Newman Lecture
Music Prof. William S
Newman will lecture and
demonstrate on the piano
"Some Nineteenth Century
Exploits With Beethoven's
Hammerklavier' Sonata"
tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Hill
HaW rehearsal hall.
Tf
ii
Aim
Number Two
Following Davidson's loss to
St. Johns, the North Carolina
Tar Heels have regained their
numbeT two national ranking
in both wire service polls. See
page four.
76 Years o Editorial Freedom
Volume 76. Number 75
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1969
Founded February 23. 1S93
Two California Campuses Face Crises
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Reagan Blames 'Anarchists9 For College Upheavals
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Gov.
Ronald Reagan said
Tuesday California's
educational system is under
attack by "criminal anarchists
and latterday fascists."
As the GOP governor called
on the state legislature to move
against campus "anarchy and
insurrection," militant teachers
and students picketed San
' Francisco State College. A few
hours earlier, the home of a
former dean at nearby College
of San Mateo was the target of
firebombs.
In his annual
state-of-the-state message at
Sacramento, Reagan asked
lawmakers to tighten penalties
for campus troublemakers
while providing an "equal
education plan" for all
qualified students at the nine
university campuses and 19
state colleges.
"We are greatly concerned
about the attacks on our
educational system by small
groups of criminal anarchists
and latterday fascists," he
declared.
"At the moment, the
problem confronting all of us is
not just the problem of
procedure of financing. Our
overriding problem is anarchy
and insurrection.
"I will continue to use every
power at my command to
insure that safety and
security and the proper
academic atmosphere is
maintained on every campus. I
am determined that academic
freedom and the pursuit of
knowledge will be upheld,
protected and preserved."
Acting President S.I.
Hayakawa vowed to keep
18,000-student San Francisco
State operating with police
force and volunteer teachers if
necessary.
San Francisco State
College's cafeteria was closed
by picket lines of striking
teachers and students Tuesday.
The college was reopened
Monday in relative peace after
the Christmas holiday, but
union teachers added to the
school's already lengthy list of
woes by their walkout They
were joined in picket lines at
campus entrances by striking
students from minority
organizations and the Students
for a Democratic Society.
Philip C. Garlington, dean
of instruction at San Mateo
College, and his wife escaped
injury after being awakened by
what the trustee said sounded
like two shots. The blaze
engulfed the garage at
Garlington's hillside home,
destroying two cars.
Like San Francisco State,
the San Mateo College was the
scene last month of violence by
racial minorities and
subsequently was placed under
police guard.
The San Francisco State
College cafeteria closed after
about 100 union workers there
voted to honor the teachers'
picket lines. However, at the
library and bookstore, workers
decided to remain on the job.
Hayakawa allowed some
pickets on campus Monday
under "legal advice" but
prohibited rallies and
demonstrations in a quadrangle
area near the administration
and classroom buildings.
"For the first day in weeks,
there was no massive rally on
the commons." Hayakawa
noted.
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DTH StMtf Photo By Tom SchnabcJ
New Union
Tlie new student union has
just opened and already
plenty of students have
found their way to the
pool room in the
basement. Seven tables
have arrived of an
anticipated 17. In the
photo at right, the
proposed snack bar
portion of the union
awaits workers so that that
section can be completed. I
uri a At . l 1 ?tl
wnemer me snacK Dar win r
be able to open is still in
doubt.
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Inauiguiration Visit Planned.
By BRYAN CUMMING
DTH Staff Writer
Radical students from UNC
and Duke are making plans to
attend the national
demonstration to be held in
Washington on Inauguration
weekend, Jan. 18-20.
The group authorized to
Posters Allowed
In New Policy
Painting and postering of
rooms will be allowed on a
limited basis as a result of two
changes in residence hall policy
announced by Chancellor J.
Carlyle Sitterson prior to
Christmas break.
Under the first new ruling,
an amended form of Rule 1,
Section 2 of the Regulations
Governing University
Residence Halls, the use of a
commercial adhesive product,
"Plasti-Tak," has been allowed
In order "to attach decorative
items to the walls."
"Plasti-Tak" . is the only
authorized adhesive permitted
under the new policy and is
being sold at both Student
Stores and South Campus
residence hall snack bars.
The use of nails, tacks and
screws are still outlawed by the
University Plant office.
Floor lounges will probably
take on a new look also the
second rule change allows for
their painting subject to the
following restrictions:
"that the common rooms
be painted no more frequently
than once a year;
"that the occupants of the
house assume the costs of the
paint job;
"that the paint be
approved by and bought from
the Physical Plant Division;
"that a refundable deposit
be made to cover the damage
caused by spilled paint, etc."
The Chancellor's approval of
the new rules came six weeks
after a Residence College
Council (formerly MRC Board
of Governors) proposal calling
for the use of "any suitable
minimally marring adhesive."
This resolution was endorsed
by the Chancellor's Advisory
Committee on Residence
Colleges.
handle plans at UNC is the
campus charter of United
Anti-War Mobilization Front,
formed from the original
Young Socialist Alliance. Plans
for transportation will be
discussed at the YSA meeting
to be held tonight at 7:30 in 111
Murphy.
Anyone unable to attend
this meeting should contact
UAWMF worker Charles Mann
at 942-6849. Mann has called
the YSA meeting tonight and
was one of the original
founders of UAWMF.
For information about the
Washington demonstration,
Mann contacted the Vietnam
Peace Parade Committee in Los
Angeles. Among the
organizations who are
supporting the Mobilization are
New University Conference,
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, Students for a
D emocratic Society and
Women's Strike for Peace.
The student at Duke who is
organizing the Mobilization is
Mark Pinsky, a writer for the
Duke Chronicle. He plans to
coordinate plans for the
demonstration with students
from UNC.
At Duke there are plans for
a demonstration to be held
Thursday in support of the
radical cause at San Francisco
State College. A Black leader
involved in the S.F. State
confrontation will attend the
demonstration.
According to Mann, the
Vietnam Peace Parade
Committee plans to focus on
the issue of San Francisco
State College, where
confrontation with the
administration remains an
unsettled problem.
The plans for Saturday, Jan.
18, involve movement
workshop conferences on
several topics. Anyone
(Continued on page 5)
BY OWEN DAVIS
DTH Sports Editor
North Carolina State, small
but tough, comes to Chapel
Hill tonight to renew one of
the most heated feuds in
college basketball.
Gametime is 8 o'clock in
Carmichael Auditorium. It will
be televised on the conference
network.
Although Carolina has
defeated the Wolfpack six
straight times over the past two
seasons, most of these games
have been close. And even
when the scores have been
one-sided, physical contact has
been thick and rugged.
State's tallest man is 6-6,
and to make up for that lack of
height Coach Norm Sloan's
team admittedly plays "rough
and aggressively."
;And Vann Williford, Dick
Braucher and Joe. Serdich . are
among the 'Atlantic Coast
Conference's best at handing
out elbows inside to snare a
rebound.
Thus far State is 7-3, 2-0 in
the conference. The Wolfpack
have losses to Indiana and
Vanderbilt (twice) with ACC
wins over Virginia and
Maryland.
Carolina meanwhile, 9-1, 3-0
in the ACC, will be playing
without center Rusty Clark.
Clark sprained an ankle against
Duke last Saturday.
In his place will be 6-10 soph
Lee Dedmon, the same height
as Clark but giving away 30
pounds to the Fayetteville
senior.
And against a team that
relies on muscle to compensate
for height disadvantage, that
30 pounds could be a
difference underneath the
boards.
With Clark out, the natural
rivalry between him and
Williford, also from
Fayetteville, will be missing.
Williford had to wait until
his senior year in high school
after Clark graduated to get the
limelight for his basketball
abilities, and he always likes to
battle his elder.
This year Williford is getting
almost all the mention on the
Wolfpack, and he is being
touted for the all-conference
team.
The 6-6 center is averaging
23.1 points a game, high for the
team, plus 12.8 rebounds per
contest. He is hitting 51 percent
of his shots.
Joining him on the front
line are 6-6 forward Rick
Anheuser, a transfer student
from Bradley, and 6-4 Serdich.
Anheuser averages 8.1, Serdich
12.1.
In the backcourt are Nelson
Isley (6.2) from Reidsville and
Braucher, who is scoring 5.4
points an outing.
In reserve the Wolfpack
have guards Jim Risinger (5.1)
and Al Heartley (5.4), the first
Negro to play at State.
Forward Dan Wells, 6-6, is
another top sub.
An old Carolina nemesis,
Eddie Biedenbach, will not be
back at Carmichael this season
after proving a thorn for three
seasons. Biedenbach graduated
last year, and his duel with
UNC's Charlie Scott here last
year when Scott scored 32
points and Biedenbach 24 is a
memorable one.
Last season the Tar Heels
barely survived in a 68-66 win
in Raleigh, but then won big in
the ACC tournament. 87-50.
This year's game aain
shows Carolina as favorites, but
it shouldn't be as close as two
or as great as 37.
Whatever the outcome,
electricity will be in the air.
The Wolfpack play it close all
over the court, and they would
love nothing better than
knocking off Carolina on its
home court
Signatures Increased
For Proposed Changes
Cliff Tuttle of the Northest
Campus Constitutional Reform
Committee submitted
additional signatures to those
obtained before Christmas on a
petition which calls for a
referendum on an amendment
to the Student Government
Constitution, said Ken Day,
student body president,
Tuesday.
The petition states that "A
student who is prosecuted in
civil or criminal courts shall be
immune from prosecution and
punishment by student
judiciary for the same act."
The petition was turned
over to Minor Mickel, chairman
of the Elections Board, and
Tuttle, special legislative
services assistant, for validation
of signatures.
The petition bears nearly
1,700 signatures. If the
petition is found to be valid,
Day plans to ask the Elections
Board to conduct a vote on the
amendment in early February.
The vote will be held,
hopefully, at the same time as
another proposal dealing with
further definition and
enumeration of the Campus
Code offenses.
Day noted that he strongly
supports such a resolution to
specify Campus Code offenses.
The petition for the
referendum on double jeapardy
was drawn up and circulated as
a complement to the
Constitutional referendum
dealing with the Honor Code,
the Campus Code and the
duties of the Attorney General.
The proposal to hold a
referendum for elimination of
double jeopardy was delayed in
student legislative committees.
Student legislators
explained that the proposal
was not supported because it student courts. The legislators
would annul the drug bill just felt that the drug bill should be
passed by Student Legislature given its stipulated time before
-in -November. The bill stated double jeopardy would apply
that drug cases may be tried in to it.
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DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnsbtl
BADLY NEEDED INFORMATION One of the Student Union
workers stands behind the information desk in the new building.
For aid in finding your way around in the newly opened building,
ask him.
Notification Requirements
Open Mouses Begin January 11
By BOBBY NOWELL
DTH Staff Writer
The first post-holiday date
for Open Houses cannot be
before Saturday, January 11,
the Dean of Men's Office has
announced.
According to the terms of
the Open House policy, house
meetings to vote on Open
House dates for a certain
month must be publicized at
least three days before the
election is held. And these
voted-upon dates must be filed
with the Dean of Men's office
at least four days prior to the
first date.
Therefore, the Dean's office
has ruled that last Sunday
night, Jan. 5, could not be
counted as a day on which to
hold house meetings, since it
was not a school calendar day.
Meetings then could not be
announced before Monday or
held before Wednesday, Jan. 8.
Assuming that the meetings
were held WTednesday and
reported to the Dean's office
by 5 o'clock, Open Houses
may be held Saturday.
The decision not to allow
Open House privileges Friday
night was made at a meeting of
the Visitation Committee on
Dec. 13 in Murphy H.
Associate Dean of Men Fred
W. Schroeder, who is not a
member of the committee and
did not attend the Dec. 13
meeting, surmised, "I guess the
decision was made to take
pressure off those house
officials who ' did not have
enough foraght to hold
meetings to determine January
dates before school recessed
for Christmas."
Dean of Men James O.
Cansler, out of town until
Monday, could not be reached
for comment. The minutes of
the Dec. 13 meeting indicate
that the decision to strike out
Friday, Jan. 10, as a possible
date was "made by Dean and
reported here (only because we
did not have time to consider
them this morning)."
Although a number of
houses had previously taken
the appropriate action to get
an Open House on Friday, "in
fairness to all," none will be
allowed.
Mimeographed copies of the
minutes of the Dec 13 meeting,
including the decision not to
have Open House on Friday
Jan. 10, were distributed to all
Host Committees before Dec.
19, Dean Schroeder reported.
Also the Daily Tar Heel has
learned that only one women's
residence college Parker has
applied for and passed the
necessary two-thirds majority
of residents to get an Open
House there.