Vol.80, No. 63 s V v V: 4 1 3 U Robert Wilson (I.) and Kill Griffin, co-chairmen of the Human Sexuality Committee, pass out forms for next semester's Health Education 33 course. More than 400 persons From all students nition deposit bv William March Staff Writer The University will require a SI 00 enrollement deposit next year from all prospective students and a S50 tuition deposit paid in the spring from all students who plan to return for the next fall semester. Entering students presently must pay a $25 enrollment deposit to hold their place at the University. Under the present system of handling Nyle Frank will appeal oral examination results 4 ; "V ) A. - V" Nvlc Frank At trustee meeting today Alcohol policy by Evans Witt Staff Writer The Executive Committee of the Consolidated University (CU) Board of Trustees will discuss the Issue of a University-wide policy on alcoholic beverages today in its regular November meeting. The committee will consider the recommendation of the Administrative Council that the individual chancellors be given the power to set regulations for each campus within the guidelines of state law and within those worked out in recent meetings with students und administrators. The Administrative Council, composed of the chancellors of the six campuses of the University and CU President Willum C. Friday, voted Thursda to recommend V N J 4 J enrollment deposits, these deposits are not automatically refunded. Once a student enrolls, his deposit can be refunded at the cashier's office or deducted from his tuition payment. But he must request that this be done. If a student forgets to obtain his refund, the University simply keeps the money as a credit on his account until graduation, when it is refunded to his home address. M.U. Woodward, University cashier, by Karen Pusey Staff Writer Nyle Frank, known to most as "King Nyle," has become the first UNC graduate student to appeal the results of his doctoral oral examination. After taking the hour-long orals on Nov. 2. Frank, a political science graduate student, was told he had failed the examination following a 50-minute deliberation by the Political Science Oral Examination Committee. Frank charges the committee did not show adequate grounds for his failure. The reasons cited, he said, were that his knowledge of the works was too superficial and that his ability to conceptualize and think on his feet were poor. Frank contends he answered all the questions to the committee's satisfaction and his nervousness during part of the questions did not make up the major part of the examination. He also charges the criteria for passage or failure of orals were never made clear and that he did as well as many who passed. to the committee the delegation of such authority to the chancellors. Mainly routine matters will take up the remainder of the committee meeting beginning at 10:50 a.m. at the General Administration Buildine of the University in Chapel Hill. Two issues that will not come up at this meeting are the selection of a new chancellor for the Chapel Hill campus to replace retiring Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson and the selection of the University's 16 representatives on the new Board of Governors for all state higher education. The issue of the trustees representatives will be decided at a special meeting of the lull board of trustees November 22 here. Friday fus said the question of j new - 3 Wf I. -r t " ft Mil II Friday, November 12. 1971 - v 'ail H5 - T 5 n crowded Suite C Wednesday to obtain class cards for the 200-member course. (Staff photo by Cliff Kolovson) to be recraired. estimated the '"probably 95 percent of the students have their deposits deducted from their first tuition payment." '"But no separate record is kept of which students still have the deposits on their accounts, so no one knows exactly how many deposits are still unrefunded." he said. "It is very unlikely that any student would forget his deposit until graduation," Woodward added. "Some leave their deposits on their accounts to Most graduate students who fail their orals quit all together or continue studying for six months in order to take the examination again. Frank thinks if it can be shown that a student did adequately on the exam, then the committee decision should be reversed. Frank submitted his appeal to the Administrative Board of the Graduate School Thursday. The Board, consisting of 12 graduate faculty members, will investigate the appeal this week and meet on Nov. 18 to make its decision. Assistant Dean of the Graduate School Joseph M. Flora said he had no opinion on the appeal. "My only job is to disseminate the petition to the members of the board, which will question the political science department and weigh the decision," he said. Frank said a legitimate opportunity to overturn a possibly unjust decision such as this will be of benefit to other graduate students. He added that in his particular case the results of the orals will determine whether he gets a teaching assistantship for spring semester. to be considerec chancellor for this campus is still undecided. His Advisory Committee on the Chancellor is still working on the selection, he said. The recent reorganization ot state higher education by the Generjl Assembly had stalled the selection process, he said. The committee is now working toward recommending a Lte of nominees to Friday, since Sitterson's term ends at the start ot the second semester this v ear. One not too routine matter the executive committee will handle !s the appeal of Thomas Edward Vail on h:s residency for tuition purposes. Other items on the committee agenda include setting the tuition lor U72-lin3 school vear and hearing the reports and personnel recommendation from the chancellors ot the CU campus. H by E3ns Witt Staff Writer Increased student participation in the decision-making processes of the University will be discussed today by the Faculty Council m their regular meeting The council will consider the report o: the Committee on Student Involvement ir. University Administrative Structures for possible action at the 4 p.m. meeting m 1 1 i Murphey Hall. Reports from the standing committees on registration, scholarships and admissions will also be presented at the meeting. A committee for a council on the biological sciences will be appointed at the meeting by Dr. Daniel Okun. chairman of the faculty. T h e c o m mitt e e on student involvement, chaired bv Dr. Gordon B. cover library charges and other miscellaneous charges." The new enrollment of S100 represents a large increase in the S25 deposit currently required of undergraduates and some graduate students. According to Assistant Chancellor Claiborne S. Jones, "these deposits are now regulated by state law for the first time. There has never before been a University-wide policy concerning the deposits. "In accord with a directive from the State Budget Office," Jones said, "the refundable deposits will now go into a separate trust fund and will not go into the University's general fund unless they are forfeited." Asked why the deposits are not automatically deducted from tuition payments. Woodward said, "The refundabe deposits are already being kept in a separate account. But not until our office is fully automated will we be able to show the deposit credit on every statement which the student receives. "When the office is fully computerized, then we hope to be able to refund the deposits automatically by reducing the tuition charge, rather than waiting for the student to request a refund. "If a student makes his first tuition payment in the cashier's office, we will deduct the deposit. But if he pays his tuition at registration, or pays the amount shown on his statement from the registrar's office, the deposit stays on his account." TODAY: Sunny and a bit warmer with a high in the upper 60s: low in the upper 30s: probability of precipitation near zero. The guidelines on alcoholic beverage use on campuses whkh the chancellors would operate under if approved by the committee permits possession and consumption in private rooms of all residents and guests of legal age. Vor areas other than private rooms, such as social lounges, halls of dormitories, dorm lobbies and other University property, the proposed guidelines call for the chancellor to make th necessary decisions on alcoholic use. The guidelines call for the chancellor consult with appropriate student to representatives before any determination is made. These guidelines were worked out in meetings between members ot the student alJairs stall ot the six campuses und the student body presidents ot the ( I units. rf r' V- c (to rolle a- WW Cleveland, first presented s report !at spring. The council decided to defer action until this time, in anticipation of having a new chancellor. i . i e i iOv.jt.u ......... e w: u ..n consideration of student :v iv-.-nient ' the areas of academic attairs ar.d tr.e den of student affairs oifLe. The committee found after -ever! hearings with students ar.d administrator that the students were r. t as satisfied with the operation- of the student dU: office as Us staff members were. In the area of academic .it fair-, t.'.e committee found student patticipatio.n m the decision-making varied w ide!y !r ::; department to department. The areas of curn-tdar atfair- ,:nd faculty promotions and appointments were two special area- m which the committee suggested the undergraduate students may have a valuable and unique perspective. T he Cleveland committee" recommendations call t - r the establishment of a campus forum to meet at least once a month. The forum would serve as a channel for student, faculty and non-administrative personnel to air grievances in public and to provide a channel to provoke administrative action. A reorganization of the student affairs office with a powerful board of directors is the second committee recommendation. This board of directors, to be made up of 10 students and 10 faculty members y .Dormitory policy et f or jaoMcnav The Office of Residence Life announced Thursday all dormitories except Mclver, Carr and Craige will be closed during Thanksgiving vacation. Dorms will close at 6 p.m. Wednesday . Nov. 24, and will re-open at noon Sunday, Nov. 28. Thanksgiving holidays will begin for students at 1 p.m. Wednesday. Classes resume at 8 a.m. the following day . Students wishing to stay in a dorm should go to the Office of Residence Life and see Mrs. Nancy Betty or call 933-5401. Reservations will be made on a first-come, first-serve basis. A residence advisor or college master The early morning hoi" s produce srjme UNC workman stacks trashcans on Cameron i.ip- .:szi&i, Jit:.-- "; ': d mZ z r C- : i"2l vr! , - . 9 yjssrtt I -----, -V J ; l. :.-; -j 1,...- , J 'Iff 1 i . ! '---sd- i f r'fk,' L ' . . Fourxied February 23. 1893 NC wou ;ci .av c r c-ruM"c p ..e severa! -tudent ru;- ace-., u--. The b-ard v. ou'd" -ct rue regulations for the Oftue . ' Rc lite. the Student Union, the Health an . .... j . i The-e a s;..de:t -Mtuir- Ja-e- P. Ca:--'er ...-.! .' J :. ! . un Jer - .v bo Under : e -..fu:e-rcd -coo ..' I.:.,; ,-ste v . ,.:V . ' . . .... and udv;-v-t board ; -::.de-.-- .o O.ltV One ot the tir-t d..'ie- t.-r this Koo.; the committee said, w, ..'.d be t- v n'e the furulion- o? c.uh aeerv .sd the agency appropriate';) . The committee did r. i make -pccitic recommendation- ::: re cod student :nvo!vem.-nt in the -. dec l-ion-makmc In the .ilea- . ; .urn. .:; n,Tc. in r ' f !i r t -ome ch.mc- in pre-.-! pr.. t.. e-. It called h.ivi-e "ai ;- ; o. -tudent r e p r e - e n t a 1 1 n " on ail committee- cori-iderm.g curriculum ' Further, the committee surge-ted ea.h department routinely colled -tudent evaluations en j.uu'.ty .mJ lli.it Midi evaluation- be hk I tided m .dl reports or fadilty promotions and appoint merit- "The uninitiated m iy n ; K' able to judge the competence ot a oologi-t. h i! they may be well qualified to nidge In capacity to communicate or to keep an audience awake something hi- colleagues may never know tir-t hand.'" the committee report says. 71 TI will be on duty in the three d .rm-ol jro. the holiday period. For a student not remjimne m hi- own room, a S2 key deposit will be required. Each student will al-.o be required ff sign a statement of responsibility for damages and property Ims in the room dunr v hi- stay Self-hmil ing hours will not be in ! tor women staying m Mclver. The poluy of closmi? b id. line- w c initiated last year to insure the per- -I property of students, jccordme to the OH ice of Residence Lite. When buddn.-. were not closed during hohdav-. -.tudent d personal property was vulnerable to thett , 1 f 9 ' i 1 4 ' v. -. interesting sights in Chapel Hill. Here a Avenue. (Staff photo by Tad Stewart)