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Campus Code
There will be an open
hearing of the Campus Code
Revision Committee today at
3:30 p.m. in the Grail Room in
GM.
76 lean Of Editorial Freedom
Volume 76, Number 55'
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAKOUNA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 196S
Founded February . 23,
1
L ; i :
Street Demonstration
T
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Code
Violation
Reported
A charge of violating the
UNC Campus Code was
brought against student
' legislator Rafael Perez Tuesday
by DTH Editor Wayne Hurder.
A member of the attorney
general's staff heard the
accusation against Perez, a
resident of Everett dormitory
and a member of student
legislature from men's district
seven, and then filed the
charge.
Perez admitted that he was
arrested in Managua,
Nicaragua, last summer for
"drunkeness and disorderly
conduct.? He said that he
incident followed
unsuccessful "tiger-hunt."
a
Hurder claimed that Perez's
actions and his ensuing arrest
constitute a violation of the
UNC's Campus Code.
The purpose of the charge,
according to Perez and Hurder,
is to test the applicability of
the Campus Code to
off-campus activities and to
point out the "absurdity" of
the Campus Code.
The key phrase : in the
Campus Code which Perez
questions is "...you are
bound on your responsibility
as a gentleman to conduct
yourself as such at all
times ..."
He said that many students
have been convicted on charges
of violating the Campus Code
for off - campus and
out-of-town activities because
of this phrase.
Perez hopes that the charge
brought agaist him will .spur
student legislature to action
concerning revision of the
code.
The legislature is
empowered to call for a
student referendum on the
Campus Code "but has thus far
fialed to do so, despite urging
by Perez, other legislators, and
other students.
The member of the attorney
general's staff who filed the
complaint against Perez said
the office's investigator's
would study the case and
gather evidence.
Perez said later, however,
after talking with Attorney
General Dan Stallings, that
Stallings indicated he was not
sure that he would press
charges and bring the case to
trial.
Exam Schedule
The following is the final examination schedule 5:
for the fall semester, 1968. The time of an exam
g: may not be changed after it has been fixed on the
schedule. :$
S Quizes are not to be given in this semester on or
x after Monday, Jan. 13, 1969. Prior to taking an :
ijij examination, to remove a grade of "Exc. Abs." or $
"Cond." a permit must be secured by the student S
ijij from the Office of Records and Registration. ::!
$
All 1 :00 p.m. classes on MWF, PhiL 21 . . . Mon. Jan. 20 8:30 ajn.
All 12:00 noon classes on TThS
gj and all Navs& Aero Mon. Jan. 20 2:00 p.m. X;
All 9:00 a.m. classes on TThs Tues. Jan. 21 8:30 aun. ijij
jiji All 1Q:00 a.m. classes on MWF Tues. Jan. 21 2:00 p.m. ijij
jiji All 1 :30 pjn. classes on TTh, PolL 41 .Wed. Jan. 22 8:30 ajn. :
iiii All 8:00 a.m. classes on MWF Wed. Jaa 22 2:00 p.m. jij:
ijij All 3:00 p.m. classes on TTh, Phys. 24 . . Thurs. Jaa 23 8:30 a.m. jiji
iiii All 11:00 a.m. classes on TThS Thurs. Jaa 23 2:00 p.m. vi
ijij All Fren., Germ, Spaa & Russ. l,2,3fr & 4 . . .Fri Jaa 24 8:30 ajn. jiji
ijij All 1 1:00 a.m. classes on MWF FrL Jaa 24 2:00 p.m. !
& AH in-OOa-m. classes on TThs Sat. Jaa 25 8-0 a.m. S
&: All 3:00 p.m. classes on MWF, ijjj
:jij: BusL 71,72,73 Econ. 61 Sat Jan. 25 2:00 p.m. j
All 8:00 a.m. classes on TThS Moa Jaa 27 8:30 a.m. jij:
jij All 2:00 p.m. classes on MWF, Econ. 70 . . Moa Jaa 27 2:00 pan. iji;
jij All 9:00 ajn. classes on MWF Tues. Jaa 28 8:30 a.m. $
Si All 1 2:00 noon classes on MWT Tues. Jaa 28 2:00 p.m. xj
?.j All 2:00 pjn. classes on TThS Wed. Jaa 29 8:30 ajn. $j
& All 4:00 classes and all classes jiji
not otherwise provided for in this schedule . . Wed. Jan 29 2:00 p.m. :j:j
X X;
:X S
X: :x
S I nstructors teaching classes scheduled for jij:
8 common examinations shall request the students in i":
5: these classes to report to them any conflict with jiji
j any other examination not later than Dec. 1 6. ijij
ijjj In case of a conflict, the regularly scheduled ijjj
$ exam will take precedence over the common exam, iji;
3 (Common exams are indicated by an asterisk.)
X: ' .l'.-:wwssssa
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s zZ..Ze" .trim, . . - .. -".-'"' 1 i"S"- 1
-1 W
DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnabel
MTTLE COLD, ISN'T IT?-Whoever this fellow is, he must be getting a little chilly with the
November winds getting fust a bit colder evervdav WpII mavho it's tho hocf W!v t ct,Tr w,r.
Gfomid)
The Carolina Union Drama
Committee will present the
"Wizard of Oz," a play based
on the original 1939 MGM
musical, on Dec. 13 and 14.
The. play is completely
student-produced and directed
with a cast composed of UNC
students and local children.
Joyce Schilke has the
leading role of Dorothy, and
Toto, her dog in the play, is
Ginger Snap Hodges. Mark
Smith plays the Lion; Pat'
Hurley, the Scarecrow; Roger
Howell, the Tinman; Linda Lee
Earp, the Wicked Witch; and
Jed Dietz, the Wizard.
The "Wizard of Oz" is
directed by John Haber. Stage
managers are Virginia Nailling
and Mike Mandel. The
choreographer is Jodi Taylor
and the musical director is
Woody Durham.
The play will be given at 8
p.m. on Dec. 13 and 14 in
Memorial Hall. Tickets go on
sale Dec. 2 at the Graham
Memorial Inofrmation Desk for
$ .50 for children and students
and $1 for adults.
The other student
performers and their roles are
the following: Marilyn Rail as
Aunt Em; Arthur Marcus as
Joe; Skip Pace as Uncle Henry;
Claudia Bond as Glinda;
December 13 14
Stages
Charlie Merzbacher as the
mayor; Sam Landsberger as the
barrister, Kenneth Rogers as
the coroner; Paul Siegel as tree
no. 1; David Perry as tree no.
2; Timothy Toney as the door
Keeper; Stephanie Kodack as
the Oz Lady; David Litt as the
private; Ralph West as Lord 1
Growlie; Judy O'Neille as
Gloria; John Cole as Tibia;
Anne Ponder as the First
Witch; and Elizabeth JMorrah as
the Second Witch ' ,
Members of the chorus are
Pat Mahaffee, Janice Nelson,
Dav Establishes Co:
To Study Housing
Student Body President Ken
Day today announced that a
group of students, coordinated
by Dick Drabowski would
undergake a thorough study of
current University policy
concerning student housing.
The committee, which will
make recommendations to the
Office of Student Affairs is
being established following a
great deal of interest expressed
in the area of University
housing.
Most recent was the
decision requiring students
paying double-occupancy rates
but assigned to single-occupancy
rooms to either move or
to acquire a roommate.
One of the specific areas of
concern to the group will be
the possibility of providing for
rearrangement of suites so that
eight people would live in two
rooms, allowing the use of one
room as a study room and the
fourth room as a social room.
Interest has already been
Need
By EVIE STEVENSON
DTH Staff Writer
Yes, Joe College can find
someone in this crowded
university to help him choose
his major and ultimate
vocation.
The Guidance and Testing
Center in Peabody Hall is
designed to assist any student,
without charge, in his decision
on academic and occupational
plans.
Through a series of tests and
conferences, arranged at the
student's convenience, the
Center can provide help for
students unsure of their major,
students considering a change
in their major and anyone
facing academic problems.
Dr. James W. Little,
4
4
1
Laura Richbourg, Susan Sykes,
Nancy Saul, Sharon DeMuth,
Candy Carter, Emily Carnes,
Grady Lonon, Eric Ellenburg,
Frank Hall, Sandy Freemon,
Clifford Hoffman, and Haskell
Fitz-Simons.
Ghosts are Jodi Taylor,
Carolyn Ross, Kathe Moore,.
Sally Jordan, and Jane
Coxhead.
Twenty-six local children
perform as the Munchkins.
They are Melanie and "Vali
.McKnight, Alex Zaffron.
Theresa Skinner, Romona,
expressed on this idea on
previous occasions, and
urrently there is a group of
individuals seeking to
impliment this experiment in
their suite.
Another major area relates
to the process of computerized
roommate
comnatibilitv
techniques in initial room
assignments. Other ideas
include policy with respect to
those people who desire to
move during the semester as
opposed to those who, for
certain reasons, are required to
move during the semester.
Of great interest to these
studies is the prospect of using
some University housing
facilities for an experiment in
co-op housing for a group of
people interested in getting
together and providing for
their living arrangements at a
lower price.
The final concern will be a
survey of current married
student housing and the
A WW o
w
A Major? Go To Guidance Center
Center Aids Students With Academic Problems
Director of the Center, said,
"Now that it's almost time for
pre-registration, ifs a good
time for students to start
thinking about their major." A
student's major can determine
which courses he signs-up for.
Little said the guidance
program can be especially
beneficial to freshmen and
sophomores. "However, the
program is offered to
upperclassmen and graduate
students, as well," he added.
The guidance program is
arranged by the individual
student. "The student decides
which tests to take and at
which times."
. The program begins with an
initial interview with a
vocational counselor. The
counselor discusses the
Coer
By BRYAN CUMMING
DTH Staff Writer
Of the six students and
faculty members arrested in
connection with the election
night street party, five were
tried and found guilty in
Recorder's Court Tuesday.
? The sixth person, Eric Clay,
was granted a postponement of
his trial It is now scheduled
for next Tuesday, Nov. 26 in
Recorder's Court.
Four of the arrested persons
were fined. George Vlasits was
sentenced to four months in
jail for two offenses.
Dr. Laurence Kessler of the
history department, the first
person to be arrested during
the soreet party, was fined $25
for obstructing traffic.
Walter Hicks, the other
faculty member arrested, was
fined $50 for disorderly
conduct. Peter Hulth was fined
$25 for disorderly conduct,
and Meri Robbins was fined
$35 for assulting an officer.
Chris, and Natalie Rogers,
Jonathan and Samuel
Reckford, Timothy and
Nathan Carnes, Steven and Lisa
Hirsch, Lynnie and Dan Cloak,
Suzanne Kessermeir, Becky
Schultz, Catherine Munson,
Robin Zukoski, Lisa Ney,
Todd Smith, Margrit Burgholz,
Margaret Hudson, Margaret
Landsberger, Patti Midgette,
and Mitzi Cherry.
Lyrics for the play are by
' E.Y. Harburg, and music is by "
Harold Arlen.
ittee
Policies
availability in advance of
regulations governing those
living in such housing.
Among those serving with
Drabowski in conducting the
study are Tom Shore and Bob
White, two of the organizers
for the Petition protesting the
snuuung oi mose m me single
rooms.
Other members include
Tom Murphy, Lawrence
Whitefield, John Daughtry and
Connie Branch. The committee
, vdll first conduct a study of
current housing policy and will
evaluate the practicability of
various alternatives to the
present policy.
Open hearings are expected
to be held for students with
grievances or suggestions. Any
student interested in working
with the committee or in
offering suggestions to it
should contact Dick Drabowski
at 968-9215.
student's general background,
goals, interests and plans.
Confidentiality is observed.
The student then selects
tests to be taken from those
suggested by the counselor.
The initial battery of tests is
usually composed of a
combination of interest and
temperament inventories,
aptitude and achievement tests.
The temperament inventory
is designed to score personal
traits that have vocational
indications.
Sample questions from this
inventory are: Do you like
work that requires considerable
attention to details? Are you
relatively unconcerned about
what others think of your
actions?
The interest inventory gives
.Finds
Vlasits received. a three
month jail sentence for
obstructing traffic and a one
month sentence for assaulting
an officer. He appealed the
decision.
Vlasits is a field worker for
Southern Student Organizing
Committee, the group which
sponsored the street party Nov.
5. He served as his own lawyer
against prosecuting attorney
Steven Bernholtz, the Solicitor
of Chapel Hill.
Vlasits was the first to be
tried Tuesday morning. He
pleaded not guilty to both
charges. The first witness, a
police captain, said that Vlasits
had been directly impeding the
flow of traffic.
When Vlasits questioned the
witness, the officer recalled the
crowd involved in the
demonstration as numbering
"about a hundred," and he did
not know how many were
arrested.
The second witness,
Detective L. Pendergrass, when
questioned by Vlasits,
commented, "If you wanted to
move, you could have." He
explained the delay in the
arrest of Vlasits, saying the
warrant "wasn't ready" on
Nov. 5.
Legal Fund
For Students
The twelve students arrested
in an attempt to distribute
leaflets at Ft. Bragg Saturday,
Nov. 16 have established a legal
defense fund to help cover trial
expenses.
The fund was started by
Bob Lock and Joh Steiger, two
UNC students who were
arrested. In less than one hour
Monday afternoon, the fund
gathered over $40.00.
Exact expenses and legal
arrangements have not been
cleared for the trial to be held
next Monday, Nov. 25, in the
U. S. Post Office in
Fayetteville, N. C. at 10:00
a.m.
The expenses will be higher
if the case is appealed.
Checks for the legal defense
fund should be made out to
Robert Lock or John Steiger
for the Legal Defense Fund.
They may be given to any of
the twelve students who were
arrested or brought by room
102 of the YMCA building.
Dorm Coke Machine Burned
The Durham Coca-Cola
Bottling Co. has charged that
the cup vending machine in
Hinton-James dormitory was
intentionally set on fire early
Friday morning, Nov. 15.
The charge was made in a
memo from David Veasey of
the Durham Coca-Cola. Co. to
Tom Shetley, head of the
University Student Stores.
The memo stated that the
machine was a total loss and
an indication of probable liking
for different majors and
occupations. The student is
asked his likes and dislike
about school subjects,
activities, types of people and
work.
Each test takes
approximately one hour to
complete. Most of the tests are
scored at the Center and are
almost immediately available
for interpretation and
discussion. Two of the interest
inventories have to be sent
away for scoring and require
about three weeks for the
results.
After completion of the
tests, the counselor explains
the results. He assists the
student in exploring the
vocational significance of his
Vlasits had been arrested
four days after the incident in
Durham, Nov. 9. He was the
only person involved who was
not arrested on the night of
Nov. 5.
When Police Chief William
Blake was called to the stand,
he admitted that many
people" had approached him
to request the re-routing of
traffic to avoid Franklin St,
but he had not done so.
Blake also said that the
traffic was not heavy on the
night of Nov. 5, although it did
block up later.
When SSOC worker Scott
Bradley was questioned, it was
revealed that Chief Blake had
been notified of the street
party. Blake had granted
permission to use the
sidewalks.
When Vlasits took the
stand, he accused the police of
'Real Epidemic 9
Feared: Stewart
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
new flu to which "more people
are susceptible" than usual
may cause a "real epidemic"
this winter, the U.S. Surgeon
General said Tuesday. He asked
doctors to reserve scarce
vaccine for "high risk" patients
who might die without it.;
"If this follows the usual
pattern, we should have a few
outbreaks from now through
December and then in January
have a real epidemic," Dr.
William H. Stewart said in an
interview.
"It's very much like what
one would expect with the flu
that we get every year,"
Stewart said of the new strain,
called A-2 Hong Kong 68,
which was brought to the
United States from the Far
East. "People who get it feel
miserable, and then in two or
three or four days it's over,
except you may have a kind of
lassitude for a while.
"The exception is the
patient who is elderly or
chronically ill."
It is for this group, from
which an estimated 60,000
died during the 1957 Asian flu
epidemic, that drug makers are
rushing production of a new
vaccine.
The virus strain must feed
on fertile eggs in the
production process and the
that the company is "in the
process of making sure the
proper authorities are notified
of this vandalism."
According to Fred Culbert,
college master of Hinton
James, he was awakened by
two students about 4 a.m.
Friday who informed him that
the Coke machine was on fire
and that they had thrown
water on it.
When I got down there, the
interest, temperament and
aptitude patterns in relation to
other information about him.
The Center has available to
the student an Occupational
Information Library and
additional tests. It is left to the
student what he wants to do.
The library contains books,
pamphlets and catalogs with
information on job duties,
requirements, salary ranges and
educational and training
opportunities. The library is
open to all students, whether
they are participating in the
guidance program or not.
Dr. Little said the program
is designed with flexibility,
enabling the student to spend
as much time as he desires at
the Center. A total of six to
Guilty
acting "in an arbitrary
manner," on the night of Nov.
5, by denying the use of the
street. Judge J.L. Phipps found
Vlasits guilty.
The second charge against
Vlasits, assaulting an officer,
also received his plea of not
guilty. Detective Pendergrass
testified that Vlasits had struck
him in the groin during the
confusion in front of the Police
Station on Nov. 5.
Pendergrass said that Vlasits
was not arrested on that night
in order to avoid trouble.
Two witnesses summoned
by Vlasits, students who had
been near Vlasits during the
incident, both testified that he
had never struck any person.
Judge Phipps found Vlasits
guilty of the second charge
also. He did not determine
sentences until after all five
students, were tried.
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers
Association (PMA) said output
has been slowed by a seasonal
shortage of amorous roosters
and mature hens.
"We should be licensing the
first batch of vaccine toward
the end of this month,"
Stewart said. "Then its
production will climb through
December. There isn't any way
of accelerating it."
After a person ges his shot,
two weeks lapse before he
becomes immune.
The PMA said drug firms
plan total production of about
17.5 million doese, far short of
needs if all 30 million
Americans who are over 65 or
chronically ill asked for a shot
But Stewart said it was
"probably about the right
level" because many persons
who need flu shots never ask
for them. The government has
"no inoculation Program but has
urged doctors to limit the
vaccine to elderly and
chronically sick people.
A Public Health Service
official indicated the PHS is
hoping drug firms will not sell
their limited vaccine supplies
to large corporations which
traditionally buy big batches of
flu vaccine so they can
inoculate their employes and
hold down work absenteeism.
machine was unplugged," said
Culbert, indicating that the fire
was not due to an electrical
short.
Culbert then called the fire
department.
According to Captain
Marvin Morris of the Chapel
Hill Fire Department, the cause
of the fire was "unknown."
Both Shetley and Veasey
were unavailable for comment.
ten hours of time in normally
required.
However, the student may
continue conferences, testing
and library research for several
months.
"We do not tell the student
what he ought to do. We
provide information to the
student about himself and
about occupations. We discuss
opportunities available to him.
WTe let him make up his own
mind," said Dr. Little.
The Guidance and Testing
Center is open from 8 ajn. to 5
pjn. Monday through Firday.
Interested students are
encouraged to make an
appointment in 019 Peabody,
or call 933-2175.
A