Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 6, 1968, edition 1 / Page 1
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";:'';C- library Box 070 Cha P1 "HI, w.c, 275 14 Cloudy, Cool Ravi Shankar r Ravi Sfcackar. famed Isdiaa rirtsoso. and his fellow musi cians via appear January 1 and 11 at 8:C3 p.m. ia Memorial Hall. vent chanr- r J , " a 45 tonf (t, ,ce Of rain af i? rala or gleet OMfc. 75 Years of Editorial Freedom CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY. JANUARY 6, 1963 Founded Februarv 23. 1893 o o LP M f J v v urr Piitaaio. Is Named Chase's Manager By STEVE PRICE of The DTII Staff Chase Cafeteria has another new manager. Re is Kenneth Putnam, who was moved to Chase from Lenoir. Ilall on Jan. 3 when Jesse Carpenter resigned uiiexpecieaiy during the Christmas holidays. Putnam, before coming to the University about 15 months ago, worked with the Zoom Zoom, Rathskeller and was Food Service Manager at the Barn Theater restaurant near Greensboro. "I'm sure he will do a good job," said George Priilaman, director of University Pood Services. "He and I have talk ed over matters and have plan ned some future changes for Chase." Since taking over, Putnam has already re-opened Chase's snack bar 1 which serves hot sandwiches and milk shakes. Starting Monday, it will be open lor both lunch and dinner meals. Business reportedly has already packed up since the re opening of the snack bar. "We are just trying to in troduce students to the (facilities we have here," Put ram commented. "This is their cafeteria. Putnam said he hopes to eventually have classes held in Chase's private rooms in the rear of the cafeteria. "I haven't talked with any processors yet," he said, but with classes being held in the residence colleges, there is no reason we can't have them here too. "The students and instructor could drink coffee or have refreshments during the classes. The entire atmosphere would be more relaxed." He emphasized that this and other new ideas were stall in the infancy stages, and would take time to work out. Priilaman said Cecil Proctor had beea put in charge of Lenoir Hall to replace Putnam. He has been with the Universi ty for nearly 20 years. Lenoir Will close down im mediately following final ex ams in May for a cample renovation, Priilaman said. Estimared cost will be $276,000. 'This is something we have been trying to get for three years," Priilaman said. "Now new contracts have been awarded so we hope to start work around June 1." Lenoir opened for business on Jan. 3, 1940. Priilaman said some of the equipment used there today is original ....1,1,1,11..,., inn . U...L .in iimiliiili... nun.- iMmmu. I .uji 1 .1 ill .. - III - L 1 I. . i j j , li.ai 1 1 . u ,, S ' . 'O v X, ; " - i Drug Rules Toughen' 9 Do rim Drinking Easier DTB Staff Photo by GENS WANG 9 Bob Travis . . . Addressing Special Meeting Friday By HUNTER GEORGE of The DTH Staff Student Body President Bob Travis Friday announced sweeping changes in the University's policy concerning 'drugs and alcohol. Travis told a special msrg of about 75 Student Govern ment heads thai an agreement has been reached with University officials which, if approved1 by the trusties, would aSow drug offenders to be tried by a five-man stuicr-t-faicuEydministrat court. Travis also said an agree ment has been reacted with University cEScxats to allow drinking in students' rooms. Consolidated University President William Friday will submit the drug measure to the board of trustees next Fri day, Travis said. If passed, it would give the University jurisdiction over students who are charged with "illicit and improper possession or use cf certain drugs" either cn the campus or of it. At present, student honor courts have jurisdiction over students caught peddling drugs on eatnpus. This is est an honor or campus code viola tion, but is defined as en of fense against - the student txrfy- . . . In cases woare tne stuaen. drawn up," Travis said. Friday was unavailable- fcr com ment. Also announced was an agreocnent between University and Studect Gocmnicnt of ficials that siudcrJts be allowed to drink in their dorms. Travis said careful study was given the matter and it was found that such drinking would cot violate any state or local law. All feat remains for this to Co into effect is approval of was caught actually usiqg the Chancelor J. Caxiyie Sitterson. .Duke Me i i ft i tllt Da iltt aar Cfrrl WorldiSTews BRIEFS By United Press International By LARRY KEITH Of The DTH Staff The Duke University basket ball team that North Carolina Coach Dean Smith has been speaking so weCl cf al season -will tappear before your very eyes at Oarmichaei AudL'tordum Ithis alftenioon at 2 p jn. This coCossal AltfiarJtie Ociast Ccdferenice enoouniteir be'lKveen Itwo rjaltioniaQlyHnainked poiweds is being pliayeid to the xJaiht of a . packed house :-of 8,800, a reigiorjal tdlevisiion auidDenee anid with- ruaiti Ortwi de at itentiion. It's going to hs a greC one.- ' "r "I've said aM aOcang tUus.it Duka would have a fime teiam ttihtis yeaaV' said Smith in Itte Spock Indicted For Draft Conspiracy p n i j WASHINGTON iDr. Beniamin Soock. the noted baby doctor. . X4 CtliL vLPiLiLiiilcll WASHINGTON-Dr. Benjamin Spock, the noted baby doctor, and If our other mien active in andVietnam war protests were in dicted by a federal land jury Friday for conspiring to help tViIVi! ovnUrt ifhn Urn -ft1 , ' . The indictment was handed down in Boston, Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark announced. Those indicted with SjJock, who has been active in the antiwar movement, were Yale University Chaplain William Sloan Coffin Jr. ; Michael Ferber, 23, of Boston, a Harvard University graduate! student; Mutchell Goodman, 44, of New York City and Temple, Maine, an author; and Marcus Raskin, 33, of Washington, DjC., co-director of the Institute for Policy Studies. Will , Include sedlusdcini cf his office Friday i end then paused to say, "I felt thait we might surprise seme peopH'lthas year. "Of course, I had no idea we'd be doing this weCl. I think lit; was the Vainldeirbiillt gsame that let me know we had an even better team than I thought. I don't believe, though, that we necessarily belong. on the top ten. There's una doubt that Oajrolim doe&." . , TheTar Heels claim-: Ken- - Icucky, Princeiton acid Utah on 'their victory list. They share siecanidi place in the conifereiacs with Duke where each is 1-0. Oarolina brings three pBayers inito the game with high level scoring averages, ACC leader Larry Mi31er (25.0), Charlie earch indents asternocn. "That's whv I haiVen't been a bit surprised by their success. "And because this is a con ference opponent, it's the big ger game thus far for us." The Tar Heels stand fourth among the nation power elite with an 8-1 record. Duke is twe!I!flh at 7-1. Vamderbft fcas provideld both teams their lone defeat, 89-76 over-Oanollaina Eirati 76-75 iaigaOnlst the iBlue Devils . Duke Coach Vic Bubas is aootheir who has beea less than sStaiggered by his team's suc cess that includes wins ever PrincetolnJJand Davidson. He broughlt Ithe Blue Deivifls to. Caiitoiichaieil Friday' af ternoon for a brief wonkouit day Scott (18.1) and Rusty Clark (17.6). The Blue Devils' strong boy, a one man show when he wants to be, is 6-7 Mike Lewis. He is sconing at la 23.8 clip and paces the conference with a 14.9 re bounding mark. CCark's 8.9 is itops for the Tar Heels. drug, a faculty-admimstrauve court with medical con sultation from the student health service has ruled. The new five-man court would consist of Dean of Stu dent Affairs C. O. Cathey, two faculty members and two students. 'A special session of Student Legislature has been called (at Travis said the chancellor has already agreed to the measure, but has net made his decision official yet Chancellor Sittcrscn was not available for comment eher. The studerc body president said discussions with Universi ty officials have been going on for a cumber of months coo- Travis' request) for Tuesday cerning both drugs and drink- TThp! nreBident eaad he hoped legislators would repeal the present drug law and give the new policy a vote of con fidence before! the trustees consider it. There was speculation Fri day, however, that the surprise .measure may cot receive ap proval from Student Leg islature. Vice-President Jed Dietz said it came as a "complete surprise'' and may mot even be considered. Regardless of how legislators treat the matter, ahough, it wil 'There's cio doubt about it," become law if the trustees ap said Bubals. "There tare gping prove it next waekr-Jand Travis to be some talecited ball said he is aire they will. &&yees : oai- '-.icttttTt.ivl wont -?t rhe (Consolidated Universi say that Mike, as goad as he's ty President dM have some been, is the key for us, though, desire that this statement be 'He's been getting a let of Heap." A policy statement on drugs was drawn up around Thanksgiving onxt the dissent of Men's Honor Court Chairman Bill Miller cad it was decided that student leaders should be informed of the matter before final decisions are made. Miller objected to the drugs proposal because, he said, "the University should net pro secute students hi addition to state or federal adjudication. If Student Government lends its support it would be another case where the University is . exSendiiig, its. own ndeliaes. in ' to the realm of the student's social and private life'." Ta lent All By WAYNE HURDER Of The DTH Staff The Carolina Talent Search appropriation, approved by Sfcudent Legislature in the last session before Christmas, was had contended that funding of largest appropriation of the the program would be a viola- semester on Thursday tijom cf the Civil Rights Act of oi ght-$ 5,224.83 fxar the 1964. purchase of 1,000 additional The amendment, made by copies of the Yackety Yatik. George Krichbawm, SP from The addSMonal copies were Thev were changed wQih conspiring to counsel, laid and abet amended Thursday fright to in- lower quad, and which passed sought because only 11,500 those who wished to refuse service with (the armed forces and to comply .with other duties required by the draft law. Maximum penalty for conviction on the charges lis five years in prison and $10,000 in fines. Hanoi's Power Center Attacked SAIGON-Communislt idisptaltches from Hanoi said American pJanes bombed North Vietnam's power, core Friday in the third consecutive day of heavy raids during a break tin monsoon weather. The Soviets charged U.S. jets (attacked la Russian ship in Haiphong Harbor Thursday. . . . Hanoi reports said live U.S. bombers were shbt down in raids Friday, onie in a dogfight. There was no confirmation from the U.S. Command in Saigon. American reports on air opeciations are (rtormally delayed 24 . Sai'con headquarters made no mention of the Russian protest " that the Soviot (freighter loaded with flour was hit Thursday by eilt U.S. bombs, including a delayed-action device. USSR Protests Bombing Of Ship MOKOOW The Soviet Union Friday disclosed la Strong protest to the United States against a "pirate attack" by American on a Russian ship 5n Ilaiphong harbor. The Soviets. Sed artioTtT 'appropriate ncies" to protect Russian ,vfU in North Vietnameso Waters. - ne SaSteBfc ote raised the possibility of a naval con rwthe United Siates and the Soviet Union. Grave SXT mGre lvemet of escaiauun w jivro w iMror tho Soviets was foreseen hi fwuc " . clulde " all students, cot just unanGmously, wil not "change Negroes as oraginaly sitatted. The change was made to remove any possible legal db jectionQ ta the bill Critics of the original bill Honor Court Puts Student On Probation Extenuating circumstances in the case of a freshman convictde on January 4 of plagiarism by Men's Honor Court resulted in the Court's serlerjcing him to definite pro bation instead of fdhe usual suspension;. On the same right. Woman's 'HontJr Count gave a freshman a 'Women's Court warning, an unofficial penalty, -for unladylike conduct. 'Men's Court decided dss the lighter . sentence was war ranted im their case because the defendact was a f irsit semester freshman who was unclear as to his responsibility limats said they feared the Russians might begin to the Honor System and to the Western &plomafc professor. arming their' vietnaTn-bound freighters with antiaircraft weapons for the first time. Red's Seek 'Talk About Tdlks9 TwnoN' Qualified diplomatic sources said Friday North ir i JL ready to begin "talks about talks" with the United SSS SSnference if U A bombing Sourcea saidllanoi is unlikely to spell out in advance thfl torSsf its offer to negate because North Vietnam is in a rtT-tton and wants to eave faco. tSIS iSnoi etatemen since last Saturday said the Ho fJhme will begin talks on 'relevant questions" when S UnSd i SaSs end. the bombing and "all other acts of war" -tr-t iMorth Vietnam. Aw?4tive diptomaSc informants said Hanoi was not ex- va ,anv formal commitment for reciprocal action if 8M He was charged with the program m a siignfifiramit way," according to one of the introducers of the bill, David Kiel, SP from MDI. The Cairolina Talenifc Search wil be for all high school students who "because of cultural or economic disad vantage don't have an ' equal opportoniity to receive in formation" about UNC, Krichbaum explained to the legislalturie, Cairolina Talenlt Search, directed by Phil Clay, will now have to contact about 500 high schools instead of the present 200 he is now contacting with the inclusion of all persons, ac ccrdinig to CEay. - The major side-effect of the amendment wall be to limit the distance .(that persons an the Carolina Talent Search can travel to talk with prospective si&udents. . The program will now have to "concentrate on students within a couple of hundred miles of Chapel Hill," CLay said, because of the possible increase in the number of "in terested, persons and the limited budget of $640. 'However a change in the litemture of the organization will not be necessary, he said, because it is "designed to ap- copies had been ordered for an expected yearnend enrollment of 13,500. Feb. IS was approved by the legislature as the date for the honor system survey, following the request of the Elections Board. Legislature had parsed a ball ordering that the survey be held on Jan. 9 but Elections 'Board chairman Norm Zettel said Thursday that he couldn't hold the survey then because he had not been officially in formed that a survey would be held until it was too late. The referendum on the reforms in Student Govern ment finances passed by (legislate will also be held on Feb 15. (Forward Steve Vaiodenberg trails Lewis in both poirit maik- ang and ball collecting 'Fis marks are 17.3 and 9.6 'each. Duke's ether men in double figures it claims one more flhan the Tar Heels is foreward Joe Kennedy, '12.1 and guard Dave Golden, 12-0. Ron Wendelin, a 7.1 scorer, rounds out ai starting lineup that averages same 25 pounds per man more weight than CaroSina'ig. "Weight meamis a lei in basketball as well as football," says Smith. "When you're fighting for a rebound you need it. It's going to be very im portant for us to 'do a good job on the boards." Wadsworth -Prepare Joining Miller, Scctt To Make Bike Deal , By LARRY KEITH Of The DTH Staff Director of Housing James 0. Wadsworth drove to work Friday morning in his automobile, met the mam mouth parking problem face-to-face and thought how nice it would be to have his racy red English bicycle back. Stolen December 16, the day before his birthday, because Wadsworth didn't believe in locks, the three-year-old vehicle is no longer iris. "I would like to have it back," he laments. "Walking is too slow and driving is too much trouble." Wadsworth has an offer for the operator who pulled the heist off. '"I'm not one to complain," he says. "If whoever it is will let me have the bike during the daytime I'll let him have it at night. "I had hoped I might get it back on my birthday, or at least by Christmas. Now it looks like it won't even be and Clark will be foreword Bill Bunting (6.2) and guard Dick Grubar5.1). Each team has a repudiation for going to its bench with regularity. The faces to watch here ere Tim Kblcdziej (5.3), returned by the Fourth of July." C. B. Claiborne (4.3) and Tonv Barons (4.2) for Duke and Joe Brown (8.0), Gerald Tuttle end 'Eddie Foster for the Heels. North Carolina, wfcich is known aSso for its knack cf winning the close ones, can rest assured of oca thing. This one shaild be close. Understand Wadsworth carries no grudges. It's just that he's been bicycling around campus for years now and he enjoys the exercise. And Wadsworth, who must worry over some 7,000 dormitory dwellers, has decided that, "finding a park ing space in Chapel Hill is almost as bad as finding a place to live." Prostitute Talks To Sex Class plagarizing "on a revised copy peal to all people outside of the recruiung network." The additional 300 hundred schools that have to be reached will be mostly small schools, according torClay. The schools the organiza tion has sent money to have mostly been Negro schools and of an English I paper in that he copied a section from Time magazine without citing the source and turned it in as his Own work.' - His definite probation will (terminate February 1, 1989. An administrative iudielal .policy dictates that any student large integrated ones, be ex a cneaiins ciso "F" in the course convicted of receives an involved. The woman tried for unladylike conduct plead guilty for this Campus Code of fense. . By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tor Heel Staff A prostitute teaching a course at UNC? Sound like a Jesse Helms inghtmare? It's not, it's part of the curriculum for the Ex perimental college course, "Sex Education." "We had a prostitute from Greensboro talk to the class," said Robert Rosskind, co leader of the course. "We wanted to find out if sex lost its value and enjoyment, if abused. We also wanted to find her attitude toward her hus band." Rosskind said the course went very well. He attributed a plained. large part of its success to the The change in the program subject matter because "sex had been worked out before the plays such a big part in human session by the opponents and relations." proponents of the biU. Rosskind said the course also The legislature also had a gynecologist and a unanimously approved the homosexual as guests. "We went meeting by meeting," said Rosskind, "If the group wanted to discuss something I or my co-leader, By Ashley, didn't know anything about, we found so meone who was an expert on the subject. Rosskind said tne course The course, "Criticism of Contemporary Television" is designed to develop an un derstanding of television. Hardy said programs were recorded on videotape then viewed by the class and discussed. According to Hardy, the made no moral judgements popularity of this course also and was designed to increase the i group's knowledge of sex. "We told everyone at the beginning of the course that they had to be objective and mature to participate," said Rosskind. "It was a serious course except for a few jokes et the beginning about when lab was going to be schedul ed." Professor William Hardy of the RTVMP department stems ter. from the subject mat- television is a part of everybody's life and everyone has an interest in it," said Hardy. Donald HalL assistant direc tor of Morehead Planetarium, taught the members of his Ex perimental College course how to run the Zeiss planetarium instrument The Zeiss instrument is a teaches an Experimental xvjeuur capaDie oi snowing College course m which how the sky looked at any time everyone watches television. & any place. Hall said the course was mostly "show and telL" "I'd show them how to run the machine and then tell them as they were running it." Hall said the course was suc cessful because the class was interested in learning to use the machine. "I tried to think of something interesting and unusual and I was amazed at the interest shown," said HalL Hall said the course featured individual discussion and- in dependant rehearsal work. Each student was allowed to deliver a ten minute narration and illustrate it with the Zeiss instrument. "I had a good time with the course. I enjoy teaching and the course was interesting," said HalL 4 v
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 6, 1968, edition 1
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