will take the
proper steps to undertake
study of this vital question.
"In the interest of students
who will be affected by a
decision in the area of co-ed
living arrangements, wre must in
good conscience begin to
devote some of our time and
effort to this issue.
"Recognizing the decision
process on this question is in
some ways more complex than
that of some other issues with
which we have recently dealt,
we owe it to the Residential
College System to take those
responsible first steps now to
see this dream become a
reality."
Day said it would be
possible to convert one-half or
one-third of any South Campus
dorm into coed quarters. This
could be done by housing
female residents in the lower
half and male residents in the
upper half, utilizing special
Kappa, DU, King Also Won
Girls
College (943 gallons,) Spencer
Dorm (926) and Alpha Delta Pi
(1974.)
Each dorm, fraternity, and
sorority was given a weekly
Ilk y ' : ' -x ' '
' ji K I
IYVH Staff Photo by Tom Schnabcl
DIRTY DORM WINNERS Winners in the dirty dorm contest receive prizes from W.L. Macllv.inen,
president of the Chapel Hill Merchants Association. Representing the winners are (left to right)
Scott Wallace (DU), Larry Boyer (Kings Residence College) and Carolyn Walker (Dappa Delta). Not
represented is Winston dorm.
Aim
j i I I 1 r i i i
crantoias
'Put Our
House In
By BOBBY NOW ELL
DTH Staff Writer
Former Pennsylvania Gov.
William Scranton told a
Memorial Hall audience
Tuesday night that America's
image in Western Europe is "at
an all-time low."
Scranton, who toured the
other half of the Free World
recently to "recement" U.S.
relations, said most Europeans
"think of America as highly
militaristic now because of
what we're doing in Vietnam.
"They think of the
Russian-Czechoslovakian
relationship in the same breath
with the United
States-Vietnam. They consider
us, like the Russians, to be
military bullies."
Scranton believes that the
plunge of American image
since WTorld War II is due to
several reasons. "Most of all it
elevators which would service
each half separately.
Many major institutions in
the country currently operate
such residence halls, but Day
pointed out they have not had
to convert dorms as would be
the case here. v -"
South Granville, part of a
privately-owned dorm complex
here, is planned to be
coeducational as previously
outlined.
"Such arrangements for
South Campus could be
beneficial and should be
considered," Day said.
"However, we realize that the
cost, and pragmatic questions,
such as security and feasible
convenience, are difficult
matters which have to be
brought forward.
"Having done 'homework'
in talking to the Chancellor
and other officials about the
idea, we felt the time was right
to bring up the resolution. We
have had the bulk of our
attention in recent weeks
consumed by immediate issues
which have been of pressing
concern to us. Thus we have
not been able to act on coed
living arrangements until now."
Named 'Dirtiest '
reading of its water
consumption. The contest was
begun to promote student
concern for the water crisis.
Joyce Davis, who managed
76 Years 0 Editorial Freedom
NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1968
Seen
Own
Order 9
has been our myopic
concentration on Southeast
Asia and our relative
inattention to the problems of
Western Europe," he said.
"Also our friends are
concerned about our internal
problems. Two recent events
which they watched on
television left an indelible
impression on them. The first
was the Democratic convention
in Chicago what went on
inside, not outside the arena.
Second was the candidacy of
George Wallace' and Curtis
LeMay. This reminded them of
the Hitleresque movement,
racist and militarist."
The silver-haired executive
suggested that the best way
Americans could help Europe
"is to help ourselves to set our
own house in order first."
He pointed out that most
Europeans feel the United
States is naive about
Communism. "They seem
satisfied that Russia must have
a peaceful flank, in Western
Europe and the United States,
in order to deal with their
Chinese problem.
"Therefore conventional
weapons have become much
more important in the last five
or six years as the reality of
what a nuclear war can do has
sunk in with the Russians."
Although he is in favor of
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, Scranton said he does
not favor adoption of the pact
now because "no Western
Hemisphere nation knows what
goes on internally
governmentally in the Soviet
Union."
As an example, he cited the
Russian invasion of the Czechs.
"None of the NATO members
made any attempt to stop their
troop movements because they
did not foresee an actual
invasion," he said.
Aformer State Department
member, Scranton said he
made the European tour
"partially on behalf" of
president-elect Richard Nixon.
But he again denied he would
be a member of the Nixon
cabinet. "I have no desire to
return to government," he
declared.
But he pointed out that the
State Department has long been
in need of an overhaul. "The
new Secretary of State must do
a better administrative job and
must reinvoke the
(Continued on Page 8)
the contest, said, "During the
contest there was significant
decrease in water usage. This
shows students will help in
time of a crisis."
As Military Bully'
ma
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DTH S taff I hoto by Tom Schnabcl
Part Of Student Group Which Marched Thursday Night
. . . Marched To Chancellor's Home Requesting Visitation
March On Chancellor's House
Studemts Ask Visitation
About "two hundred
students marching for
visitation found no one at the
Chancellor's house and ended
up presenting their
recommendations to a full
crowd at Memorial Hall last
night.
The march lasted over an
hour, beginning at South
Campus, passing dormitories
on Raleigh Rd., assembling
before the home of Chancellor
J. Carlyle Sitterson, and ending
by marching into Memorial
Hall shortly after 8:00,
moments before the scheduled
appearance of Gov. William
Scranton.
When the marchers reached
Chancellor Sitterson's house,
Buck Goldstein suggested that
they present the
recommendations to the
Chancellor at Memorial Hall.
The students voiced their
approval and proceeded
towards the main campus.
Upon reaching Memorial
Hall, the group divided into
two columns which entered the
auditorium through the side
and center aisles. Sam Austell,
one of the march organizers,
addressed the crowd at a
microphone before the stage.
Austell informed the
audience of the students'
search for the Chancellor. He
then read his recommendations
to the audience.
The recommendations asked
that each dorm be allowed to
determine its own visitation
policy, just as worded in the
October visitation petition
D
ean
O
O
Dean of Men J.O. Cansler
told a group of student
personnel officials Thursday
that they should react both
sympathetically and skeptically
to the student activist
movement at UNC.
"What we must do," Cansler
told the group," is to take care
to understand the dynamics of
today's student who he
is what he's trying to do but
to oppose the destructive
forces he sometimes
promotes."
Cansler pointed out that
90 of the students on this
(and most other college)
campuses are the orthodox and
apathetic while the other 10
are the culturally allienated
and the political activists.
L
signed by over four thousand
students.
Austell also read the request
that all committees making
decisions that influence lives of
the students hold open
meetings in the future.
After the demands were read,
the Memorial Hall crowd
applauded, a few people hissed,
and the marchers left the
auditorium
The march was organized by
the University and Student
Committee, an action group of
Southern Student Organizing
Committee. The University and
Student Committee also
initiated the petition on coed
visitation last month.
Jeffress, Goldstein Label
Legislature 'Unresponsive'
By TOM GOODING
DTH Staff Writer
Student Government was
severely criticized yesterday as
being "irrelevant, elite, and
unresponsive" by Buck
Goldstein and Charles Jeffress.
"The thing that troubles me
most in working in Student
Government and as one of Ken
Day's presidential assistants is
to see the work we are doing
become increasingly irrevelant
to the lives of the students,"
said Goldstein.
Both Goldstein and Jeffress
Understand.
Cansler Addresses Personnel Officials
He explained that the
political activists reject the
status quo, demonstrate
abrasively and destructively,
but are the idealists of the age.
They have achieved
considerable success by being
articulate and relentless, he
noted.
Cansler stated that the
political activists on the UNC
campus are the most gifted
intellectually, the most
sensitive, the most perceptive
and the most advantaged.
Chapel Hill, according to
Cansler, has many activists
because the recuirements for
admission are high.
Cansler blamed the trouble
of this voung generation on Dr.
Benjamin Spock and his
owe
- Austell had originally
planned to leave the
recommendations at the
Cahncellor's house if he wasn't
there, but last night the
students marching for
visitation voted to try to find
the Chancellor.
The Chancellor was not
present in Memorial Hall when
the students recommendations
were read.
The Chancellor's advisory
committee on coed visitation,
comprised of six students and
six faculty members, is
expected to submit
its
the
recommendations to
Chancellor next week.
Austell originally planned to
were upset that the Student
Legislature had passed the
Williford-McMurry Drug Policy
which they consider to be
contrary to both student rights
and freedoms, and contrary to
the wishes of the student body.
"When the time has arrived
that SG supports a bill to limit
the rights of students we've got
to think seriously about
whether there ought to be a SG
at all," Goldstein sa?d.
"Student Legislators aren't
listening at all to atudents. The
any claim to leadership we may
have had. Students expressed
teaching of permissiveness. He
said "we are reaping the
'rewards' of this up-bringing."
For the student activist, the
past is obsolete and the future
cannot be predicted, thus he is
living for today and is
concerned with action today.
He cares little for the long term
effects of his actions and it is
the duty of these officials
working with the students to
show him these effects, Cansler
advised.
Cansler supported the
student activist in trying to
change bad processes in
administration, government,
social injustice and academic
reforms.
However, he made ii clear
that student personal efficials
Interdating
Rabbi Sau! Kraft will lead a
discussion of "Interesting and
Intermarriage on the College
Campus" tonight at 8 in the
HiDel House, 210 W. Cameron
Ave.
Founded February 23, 1893
march on this committee, but
he decided to march on the
Chancellor instead since the
committee is responsible to the
Chancellor.
A march on the visitation
committee, attracting over a
thousand students, was held on
Oct. 28. The march was held to
support the work of the
committee and express student
support of visitation.
After the march on the
committee, the University and
Student Committee drew up a
statement shifting its strategy,
deciding to march on the
Chancellor instead of his
committee.
clearly what they
wanted which is more student
freedom in the area of drug
possession. Legislature
squashed it, saying students
shouldn't have that freedom."
"I think legislature is in
danger, if it hasn't already, of
losing leadership of the
students on this campus. If we
continue doing in the future as
we have in the past in the drive
for student rights and
freedoms, the students will
completely bypass the SL and
the SG," Jeffress said.
(Continued on Paffe 7)
indents
must exercise discipline to
maintain an ordered life and
that there were times when the
university must say no and
mean it. They must do this, he
said, in order to make the
future more certain.
When asked about the SSOC
visitation march Thursday
nig'it, Cansler said that in his
opinion the march was taking
place because Student
Government is doing too good
a job and is stealing the
spotlight from SSOC.
He added that a member of
Student Government had
expressed his displeasure of the
march to Cansler. According to
Cansler, Student Gov. has done
its best to prevent the march.