' i'ij(pS,'-Ja5ai',--,t-1
' - " -
IV v -hi
Hi1
In fT
II if i I ill i ;
The present central cafeteria
food service on campus may be
approaching an inglorious end.
A study of the food service
situation on campus by Joe
Eagles, vice chancellor of
business and finance, painted a
gloomy picture of the chances
a central food service would
have.
Eagles' study, released to
the Board of Trustees
Thursday, coupled with earlier
statements by University
officials, seems to indicate the
University's reluctance to
retain the present system of
food service.
The University has been
SP Meetings
The student party will meet
at 7:30 tonight in Gerrard Hall.
All members are requested to
Attend this meeting and the
convention Monday night at 8
p.m. in Gerrard Hall.
Volume 77, Number 107
Interviews
Scheduled
Interviews for residence
college co-ordinators for
orientation will begin Friday,
Feb. 27, and run through
Wednesday, March 4.
"Orientation involves
discovering where you are and
then finding the best way to
get from where you are to
where you want to be," said
Chuck Patrizia, head
coordinator for orientation, in
explaining the goal for the
program.
One girl and one boy from
each residence college are
needed to work as co-ordinate
heads of the orientation for
each residence college. These
residence co-ordinators will
work with the orientation
commission and the individual
dorm counselors.
"We are looking for
students who are interested in
"helping new students discover";
what college can and should
be," said Dianne Gooch,
women's coordinator.
The times for the interviews
will be 3-5 p.m. Friday; 7-9
p.m. Monday; 2-5 p.m.
Tuesday; and 3-5 p.m.
Wednesday.
"More of the orientation
program will be held in the
residence colleges this year,"
said Miss Gooch. "Counselor
interviews will be scheduled
within the next two weeks for
the fraternity, sorority, dorm
and town students who are
interested in being orientation
counselors."
Rast Announces
As VP C
By ANN ROTHE
DTH Staff Writer
Student Legislator Phil Rast
announced Saturday his
candidacy for student body
vice-president on the
Conservative Party ticket.
The junior chemistry Inajor
from Atlanta began a brief
explanation of his party
platform with an expressed
desire for "more fraternity
representation in student
government."
"I wrant to get fraternities
more involved in the functions
of their student legislative
body. I myself am the only
fraternity man to be running
for the vice-presidential
position so far," he added.
Rast, a member of Sigma
Phi Epsilon fraternity, was
second to announce his
vice-presidential candidacy
behind University Party
representative Bill Blue.
Coupled with fraternities,
Rast viewed ROTC as a
"worthwhile campus function"
which is not receiving due
attention in student
government policies.
. He categorized the
possession of marijuana and
other such drugs as "civil
matters, not to be handled in
student courts as is the case
under present double jeopardy
rulings."
On the issue of the funding
of the Daily Tar Heel, R 1 is
decidely in favor of
non-compulsory funding and
maintenance of the
Publications Board as financial
overseer.
"Once the students of this
studying what type of food
service, if any, would replace
SAGA Food Service Inc. after
their scheduled May 27
departure from campus.
SAGA cited a low level of
sales, low productivity of
workers and a high wage scale
as reasons for not renewing its
contract.
SAGA had taken over food
operations here in May, 1969,
following a four-year loss of
$200,000 by the' University's
operating food facilities.
Eagles' study did not rule
out chances of another private
food service firm coming in or
of a workers' co-op (workers
f
J". .
1 I .?
3o
V ;
UP i- r
3 Stud
Of Cheating On
By GERRY COHEN
DTH Staff Writer
Three UNC students were
A
9i
A lit L
Phil Rast
University have chosen an
editor by popular vote," Rast
explained, "I believe that the
paper belongs to the editor to .
do with it what he feels best
journalistically speaking."
Rast's position concerning
visitation regulations like that
of presidential Conservative
Party candidate Gary Fagg, is
one of "individual tests"
within each dorm according to
majority rule.
Finally, Rast favors the
retroactive motion of the
Merzbacher Committee
reforms, "allowing present day
freshman the advantages of
these requirement reductions."
Although a Conservative
Party member, Rast still claims
membership in the University
Party from which the CP split
last November over internal
policy disagreements.
andidate
f
. DTH Xeics Analysis
By
A I Thomas
own stock in and operate the
food service) continuing
operations. It did make such
possibilities seem financially
unsound and remote, however.
Eagles had said last week
the University itself would not
re-enter food service operations
unless forced to by the Board
of Trustees.
The last section of Eagles
study seemed to pinpoint
where the University stands on
3U&
D
ti i"
... i A l v
Mr i
V1.M V
c m 1 y -
. ' i I ' i t I tl
V
Scott feeds off
ents Convicted
convicted of cheating by the
student Honor Court this
week.
Two of the students,
charged with collaborating on
an English 21 final, were
convicted of copying each
other's exam paper.
One of the students was
suspended until the end of the
spring semester. The other was
placed on indefinite probation.
The court gave the second
Student a lighter sentence
because it felt he had been
under much greater pressure
before his offense. A doctor
from the infirmary testified the
student had spent two weeks in
the infirmary, and had missed
four weeks of classes. The
court felt that suspension was ,
not merited in light of the
defendant's difficulties.
uMm-
By PAM PURYEAR
DTH Staff Writer
The Board of Aldermen for
Odum-Victory Village will
meet March 9 to discuss with
residents complaints ranging
from too little storage space to
the 'mile-away" parking
problem.
The Board will meet in the
Day Care Center at the Village,
but will soon conduct meetings
in a new Community Center,
slated for opening as soon as
the University paves its parking
lot. The Center contains the
Board's meeting room, the
Rental Office (now at 217
Jackson Ave.), and a study
room for those students whose
children make it hard to study
at home.
U)
the question of central
cafeterias.
"One of the four
contractors making a proposil
at the time SAGA was selected
has indicated to the University
within the last week that under
the present circumstances ft
absolutely has no interest in
becoming involved with a
central food service on the
Chapel Hill campus.
"This firm is the one food
service most familiar with the
present situation and, in my
opinion its judgment is more
soundly based that the
judgment of any other food
contractor who might now be
77 Years of Editorial Freedom
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA.
3
DTH Staff Photo by Steve Adams
Exams
The third defendant, a
second semester senior, was
given two semesters of
probation. He was convicted of
copying during a psychology
final.
Because of his probation,
the student will not be able to
graduate until February, 1971.
The court felt that probation
in this case was a servere
enough penalty because
suspension would have
prevented the student from
graduating at all.
According to University
regulations, any student
convicted of an Honor Code
offense of an academic nature
automatically receives a grade
of "F" in the course involved.
mu u x
The Honor Court has yet to
dispose of a number of other
Honor de. oU?e s which
occurred during fall semester
final exams.
r- -A
fx . 4
j 1 - ' -r 1
is, -V
Victory
Parking at your doorstep
but not for your car
High on the list of
complaints is the lack of
parking space. Only one space
is provided per apartment in
the complex itself. This means
that 2-car families must park a
second car in the C-sticker lots
on Manning and Daniels Drs.
Bratsch notes the Manning
Drive parking area is not easily
accessible and is rarely more
than half full.
There lots are available to
them only after 6 p.m.
weekdays and 1 p.m. Saturday.
A resident must get up early in
the morning to move his car.
The same situation is created
when a visitor takes one of the
spaces in front of the
apartment. Students coming
indicating some interest.
Eagles's study continued
that the University should not
let another contract food
service in, regardless of the
company s eazemess.
if
would "result in - continued
turmoil and a third failure in
three years."
Both SAGA and the
University were hit bv
crippling cafeteria workers
strikes which were
accompanied by scattered
disturbances.
; Eagles backed his arguments
and suggestions with
nation-wide trends and a
customer projection made by
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22.
By ART CHANSKY
DTH Sports Editor-
Then there was silence.
A great crowd came to
Carmichael Auditorium last
night to watch the Tar Heels
play South Carolina. All the
pre-game hysteria with
banners, cheering and
screamingwas more fervent
than ever before. Carolina
exploded to a 6-0 lead, and the
Blue Heaven began to split at
the seams.
, Then there was silence.
For the next eight minutes
find 15 seconds, the Tar Heels
failed to score a point, while
the Gamecocks were rolling up
DTH Staff Photo by Steve Adams
Wuycik and Ribock lose control.
Villas:
home with groceries and small
children must park several
blocks away nd move their
cars later.
To eliminate this
inconvenience, Bartsch
proposes to:
(1) have a different sticker
for Village cars which would
allow residents to park in the C
lots at any time. (2) building of
small lot near the new
Community Center for those
students with two cars who use
the second car infrequently.
(3) cut a drive through to
the Manning lot to make it
more accessible.
(4) reserve the spaces in
front of apartments for
residents and ask visitors to
park only in the Manning and
Daniels Drive lots.
SAGA.
The nation-wide trend,
Eiies Said, was s steady
decrease in student patronage
for the full service type of
campus dining hall facilities.
He added Chapel Hill's faculty
and staff patronage of SAGA
was almost non-existent.
SAGA's projection.
according to Eagles, was for a
continued downswing in
business here comparable to
losses suffered by the
University in its four-year
operation of food facilities.
Eagles added to his
i i j
"0
P1 1
1970
'Cold' Tar Heel.
1 O T? "71 TFT) Tf TrO f" Ff
aienced nj Us(L J
19.
Before Jim Delany broke
the ice with a jump shot, South
Carolina had overtaken the
lead and streaked to a 23-8
advantage.
For the remainder of the
way, Carolina had to play the
Gamecocks' brand of
basketball. The Tar Heels did,
and they lost, 79-62.
Carolina had a streak of its
own a 7-2 spurt over the final
two minutes of the first period
that cut the margin to 31-21 at
intermission.
But the Tar Heels could not
recapture their first half
momentum and gradually fell
further behind over the final
y .j
7
I J
'ers
H 77
Bartsch also asks the
university make the new
regulations effective for 24
hours.
The second big headache is
housing. According to Bartsch,
faculty housing and the Hand
Rehabilitation Center occupy
space badly needed for
students. Bratsch is asking the
University move the Hand
Center and vacate the faculty
quarters. This would free an
estimated 8 to 16 apartments
for married students to
occupy.
Money and Beauty-
Though married students
receive some funds from the
Student Legislature, the Village
residents feels it is not enough.
They are asking more help.
r
arguments aiins: central food
service by noting what
University members alrtady
en;oyed in food service:
snack bars, vending service
and the Carolina Inns new
cafeteria (to be opened this
spring and serve 1,000 meals
three times a day)
59 food service
establishments in Chapel IL'I.
600 refrigerators recently
installed in individual dorm
rooms.
Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sii'erson said he would poll
students on what type of food
ri
20 minutes.
The win gave South
Carolina the regular season
Atlantic Coast Conference
championship that had been in
Chapel Hill for the last three
seasons. Frank McGuire's
Gamecocks have now swept 12
consecutive ACC contests
while extending their record to
21-2.
In dropping their sixth
overall and fourth conference
game, the Tar Heels fell back
to third in the ACC race
behind N.C. State, which
defeated Wake Forest last
night. UNC currently stands at
17-6 and 9-4.
The South Carolina scoring
damage was done . in deadly
spurts by All-America John
Roche. The flashy guard
delivered 28 points on 11 of 23
field goals and six of seven free
throws. He was double-teamed
most of the night by the Tar
Heels' pressing man-to-man
defense, but Roche leaned,
squirmed and faded in shot
after shot despite the very best
preventive efforts of Steve
Previs,. Charlie Scott and Ed
Fogler.
Roche had eight of the 19
points during the killer streak,
while the cold-shooting Tar
Model UN h Scheduled
For March By CIRUNA
A model United Nations for
students will be held in
Washington March 5-8,
sponsored by the Committee
on International Relations and
United Nations Affairs
(CIRUNA), according to
Richard Darr, a member of the
committee.
The local CIRUNA group,
sponsored by the YM-YWCA,
is seeking four or five students
who would like to go to
Washington for the model UN.
The model UN, aimed at
showing how the assembly
works and some of the
problems it is faced with, is
being held for the
Mid-Southern Region. There
77"
omBmmm
JL
Bartsch is presently heading
a "Beautify Odum-Victory
Village" campaign. Shrubs and
trees will be planted with the
help of the University Physical
Plant. This service has not been
available previously. The
residents also hope to have
backyard trash cans replaced
with large "dempsey
d umpsters" containers like
those on campus.
Another complaint is the
limited storage space. The only
area now available is that under
the stairs, and this may not be
used for flammables. Bartsch
plans a large, covered area to
be used for items used
everyday, not to store
furniture.
The Board of Aldermen
runs a state-licensed Day Care
strvii-t?, if any. they would
war.: ard support. details
of the poll have not he-en
relied. Unr;r;ty official;
sc?m to have a'.rvady decide J,
on facts and figures of the
present and pis; fond
operations, that students da
net want a centra! food service.
In discussions w ith o
of the American Ftxieraiion of
State. County and Municipal
Employees, the union
representing most of th
cafeteria workers, University
administrators have
emphasised that there may be
(Continued on page !)
Juliili c Plan
All Carolina Union
Committees will meet jointly
to discuss Jubilee planning
tonight at 7 p.m. in room 202
of the Union. AH committee
members should attend.
Founded February 23. 1 893
9
62
E3
Heels (26 per cent in the first
half) were missing 15 shots and
turning over numerous other
potential scores.
UNC's overly-aggressive
defense paved early foul
trouble against the taller
Gamecocks. Lee Dedmon,who
scored 15 points while in there,
picked up two quick personals,
added a third with seven
minutes left in the first half
and got his fourth just before
the break. He fouled out late in
the second half after playing
carefully for more than 15
minutes.
Dennis Wuycik also fouled
out after picking up three
personals early in the second
half. - He departed with six
minutes to play.
Charlie Scott was the high
man for the home team with
26 points, 15 of which were
gotten in the final seven
minutes of futility.
The hot-handed Gamecocks
shot a consistent 52 per cent
from the floor, while Carolina
ended up at 37.5. About the
only shooting famine South
Carolina experienced came
during the Tar Heels' frenzied
fast start. It did not last for
long.
And then there was silence.
are ten regional models each
year, plus a national or.e.
Students participating on
the conference will research a
country which they choose to
represent and argue its points
on the floor of the model UN.
This will provide not only an
inside look into the operations
of the United Nations itself but
will also give the students a
look at the countries
represented there, according to
Darr.
Interested students are
urged to contact Bill Briger,
president of the local
CIRUNA, at the YM-YWCA or
410 Morrison, phone
933-3204.
n
Center headed by Dr. George
Nevious. Bratsch, currently
working for state-wide
regulation of such centers, feels
they should provide
educational training in addition
to baby-sitting service.
The Odum-Victory Village
Board of Aldermen was formed
about 15 years ago. It
represents the pre-fab
apartments of Victory Village
and the newer brick Odum
Village. The two are not
consolidated but are
represented jointly by the
Board. The Board governs the
township and manages the
financial affairs. "The trouble
is that there are not enough in
Interested students.