Philological Talk
Dr. Robert Wilson,
chairmen of the School of
Public Health Mental Health
Dept., will address the
Philological Cub at 7:30
Wednesday right in Dey Hal!
faculty Lounge. His topic will
he "Nailer of Hearts: The Poet
ir. Society."
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77 Years o Editorial Freedom
Volume 77, Nuber S3
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY. JANUARY 6. 1970
3 -ebfuerv 23.
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The oral summations of the
David Iilcvins trial will be held
tonight at 8 p.m. in the
Faculty Lounge of the
Morehead Planetarium.
Blevlns, a part-time lecturer
in the School of Social Work at
UNC-Charlotte, is being tried
for violating the University's
disruption policy. Blevins
failed to meet his class on Oct.
15, the first day of the
Vietnam Moratorium. The
University had announced that
any faculty member not
meeting his class that day
would be violating the policy.
Blevins' trial began on Nov.
12 when the Hearings
Committee heard three hours
of testimony concerning the
case. The oral summations had
originally been scheduled for
Dec. 19 but Adam Stein,
Blevins' attorney, was busy
with another case and
requested a postponement.
The Hearings Committee,
chaired by William B. Aycock
of the Law School, has
reviewed the written briefs of
the case. Stein and Robert A.
Melott, a professor in the Law
School who is representing the
University, will present their
final arguments tonight. Stein
is expected to argue that the
disruption policy is illegal and
thus Blevins is innocent.
Blevins said at the original
hearing that he "felt a
responsibility to show some
UNC Strike
Picketers
Face Trial
Two labor union officials
are among the 13 people who
face trial today in the Orange
County Circuit Court in
Hillsborough on charges
stemming from picket line
activity during the food worker
strike last November and
December.
Charged with assault of a
the Board of Trustees in 1947
workers Ronald Best, Roland
David and Eugene Gore, an
organizer for American
Federation of State, County,
and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME). David is also
charged with resisting arrest
and Gore with two counts of
failure to disperse.
Jack McClean, president of
the Black Student Movement,
is charged with assault of a
police officer with a deadly
weapon and failure to disperse.
Also charged with failure to
disperse are James Pierce,
former regional director of
AFSCME, food service workers
Mrs. Alice Ferrar, James
Howard and Mrs. Dorothy
Farrington, and students John
Wheeler and Clinton Pyne.
James McPherson of
Hillsborough and two students,
John Thome and Larry White,
are charged with interefering
with a police officer and failure
to disperse.
The 13 are to be
represented by Adam Stein and
James Ferguson, partners in
the Charlotte law firm
Chambers, Stein, Ferguson and
Lanning.
he Slates Ginsberg
ill
Allen Ginsberg, avante garde
poet and magazine publisher,
will speak at Duke's Page
Auditorium Thursday evening
at 8:15 p.m.
Ginsberg recently made
nationwide headlines when he
chanted his now famous "Om
..." during the courtroom
proceeding at the trial of seven
men accused of disrupting the
Democratic National
Convention in Chicago.
Ginsberg is coming to Duke
concern about the conduct of
the war" and decided not to
hold his class. He said his class
was told one week before
Moratorium Day that class
would not be held. Blevins is
also employed by the Charlotte
Area Fund, Inc., an
anti-poverty agency in
Charlotte.
This case serves as the first
test of the disruption policy,
which was severely criticized
after its passage last summer.
The Hearings Committee
will judge Blevins' innocence or
guilt and then make its
recommendation to President
William Friday, Friday, with
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson,
will decide his punishment.
Under provisions of the
disruption policy, Blevins is
subject to dismissal.
If
ci Fines
By BILL MILLER
DTH Staff Writer
The office of the Dean of
Men fired a James Dormitory
resident advisor Dec. 17 for
failing to enforce the visitation
policy, it was learned Monday.
John Daughtry, an RA in
the Project Hinton program of
James, reported Monday he
told Associate Dean of Men
Fred Schroeder he could not
enforce the provisions of the
visitation agreement and called
for a change in the structure of
the existing RA program. The
stand lost him his job.
The decision not to enforce
the policy was reportedly made
UNC Gets First
PoHiition
By STEVE PLAISANCE
DTH Staff Writer
Representatives from Duke,
N.C. State and UNC Chapel Hill
met at the Research Triangle
Park office of Manpower
Development Monday at 2
p.m. to sign an agreement
creating the nation's first
University Consortium for Air
Pollution Control.
The Consortium agreement
calls for the universityies to
exchange information, faculty
members and services. The
universities will also expand
workshops, seminars, public
meetings and technical
conferences and make their
findings available to both
communities and industries, as
well as groups of concerned
citizens.
Dr. Johm Middleton,
representing the Department of
Health, Education and
Welfare's Commission on Air
Polution, states that the
formation of the Consortium
"between these three great
universities is a simple, direct
and sincere affair."
Consolidated University
President WTilIiam Friday
emphasized the importance of
air pollution in the modern
environment and the
importance of the Consortium
as a first step in the battle
against pollution.
under the auspices of the Duke
Activities Committee. A
spokesman said Ginsberg was
scheduled to speak on several
of his poems, which include
"Howl and Other Poems,"
"Reality Sandwiches," and
"Airplane Dreams."
However, the spokesman
added that Ginsberg would also
mention current national issues
involving youth.
There will be no admission
charge for the program.
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where have you gone
Daughtry
'A. Wire
following a November meeting
between Dean of Men James
Cansler, Schroeder, and the
advisory personnel from
Project Hinton.
"They said our visitation
enforcement was not working
adequately," Daughtry said.
"They wanted the advisors
to the project to report any
visitation violations and to
check out any rumors we
heard. At the end of the
meeting I told them I wanted
to resign," he continued, "but
Cansler wanted to wait a
period of time before accepting
the resignation."
Daughtry said he talked to
Project Hinton residents during
"It is our task now' to keep
our state habitable and a joyful
and productive place to live,"
Friday commented.
"I see this air pollution
consortium as providing, with
the support of our federal and
state governments, a major
vehicle to the solution of one
of these major environmental
problems."
Remarks made by
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson,
who was unable to attend the
ceremonies, were read to the
distinguished gathering by Vice
Chancellor of Health Sciences
C. Arden Miller.
Sitterson's remarks
emphasized the University's
record of research and
development in the field of
environmental pollution and its
present programs of study in
this field.
"WTe at Chapel Hill are not
new to the field of air
pollution. Infact, our twelve
continuous years of teaching
and research in the field
qualifies us for being
considered among the oldest
'pros'."
According to Sitterson's
statement, the first tangible
evidence of the consortium
(See Pollution, Page 5)
By ART CHANSKY
DTH Sports Editor
COLUMBIA, S.C-North
Carolina went to a slow-down
offense here last night to offset
a decided height advantage.
Turnovers and poor shooting
caused the strategy to backfire
as powerful South Carolina
captured a 65-52 win.
The Tar Heels attempted to
compensate for USC's front
line of Tom Riker, John
Ribock and Tom Owens by
opening the ball game in a high
percentage, deliberate attack.
Study
South
DTH Staff Photo by Cliff Kolovson
Billy boy, Billy boy . .
Wouldn't Enforce
the waiting period and decided
not to resign. However,
Daughtry told Schroeder he
still could not enforce the
policy. '
"I decided not to resign
because the residents, the
students themselves, do not
agree with the visitation policy
and voted not to have police
officers in the role of
advisors," Daughtry said.
Daughtry claimed Schroeder
told him he would be fired if
he didn't change his position.
"He (Schoeder) told me to
come back Dec. 17 and if I still
felt this way, I would be
officially out. I did, without
changing."
Daughtry said he
like to have kept the
"would
job of
RA" simply because he liked it
and felt he was of some service
to his fellow students.
"You can get all sorts of
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But a pesky Gamecock zone
outlasted Carolina on many
occasions and forced more
difficult shots than Dean Smith
anticipated.
UNC led only twice in the
contest and both were
short-lived. Junior Don
Eggleston, replacing ailing Bill
Chamberlain in the starting
lineup, converted an Eddie
Fogler feed for the initial
bucket of the game. Lee
Dedmon's basket almost nine
minutes later gave the Tar
Heels their last lead at 6-5.
From then on, the
By STEPHEN WALTERS
DTH Staff Writer
Campus Police yesterday
shut down sales of the Protean
Radish outside Student Stores
after receiving instructions
from the administration to
enforce the Board of Trustees'
merchandising regulations. -
The police action arose
when J. A. Branch, director of
the University's Auxiliary"
Enterprises, instructed Campus
Security Chief Arthus
Beaumont to enforce
regulations against the sale of
items by sources other than
student stores.
The regulations prohibit
independent sales, unless a
bonafide campus organization
applies, to the chancellor to sell
goods which do not compete
with Student Stores.
The regulations were set by
the Board of Trustees in 194
Policy
o
if-
beautiful quotes from the RA
manual about the advisory
program and being good
advisors," Daughtry explained,
"but
that.
in
reality it is not like
"An advisor in the RA
program is supposed to be a
person there to serve students.
He happens to be a
representative of the Office of
the Dean of Men because that
is how the program happens to
be set up.
"The role of RA has now
been changed by that office,"
Daughtry continued, "and I am
very upset by that change.
Cansler now wants us to be
policemen instead of advisors."
He termed the change "a big
step backwards."
Daughtry said the new
system would not work
because the students would not
V
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Hey you guys, look who's back
Collision Of ACC Title Contenders?
i ppies
opportunist Gamecocks took
advantage of open shots to
control the game till the end.
Tar Heel defensive strategy was
to collapse on South Carolina's
John Roche and Owens, but
usually mild-scoring John
Ribock hit the first five of six
shots he attempted to
repeatedly, frustrate UNC.
Back-to-back buckets by
Chamberlain and Scott with
four minutes left in the first
half cut the USC lead to three,
but Roche, reserve Rick
Aydiett and a last-second tip
bv Ribock gave the Gamecocks
to see that profits from a I!
entrepreneurism on Slate
University campuses go to a
scholarship fund for needy
This scholarship fund
receives part of the 10 cents
charged by the Student Stores
above the cost the stores pay
for the Radish.
Beaumont said in the past
he informed persons selling the
Radish that such sales are
against the Trustees' policy.
George Vlaslts, Radish
staffer, said these warnings
have been made, since
September, but the Radish
staff found the regulations
unclear and decided to
continue sales until they were
actually prevented from doing
so by policemen.
Beaumont said photographs
were taken to prove Radish
sales continued after the
warnings while cop ies remained
Alcana
trust the RA as a policeman.
"He would become a person
to avoid," he said. "The
students at large do not even
believe in the visitation policy.
How can they trust someone
who reports them for violating
rules they don't believe in?"
Daughtry said he would
strongly favor taking the role
of supervisor of the advisory
program away from the Offices
of the Dean of Men and Dean
of Women.
"Part of the problem stems
from having this job in the
hands of an office with
disciplinary functions. It
should be controlled by
someone totally without a
disciplinary job," he theorized.
Daughtry said he felt the
(See James, Page Five)
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a 23-16 edge at haJftime. The
complextion of the game was
determined in the first half
when the Tar Heels could only
manage a frigid 30 per cent
from the field while
committing seven costly
turnovers. A Gamecock
rebounding edge of 16-10 gave
the Roosters second and third,
efforts time and time again.
The Tar Keels quickened
the tempo a bit in the second
half, and the changeover
seemed to have a positive
effect; But South
Carolina and the capacity,
sale
in Student Stores in
case
evidence
needed for
court Ection.
Masits said th? man s?'l
the paper this morning was
told by police to immediately
stop hawking the paper, and
that if he refused to do so he
would be arrested.
VI a sits said sales were
ceased, but members of the
staff would meet later to
discuss future action.
Mr. Branch said sales of all
papers on campus news stands
are managed by student stores
in return for a percentage of
the profits.
Chief Beaumont added,
"The people selling the paper
outside the Student Stores are
just robbing needy students of
scholarships."
Vlaslts said he was unsure as
to how the Radish could react,
but something m jst be done to
keep the University and local
school systems from banning
dissent.
for
JcUQl
6 Will B
Exam Heading Day
Provost J.C. Morrow has announced that Friday,
January 16 will be used as a reading day and no classes will
be held that day.
Provost Morrow said that Thursday, January 15 would
be the final day of all semester classes with January 1G, 17,
and 18 to be used as reading days. Exams start Monday,
January 19 and extend through Wednesday, January 28.
Provost Morrow also announced that lecture quizzes
prohibited the last six days
days are January 3, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15. Laboratory exams
may be held the last six days, however.
Provost Morrow also reminded students that the faculty
policy governing examiniations states that final
examiniations for laboratory courses may be set at other
times than those regularly designated in the exam schedule.
Aural foreign language exams are also included in this
provision. Professors of these courses will announce the
times of exams to their students.
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DTH Staff Photo by Cliff Kolorson
tz 9
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hysterical crowd at Carolina
Coliseum were not to be
denied once the Gamecocks
had the lead.
UNC made two comeback
attempts in the second period.
One false and one real.
Sophomore Chamberlain
triggered both.
The Tar Heels sliced the
USC margin of five on three
different occasions early in the
second half. But Gamecock
sophomore Tom Riker hit two
field coals tnd a free throw to
up the Sotiih Carolina lead
each time.
Continued on page 5
arr-ed
that recent court
hate indicated
decisions
newpapvTs are
ot hke other
y hive tKvn
found by the courts to
exempt from restrictions set on
other merch
mdise.
He documented thi
assertion lih th' f- t tht a
court rv-cerstiy found a paper
published by Jehovah's
Witnesses to not be covered by
restrictions aain&t dcKr Ui
door sales in numeious tons.
Chancellor Sittcrn v:
not available to ctrrnient on
whether he had the suthoniv
to waive prohibition of Radish
sales, but Mr. Branch id rult-s
prohibit such an exception.
A further question can the
Radish be offered in return for
donations was contingent
upon interpretation of the
regulations, according Ui
Branch, but he said he did not
know who would have to
interpret the restrictions.
e
ere
of the semester. Ihe "no quiz
mas Fire
estroys
rat House
The Phi Kappa Sigma
fraternity house was gutted by
a fire Christmas night when
flames spread from th
basement to the second floor
in minutes and consumed the
structure before firtmer
arrived.
Captain Robert Williams of
the Chapel Hill Fire
Department said Monday th-
neither the the blaze nor tht
amount of
damage
has br-er
determined yet.
One member of th
fraternity, Jim LonUw
estimated that as many is
fifteen of his brothers lost our
$1,500 in the fire.
The fire department arrived
on the scene at 10:18 p.m.
Christmas night and could not
get the fire under control until
3:00 a.m- the next morning.
According to Longley, Rick
Dana was the only member in
the house at the time of the
blaze. He was in his room
studying when he smeiled
smoke. He went to check and
saw that flames were coming
from the basement.
, Dana called the fire
department from across the
street at the Kappa Alpha
house, and by the time he got
back outside the flames had
already spread to the second
floor.
Both Longley and Captain
Williams described the building
as being ""completely
destroyed."
Longley said that house
members were having trouble
finding places to stay and said
any offer of a room or a bed
would help.
lie