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Recruiting
A representative from the
State Personell Department
will be on campus Monday to
interview prospective seniors
for jobs. Students should
contact the Placement Service
Office to arrange for an
interview.
Music Can eel I Pil
The program of
CcT.ierr.poT3.ry Music scheduVd
in t'r? Greu: IL-H of th?
Carolina Union for it's
afternoon has been car?tx:Ul.
if
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77 Years of Editorial Freedom
Volume 77. Number 95
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA. SUNDAY. FEBURDAY S. 1970
Found ed Fc b rua ry 23 .
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Yout
Cabinet
Formed
Mayor Howard Lee
announced plans Friday for
creation of a Youth Advisory
Cabinet which he hopes will
"bring more youths into the
decision-making processes of
the community."
Lee said during the month
of February he and his
assistants will hold a series of
public hearings designed to give
the public a chance to help
write an ordiance forming the
Advisory Cabinet as an official
body of town government.
The first meeting will be
held at 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 11 in
the Town Hall. The purpose of
this meeting is to explain the
ideas of the mayor and listen to
suggestions from the
community.
The Advisory Cabinet will
have a three-fold purpose,
according to Lee. The Cabinet
will "concern itself with all
problems in the community
confronting our youth, acting
as the official body to handle
youth grievances; work to
create opportunities for youth
in employment, education and
recreation; and work to create
a greater sensitivity for youth
on the part of public officials
and all adults in the
community and whenever
necessary pushing for more
action on behalf of youth."
The Cabinet would consist
of 11 members with
co-chairmen. The 11 would
consist of three high school
youths, four junior high
youths, L Jaycee, 1 Merchants
Association member, and 2
additional members appointed
by the Board of Aldermen.
Lee issued a special
invitation to all youths to
attend the meetings and make
their views known.
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Parallel bar competition yesterday
.Mew Clinics Be
Several hundred
distinguished guests and
medical personalities will
attend the dedication today of
a $10.4 million Ambulatory
Patient Care Center on the
University campus.
; The new facility, which
contains nearly six acres of
floor space, represents the
largest, single state-funded
building project ever completed
in North Carolina.
A major addition to North
Carolina Memorial Hospital,
the new building houses the J.
Spencer Love Clinics, a new
surgical suite, and clinical,
research and teaching facilities.
Today's dedication program
gets underway at 2:15 p.m.
following a luncheon at the
Morehead Planetarium for
Bolivar Kazutsky, who, as some very few of with r stack of 750 grainy prints. So lest
you may remember, had a three-picture career Bolivar be forgotten, we thought we would pass
as a fledgling DTH Photographer a couple of one along to you.
years ago, came by the DTH Office yesterday
Wolf pack 6Imwasiom
By ART CHANSKY
DTH Sports Editor
Carolina and N.C. State
meet in a series of events
Monday night, of which a
basketball game may end up
the least exciting.
The Wolfpack is 17-1 and
ranked fifths in the nation,
while the Tar Heels are 14-4
and rated seventh. That's a
dramatic cage matchup, so you
know whatever else happens
has got to be good.
Tipoff at Carmichael
Auditorium.., is . scheduled for
just past 9 p.m. and will be
preceded by a UNC-State frosh
preliminary. A regional
television audience gets a peek
at only the main event,
however.
For the understatement of
the year, how about saying that
special guests. The ceremony
will be held in the lobby of the
new building which is also the
new entrance to N.C. Memorial
Hospital.
Presiding at the ceremony
will be UNC Medical School
Dean Isaac M. Taylor.
Introduction of platform guests
and speakers will be by Dr.
Reece Berryhill, dean emeritus
of the School of Medicine and
Sarah Graham Kenan, Professor
of Medicine.
Other key figures on
thyfprogram will be UNC
President William C. Friday, Lt.
Gov. Patrick Taylor, UNC
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson,
Dr. C. Arden Miller, vice
chancellor for health sciences,
Harold P. Coston, acting
director of N.C. Memorial
Tar Heels Host Nation's 5th
both teams will be slightly
angry when they take the court
Monday. Accept it, for indeed
they will.
State nearly suffered an
embarassing loss Saturday at
Virginia and will be out to
validate its national standing.
Further incentive comes from
the Wolfpack's only defeat this
season a 78-69 dumping at the
hands of these same Tar Heels
in Raleigh last month.
For Carolina anger, try a
little hurt pride.
Dean Smith and Co.
suffered their fourth loss but
second to Wake Forest this
season, Thursday night.
Crippled physically, they gave
the Deacons an inspired game
only to - lose in the waning
moments.
North Carolina does not like
to lose. It never has and likely
1T6 ! A
jroiice zirresi senior
On Drug Possession
Philip F. Busby, Jr., a senior
at the University was charged
with "possession for purpose to
sell marijuana and. hashish"
Friday by detectives of the
Chapel Hill Police Department.
According to Detective
Sergeant J. Earl Allison, the
raid occurred at 1:30 Friday
morning in 1103 Granville
West. The Granville
information desk lists Busby's
residence in room 1101.
Sergeant Allison said he,
Lieutenant Lindy Pendergrass,
and detectives Don Tripp and
Paul Minor raided Busby's
room.
According to THE CHAPEL
HILL WEEKLY "search of the
room disclosed a box
containing 43.18 grams of
hashish and 83.5 grams of
marijuana, plus a number of
capsules of undetermined
content."
Busby, a native of
Winstori-Salem, was released on
Hospital, and Fred W. Reid,
hospital chaplain. The UNC
Men's Glee Club, with Robert
Porco as director, will present
choral selections.
Among special guests
attending today's dedication
will be Charles F. Myers Jr.,
chairman of the board of
Burlington Industries, Inc., and
Mrs. Nathan M. Ayers. Mrs.
Ayers is the former Mrs. J.
Spencer Love. The late Mr.
Love, whose name the new
hospital clinic complex bears,
was; the founder and first
president of Burlington
Industries Inc.
The new clinics be dedicated
to the task of treating the sick
while they are still on their
feet, thus keeping them on
their jobs earning a living and
dicated At
V-!
never will. That should be
enough right there, but there's
more. Much more.
The perennial Atlantic Coast
Conference power Tar Heels
are at best third in the
conference race and are being
heavily pushed by Wake and
Duke. They've already lost
more ACC games this season
then in each of the last three
championship campaigns.
Plus that, the Tar Heels have
been pelted with far more than
the normal amount of talk
concerning a basketball demise
in Chapel Hill.
Which brings us relevantly
to the next point. The majority
of such talk has come from
Raleigh and the arrogant
Wolfpack.
In actuality, Monday
.
$5,000 bond pending
arraignment on felony charges.
He will be given a preliminary
hearing on Feb. 25 in Chapel
Hill District Court.
Possession of a gram or
more of either hashish or
marijuana is a felony
punishable by up to five years
imprisonment, plus fine.
Supreme Court Will Rule
On Hunger Walk Allocation
The Student Supreme Court
will decide Monday night
whether or not the Student
Government allocation of
money for the Walk Against
Hunger is legal.
Bill Brieger, cp-ordinator of
the Walk, is hopeful the court
will rule in favor of his
committee.
"I don't see any reason why
they shouldn't agree with us,"
.Memoria.
out of expensive hospital beds.
A referral hub in the
regional wheel of medical
resources, the new Ambulatory
Patient Care Center is both an
innovator and demonstrator of
new ways to deliver better
health care to the public in
North Carolina.
When fully staffed and
equipped the new Center will
increase North Carolina
Memorial Hospital's out-patient
capacity to more than a quarter
million patient visits per year,
according to hospital officials.
The" heart of this operation
is the J. Spencer Love Clinic
complex.
In this complex are 181
out-patient examination and
treatment rooms where 57
Bv AL THOMAS
DTH Staff Writer
Whether the University is to
be hit by a general strike of its
non-academic employees will
probably be decided in a mass
meeting at the Roberson Street
Center today.
Mrs. Elizabeth Brooks, a
cafeteria worker and one of the
leaders of the local American
Federation of State, County
.and Municipal Employees
Union (AFSCME), said a strike
would be discussed at the 3
p.m. meeting.
9Setl
Ranked Team
matches two basketball teams
possessing an abundance of raw
talent.. State's Vann Williford is
averaging 23 points and nine
rebounds. Center Paul Coder
boasts 19 and 11, respectively,
while loud mouth swingman Ed
Leftwich has scored 18 and
grabbed four per game. The
remaining two Wolfpack
starters, Rick Anheuser (10)
and Al Heartley (4),
compliment the big three
nicely.
' The Tar Heels, who are
slowly and surely mending
towards that ACC Tournament,
return center Lee Dedmon to
the backboard wars for the first
time in three games. A healthy
and helpful Dedmon should aid
the Tar Heel cause greatly.
Mono-stricken Dennis
Wuycik is currently playing the
best basketball of his college
career and should get
physically stronger as the
infection clears. The
sophomore forward has hit 27
of his last 39 shots in scoring
23, 23 and 19 points in
succession.
The other forward will
likely be Dave Chadwick, who
has played well while filling in
for Bill Chamberlain. The
guards are Eddie Fogler, off his
greatest college game against
Wake, and Charlie Scott, who
Brieger said Saturday, "because
the Student Legislature passed
the bill, and it's a minimal sum
compared to some things they
finance."
Brieger added that he had
not yet prepared the statement
he will present Monday, but he
said he will try to show that
the Walk' is related to the
students and is worthy of
Student Government funding.
out-patient clincis re
conducted, 28 each day.
Also included in the new
building are out-patient
registration, in-patient
admissions and the new
entrance to the hospital. Other
new features include a 4,622
square foot emergency service
area, 49 radiology diagnostic
and treatment rooms,
pharmacy, clinical laboratories,
immunology, bacteriology,
teaching and conference rooms
and patient and personnel food
preparation facilities.
One complete floor is a
clinical research unit to be used
initially for research in
metabolic diseases.
A tour of the new facility
will conclude the day's
activities.
.Hospital
, The meeting today is
scheduled to include porters
and maids as well as cafeteria
and hospital employees.
Miss Carrie Lakes, an
organizer for AFSCME. said
Saturday the workers would
vote on striking at the meeting.
"We'll try to think of some
options," Miss Lakes said.
"Nobody here wants to strike
but if we can't get satisfied any
other way there would be no
choice."
Miss Lakes said the union
would not try to force the
workers to either strike or not
Monday
seems to better his greatest
college with every ensuing
performance.
Jim Delany, Steve Previs,
Donn Eggelston and Dale
(Continued on page 4)
Spring Rush Change
By MARY BURCH
DTH Arts Editor
"Rush will be much less
structured and more informal
than ever before," said Jackie
Ka i n , Panhellenic publicity
chairman. "The girls going
through rush will have an
opportunity to get to know the
girls in the sororities on an
, individual, informal basis."
All nine UNC sororities will
,be participating in spring
sorority rush which begins
Sunday, Feb. 15 with a
convocation and runs through
Feb. 25 with the issuing of
bids.
Sororities will be able to
invite rushees to meals and to
planned activities. An
opportunity will be provided
for rushees to discuss the,
sorority its interests, plans,
activities, pledge program and
membership responsibilities
with the sisters.
ft
it..
f i
Behind the
Strike
strike.
The decision is the workers.
The majority of them would
have to be for striking."
Miss Lakes had announced
earlier if the cafeteria workers
voted for a strike then the non
academic hospital employees
would join them.
AFSCME has been
organizing porters and maids
and hospital workers for a
month, and according to a
circular passed to the workers
Saturday, the non academic
employees would soon ask the
University for official
recognition.
Cafeteria workers were
unionized in November.
Mrs. Brooks explained
cafeteria workers had become
concerned over lay offs by the
contract food service, SAGA.
SAGA laid off four full time
employees last week in
addition to the 66 workers
agreed to be laid off following
a month-long cafeteria strike in
November.
Mrs. Brooks said SAGA's
announcement they would not
continue food service here was
a "trick."
Silence which has been
strictly upheld in tliypast will
be changed. Rushees Vnay talk
to the sorority girls outside the
rush party situation provided
they do not discuss specific
sororities.
Rush counselors will be
available to all rushees to
discuss or answer any questions
concerning rush.
Any undergraduate woman
of sophomore, junior or senior
standing with a 2.0 academic
average is eligible to participate
in rush.
"Many sophomores and
juniors transfered here this
semester," Miss Kain added.
"These girls will be eligible if
they wish to participate."
Additional information
about rush (parties, times and
rules) and sign-up sheets are
available in the Dean of
Women's Office, Steele
?
M
scenes of The Marriage
SAGA nt a Utter to the
University Jan. 30 saying thoy
would not renew their contract
and would ceao operations
May 27.
Ted Your.s, manager of
SAGA, noted high labor cots
and low patronage as the
reasons for his company's
scheduled departure.
Mrs. Brooks, however,
maintained SAGA had no
intention of leaving the campus
and merely wanted to ".scare
the workers into not striking."
A strike had been
threatened at the time of
SAGA's announcement
because of alleged additional
lay offs.
Miss Lakes said Saturday
SAGA officials told nural
workers another layoff was
scheduled for this week. She
said SAGA intended to bring
their work force of full time
employees down to 69 instead
of the 95 set by the fall strike
settlement.
Young could not be readied
for comment concerning the
charges of another lay off this
week.
s
Building. The deadline for
signing up for rush is
Wednesday, Feb. 1 1.
Since the University will, in
the future, be rdmittin' fewr
junior transfers and more
freshmen women, next year
sorority rush will be expanded
to include freshmen.
"We are moving mrre
toward a younger sysfem,"
Miss Kain said.
The acitivites of sororities as
a Panhellenic body include
many philanthropy projects.
This spring the sororities will
be working in the Chapel H:!l
Day Care centers. An
orientation meeting for this
project will be held Monday cl
7 p.m. at the United
Community Church.
Other plans include working
with Upward Bound, the
UM-YWCA and a long range
project of establishing a day
care center.
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