If Budget
Cut,
No
Color
Photos-Mitchi
ner
by Evans Witt
Staff Writer
The 1971 Yackety Yack yearbook
may be an entirely black-and-white
publication with no color photographs.
'FC Re -
elf -De termination
by Jessica Hanchar
Staff Writer
The Inter Fraternity Council (IFC) has
re-endorsed a resolution supporting
self-determination visitation which was
previously endorsed last spring.
The resolution states, "We do
unanimously re-endorse our resolution of
March 2, 1970, supporting the Student
Government's stand on a self-determined
visitation policy."
IFC was one of the first organized
campus groups to support a
self-determination visitation policy. It
passed the resolution soon after Student
Legislature adopted its stand last spring.
The resolution was also passed
unanimously last spring.
"Many people thought IFC was just
sitting back and not taking a stand on the
issue," said Pete Hall, president. "We
want people to realize we took a stand
long before many other groups did."
Presently, all fraternities except two
have passed the maximum Open House
policy allowed by the University
administration. The two who have a "no
visitation" policy also did not vote for
visitation last year.
Most fraternities have considered
adopting a self-determination policy but
none have done so yet.
"I doubt any fraternity would want
seven-day-a-week, 24-hour visitation for
itself, but all fraternities are strongly
behind the idea of determining what they
do get," said Hall.
If any fraternities adopted
self-determination under the present
policy, they would come under the same
jurisdiction as a dormitory that adopted
self-determination, according to Dick
THIS NEW DYLAN ALBUM
IS THE OLD DYLAN SOUND
AND VERY MUCH
RESEMBLES HIGHWAY 61
A NEW ALBUM BY BOB DYLAN
?.
REG. $6.98 S,
10 A.M.-10P.M.
MON.-SAT.
I m
said Yack editor Joe Mitchiner
Wednesday.
"There will be no color pictures in the
1971 Yack if the budget cuts proposed
last week by (Student Body President)
Tom Bello are approved by Student
Legislature," said Mitchiner.
endorses
Baddour, assistant dean of men for
fraternities. Those fraternities would be
officially recognized by the University as
having no visitation policy.
The visitatio policy recently
recommended by the advisory
Consultative Committee to University
William C. Friday proposes that living
units be classified into three groups:
those with no visitation, those with the
present administration visitation policy
and those with a self-determination
policy.
"I don't know what would happen to
fraternities under the proposed policy,"
said Baddour.
The Dailv Tar Heel is published S
g by the University of North Carolina g
Student Publication's Board, daily '&
except Monday, examination
$ periods and vacations and during jg
5 summer periods.
I
Offices are at the Student Union g
ia.. Univ. of North Carolina, &
g Chapel Hill. N.C 27514. Telephone fe
8
fj numbers: editorial, sports; g
S nu,OU-10M : business.:!:!
ft circulation, advertising-933-1163. $
i tfitmiF !080, Chapel Hm'
Suhcrrintinn rates: SlOoervear:
fc! t5 npr cpmpcter. We reeret that we
" f -
can
accept
only prepaid
1
subscriptions.
Second class postage paid at U.S.
Post Office in Chapel Hill, N.C.
ft
t!r
jp--, V - . ....
k -. (:
"NEW MORNING
REG. 8558
NOW
ONLY
'CHICAGO"
GWKOKfl ltDCP
-V
I II r I I it k.
Mitchiner also lashed out at the uses to
which the funds taken from the Yack are
to be put.
The budget cuts will, in essence,
reduce the size of the Yack by one-half,
with corresponding 50 per cent
reductions in the number of pages in
almost every section which had been
planned for the book. Some sections will
probably have to be eliminated if the cuts
are made, Mitchiner said.
For example, Mitchiner said, the
fraternity and sorority section and the
residence college section will each have to
be slashed from 36 to 18 pages.
"This means I'm going to have to
renege on some agreements that have
already been made with these groups," he
said.
Recruiting
The following companies will recruit
on the UNC campus during the week of
Nov. 2-6:
Monday-Central Carolina Bank And
Trust Co.; Texaco.
Tuesday-Southern Bell; Consortium
for Graduate Study in Business for
Negroes; Hartford Hospital; Cone Mills
Corporation; Firestone Tire and Rubber
Company.
Wednesday-Southern Bell; Westvaco
Corporation; Owens-Corning Fiberglas
Corporation.
Thursday-State Farm Insurance;'
Allstate Insurance; Branch Banking &
Trust Company; Carolina Telephone and
Telegraph; Tennessee Eastman Company;
Texfi Industries.
Friday-Washington & Lee University;
Fireman's Fund American Insurance;
Emory University Graduate School of
Business Administration; American Enka.
Ticket s G oi ng
Only 417 tickets remained for the ;,
second Chicago concert Wednesday night! X
Ticket sales will begin at 10:00 a.rni If
today for the concert, to be given at
11:15 p.m. Saturday.
Tickets for the first concert, to be
given by the rock group at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, sold out less than six hours
after they went on sale last week.
PRES
EECJOEP
ENTS
DYNAMITE NEW ALBUMS
" -.4
I
99
CHICAGO
rM WANAOMDrBfGINNINGS
USTENUBERATION
1st CHICAGO "CTA'
REG. $5.98 0N
1-10 P.M.
SUNDAY
The athletics section which had
already been planned for the Yack was to
consist of 48 pages. This section will have
to be cut to approximately 20 pages for
coverage of all the sport activities on
campus, said Mitchiner.
The section which is to be devoted to
activities on campus-such as the Union,
the YW-YMCA. Jubilee and others-will
be only 32 pages as opposed to the 48
pages originally assigned to it.
"Also remember that this means that
there will be no color pictures of Jubilee
or any concerts in the Yack," Mitchiner
added.
The problem the Yack faces in regard
to the proposed budget cuts is basically
two-fold, explained Mitchiner.
First, the Yack has a certain amount
of irreducible overhead expenses, he said,
approximately SI 1,000 in all, plus the
fact that 75 pages and S7,000 are already
committed to the "mug shots" section
for which the contract has already been
signed.
The second major difficulty facing the
Yack staff is that cutting the budget
reduces the number of pages the Yack
can have, since printing costs are a major
portion of the expense of the Yack. This,
in turn, leads to a reduction in the
number of pages for which the yack
.IedepeMdeiiitt
.For fc
A slate of independent candidates for
junior class officers has turned in the
required number of signatures on
petitions to be placed on the ballot for
the campus elections Nov. 17.
Lee Hood Caps, a journalism and
political science major from Kinston,
N.C, heads the ticket as the candidate for
president. Cecil Miller is the vice
presidential candidate from Colerain,
N.C. and is a political science major.
Running for the position of secretary
of the class of 1972 is Nadine Baddour,
from Laurinburg, N.C. A transfer this
year from Peace College, she is studying
psychology. The independent candidate
for treasurer of the slate is Billy Latham,
ft
j it
SLY
"GREATEST
Side 1
"I want To Take You Higher"
"Everybody Is A Star"
"Stand!"
"Life"
"Fun"
"You Can Make It If You Try'
r
REG.
All
receives income such as the fraternity jr. J
sorority section, the residence college
section and the athletic section.
If the budget cut of almost S-6.000 is
approved, the Yack will be produced on a
total budget of S4I.SI1.12. instead of
the S67.790 the Yack requested and
received approval for last spring from the
Student Legislature.
The budget cuts will also affect the
Yack in the follow ir.g ways, according to
Mitchiner:
The amount of money allotted for the
cover of the Yack will drop from $6,000
to S 3,000 or about 25 cents a
cover-"just enough for a paper cover,"
he said.
The actual printing cost will have to be
cut from $52,000 to $29,000; but
considering that $7,000 of this money is
already committed to the mug shot
section, the cut actually amounts to more
than a 50 per cent reduction.
The total number of pages in the
finished product will have to be cut from
the 400 which were planned to a total of
only 235. This is in contrast to the 504
pages of the 1970 Yack.
There will be no girl or beauty section
in the Yack at all.
"I explained in a column in the Tar
Heel last week that we were completely
Glass
who is concentrating his .studies in
economics. He lives in Clarkton, N.C.
The major emphasis of the candidacy
of the slate is "the alleviation of forced
University housing for junior transfer
students,'-' according to their qualifying
petitions.
: "With issue-oriented politics, the class
officers can provide the necessary
leverage to get particular problems
solved," Caps said.
He went on to emphasize that it is
ridiculous to force students who range
from 19 to 21 years in age and have had
at least two years of college experience to
live in dorms for a year.
Caps is a member of the Chancellor's
Committee on State Affairs and of the
AThe
Famihf
& THE FAMILY STONE
HITS keg. $s.98
Side 2
"Dance To The Music"
"Everyday People"
"Hot Fun In the Summertime"
"M'Lady"
"Sing A Simple Song"
"Thank You Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agir"
COLUMBIA CLASSICAL SALE
Entire Columbia Catalogue
$5.98 wow
Odyssey BucLt
changing the section but now all the work
that had gone into that revision mrgh?
have to be wasted." Mitchiner
complained.
Bello proposed two weeks ago to make
the cut of $26,000 from the Yack jnd
reallocate the money to other services
Among these services are funds for j
black " counselor, a draft counseling
service, health education service, a
student government-hired teacher service
and scholarships for needy students.
"How many students are going to take
courses, not accredited by the Universitv
which are taught by the one teacher t ;...
SI 1,000 is supposed to hire? Mitchiner
said, discussing one of the propose
reallocations of the $26,000.
Commenting on the proposed S6.00C
allocation for a black students counselor
Mitchiner said:
'There's already a black counselor
paid by the administration. If he's not
doing an effective job, he can be replace,!
and it won't cost the students anything "
On the, proposal for a scholarship to
be funded from the funds to be cut from
the Yack, he commented,
"I really don't think the students
should judge the financial situation ot
another student."
Rum.
o
Inter-fraternity Council court. He is also
an officer in the Fhi Kappa Sigma
fraternity.
Miller has been a member of the
Student Legislature and is currently a
resident advisor in James Dormitory. He
currently serves as the chairman of the
Board of Academic Lt. Governors and
was inducted into the Society of Janus
last spring.
Miss Baddour was active at Peace
College as a cheerleader and as a member
of the annual and newspaper staffs. She
recently pledged the Sigma Sigma Sigma
sorority.
Latham is a member of Chi Phi
fraternity and serves as treasurer of that
organization.
NOW
per disc
Classics
Office
M0Ua&(Q) perdis?