Slavic Club Students who have visited the Soviet Union will discuss their experiences at the meeting of the Slavic Club tonight at 7:30 in the Dey H?" Facultv Lounge. 4f ' f Christian Fellowship Carolina Christian Fellowship will hold three simultaneous discussions at 9:15 tonight in Granville West, Ehringhaus, and James Dorms. Refreshments will be served. ( i i 77 Years of Editorial Freedom Vol ume 77, Number 31 3 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1969 Founded February 23. 1893 mint n n on rmo ti fl 1 r- -t f "PHI: D7H Staff lfioto By Woody dark A fire causing $25,000 damage to Peabody Hall Sunday may have begun in this basement utility room To Achieve Wider Viewpoints On Issues By BILL MILLER DTH Staff Writer Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson has created a special 60-memher consultative forum "to achieve wider expression of viewpoints in the consideration of important (campus) issues, Dr. Claiborne Jones, assistant to the Chancellor, reported Monday. "To bring a broader range of opinion to bear on cam pus-wide issues and to promote a greater understanding and a heightened sense of community among all elements within this institution," Sitterson has outlined a membership including: Fifteen students including JL :;i By NANCY STANCILL $i :: DTH Staff Writer g :: Carolina beauties will have the opportunity to enter two ::j: :: contests this week the annual Homecoming Queen contest ::; and the Maid of Cotton contest. g i The Homecoming Queen and her court of six finalists :$ i will reign over weekend festivities Nov. 8. The contest is g . sponsored by the Carolina Athletic Association. g Deadline for entries is 4 p.m., Oct. 27, according to CAA fg President Ken McAllister. g "Any residence hall, organization or individual wishing g :: to sponsor a candidate may pick up an entrance form at the g & information desk," said McAllister. g He noted there is a fee of $7.50 for each entry and there g g is no limit on the number of entries. g A committee of judges will select seven finalists at a g A queen's tea to be held for all nominees Oct. 30. The tea will g y- be held at Kenan's Ram's Qub Room, according to g McAllister. g A student election will be held Nov. 5 to select the queen g ::: from seven finalists. The queen and court will be presented g at the UNC-VMI football game. g A representative of the National Cotton Council will be g: g on campus Thursday, Oct. 23, to meet with coeds g jx interested in the Maid of Cotton competition. g g Interested students should sign up and receive g g applications from Assistant Dean of Women Mrs. Lynne g g Armstrong in Steele building. "The Maid of Cotton has the demanding yet extremely g: :: rewarding job of travelling throughout the U.S. and other g g countries as the American cotton industry's fashion and g g goodwill emissary," said Mrs. Armstrong. g g She noted that Wylene Commander and Linda Beazley g g represented UNC in the contest last year and former UNC g student Peach Pierce was a winner several years ago. g g Some qualifications for the contest include birth or $: jij: residence in one of the 19 cotton-producing states, g g minimum height of 5 feet 5 inches and age between 19-23. g irms The Student Party affirmed resolutions concerning student rights at its regular meeting Sunday night. "The party condemned the University's practice of searching a student's room without his knowledge," Mark Evens, SP legislative leader, said Monday. "We also resolved that a student should be able to lock his door during visitation," i i TVS undergraduate, graduate, and professional school students; 15 faculty members drawn from all ranks and including members from the professional schools as well as from the departments in the College of Arts and Sciences; 15 representatives of the administration and the non-academic staff; eight members of the Board of Trustees and seven alumni ' representatives." The consultative forum will be chaired by Sitterson. Provisions have been made for Alan Albright, president of the student body, and Professor Fred Cleaveland, chairman of the faculty, to serve as ex-officio members. The first meeting of the ere 1 Indent Mights Evens continued. "A student should have the same rights in his dorm room as those students who rent rooms off campus." In other action, the SP elected Peter K. Howard chairman of the party. It also endorsed the Alan Hirsch bill to abolish student judicial functions if the administration violates the double jeopardy amendment. -, A jf -" jp' w-' -. T' - f" .' CK &Ts 1 r Ok o forum is planned for sometime in November. According to a prepared release announcing the formation of the forum, "the initial objective will be one of self-education, to seek to understand in some depth how the University operates, how decisions are made and implemented, how essential information bearing on policy ma ki ng " is gathered and disseminted, and soon. ''Following this self -education, I (Sitterson) hope the consultative forum can turn to an exploration of ways to improve processes of, information exchange and consulation which are indispensable to sound policy making and effective policy 1CP Three Discussions By KEN RIPLEY DTH Staff Writer Three simultaneous dorm discussions are being presented tonight at 9:15 by Carolina Christian Fellowship in Granville West, James and Ehringhaus dorms on the topic, "The Way, the Truth, the Life." Among the three speakers will be Dr. John Alexander, national president of Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, who will give a short talk and lead a discussion of Christianity in Granville West. Black staff member Carl Ellis, associated with Tom Skinner Crusades, will present a similiar program in Ehringhaus. Inter-Varsity Area Director Bill York, who works Compulsory Qmmpus Limimg By CAM WEST DTH Staff Writer Residence colleges have reached a critical stage in their development, according to Larry Passar, assistant on residence colleges to the student body president. "It's reaching the point in the residence college system where the Uniersity may have to make campus living compulsory,' Passar said Monday. Referring to a rumor that the University may soon require sophomore men to live in dormitories, Passar said, "Most college governors feel this would be treating the sympton instead of the cause. We are hoping that students will be more able in the future to make use of their individual environment to make dorm living attractive." He emphasized lack of funds prevented many residence college activities from getting off the ground, using the faculty fellows program as an example. Passar noted encouraging developments within - i ThTT AT implementation." Jones said, "This body will in no way replace any presently existing body or responsibilities." Albright said Monday he did forsee the possibility of the forum becoming a legislative body. "This is one of the items they will be considering," the student president said. The body could supercede the powers of the legislature and other existing bodies, according to Albright. "In a campus this size," he said, "it is necessary to have a body of this type to bring in the opinions of a larger range of the student body as well as the non-academic employees." The ; forum concept was on campuses in Virginia, will speak in James dorm. The three-dorm "meeting" is the largest activity presented in the last two years by Carolina Christian Fellowship, the UNC chapter of Inter-Varsity. It is the first time in several years that Dr. Alexander has visited the campus. During the afternoon, Dr. Alexander will speak to a gathering of I-V chapter leaders from UNC, Duke, N.C. State and Greensboro in Howell Hall. This evening, before the dorm discussions, he will attend a dinner and speak to Christian faculty members. Inter-Varsity is a national Christian organization of autonomous student chapters on several hundred college campuses. By AL THOMAS DTH Staff Writer J Campus security was tightened Monday as the search for an arson who set fire to three, and possibly four, classroom buildings Sunday morning continues. Arthur Beaumont, head of dorm security on campus, said extra campus police, town police and several agents from the State Bureau of Investigation are aiding in the increased security. The fires slightly damaged three classroom buildings and did extensive damage to a fourth. The first fire discovered also did the largest amount of damage. Peabody Hall, home of the School of Education and the University Testing Service, may have rece ive d approximately $25,000 damage, according to Chapel Hill Police Chief W. D. Blake. He declined to make the estimate official, however. -n-n- introduced on this cimpus by Joel Fleishman, vice provost of Urban Studies at Yale University, in v. program sponsored jointly by the Richardson Fellows and the American Studies Program last February. A similar forum is in operation at Yale. The idea evolved from discussions between Albright, Cleaveland, John Graham, acting as chairman of the Faculty Committee on University Government and Chancellor Sitterson. The decision to implement a consultative forum for UNC was reached last week by Chancellor Sitterson, according to Jones, who issued the statement to the press Monday. Tonight The dorm discussions are the first of several campus activities planned by the CCF. Last week the chapter sponsored an all-campus meeting for freshmen and transfer students. Dr. Fred Books, chairman of the Department of Computer and Information Science, presented the question, "Jesus Christ-Who Needs Him??' Next week Carolina Christian Fellowship willf present small group Bible studies for anyone interested in examining the Bible as a source document e.f Christianity. Information on these studies will be provided at the dorm discussions tonight. All interested students are invited to attend any one of the three meetings tonight. the system, however. The liberalized visitation policy and the coed living experiment, Project Hinton, have bolstered the residence college image, he said. "Originally residence colleges were nothing but a group of dormitories. In the near future they will increase their activities, adding projects with both sophistication and variety," he commented. Passar pointed to campus radio stations as a valuable contribution to the system and said that one college is hoping to start a little theatre. Turning to individual residence colleges, Passar said Granville is probably the most successful college because of the active coed environment. Joint recreation facilities and the dining hall help bring Granville residents closer together, Passar noted, and the college Senate has taken an active role in major campus issues. Granville South, the recently opened third wing of the living complex, may feature an alternating male-female suite arrangement next year, according to Passar. South was scheduled to open as a coed dorm this year, but there were The Peabody fire Is the only one investigators haven't officially blamed on arson. Damage was so extensive within the five-room fire area, Blake said, that evidence of arson has probably been destroyed. The three other classroom buildings damaged by fire include Bingham, Murphey and Gardner Halls. Damage in these buildings was confined to several desks and trash cans. Pete Ivey, director of the University News Bureau, said firemen discovered a test tube at the fire in Gardner which, he added, may indicate a chemical was used. No complete estimates on total damages were available Monday. Blake noted Monday he believes the fires were not the -4 h i r.A I' t DTH Staff Photo by Tom Schnabel UNC Soccer-Ugh! .... ILO Gets Peace OSLO (UPI)-The 1969 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded today to the International Labor Organization (ILO), which was formed at the end of the World War I to help peace by improving working and social conditions throughout the world. The ILO and the International Court of Justice are the only two organs of the defunct League of Nations to survive. The ILO is now one of the special organizations of the United Nations with headquarters in Geneva. Since 1948 it has been headed by an American, David A. Morse. not enough female applicants to make that possible, he said. Scott College (Parker, Teague and Avery) also feature a women's residence hall, Parker, adjacent to two men's dorms. Although Scott was the first college to be residentially united, it has not developed as well as expected, according to several Student Govern me mt officials. One reason, they suggest, is that the residents do not share a common dining hall. There has also been considerable political infighting in Scott between college officials and individual dormitories over allocation of funds. The South Campus residence colleges are attempting to establish coed living. James College has a head start on the others with Project Hinton, the coed project on the ninth and tenth have been problems keeping Project Hinton in the residence college. But Tommy Bello, governor of James and a Project Hinton resident, has been working to allow the coed experiment to pursue its activities while making it an integral part of the system, according to work of a vandal but of a pyromaniac. "There was no real pattern to the fires," Blake said. "These just happened to be the classroom buildings that were open at the time. "We can't find anybody with a grudge against these particular structures," he continued. ' The four classroom buildings were open for classes Monday but the areas of the fires were sealed off for investigation. The smell of smoke was evident throughout the four buildings Monday and was noticed within a block in all directions around Peabody. Agents from the S3I and the State Department of Insurance combed the fire areas all day Monday but no - ill, .. As usual, the Nobel Committee of the Swedish Parliament gave no reasons for its decision and made it clear there will be no comments. It said only that the $75,000 prize would go to the ILO. Informed sources in Oslo said one of the reasons for the choice was the valuable work done by ILO in developing countries where it has given valuable technical assistance. An ILO spokesman in Geneva said the group received the newrs "with great delight." "We received the news with great delight and can only say that it is a great honor," said TT T 7!7xr.(n)Tm). n. m& t new leads were revealed. Beaumont warned Monday afternoon against any kind of panic, saying all precautions are being taken. He said classroom buildings that ?re officially supposed to be locked at night but have been left open will now be closed. That, along with increased manpower, should be enough right now, he added. Blake said the only other experience the University has had w'th arson was about 11 years ago. Swain Hall received well over $100,000 damage in that fire, he continued, with the Carolina Inn receiving slight damage. The person convicted of setting those fires, Blake added, was a student here. 'Kopechne Death Was D rowning WILKES BARRE, Pa. (UPI)-Dr. Donald R. Mills, associate medical examiner of Dukes County, Mass., testified Monday the death of Mary Jo Kopechne was "a clear case of drowning." Dr. Mills, the fourth witness called at the first formal hearing in the death of Miss Kopechne on Chappaquiddick Island, Mass., last July 18, testified "there was water in her bronchail trachea and her nose and mouth" when, he examined her body the day it was removed from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's submerged automobile. The hearing was presided over by Luzerne County Judge Bernard C. Brominski. The judge indicated that he may order night sessions to expedite the proceedings which may last three to five days. Fourteen witnesses were scheduled to testify. Under questioning by a Kopechne attorney, Joseph F. Flanagan, Dr. Mills said there was no evidence of "foul play" and no evidence of "criminal conduct" in the death of the attractive secretary. 28-year-old Prize ILO Public Affairs Director John Weston. ' "WTe had been hoping but we had no idea that we would be awarded the prize." Morse, the ILO director general, was visiting the organization's branch office in New York when the news came from Oslo. The ILO was formed in 1919 to bring governments, employers and trade unions together for united actions in the cause of social justice. It functioned as part of the League of Nations during two world wars before it became associated with the U.N. Passar. Morrison College Governor Johnson Harris has been working to bring Nurses Dorm residents into Morrison next year. As of now, all nurses are tentatively scheduled to move into Morrison in the fall of 1970. Ehringhaus College, presently combining Ehringhaus men with North Campus women residents, has also worked to become coed. The main roadblock, said Passar, will involve a reshuffling of athletic living quarters. As the bulk of attention is focused on South Campus, governors of King (Upper Quad) and Morehead (Lower Quad) Colleges are worried about being forgotten: They express concern about improving the hall arrangements in the older quad dorms, noting that living improvements are continually being made in the suite system on South Campus. Residence college officials believe the system is improving. But until there are increased funds made available and an improvement in coed living arrangements, residence colleges will face many problems, they contend.