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The committee on student
transportation announced
Wednesday bus service to
rom South Campus
discontinued Thursda)
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Volume 77, Number
'Issues
Forum
eg ins
Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sitterson announced last week
that operation of a special
consultative forum will begin
early next month.
The 60-member board will
"bring a broader range of
opinion to bear on
campus-wide issues and to
promote a greater
understanding and a
heightened sense of
community among all elements
within this institution,"
according to Chancellor
Sitterson.
The forum will consist of 15
undergraduate, graduate and
professional school students,
15 faculty members drawn
from all ranks including
professional school members,
15 representatives of the
administration and the
non-academic staff, eight
members of the Board of
Trustees and seven alumni
representatives. '
Sitterson will act as
chairman of the committee.
Student Body President Alan
Albright and Professor Fred
Cleveland, Chairman of the
Faculty, are ex-officio
members.
The first meeting of the
Forum was originally planned
for November and was then
rescheduled for December.
Sitterson reported the delays
were a result of the failure of
the various groups to nominate
candidates and submit names
on time.
The Chancellor's office has
reported all names have now
been received and a list will be
released shortly.
The forum concept was
introduced on campus by Joel
Fleishman, vice provost of
Urban Studies at Yale
University, in a 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,
Cleveland, and the Faculty
Committee on University
Government.
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Tarheels On The
By ART CHANSKY
DTH Sports Editor
CLEMSON, S. C.-Carolina
takes the plunge today,
heading deep into the barren
wastelands of South Carolina
for a basketball appointment
with Clemson University.
If the Tar Heeis survive the
trip which includes a
i Piedmont charter to Anderson,
S. C. and almost an hour bus
ride to Clemson tipoff at
Littiejohn Coliseum will be at
8 p.m.
After all of the "pre-game
Festivities," the contest may
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It said. "I'm being held prisoner in a
Albright M
No Will fui Abuse Of Funds
By STEPHEN WALTERS
DTH Staff Writer
A bill concerning alleged
abuses of funds allocated to
the Daily Tar Heel will be
signed by Student Body
President Alan Albright even
though he believes "no willful
misuse of funds occurred."
Indications are that neither
the Publications Board nor the
Student Attorney General's
staff will initiate any court
actions , against the alleged
offenders as some student
legislators speculated after the
bill was approved.
The bill was passed by
Student Legislature Dec. 16
after some representatives
charged officers of the
newspaper with mishandling
funds.
The bill includes three
provisions:
Allocation
of $500 to
This Virginia, is hidden meaning
Will Ojypose
seem incidental to the
road-weary Blue and White.
That's just what Clemson is
hoping. The Tigers of Coach
Bobby Roberts are currently
2-6, having split their two
conference games with Virginia
and Maryland.
In the past, Carolina would
have had to trek far further
than South Carolina to
"equalize" the game odds.
Despite the Tigers record,
that's not the case this season.
Clemson is no way near an
ACC contender, but the
Bengals are much improved
over recent teams. Ironically,
their strength has not come
CHAPEL
D7W Sfa Vioto iy Oiff Kolovson
members of the Tar Heel staff;
Prohibition of' staff
members from drawing double
salaries for any reason;
Instruction that the Pub
Board investigate the situation
and report their findings to the
Attorney General's staff for
possible court action.
DTH editor Todd Cohen
asked that the bill be vetoed on
grounds double salaries are
warranted because those
drawing them fill two jobs.
Cohen also asserted the
double salaries were granted
with full knowledge by the Tar
Heel business manager and the
Pub Board.
Albright said- he doubted
either the Pub Board or the
Attorney General will initiate
court action against those who
supposedly abused funds.
He said he has talked with
DTH Staff Photo by (.Tiff Kolov son
Move To South Carolina
The Losing Clemson
from the scoring of Butch
Zatezalo. In fact, it has come
from his non-scoring.
For the first time in three
years, the 5-11 Tiger
sharpshooter has not surged to
the head of conference
pointmen. The ACC Scoring
King twice over is still hitting
at a creditable 22.7 points a
game, but he seems to be
passing to his teammates more
and ignoring them less.
The result: a well-balanced
Clemson attack that has kept
the Tigers in nearly every game
they've played including a
narrow loss to LSU.
For Carolina tonight, the
II
77 Years of
HILL, NORTH CAR 05 IN A,
.i FOTO)
By HARRY BRYAN
DTH Staff Writer
The report of the
Committee on Accreditation of
ROTC Courses and Programs,
released Wednesday,
recommends the establishment
of a Curriculum on War and
Defense which will concern
various problems associated
with the military.
The committee also
recommends that ROTC
programs be contnued in
affiliation with the curriculum.
The report, now under
consideration by the
administratiie boards of the
General College and the
College of Arts and Sciences,
will be distributed to faculty
members Thursday and
presented to the Faculty
Council in February.
Pub Board Chairman Gunnar
Froman about the matter and
they agreed the Puh Board
investigation is an effort to
clarify handling of the funds,
rather than to punish anyone.
He added that he feels staff
members should not receive
double salaries as he opposes
the holding of, two jobs by
DTH staffers.
"If the salaries we are
appropriating to Tar Heel staff ,
memoers are iuu iuvv iu aitiati
enough people, so that some of
the staff have to fill two
offices, I think the Legislature
should look into possibilities of
increasing the pay rates,"
Albright explained.
He added he believes staff
members should be allowed to
fill two positions if one is a
daytime job and the other is
night work.
. Albright said he believes the
Pub Board will clarify the
matter and there may be
further legislation to permit
double salaries for double
positions if they are on
different shifts.
He said to veto the bill now
would probably result in SL's
overruling his action and this
might result in further
accusations without prior
study as to their truth.
CTjT
w
UNC PMns Music
JKxamr Stud
or
WUNC (91.5 FM) radio will
present "music to study by"
during the first week of exams
(January 19-23), according to
station representative Terry
Hendersoii
The music, according to
Henderson, will be of the
"light classical" variety and
will feature works by Schubert,
Brahms, Mendellossohn,
Mozart and other composers of
Tigers
cast facing the Tar Heels will
be "Zaterzalo Plus Three-and
An Old Fnend."
Besid's bombing Butch,
Coach R iberts will start three
double-digit scorers in 6-7
sophomore Greg Latin (16.7),
6-1 junior Dave Thomas (15)
and 6-4 senior Ron Yates (14).
The "old friend" is
super-senior Richie Mahaffey,
the 6-7 tri-brother who was
granted another half year of
eligibility by the ACC when he
missed the last half of his
senior season with an injury.
Mahaf f returned to the
Clemson ' lineup for the first
time last Monday, enabling
i D Ml I
Editorial Freedom
THURSDAY. JANUARY 15.
fficfJtlmii
The committee further
recommends that all students
in ROTC be required to pass
four non-ROTC courses of the
Curriculum of War and
Defense, one of which would
include a course on moral and
political philosophy.
"The curriculum should be
open to all students, including
cadets," the committee said.
"It should be concerned with
war not as a vocational
specialty, governed by
technical principles and
experience, but as a paramount
human problem, a
phenomenon that is social,
political, psychological, and
ethical and, as such, deserving
all the systematic attention
that the learned world can give
it.". .
The committee also stated
that no student should receive
Guil
Waddell, Pub Board
member, verified Albright's
remark that the Pub Board will
not recommend court action
against any of the alleged
offenders.
Student Attorney General
Bob Mosteller, however, said
he will Examine material from
the Pub Board's inquiry before
he determines if his staff will
begin any judidal action
"From the second-hand
information I have on this, it
would appear no misuse of
funds occurred," Mosteller
explained.
APO
. n
Any student who needs to
buy or sell books for the spring
semester might find some good
bargains at the Book Co-op
sponsored by Alpha Phi
Omega.
According to APO's
president, Vincent Townsend,
and Co-op Chairman Jerome
Thomas, students will be able
to set their own prices for
books they wish to sell. They
ymg
the light classics.
"The unique thing about
the programming," Henderson
explained, "is that there will be
no interruptions for
commercials, promotional
announcements or public
service messages.
"Just straight non-stop
music the perfect background
for studying."
Latin to move out to the
corner, but the Tigers bowed
to Maryland.
Tonight, Mahaffey should
be efficiently reacclimated. His
presence gives Roberts added
rebounding and a better inside
game to complement heavers
Zarezalo, Thomas and Yates,
Regardless of the cast,
Carolina is still the decided
favorite. The mere presence of
the Tar Heel regulars makes it
that way, but the recent play
of Charlie Scott, Lee Dedmon,
Dennis Wuycik and Bill
Chamberlain add further
disfavor to the upset theory.
That is, of course, if
Carolina makes it down there.
On -BTE:
UPh; IK IK II
C V vv
1970
more than 12 hours' credit for
ROTC courses.
Concerning academic credit
for courses taught by members
of the military departments,
the committee recommended
that credit be given for such
courses provided that (1) the
instructor has an intimate
association with the practices
of the armed services
concerned; (2) the subject
matter is not associated with
any other non-military
department and (3) the subject
matter involves advanced skills
pertaining to the service
concerned.
The report also stated that
drills and other ROTC
activities requiring students to
wear uniforms be limited to
one day a week and that "the
faculty reaffirm the principle
that no student who attends
class in uniform should be
treated with disrespect because
of his military affiliation."
Concerning disenrollment
the committeee requested that
the University urge ROTC to
establish a system in which any
student could resign on the
condition that he repay any
monies he hs received.
In addition, the committee
recommended that if the
requests are granted, the
University urge the services to
revise the contracts ROTC
students are required to sign so
the students could postpone
the time they must become
committed to enlistment until
the beginning of their senior
year.
The committee also said the
the services should clarify what
constitutes an attempt to evade
military obligations.
The fact that a cadet's
educational and personal
development has made the life
iff)
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im Ann
Organizes Effort
Tin imn
ii
will also be able to buy books
for less than in the Book
Exchange.
The Co-op will be held from
Feb. 2-6 in rooms 207 and 209
of the Union.
Townsend said students will
have to pay only a ten percent
charge on books sold to cover
APO's expenses for running the
Co-op.
He emphasized that
students should hold on to
their books during semester
break and not sell them to
others because "more people
will see the books at the Co-op
and they'll get a better price
for them than they would
selling them in the dorms."
Thomas estimated that the
Co-op of last year handled over
5,000 books, and that over
h
9
and work of an officer
incompatible with his values
should be a justifiable ground
for disenroiSment without
obligation to enlisted service."
the committee said.
Dr. Raymond Dawson, dean
of the College of Arts and
Sciences, said copies of the
Lee Hon
k3 ILlliiO-
with
i own
By MIKE PARNELL
AND HENRY HINKLE
DTH Staff Writers
Mayor Howard
proclaimed today
Luther King Day"
Lee has
"Martin .
to honor
the second anniversary
of
King's birthday since his
assassination. Lee called on all
citizens of Chapel Hill to "take
a few moments during the day
and remember with gratitude
the great contributions" King
made to society.
Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sitterson, by recommendation
of the University Committee
on Instructional Personnel,
turned down a request by
union local 1887
AFSCME-A.F.L.-C.LO., the
food service workers union, to
call a work holiday for
"students, faculty and
nor -academic employees on
the anniversary of King's
birthday.
Sitterson said, "At present
the University does not have a
policy of observing holidays in
honor of great men. Dr. King
was a great man but the
Committee found that under
3,000 of those were sold. Many
of the ones not sold, he added,
were freshmen's books which
could be used only for first
semester courses.
Thomas said Mod. Civ. and
English I books will be almost
impossible to sell.
Last DTH
This is the last issue of
the Daily Tar Heel until
the spring semester. Good
luck on exams. And
remember, exams are there
to prove how much you
have learned. Without
exams, what would be the
purpose of learning?
Bright sun wiirmei! this winter
A chartered bus trip to New
Vorfc ii3 b sr.sortd by
Pra Hinton durir s-rrA-?ir
brvik. There i: 2aVa: s::.;l
opr,. at a ft--- of $20 jvr
not ind-i. of r.-.ea! ard
l:::crcci studLv.:
founded February 23. 1593
report will be placed in the
Student Union so all students
can read the full report. ,
"I think it's an 'excfil-t-nt
report," he said "1 think it has
given the Faculty Council the
basis for a more souri
approach to the question."
.ors ivins
the present circumstances, we
can not observe a holiday,"
Lee said there would be no
official functions today but he
did not discount the possibility
of official observance next
year. Lee noted there ; were
movements over the entire
nation to make King's birthday
a national holiday and he
expressed hope this would be
done. Lee said although he
would not declare official
observance this year, f'next
year we may have something
special if nothing comes about
on the national scene."
In his proclamation), Lee
termed King "a man! who
dedicated himself and his life
to the freeing of people and
removing barriers that tend to
prevent citizens" from
executing their rights granted
by the U.S. Constitution.
Lee praised King for his
work in the Civil Rights
Movement and called him "a
model after which all youth,
black and white, could pattern
their own lives in termn of
giving more to their fellow man
than they asked in return."
Lee called on Chapel Hill
citizens to remember the
"great contributions" Kir:
made and to remember "the
hope he had that someday we
will live as one people in one
land."
The request sent to the
Chancellor was signed by Mrs.
Elizabeth Brooks and Mrs.
Mary Smith, co-chairmen of
local 1 88 7, Roscoe
McCrimmon, chairman of the
Maid and Porter Union, and
Carey Lakes and Eugene Gore,
organizers of American
Federation of State, County,
and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME).
The request read, in part:
"Local 1887 AFSCME-A.F.L.-C.LO.
has unanimously voted
to honor the Jan. 15
observance of Dr. Martin
Luther King's birthday. We are
(Continued on page 5)
DI M Stjff liwtu by CLff Koht son
clay
Day