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By ARTCHANSKY
DTH Sports Editor
North Carolina turned its
second technical fou! in as
many games into a shot of
penicillin last night that
boosted the Tar Heels to a
heart-throbbing 88-86 win over
N.C. State at a raucous
Carmichael Auditorium.
Following the
misdemeanor which came after
Charlie Scott objected to a
travelling call the Tar Heels
reeled off ten straight points to
reenter a game that looked at
best bleak late in the second
half.
Four points by center Lee
Dedmon. and two each by
Scott, Eddie Fog'er and Jim
Delany composed the
consecutive ten that sent the
Wolfpack to only its second
loss of the season. State must
be paranoid by now, for their
due of defeats came at the
hands of Carolina, which now
owns ten straight wins of
Norman Sloan and his dogs.
These ten points were not
the death blow, as State came
back to lead by three with
seven minutes left, but the
Wolfpack had lost its command
and shortly withered beneath
the pressing Carolina defense
and the distressing Carolina
home crowd.
A three-point drive by
Scott who showed more
nerves than a contortionist all
night-regained the Tar Heel
egz for good with 5:15
remaining.
Scott took the outlet of a
Dedmon rebound and began a
three-two break that broke the
Pack. It went from Scott to
Fcg'er back to Scott and
through the hocp. The crowd
lost its mind.
From there Carolina went to
its classic 4-coraered delay and
was in control throughout
despite holding only a slim one
point lead on two stretch
occassions.
With 23 seconds remaining
and the Tar Heels on top by
two, 2 ten second tickccurt
violation was called by one cf
the two freshmen officials who
were pressed into duty when
the varsity refs did not post.
State center Paul Coder
qukkry obliged by losing the
ball out of bounds and Dennis
Wuycik's twD ensuing free
throws kd the win h;
to be .one cf the $r:2'
Blue Heaven hLcrv.
k r. .
Carolina succu:
blistering hot State lean
first half that hi: 5?
from the floor. Chirlie i
21 first half poinJ ro
do much to offset IS
Continued on p.i:?
, .1 "s.. . j- ; ; f
Writers Wanted
The Daily Tar Heel is
looking for staff writers. Apply
at the DTH office Tuesday and
Wednesday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Experience preferable.
Volume 77, Number 96
Fuller Tried
On Picketing
Charges
By HENRY HINKLE
DTH Staff Writer
The trial of Howard Fuller,
director of Malcolm X
Liberation University, and two
of the school's students on
charges made in connection
with the food service workers"
strike last November is
scheduled in Hillsborough
district court this morning.
Fuller and the two students,
Anthony M. belcher and
Thomas N. Grayson, were
arrested Nov. 25 after
picket-line activities at Lenoir
Hall. They were charged with
disorderly conduct, failure to
disperse and engaging in a riot.
The three had originally
been called to trial on Jan. 6
but defense attorneys W.G.
Pearson and Buddy Malone
asked for a ' continuation
because a court reporter was
not present.
Pearson later explained a
reporter was" necessary since he
intended to raise
"constitutional issues" in the
case that would require
testimony to be recorded.
Under North Carolina state
law the court must furnish a
l t. :e :
court reporter 11 uue ia
requested by the defense.
The trial of nine others,
arrested on charges growing
out of the strike will resume
Thursday. It has been delayed
twice.
Most of those who will be
tried Thursday were arrested in
the melee at Lenoir on the
night of Dec. 4.
Among the nine is Eugene
Gore, an organizer for the
American Federation of State,
County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME),
charged with failure to
1
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Toda
y
disperse. Gore was convicted
last week on charges of assault
and blocking a building. He
received sentences of 30 and
90 days but his case was
apeppealed to Superior Court.
Also convicted in last week's
trials were James Pierce,
former regional director of
-AFSCME; Larry K. White, a
student; and two former food
service workers, Roland Davis
and Doris Farrington.
Pierce ,was charged with
disorderly conduct and
blocking ingress and egress in
Lenoir Cafeteria while Davis
and Mrs. Farrington were
charged in a disturbance at
Chase Cafeteria on Nov. 12.
All received jail sentences
ranging from 30 days to six
months, which attorneys said
will be appealed.
Uniwe
The University will suffer
some cutbacks in funds from
the N.C. General Assembly due
to failure to meet a projected
enrollment figure,
administration officials
disclosed Monday.
Chancellor Sitterson spoke
briefly on the cut-back in
Friday's Faculty Council
meeting. He said the University
would have some losses, but
critical points have been
negotiated in the University's
favor.
The ? projected , enrollment
for the University was made in
a study five years ago which
predicted attendance for each
year through 1975. The study
called for a total of 13,742
full-time undergraduate,
if
to dust to. ashes the
Li i ri!
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Scott and Dedmon
rsiw.
Underenrollmeiit Jeopardizes
graduate and professional
students for 1969-1970.
according to University
Registrar James R. Gaskin.
Gaskin said statistics for last
fall indicated there were 322
fewer undergraduates than
were expected. He added there
were 533 fewer graduate and
professional students than were
expected.
Figures are based on the
number of undergraduate
students carrying 12 or more
hours and graduates with at
least nine hours of academic
work per semester.
The Department of
Appropriations under the
Bureau of the State Budget"
14
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77 Years of
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY
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DTH Staff Thotot by ClifKotovwon
combine on tip for two.-
9s:3PiM&M&iul I
fixes the requirements for a
class as "13 plus." Under such
regulations, a drop of 855
enrolled students could mean
the loss of as many as 60
Committee
olds'. Ui
ills
No new drug legislation is
expected in Student
Legislature until after the
report of the Judicial Reforms
Committee in the spring,
according to Judicial
Committee Chairman John
Williford.
The Possibility of adoption
of the Hirsch drug bill limiting
the aspects of drug abuse
"would clearly be. unpalatable
to the U niversity
administration," Williford said
Monday.
Williford indicated that the
present state of "legislative
limbo" on the issue of a drug
policy would continue because
of its "entanglement in the
double jeopardy mess." This
entanglement is the subject of
the judicial reforms committee
report.
Williford said he had talked
with Dean of Men James O.
Cansler on occassion about
drugs and the drug policy issue,
but would make no further
comment on the content of
those discussions.
The Hirsch drug bill,
according to its author would
limit the aspects of drug use
which can be considered
offenses against the student
body. ...
Hirsch recently said he had
given up most hopes of the bill
being adopted or ever getting
out of the judicial committee,
due to pressure from the
administration.
"As far as I know," said
WUliford, "the bill hasn't even
been introduced into the
legislature yet."
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Editorial Freedom
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ByAL THOMAS
DTH Staff Writer
The University was
temporarily spared a possible
general strike of its
non-academic employees
Sunday as workers decided to
postpone a strike vote until
Wednesday.
The reason for the delay,
according to Jesse Epps, special
assistant to the President of the
American Federation of State,
County and Municipal
Employees Union (AFSCME),
was to give union officials time
to investigate charges against
SAGA Food Service.
The Union has charged
SAGA with laying off full-time
black workers and hiring
part-time white students.
MoMomSlMpped
Subsidies
faculty members. Gaskin,
however, was quick to point
out such measures were not
applicable to the current
situation. He said the danger of
a significant drop in faculty
personnel next fall was also
unlikely.
Exact figures for the
cut-back have not yet been
released. Dr. Claiborn Jones,
Assistant to the Chancellor,
declined to make any specific
comment pending further
developments in budgeting.
''We will have to tighten our
belts here and there," he
admitted. Jones was quick to
add economy measures would
not be unduly harsh.
Rumors circulating the
Greensboro and Chapel Hill
campuses last week suggested
administrative action to
increase enrollment.
Recruitment of women
transfer students allegedly took
place on the Greensboro
campus, according to some
stories.
Mousing Policy
By BILL MILLER
DTH Staff Writer
A new University housing policy announced Thursday
requiring sophomores and transfer students to live on campus
drew negative comments from student leaders Monday.
The decision to alter the housing rules was reached by an
administrative study panel created to study the lack of students
living in University housing.
"I see the plight of the University," Richard Stevens, chairman
of the Men's Residence Council, said, "but they have to live with
it, not us."
"It's true the University and the administration are in a bind
money-wise," Guil Wad dell, chairman of the University Party
(UP) sympathized, "but so is Student Government, and the
United States for that matter. The University is going about
getting people to live in residence colleges in the wrong manner.
"The students are bearing too much of the financial end of the
University without getting returns."
Joyce Davis, chairman of the Association of Women Students,
said that in its present state, University housing is "definitely
detrimental to the psychological well-being or the students.
"If living on campus is a real asset like the administration
asserts, or if it even can be, the students will choose to live there
themselves."
Peter Howard, chairman of the Student Party, cited the recent
administrative act as a demonstration of "the great need for a
progressive mind in the administration.
"The administration has provided a short-term salve for their
pains without touching or even looking at their cause," he said.
According to Steven's statement Monday, the decision to alter
the standing rules on University housing was in contradiction to
the decision of a special advisory committee to the Chancellor,
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10. 1970
CSKDieHllC
o Mold.
SAGA officials deny the
charge, however.
Union representatives , met
with University officials for
two hours Monday in the first
part of the union's fact-finding
venture.
Epps said he was "neither
discouraged nor encouraged"
by the meeting. He said his
own investigations would
continue and a recommenda
tion whether to strike would
be presented to the workers
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
AFSCME has been
organizing janitors, maids and
hospital employees here for the
past month charging they have
been mistreated and denied fair
overtime pay. Cafeteria
workers were organized in
November.
Asked about this rumor,
admissions director Richard
Cash well said admissions for
the spring semester were based
on the student's qualifications
and the allotment of
enrollment openings. He added
there was no conscious effort
break down admissions
standards to admit more
women.
Cash well reported spring
admissions were "fairly close
to normal." He noted the
proportion of women to men
students admitted second
semester was about the same as
it has been for several years.
Actual numbers of students
"always fluctuate," according
to Cashwell.
About 150 students were
admitted this spring.
Approximately 100 were
women.
mpJleyees
IhriLke
During Monday's meeting
S i tterson said the
Universitywill not negotiate
another contract with SAGA at
the end of its present contract
(May 27) even if SAGA asks to
stay.
Sitterson said rumors SAGA
may stay were "emphatically
wrong."
SAGA announced in a letter
to the University it would not
continue food service on
campus after May 27. SAGA
officials later noted high labor
costs and low patronage as the
reason for their scheduled
departure.
Dr. C'aiborne Jones, special
assistant to the Chancellor, said
the University would give
preferential treatment to
SAGA employees laid off
"when qualifications are
equal."
The University had told
union officials at the end of
the month-long cafeteria strike
in November SAGA employees
laid off (62 of the 150 full
time workers) would be placed
in other jobs within the
University if possible.
SAGA has laid off four
employees in addition to the
62 and, according to SAGA
officials, will lay off more if
business does not increase.
The eventual outcome of
food service on campus was
also discussed during the
meeting.
APO Book Co-0,
Grosses
The Book Co-Op operated
on campus by Alpha Phi
Omega, national service
fraternity, grossed $11,800 in
last week's book sales.
APO president Vincent
Townsend estimated trade
increased $4,800 over last year.
The APO Co-op sold 3,500
out of 6,500 books in its four
days of trade. From the
$11,800 income APO deducted
10 for expenses and its
Gets Criticism
the Committee on University Residential Life (CURL), chaired
by Dr. John Schorrenberg.
Stevens said the committee agreed after a study last year to
alterations in the policy because they were financially nectary
and only with the stipulation that the "social, academic, ar.4
institutional life was improved."
Three members of the committee wrote dissenting opinions.
Miss Davis, Stevens and Gwen Hightower, president of Nurses
dorm, were opposed to forcing certain students to live in
University housing, Stevens reported.
Prior to granting approval to the alterations, CURL set up six
conditions to be met by the administration, which Stevens nil
had been ignored.
They were:
to revamp the dormitory advisory staff and to incorporate
several full-time, trained employees in each building;
to provide faculty advisors and participants in each
dormitory;
to provide facilities for men that are similar to the special
facilities granted for women;
to critically study and revise the operation of the physical
plant.
to admit equal numbers of men and women;
to abolish the difference between room rents for men zvA
women. .
WaddeU cited lack of fire alarms, inad equate wirings and
one-color, rooms as reasons why dormitory life is "unfit." in
men's dorms.
Howard added, "The University would do much better to
make the dorms more liveable rather than tryl2 to stuff them
with unwilling victims."
Stevens "said he was going to discuss the situation with
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson later in the week.
SDS :lccu
Students for a De:rt,HT2t;c
Society will met tonight ;r, Vse
Carolina Union at S p to
discuss the actions of SAC. A
and possible SDS uorkrr
?jpport.
Founded February 23, 1593
V
Or
Sitterson said "Whether any
kind of food service will b,
operated on campus wo ju4
don't know yet. We will try to
ascertain what kind and form
of food service students ?.ni
and would patronize. Wv will
then make our recommend.
tions to the Board of
Trustees."
Following the meeting Kpp
said he would begin
investigating charges that
SAGA, in addition to lawn-;
off blacks and hiring whites,
has violated the seniority
agreement.
He repeated charges SAGA
had been laying off ptop!
without regard to seniority. If
the charges are substantiated,
he continued, the union will
try to force SAGA to pve
those workers back pay.
During Sunday's meetirg of
non-academic workers, Epps
called the University "the real
enemy of its employees.
"We heard the voire of
SAGA but felt the hand of the
University," he said.
Gene Gore, a union
organizer, said the University
and SAGA were involved m a
conspiracy to lay off al! bku-k
workers, and hire white
students. He said workers who
have been with the Univ r Jty
for 10 or 15 years were bein-;
(Continued on page 5)
TTh.
2
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$11,800
Scholarship Building Fund.
Townsend said the co-op
was quite successful. "Students
who brought their books in
early and for reasonable prices
sold most of them.
Townsend reminded
students to pick up unsold
books and money today or
Wednesday from 12-5 p.m. on
the second floor of the
Carolina Union.