Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 1, 1967, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page' 6 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Wednesday, March 1, 1967 H appenings On The Hill TODAY The UNC Chess Club will meet from 7-11 p.m. in Ro land Parker III. All inter- Ex-NSA Head To Talk Here Al Lowenstein, former top aide to Vice President Hubert Humphrey and former student here at UNC wil speak on campus tomorrow night at 8:00. Lowenstein, also a for mer president of the National Student Association, is being sponsored by the Carolina Po litical Union but the public is welcome to hear him speak. He will speak on the impor tance of the recent College and university student body lead-, ers letter to President John-, son expressing doubt about the Vietnam war. Lowenstein-help-ed draft that letter. , The place for the speech will be announced in tomorrow's DTH. CFFS To Sell The concern For a Free sale in Y-Court today from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. to raise money to help Mississippi Negroes who have lost their means of support because of involvement in the civil : rights movement. jij: The Concern For a Free South was formed about a ig month ago. At first its main intent was to help a civil lj rights worker whose house was burned down. Since then : it has expanded. jij:; The group sent $80 to help two men who lost their i jobs pay their rent. They have also sent about a hundred pounds of clothing ; to other families who were forced off their tenant farms for registering to vote or getting involved in the civil jiji rights struggle. $ The organization hopes to get enough money to buy a sewing1 machine that could be given to a community and would make them more self reliant. The CFFS is still trying to get clothing, especially boy's clothing since it wears out fastest. They are collect ing them at the Wesley Foundation, 214 Pittsborp St. They are planning a trip to Mississippi this weekend to see how they can best be of use to the civil rights movement 'Morals And Medicine9 Doctors, Ministers Discuss Organ , transplants, the ris ing costs of medical care, and ailing patient - doctor rela tionships were among perti nent problems of our chang ing society discussed at the Presbyterian Center last week. Some 100 North Carolina ministers and doctors dealt with these, and other ethical problems during a day - long conference on "Morals and Medicine." University of North Carolina Medical School faculty mem bers and several local Pres byterian and Episcopal minis ters conducted the conference. A morning panel on1 "Moral Problems Raised by Advances in Medical Technology" dis cussed chronic renal (kid ney) dialysis, organ trans plants and the use of human beings in medical research. Participating were modera- tor Fred Reed, N. C. Memorial Hospital chaplain; Dr. Carl Gottschalk, professor of med icine and psychology; R: Wil liam Blythe, associate profes sor of medicine and director of the Medical Research Unit; and Dr. Benson Wilcox, as sistant professor of surgery. Gottschalk talked about renal dialysis (attaching a pa tient to an external artificial kidney), which involves "cost, time, and the vital need for more and more personnel." According to Gottschalk, over 25,000 persons are dying with kidney failure a year.. "The cost of treating them is great, about $15,000 per per son a year," he said. "Patients must continue the treatments for a considerable length of time, and with the expense involved, this is some- times difficult," he added. Gottschalk remarked there are also considerable prob lems involved in organ trans plants. "Many people," he not ed, "are very concerned with the human factor when does a person stop being a person?" , den on those left." He noted the renal dialysis Williams concluded, "Our alternative presents the prob- greatest problem is finding out lem of dependency on a ma- how we can get the strength chine, which many people re- to carry on these personal ex sent. "In some cases," he periences." said, "people are able to use One doctor noted half his Announcing A CHANGE OF ADDRESS for your convenience Dr. William E. Beel OPTOSIETEI3T to 151 E. Rosemary St. Vision AnaJjCa Glasses Fitted ested in playing chess should attend. The Concern For a Free South will hold a doughnut sale inY-Court from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. today to raise funds to help Misissippi Negroes who have lost their means of support because of involvement in the civil rights movement. Student Party Advisory wil meet at 4 p.m. in Roland Parker I. Women's Residence Council will hold interviews for WRC chairman today from 3-6 p.m., tomorrow from 3 5 p.m., and Friday from 12 3 p.m. on the second floor of "Graham Memorial. Sign up at GM Information desk. Dr. Harold Edmundson, Sen ior Scientist of the Systems - Development Corp. of San ta Monica Calif, will speak on "Mathematical Models in Linguistics" at 3 p.m. in Doughnuts South will hold a doughnut .VI V) . ... . .. .v.Nv.v.r.v.v smaU. machines in 'their own homes. This gives thefn a feeling of independence. When mey nave 10 reiy on nospiiai equipment, this feeling doesn't , prevail." Bly the commented, "Be cause of the experimentality of j the medical profession, all pa tients are experimental sub jects in a sense, and physi cians are researchers." He cited many restrictions placed on doctors in experi mentation, however, and em phasized that concern for the patient's health is foremost at all times. Afternoon sessions consider ed "The Right To Medical Care," directed by Dr. T. Franklin Williams, associate professor of medicine and preventive medicine, and "The Doctor-Patient Relationship," conducted by a panel of doc- tors and lawyers concerned with legal aspects. Williams discussed fees and the cost of medical care and tended to all people. He noted problems involved in establish ing and maintaining the phy sician - patient relationship and the place of this relation ship in society. "We are in a stage of social evolution," he said, "and good medical care is everyone's right. The problem lies in to day's scarity of "old fash ioned" family doctors. More and more are specializing. The patient relationship that has always been essential is be coming increasingly harder to maintain. ' "People who have their own personal doctor put a great deal of trust in him. But," he went on, "many people who want family doctors in whom to confide, simply can't find them because there are not enough available. "Only 20 per cent of the med ical graduates today go into general practice," he added, fand this puts a great bur- Contact Lenses Phone S42-52S0, 233 Philips Hall. The semi nar is sponsored by the, Dept. of Information Sci ences and Computation Center. The 1967 Fine Arts Festival office, 204 Y-Court will be open from 1-4 p.m. starting today. The telephone num ber is 933-3032. Charles Angoff, the noted au thir and critic, will speak at Hillel this evening at 8 p.m. THURSDAY Pep Band rehearsal in Hill Hall at 4:30 p.m. 107 The Helicon Is More Than a Large Bass Tuba" is the topic of a talk by Dr. John Merrill at 4 p.m. in 223 Phillips Hall. Carolina Women's Council will meet at 5 p.m. in the Grail Room. Arts and Sciences students who expect to graduate in June should be sure and have applications in for a degree by March 25. Cycle Wreck Analysis of 366 motorcycle accidents reported to the North Carolina Department of Mo tor Vehicles over a six-months period last year reveals that two-thirds of them involved a collision with another vehicle and that when charges were made, the "other vehicle" was cited for law violation in 74 per cent of the cases. These findings along with suggestions for improving mo torcycle safety, are contained in the first" of a series of monthly news bulletins to be issued by the University of North Carolina Highway Safe- ty Research Center. Dr. B. J. Oampbell is director of the Center. time, which could be used more profitably otherwise; is spent signing papers and do- s yetuiy tjAamiuauuns uu barbers, cosmetologists- and others. "' Williams, remarked there are problems of the public's growing resentment toward doctors' incomes. "Progres sively," he said, "there will be organized methods to re lieve pay problems." Legal questions in the doc tor - patient relationship were mapped out in an afternoon panel session composed of moderator Will Spong, N. C. Memorial Hospital Chaplain's staff; Dr. Martin H. Keeler, associate professor of psychia try; David Warren, assistant professor of public law and This is a Flabby Cat. What breed of cat are you? Flabby Cats pad around racked with indecision . . . soft-minded, tod, about such things as choice of careers. We know a better way. Investigate our Campus Internship Program: a learn-and-earn opportunity in life in: surance sales that could place you in a field where earnings have no ceil ings. Which is precisely what it's done for many of those participating in the program over the last 10 years. Lean, hungry, ambitious cats like you will find out more about, it Because if life insurance sales and sales management is for you, you'll have a very important headstart. Come graduation, you'll know exactly what's down your aHey. cxn:i3 C CSSNSHAW . Ctsspos Sspenrlser -ttl Unt U&isa Ens. 2-32:3 E3.OT.::n PROVIDENT" MUTUAi r i LIFE INSUKANCK COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Wo WILLIE TEE AND THE MAGNIFICENTS will be featured at a Freshman Class dance Friday after the UNC-Duke freshman game. The dance is free to freshmen and their dates only. The study points out that even when the motorcycle op- erator is the innocent victim in an accident, the conse quences to him in terms of death and injury are much more severe than in the case of car occupants. "PreUminary analysis of the 366 accidents suggests that many of the accidents oc curred because the car driv er and the motorcycle opera tor were mutually unacquaint ed with the dynamics of the new and unfamiliar blend of these vehicles on the high- way," the report states. . "The growing number of in- juries and deaths to motorcy- cle operators calls for inten- Ethics government and assistant di rector of the Institute of Gov- eminent; and Dr. J Dewey Dorsett, internist in Char- lotte.- - Harry E. Smith, Presbyter ian campus pastor, noted the. periodical symposiums are part of a continuing effort to help persons over the state, in the churches, understand the kings of things which are taking place today nation wide. '-.; , The next symposium, on mental health, is slated March 15 in Raleigh. Tho GLEN LE for all of you HMOC's To nig hf ALL THE CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT! Mashed Potafoss Colo Slow Hot Roils - Butter Thursday ALL THE You Can Eat Hot Rolls & Only at Tho DAICiY BAfl in from 5:00 - Closing Study Made sive action problem." to counter this Several possibilities for ac tion to increase safety are ad vanced in the report. Three of the suggestions are a i- i ' m : m ii -aimed at motorcycle opera- Archaeologist To Talk rcycle opera tors. They include intensifying distribution of education ma terials on the importance of defensive driving for. motor cycle operators with hints as to how this can be accom plished, legal requirement of approved crash helmets for all state motorcyclists, and spe- rial license."? for mntnrvHists One of the Drooosals involves mdustnes that produce and sell motorcycles and their ac cessories. The report says the motorcycle industry and man ufactureres of crash helmets could jointly contribute to wid er acceptance of crash hel-: mets ,by providing a means for storing a helmet securely to the motorcycle When not in use. ' ,,. The, , final ftiree, t, suggestions are aimed at r car operators, pointing out that many car dnvers literally do not "see': a motorcycle ; in the . traffic stream, . "",-V The report calls for a pub lic information program em phasizing that the. contrasting size of cars and motorcycles is presenting a new perception problem for car drivers, con sideration of a legal require ment that motorcycle lights be turned on at all times when a motorcycle is in operation, and information materials stress ing that rules of the road ap ply to all vehicle classes alike. of NNO) T Presents the in .11 1 "Hungry Man on Campus Special a LiO ITALIAN STYLE a Putter News Shorts UDeiegates Picked UNC delegates to the mock United Nations assembly are Agola Auma-Osolo, Mary Bruce Battle, Betty Anne Ben bow, Albert Ellis, James F. Kelly, Douglas W. Morgan, Cliff Potter, and R. J. Ruble. The alternates are David Williams and Charles McAr ver. The delegates will serve as representatives to the mock assembly to be held April 5 8 at East Carolina College. French Scholarships The French government is offering two scholarships worth $100 each to outstand ing students at the junior or senior level who are major ing in French. Application blanks may be picked up in 216 Dey Hall. Deadline for presenting the application is April 30 and re cipients will be named May 1. Dale, Varner Tapped Two UNC students, Bill Dale, Jr. and Grant Bernard Varner, Jr. have been award ed fellowships to enable them to study at any accredited Protestant seminary in the U. S. or Canada. Dale is an English major and Varner a mathemat ics major. Professor Peter Heinrich von Blanckenhagen of the In stitute of Fine Arts, New York University, will speak at the University of North Carolina and Duke University, March 6 and 7, as part of the joint DUKE-UNO Cooperative Pro- gram in the Humanities, .noted archaelogist will speak in 111 Murphey. Hall on the UNC campus at 8 p.m. Monday and in 204 East Duke, on the East Campus of Duke, at 8 pjn. Tuesday. His topic is "Hellenistic and Roman Aspects of Ancient Landscape Painting." Lurch Leads Contest Leondard Lurch of Gran- ville leads in the annual Ug- liest Man on Campus contest. Second is Gomer of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and The Stu dent Special of Phi Kappa Sigma. Third is Count Von Super stud, of Oraige; fourth is Moe Lester of Morehead College, La Pizza For Delivery Call 967-1451 OS. HOPPING Ml SPAGHETTI Glen Lennox and fifth is the Law School entry. Rounding out the contest, Curch is sixth, Candy's De light is seventh, The Campus Prowler is eighth, Barney of Alexander Dorm is ninth, John E. House is tenth, and the Morrison Hick and Phi Sig Goon are tied for last. Druggists Sleet Today CHAPEL HILL Blood clotting and how certain drugs affect the process in humans will be explained to Tar Heel pharmacists attending the sec ond in a series of six weekly Drug Symposium meetings here today at 8 p.m. in the UNC School of Pharmacy. Dr. Kenneth M. Brinkhous, chairman of the Department of Pathology at the Univer sity of North Carolina School of Medicine and an in ternationally recognized au thority on blood disorders, will be the speaker Uat Ocn's Xltzi GOING OUT OF BUSINESS ;S Za Lip Lg dh m g::lv a fevj vmm nHnni:::r:3-EUEaCTin::3 J3T C2 CGLD! drasfic 0 Are Being Made Each S Day On Many Items CHOOSE FROM FRESH STOCKS OF NATIONALLY FAMOUS BR AN 3 OF MEN'S VEAR AT CLOSE OUT PRICES Entire Stock Fall Suits o AN Wool Dacron-Wool Reduced Up to 69 ENTIRE STOCK TOPCOATS . Mi OFF Entire Stock Fall Sport Gears Reduced from Vz to 60 ENTIRE STOCK LINED Entire Stock SHOES Values to 33.S5 27,00 Values to 29.C3 19.00 Special Group Values to 23.C3 16.00 Special Group BELTS & NECKWEAR Values to 5X3 ... . .t2z MANY DRASTIC REDUCTIONS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. SHOP NOW All D SAVE! f Cwt .11 ft n em Sorry: No Charges No Clothiers Franklin Street Miller Ends Lectures" CHAPEL HILL The direc tor of toe Office of Research in Medical Education at -ths University of Illinois CoLege of Medicine will be the fipal speaker here on Saturday Sot a nine-week series of Lcc- tures on Medical Education: Dr. George E. Miller cf Chicago will wind up the - se ries with a talk on "Teach ing, Learning and Curricu lum." ;S He is the editor of a bock' on 'Teaching and Learning in Medical School." The lecture series has been conducted in conjunction with ; a review of the medical cur riculum at the University- of North Carolina School of Med icine. There were 102,300,000 licefc- sed drivers in the United States at the end of 1966, say$ the Bureau of Public Roads m wm T2I is? Entire Stock Fall Slocks All Veol Dacron-Wool 0 Dscron-Ccttsn UptoiOoff - Spcrt & Drct3 SHSQT3 Long & Short Sleeve Reduced Up To More Than eo Oft ' WEATHER COATS V2 OFF I Entire' Stock SWEATERS Lambswcol reg. to 17.95 0.00 Alpacas Reg. to 2950 16.C0 Special Group Reg. to 19.95 6.00 Layaways All Ssiss Fins! of Distinction Chaps! Hill i AO lUH0AUr7?
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 1, 1967, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75