Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 29, 1966, edition 1 / Page 6
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Page 6 Carolina Professor Viet War End In BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A University expert in Far East affairs said Wednesday that new peace conditions offered by the Viet Cong may "represent an indication that a turning point in the war is coming." Dr. Robert Rupen, a politi cal science professor, said the apparent softening of Viet Cong conditions "is potential ly important but not decis ive." Ruper said turmoil within Bed China, the Sino - Soviet split, and increased military pressure from the United Sta tes, may all be combining to give the Hanoi government se cond thoughts about prolong ing the war. "I see a lessening of Chi nese influence in Hanoi," Ru pen said, "because for one thing, the North Vietnamese have an intense and historic dislike for the Chinese. For another thing, there is the highly unstable condition in side China. North Viet Nam may be worried by the Red Guard madness. "Naturally the Russians are v.v.v.v.v.r.v.:. J.W.V.V.V.V.'. I Campus ICalendarl TODAY Graduate men are invited to the annual Kenan Dormi tory open house at 8:30 p.m. Graham Memorial film com mittee meets at 4:30 p.m. today in the Woodhouse Room. Succot services will be held at the Hillel Foundation at 8 p.m. today and 9 a.m. Friday. Girls interested in going through informal rush should sign lists in 202 South Building by Oct. 5. Marching Band rehearsal is scheduled for 6:30 to 8 p.m. on the Navy field without instruments. In case of rain members should report to Hill Hall. Carolina Christian Fellowship , will meet for super at 6 p.m. in the Epsilin Room of Chase Cafeteria. Dr. Thom as W. Noonan will speak at 6: 30 p.m. on "College Life: With or without God." YWCA Hospital Committee in terviews will be held up stairs in the YWCA from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. today and Friday. Sign up at the main Y office. The Physics Club is holding an organizational meeting at 7:30 pjn. Interviews for the Social Com mittee of Graham Memorial are scheduled for today and Friday from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the GMAB office. Sign up at GM information desk. Freshman cheerleader .try outs will be held at 4 pjn. in Kenan Stadium. In case of rain try-outs will take place in the Tin Can. Orientation Committee will meet in the Grail Room of uZSbXirjMG present. Any girl interest in trying out for majorette contact Anna Falter at 929-2334 to day. FRIDAY YWCA Hospital Comittee in terviews will be held from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. upstairs in the YWCA. Sign up at the main Y office. Interviews for GJM. Social Committee will be held 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in GMAB of fice. Sign up at GM infor mation desk. Hillel Foundation is holding Succot services at 9 a.m. Fine Arts Festival Interna tional meets in 204 Y Build ing from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Any girl interested in trying out for majorette contact Anna Falter at 929-2934 to day. No other planet approaches earth so closely as Venus only 28 million miles away. Come to the CHAPEL HILL TIRE CO. for One-Day Recapping tAt Goodyear Tires Front End Alignment Brake Service 3 Full-Time Mechanics on Duty 522 17. Franklin St. Chapel Hill taking advantage of this situa tion to step up their own aid to the north, so the Sino - So viet split plays a part in the overall picture." Rupen said the most signi ficant sign of an increased Communist willingness to come in terms may be a re cent increase in Viet Cong manpower in South Viet Nam. Marriage Obtained By KAREN FREEMAN DTH Staff Writer After one year of combined efforts, the Student Mental Health Service and the De partment of Psychology have succeeded in obtaining UNC's first full-time marriage coun selor Dr. William Eastman. The need for such a service has been apparent. Under graduate married students comprise approximately 13 per cent of total undergraduate enrollment here, but in the past three years their usage of the Student Mental Health Service has doubled that of any other group. Prevention of crises that bring students to the Mental Health Service is one of Dr. Eastman's major areas of con- cern. He hopes to accomplish this by "helping people deal with problem situations and more clearly define their posi- tions for themselves." Dr. Eastman has worked on four degrees himself while married. He received his B.S. in Ed- ucation from Rutgers Univer- sity, his B.D. from Yale, his A' project has already been M.S. from the University of begun among married stu Pennsylvania, where he also dents. All of them were given received his Ed.D. and h i s M.S.W, from the University of Maryland. His work will not be limited to married students, however, xie aiso expects to do pre marital counseling, and is planning to organize groups for engaged students. In cooperation with' the Dean of Women's Office,1 Dr. Eastman will have spoken at all freshman women's dorms within the month. He con ducted groups at Spencer Tuesday and Wednesday eve nings of this week, and ex pects to finish the program at the Nurses' Dorm on October 25 and 28. Dr. Eastman is available to subjected to the demands of speak to any other group attending school. Violence Erupts In San Franci SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Advance units of 2,000 Na tional Guardsmen began mov ing into San Francisco today after scattered violence broke out anew in racially tense Ne gro areas. Guardsmen headed north from San Jose, 50 miles south, on orders of Mai. Gen. Paul &i?Trf Infantry division. They set up uiuuuizauon neaaquarters at Candlestick Park baseball sta- dium on the fringe on one of the trouble spots. The new disturbances were in the Hunters Point and Bay- view areas where rioting ragea for seven hours last night after the fatal shooting of a negro teen - ager by a white policeman. Trouble also was reported near Mission High School, about three miles to the North. The high school w a closed at noon when rampag ing youths in hallways refus ed to return to classrooms. Police said several windows were smashed along Mission Sales Personnel regular and part-time positions for Men's Clothing Store Some previous sales experience preferred. Phone 942-6610 for appoint ment. S37-7D31 Says Sight The Hanoi government, he said, "just can't feed the num ber of troops it now has in the South. I think what they may be doing is sending more troops there in the hope that it will strengthen their posi tion at the bargaining table." Rupen said the United Stat es should maintain its military pressure for the time being. Counselor For UNC upon request, and is scheduled to speak at Avery tonight. The main topic to be dis cussed at these meetings will be men-women relationships before and during marriage, and Dr. Eastman will at tempt to clarify students' ideas in this area. In describing what he con siders his purpose here to be, Dr. Eastman said, "Im not here to umpire disputes or to make decisions for people. I believe in people making their own decisions. My pur pose is to help students ex plore different possibilities , and decide what they want to do." Dr. Eastman's counseling service will include students referred by the Student Men tal Health Service, hou se mothers, graduate counselors, and the Dean of Student Af- fairs Office in addition to students seeking help on an individual basis. Although records will be kept, they will be confiden tial, in an effort to encourage those students who 'might be apprehensive" to seek help. lengthy questionnaires during Orientation to complete. As the first effort to glean com plete information about the problems of married students at Carolina, the results should help Dr. Eastman de termine "how best we can use the manpower we've got" in alleviating married students' needs. 'We can anticipate that younger marriages face ob vious difficulties in terms of life experience and matur ity," said Eastman. He theorizes that most diffi culties arise from the triple pressures of being married, being young, and still being Street near the school as teen agers were packing onto city buses. Two fire bombs were hurl ed at an auto near the Bay view Community center. -A rare heat wave aggrav ated the unrest. Scores of officers were or dered to Mission Dolores P?rk' mission high, when some 200 negro youths oegan a march toward a sta- tue where 75 white youths were lunching, Officers formed a line be- tween the two groups. The white youths pulled off belts and gathered rocks. JUST ARRIVED! We have just received a new shipment of vested plaid suits. Come in today and browse mrough our great selection. Charge Accounts Invited Haniiiji Llm b G$tw Clothiers of Distinction! Frssj&a St. 'it1' si 4wPJ?l ' ," t - L ' N ) V A ' . ft. I - ill TICKETS for the Four Tops concert Saturday mation desk night at 8 p.m. in Carmichael Auditorium are will cost the still being sold to students at the GM infor- White Students Integrate PS 20 NEW YORK (AP) Every week day, 40 Brooklyn white children leave their middle class homes for an hour's bus ride into a poor, predominant ly Negro and Puerto Rican area. There, they go to school. It is called "reverse open enrollment" white children being bused to a Negro and Puerto Rican school and the white parents are thrilled to see their children go. In fact, it was their idea. The experiment began at the peak of the national furor over proposal to bus Negro pupus to white schools. It was widely predicted then that reverse open enrollment would not last three weeks. It has lasted three years, and those involved count it a smashing success "These white parents have very strong convictions about integration," said Carl V. Warren, principal at Public School 20 where the program is in effect. "Three years ago they de cided they wanted their chil dren in a Negro school and they fought until they got them in . I'm glad they came here." P. S. 20, in Brooklyn's Fort Greene section, was not the A ft m parents' iirst cnoice. rney on- ginally picked P. S. 21, an all- negro school in the Bedford Stuyvesant section. "They (the white parents) even staged a sit - in over there," Warren recalled. "When I heard about it, I in vited them to come to my school. We already had a few whites here and I feel that you should never send child ren white or Negro into schools where they suddenly become unique, as these white children would have in a school where no whites had ever been." The Board of Education shares enthusiasm over the VVe Make Sport Coats Jl AS THOUGH YOUR LOOKS DEPENDED ON IT ... And let's face it, your looks do depend upon the way you dress. ... So don't neglect your clothing treat yourself to the unparalleled comfort and excellence of a sport coat from THE HUB. ... Where every coat you buy will look as though it was tailored with you in mind and indeed it was because careful attention ' to fit and comfort are pre requisite to a coat leaving our store. 6 . . . Add to all this a wide selection of colorful plaids subtle heather tones, and a tasteful collection of solids ... All gathered under the most reasnnahlp nrirQF u nn u "--o viium $35.00). You can't afford not THE HUB of Ghap:! 111 mm 1 J X program with Warren, the white parents and the pupils of P S 20 ''We're delighted that this program has moved well," said Frederick H. Williams, the board's assistant superin tendent in charge of integra tion. "Integrated education is good for all children, and these parents realized it." One of those parents is Mrs. George Kapp, whose daughter Edna, now 10, has been at tending P. S. 20 since the re- verse open enrollment expen- ment began. Mrs. Kapp called it "a very healthy, worthwhile expert ence "When we first began," she said, "there were rumors that we might not be welcome. SmQ people thought we were mad and told us so. But it turned out just fine. There have been no problems at all." This year, there are 40 chil ren in the program. The first year there were 32 and last year 43. Warren said several new pupils come into the program each year and several are lost "because their families move or because they finish elementary school." "We have lost none because of racial difficulties," he said. "Successful? I'd say that just the fact that the bused children are coming for a third year means something. But I don't like to talk about success because in terms of numbers, this program really is insignificant." 1 f u 1 ENJOY STEREO in your own car without maddening commercials with BORG-WARNER 8-TRACK STEREO TAPE PLAYER Comes complete with speakers, grills, and everything necessary for do-it-yourself installation, or we'll have it installed. Borg-Warner is optional equip ment in Ford & GM. A.R.C. Car Record Players, only $59.95 Buy Where Satisfaction is guaranteed! Wholesale Prices on Tubes. Speakers, Tape Re corders, Tape, Batteries, Microphones, Hi-Fi and Stereo Components, Kits, and Wires, etc. 58$. EAST MAIN STREET A ' V t r ' ' - 1 L h i I . - i : ' - for 75 cents. Tickets at the door general admission price of $1 50 P ce ot 1,50- Nixon 'Continued From Page 1) are fighting on the ground they should receive strategic support in the air." Nixon said he expected Re publicans to gain at least 40 seats in the U. S. House in the 1966 election because "the Johnson policies are catching up. "Johnson's coat tails," he said, "are pulling his suppor ters down instead of along. The President's popularity will continue to slide." Nixon said the North Caro lin anti - poverty program is the first in promises and press releases, but last in progress. "The Johnson administra tion" he said, "is putting pol- ?a; r' L i .... itics first and profiting from tne poor." FOR REAL COMFORT, wear Bass Weejuns the traditional outdoor footwear. Clothiers of Distinction FRANKLIN STREET $119.95 with 6-month warranty Phone DURHAM ' " i ' i a MHC Openings Interviews On Interviews for vacancies on Men's Honor Council will be held today and Friday from 2-4:30 p.m. in the Woodhouse Room of Graham Memorial. Open seats include: District 4 - area bounded by Columbia St. on the e a s t, Cameron Ave. on the north, and the corporate limits of Chapel Hill on the west and south; District 5 - fall seat - Old East, Old West, Battle-Vance-Pettigrew and Can residence halls; District 9 - spring seats -Avery, Parker and Teague residence halls; District 10 - spring seat -Ehringhaus; District 12 - fall seat - Mor rison. Anyone living in the dis trict may apply, but upper classmen must have a 2.0 average. The information desk at GM is taking names of in terested applicants. The Norfolk Naval Ship yard, oldest in the United States, was founded in 1767, 31 years before creation of the U. S. Navy Department. St. Louis was the place to get outfitted for crossing the Plains more than 100 years ago. That's Our Student Number If You Can't Find Us, Call. Alpaca Sweaters .... .$11.75 & $13.75 Chapel Hill Classics . $12.00 Ladies 1st Quality Hose 3 pr. $1.25 Boxers, Briefs, T-Shirts 65c ea. ALL THESE AND MANY MORE BARGAINS iipy Cultivated Corduroy A blossoming: ef quiet charm . . . this gently printed suit that's ripe to be picked for autumn. Faultlessly tailored in the Seaton Hall manner, with its deftly shaped "A"-line skirt and classic jacket. Also we have a lovely se lection of coats, suits, dresses and complete lines of sports wear. Due to many requests we have decided to also open on THURSDAYS. Our schedule now is Mon., Thurs Fri, Sat iab' DRESS SHOP 504 WEST FRANKLIN Thursday, September 29, MSU Offers, Grad Grants Michigan ate Ogj-JT has announced a nauon competition r 'ver ships worth $12,000 eacn "tHT? scholarships are available to college an invitation basis only Those who wiU have been adm to graduate study at Mrctaf State prior to December 31 oi this year are eligible. . -An A-minus or better coU- ! n;COrV tO ege average is r be consiaereu iui - ship. CHAPEL HILL BARBERSHOP Across from the Zoom FREE PARKING LITTLE OR NO WAITING with Our 3 Expert Barbers Clothing Is Our Middle Name and This Is Where Milton's Realy Shines! If 111 all Vmir huntirtn. . have come to the frustrating conclusion that all stores are alike, we've got news for y?" you haven't visited Milton's. We boast the choicest Old School Trap pings in these environs with many unusual patterns and fabrics not found else where. bold plaid sports coats with identical matching vests--jackets at 150.00 and $55 00 -vests at $12.50. Ilniicnol i. : nupidUK SDort Basic naw cult i- . . weight wool reverse K" vested-$70.00. st" Cox-Moorp pullover- ESJ: At MilfnnV -..... The Sm;? . u ." Fmd Pare. AnyiheUnVr' & .Clothing Cupboard 4 Downtown Chapel Hill
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 29, 1966, edition 1
6
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