Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 18, 1969, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page 8 THE DAILY TAR HEEL New Grad Office L Director Named William J. Brinson has been selected appointed director of the Command University of North Carolina's College Graduate Office, effective in February, and 'will be responsible for its overall supervision. In announcing this appointment, Graduate School Dean James C. Ingram said, "We are fortunate in having secured a person with Brinson's extensive experience in to and attend General the Staff As a logistics staff officer in Washington, D.C., Brinson had extensive contacts with Congressional committees and with other government agencies. He also participated in Vietnam's rural reconstruction program, working closely with the U.S. Agency for International administration, personnel Development (A.I.D.) and the supervision and the design of Vietnamese of ficials. for in this the office procedures, important position Graduate Office." An Arapahoe native, Brinson was graduated from Atlantic Christian College. He then entered a career in the U.S. Army and had appointments in the Pentagon, Korea, Japan and South Vietnam. In 1961 he was The Porthole Open 7 Days a Week 11:30-2:00 5:00-7:30 In his last assignment before retiring from the Army as a Lt. Colonel, Brinson was executive officer of the Gunnery Department of the Artillery School at Fort Sill, Okla. He was responsible for administering several hundred civilian and military employees. As director of the Graduate Office, Brinson will work closely with Dean Ingram and with the assistant deans, Dr. Joseph M. . Flora and Dr. Edward S. Howie, in administering Graduate Office affairs. 131 Coming Soon ... CUBBY HOLE 421 WEST FRANKLIN Beside Leo's A large variety of tobaccos, drinks, candies & ice cream 4 " .lUfi t Tuesday, Februap-jjJL969 ! Earns Data UNC Asset Ramona Taylor looks concerned . . . The Louis Harris Political iData Center, established here Three years ago, now has a collection of over 150 studies representing an investment of several million dollars. Harris, noted public opinion pollster and political analyst was graduated from the University in 1942. He selected his alma mater in 1965 to be the official repository for survey data compiled by his national research firm, Louis Harris and Associates of New York. The Center contains public opinion and electoral behavior studies conducted by the Harris firm since 1965. The Center is a major asset to the Political Science Department. Harris is a lecturer on the faculty and often visits the campus to talk or participate in seminars with graduate students. Over 100 Harris studies are now housed in the Center, though data holdings are not restricted to Harris material. The Political Science Department is a charter member of the Inter-University Consortium for Political Research and the Harris Center has all the studies made available through this organization. Complete files on studies made by political faculty members are also available at the Center, including the Negro Political Participation Study conducted by Professors James Prothro, director of the Harris Center, and Donald Matthews, another specialist in political behavior. Last year, the Center received the Miami Herald and the Detroit Free Press Urban Studies conducted by the Knight Newspapers. The studies represent an investment of $20,000. The Center's most recent acquisitions came from Independent Research Associates, a Washington-based firm which conducts public opinion market surveys, research. polls and The firm. headed by Hamilton, has offitie. The IRA consists of William a Chapel R. Hill contribution 14 studies Wisconsin Radica Is Blasted (UPI) National Guardsmen at San Francisco State Monday witn iixea Dayoneis nurriea and acting Presdent Fireside Girl of The rp M i vvjypi i I m ((My 1 lj VA d . Jfci ' ----- ' 1 1 .V i --J. , j FAY HAUSER, soph from Winston-Salem, wears a Juliet inspired dress by Arpeja from THE FIRE SIDE. Fay lives in Kenan. back to the University of Wisconsin campus Monday to disperse chanting, stomping student rebels seeking to disrupt classes. The guardsmen scattered the demonstrators, whose numbers ranged from 350 to 1,000 during the morning. But the student strikers then broke into groups and turned to traffic-harassing tactics. It had been hoped that the Guard's show of force at Wisconsin last week had cooled the spirits of student strikers pressing demands for black students on the campus. The Guardsmen were kept off the campus over the weekend, iut were called back when the strikers marched on Bascom Hall, heart of the liberal arts campus. "Arrest Them" At least six persons five of them studentsrwere arrested. Non-striking students shouted "arrest them! arrest them!" to police when rebels invaded their classrooms. "We want classes go home!" the non-strikers yelled to the dissidents. The week began on a tense note at another campus plagued by student revolt, San Francisco State College. The spring semester opened S.I. faculty members under which both teachers and students had Ilayakawa sought to impose an to sign registration cards on the enrollment check on student first day of classes, strikers and 250 striking Teachers Picketed A handful of picketed Jthe main entrance but most striking professors met their students to keep 4 'k- - A n K n rs A DTH Photos by Tom Schnabel . . . And then shouts encouragement SSOC To Show Documentaries Two afternoons of free films on subiects related to "The Movement" will be in Carroll Hall from 2:00 to 6:00 p.m., Tuesday and We Are Open 7 DAYS 9:00 ajn. PER WEEK till 11:30 p.m The Ivy Room Try Out Hickory Smoked BEEF BARBECUE Cosmopolitan Room Chicken in the Rough Steaks Salads DELICATESSEN fcf a hit nt New Ynrkl J004.W. Majn JSk . J0Mi. Durahm, N. C. Wednesday by the Southern Student Organizing Committee presented (SSOC). The films, including a 40-minute short on the student uprising at Columbia University, are produced by Newsreel, an motion picture service, l he Columbia tilm will also be shown Tuesday night in Howell Hall auditorium at 6:00, 8:00 and 10:00 p.m. Two representatives from the Newsreel staff will be present to discuss the possibility of establishing a Southern bureau of Newsreel and to talk with people who Wall, Miss America," an Advertising Merchandising Market Research Juniors, Seniors, MBA's Career Opportunities In AH Phases Of Marketing Sales Management Sales Promotion Join Sauter Laboratories Program for Career Development. Schedule a campus interview with the company representa tives now. Seniors, Graduating MBA's . . . Permanent employment. Gain extensive experience in all 5 phases of marketing. Juniors, 1st year MBA's . . . Summer employment. Get a head start on your career before graduation. Gain valuable sales and marketing experience. Both programs provide car, good salary, and pay all expenses seve.v days a week. Contact your Placement Director for full details. Interviews on February 24-25. SAUTER LABORATORIES, INC Proprietary Division of Hoffman-La Roche Manufacturers of ROMILAR Cough & Cold Preparations and ZESTAB Children's Vitamins AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER are interested in turns as a journalistic medium. Among the films to be shown are "Black Power," with Eldridge Cleaver and Huey account of the demonstration tjy the Women's Liberation Front at the Miss America Pageant last year. Others include a documentary on new weapons underground police are using in riot control, news coverage entitled "Riot Control Weapons," and an anti-war film called "Time of the Locust." One of the films will be a comprehensive synopsis of the civil rights struggle over the last few years. In addition to a film on everyday life in North Vietnam and an account of the march on the Pentagon in 1967, there will be a report on the black liberation struggle in Portuguese Guinea, entitled "Nossa Terra." The films are open to the AGIO SHOES, inc. Room 19 10S N . Columbia St Hill, N.C. Chapel How! Clothing! Men's Playboy Shirts ... Knit Shirts & Terry Cleth (Long & Short Sleeve Turtleneck) Women's Corduroy Shirts Women's Corduroy Bellbottoms Wool Shirts Mod Blouses from New York Turtlenecks For Men & Women Women's Popovers Men's and Women's Shoes Seconds and Factory Reconditioned. New Shipment of Shoes Arriving this week. 4.95 3.95 7.95 9.95 10.95 9.95 teachers campus of the with their courses from being dropped by the school administration. On other campuses: The president of the University of Notre Dame, acting in the wake of an outbreak in which four persons were injured 10 days ago, laid down a no-nonsense policy of suspension, expulsion and arrest. The Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, in a open letter to students and faculty members, said disrupters "will be given 15 minutes of meditation to cease and desist" before they are punished. A student group calling itself the "Steering Committee to Reform the University" marched into the office of the president of Pennsylvania State University and laid down a list of demands it said were nonnegotiable. The demands included equal rights for women, abolition of ROTC academic credits, and a ban on military recruitment oa campus. conducted in six states during 1957-68 political races. Four of the studies were done in North Carolina and the others were done in Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland and Virginia. Representing an investment of $95,000, three of these studies were limited to congressional districts while the other 11 were statewide surveys dealing with congressional, senate, gubernatorial and presidential races. A total of 9,600 people were polled on their political preferences, issues they considered important, current topics at the time, and their views of political parties and candidates. Harris chose UNC as the permanent repository for his studies because he first became interested in politics while an economics student in the University and because the South pioneered the way in the study of political behavior and opinion. "The South has produced the top political scientists in the nation and the University of North Carolina has led the way in this accomplishment," he said on one of his frequent trips to the campus. "Good surveys are like radar to a navagator on a ship or plane. They tell you the lay of the land so you can see clearly the outlines of issues and the shape of an election." Harris views opinion and behavior research as part of man's continuing search for knowledge. "The more we understand, the better off we are," he said. "The history of the progress of rational man has been his ability to free facts." Surveys filed in the UNC Center, he said, can be reanalyzed to show the history of voting patterns of practically every state in the nation. "They may even lead to projections into the future. We now have information out of the minds of voters themselves when they made their decisions. This information is fact." The Porthole Open 7 Days a Week 11:30-2:00 5:00-7:30 jsrrnvr I j Safety, is Comfort! LEATHER MOCCASIN Hand-crafted a!k-tanned cowhlda that dries soft. Moccasin comfort, Top-Slder saftty! Men's and Women's fee Julians 9 mm inn Chapel Hill: 208 W. Franklin St. Join the Inn Crowd Featuring, Famous Fresh Baked PIZZA Carry Out or Eat in Open Mon.-Thur. 11 A.M. 'ti! 12 P.M. Friday and Saturday 11 A.M. 'til. 1 A.M. Sunday 4 P.M. 'til 1 1 P.M. Order by Phone for Faster Service Durham-286-9857 Chapel Hill 942-5143 Allow Approximately 20 Minutes j Ranch Hand SDAV ONLY Newton, and "Up Against the public. Duke Settlement Reached (Continued from Page 1) program. More than 1,500 of President Knight said the the University's 8,000 students negotiations with black heard the announcement of the students, "offered positive program from faculty member proof that we can solve our Alan Kerckhoff in Duke's Page problems with reason." Auditorium. Roy Rogers Roast Beef SANDW CM In French Fries Cole Slaw (0)(0)c 106 MALLETTE ST. OPEN" 11 A.M. to 1 A.M. 'Til 2:00 A.M. FR. & SAT PHONE 929-3103 t t i ! ! ; i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 18, 1969, edition 1
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