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By PETER BROWN
Special to the DTH
The Carolina Symposium
has arrived.
And the five-day series of
speeches will begin today with
Stewart Udall, former
Secretary of the Interior,
delivering the keynote address
at 8 pan. in Memorial Hall.
Other speakers will include
David Bower, George
Woodwell, Garrett Hardin,
Governor Robert Scott, Abel
Wolman, Edmund Muskie,
Rene Dubos, Kenneth
Boulding and Ansley Coale.
These experts will speak and
answer questions on their
observations and experiences in
the study of man and his
environment.
EDUCATION DEGRFPc
All seniors in the scl
Education who expert-5
graduate in June must i
application for degree nc
than Wednesday in
101-D of Peabody Hall.
Volume 78. Number lb
X
:-xw-:-twX
. . I I i t . .'II
1 150 Frogs
I Meeting In
1 S. C. Town
SPRINGFIELD, S.C.
(UPI) Preparations are in full
. swing for the fourth annual
'governor's frog jumping
contest scheduled Saturday,
March 28.
Mayor Oswald Furtick said
more than 6,000 visitors are
expected to come to this
Orangeburg County town for
the event. More than 150 frogs
are expected to enter the
contest. Winner of the contest
will go to the tournament in
Angel's Camp, Calif. Angel's
Camp is in Calaveras County,
where Mark Twain began the
event with his story "The
Celebrated Jumping Frog of
Calaveras County."
The frogs will be placed on
a plastic lilly pad and given 15
seconds to jump. The official
distance is measured from the
pad to the landing point of the
third jump.
TTft o 71
f
. -
s
I
.
ir resraeiMia.
By GERRY COHEN
DTH Staff Writer
EDITOR'S NOTE: Staff
Writer Gerry Cohen has
completed a two-week series
about the various views of thz
candidates for the office of
student body president. In this
analysis he will summarize
their positions.
In their responses to
questions concerning several
issues of current interest to the
campus, the five presidential
candidates showed little
diversity of opinion on some
topics and greater disagreement
on others.
The first question asked
each candidate concerned the
disruption policy, which was
enacted last year by the
University Board of Trustees.
Only candidate Gary Fagg
thought the policy was valid.
The other four candidates said
the policy should be limited to
The Symposium speeches
will all take place in Memorial
Hail the afternoon sessions at
3, the evening sessions at 8.
Complete schedules of the
events have been distributed
door to door on campus and
additional copies may be
obtained from the Carolina
Union desk
There will be an information
center established in the north
lounge of the Carolina Union
to answer questions about the
various speeches, serve free
coffee, and act as a center
where interested and turned-on
environmental enthusiasts can
convene. The lounge will have
literature to distribute, as well
as additional copies of the
publicity booklet for the
Symposium and extra buttons
0
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Ricketts on
ustea
( .
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, ID
9
Is Scheduled April 27
By MIKE PARNELL
DTH Staff Writer
The trial of nine youths
arrested Feb. 16 in a Chapel
Hill drug bust will be held
April 27 in Orange County
Superior Court.
The youths were arrested in
a three-county bust conducted
by the SBI and local
authorities. Seventeen
members of the drug ring have
been arrested in Orange,
Durham, and Moore counties.
One UNC student was
involved in the arrests, Curtis
H. Sitterson, a freshman here.
Sitterson, 18, is the son of
University Chancellor J.
Carlyle Sitterson.
Sitterson is now serving a
60-day "pre-sentencing
diagnostic term" in Polk
Youthful Offenders Camp in
Raleigh. He received the term
n
violent disruption and thought
UNC-C instructor David
Blevins was not guilty of
iolating the policy when he
failed to hold class on the Oct.
15 Moratorium Day. Fagg
maintained that Blevins was
indeed guilty.
In response to a query on
the University's drug policy, no
candidate thought it should
punish students for possession
of narcotics.
Alan Hirsch and Guil
Waddell thought student courts
might be allowed to prosecute
cases where transfer and sale of
physically addictive drugs wras
involved (marijuana is not
considered a physically
addictive drug).
Each candidate was also
asked how he felt about
compulsory student funding of
the Daily Tar Heel.
Alan Hirsch said he opposed
compulsory funding. in
principle, but
cutting
off
showing a sculpture of Gustav
Vigeland.
The hours for the
information center are 10 a.m.
until 11 p.m. weekdays and 3
to 7 p.m. Sunday.
Broadcasts
The entire Symposium will
be broadcast live on
WUNC-Radio (91.5 FM). All
the evening sessions will be
broadcast bv WCHL-Radio
(13.60 AM) "in Chapel Hill,
which will tape afternoon
sessions and replay them each
dav beginning at 6:30 pjn.
WUNC-TV will broadcast
live Senator Edmund Muskie's
speech at 8 p.m., Tuesday.,
March 17, and will tape several
others for delayed broadcast.
CHAPEL
4f 'A
ihe ball.
iHf it 8
Dvuaemts 1 rial
after entering a plea of "no
contest" to 'three counts of
possession and sale of drugs
before Judge Maurice Braswell
Feb. 27 in Hillsboro District
Court.
In Durham Superior Court
Tuesday, Sitterson also entered
a plea of "no contest" to one
count of possession and sale of
LSD.
The other Chapel Hill
residents who will be tried
April 27 are Ricky Norwood,
20; Robert Earl Blackwood,
18; William John Gehweileer,
17; Kenneth Walden, 22;
Simmons L. Parks, 21; Richard
Keith Holloway, 17; Robert
Eugene Lewis, 19; Kenneth
David Cleveland, 19; and James
Huel George, 20.
All of these youths are now
out of jail after posting bond
of $5,000 or $10,000.
Nine men were arrested in
DTH News
funding for the DTH would kill
the newspaper. He added he
intended to vote against
discontinuation of funding of
the referendum.
Gary Fagg expressed his
opposition to continued
funding.
Tommy Bello, Tim
Duaghtry, and Guil Waddell
called for continued funding.
Daughtry stressed that the
whole system of student fee
allocations needed change.
In regard to the housing
policy, all candidates were
strongly opposed to the new
University regulation requiring
sophomores to live in
dormitories.
Tommy Bello called for
more coeducational living
projects, while Alan Hirsch said
increasing the freedom
students are allowed in their
rooms would alleviate the rush
from University housing.
A colloquium on "The
Educational Opportunities and
Activities in the Environmental
Sciences at The University of
North Carolina" will conclude
the week-long Symposium at 3
p.m., Friday, March 20, in the
Carolina Union. Participants
will include Dr. J. Frank
McCorrnick, associate professor
of Botany; Dr. Danial Okun.
chairman of the Department of
Environmental Sciences and
Engineering: and Dr. Sagar
Jain, assistant professor in the
School of Public Health.
McCormick, who will serve
as moderator, will focus on
"Opportunities and Activities
in Ecology." Dr. Okun will
deal with environmental
sciences and Dr. Jam with
population research.
uLJJ(v J L L LJU
ST)
78 Years Of Editorial Freedom
HILL. NORTH CAROLINA.
DTH Staff Vhoto by Steve Adams
m nn If
the bust Feb. 16. Norwood
surrendered to Chapel Hill
police March 6 after being
sought for three weeks.
The original drug bust was
carried out at 7 a.m. Feb. 16.
Police officers confiscated
about $50,000 worth of drugs
ranging from heroin to
amphetamines in Chapel Hill.
SBI Director Charles Dunn
said the young men arrested
were "major suppliers and
pushers selling drugs to high
school and college students."
Chapel Hill Police Chief
W.D. Blake said undercover
narcotics agents bought drugs
from the suppliers but arrests
were withheld until the entire
ring could be captured.
Each of the defendants has
pleaded "no contest" in
preliminary hearings and is
expected to plead guilty at his
trial.
Analysis
Do o
mi en
o
o
All said the University must
improve the living conditions
in the dorms.
Another question centered
around the role of students in
university decision -making.
Alan Hirsch and Tommy
Bello called for structural
changes in University
government so as to allow
greater student participation in
the decision-making process.
Waddell also called for a
greater student role, but did
not discuss the formal
structure.
Daughtry said Student
Government should limit itself
to issues on which there is a
consensus.
Fagg said pressure on the
administration would produce
many of the policy changes
students desire.
Concerning the recent
"Cansler Doctrine"
controversy on resident
advisors, all five agreed should
A previously unannounced
addition to the Svmoosium
schedule will be Christopher
Demuth. Administrative
Assistant on Environmental
Affairs to President Nixon. He
will speak at 3 pxi.
Wednesday. March IS. His
address is entitled.
"Environmental Policy Issues."
Union Art
One should, if at ali possible,
take the time to wander
through the Carolina Union
and obsene the art show
assembled by Claiborne Jones.
She has solicited pieces of ali
kinds from a variety of !ocal
artists and arranged them
throughout the lobby of the
Union building.
SUNDAY. MARCH 15. 1970
Cold-Shooting Heels
N
By ART CHANSKY
DTH Sports Editor
-NEW YORK CITY-Frigid
shooting that severely injured
Carolina basketball almost a
month ago finally killed the
Tar Heels here yesterday in the
opening round of the National
Invitational Tournament.
Two icy spells one at the
beginning of the second half
and one midway through
it enabled Manhattan College
to catch and then defeat
Carolina, 95-90, before a sparse
but raucous gathering of 9,553
at Madison Square Garden.
It was a bitter way to end a
season of frustration for UNC.
Attempting to rebound from
recent failures and recapture
lost prestige, the Tar Heels
played rugged basketball from
the outset but could not shoot
with any consistency.
Aggressive rebounding and
defensive tactics that at first
confused Manhattan allowed
the Blue and White to
dominate much of the first
half, however.
Carolina shot only 39 per
cent in the opening 20
minutes, but the Tar Heels
outrebounded the Jaspers,
28-12, and made 18 of 20 free
throws to go out .at
intermission with a 48-40
advantage.
Once again, the lack of a
killer instinct kept Carolina
from applying the death blow
and subsequently cost UNC the
chance to enter Monday's
quarterfinal round.
Ironically, Manhattan, who
was playing on its home floor
and had a beserko-type rooting
section on hand, seemed awed
early by the Tar Heels and
their All-American Charlie
Scott. The Jaspers were fidgety
and unorganized during the
first five minutes of play, and
Carolina raced out to a 16-3
lead.
not be used as disciplinarians.
Guil Waddell said the Men's
Residence Council should take
over that role.
Hirsch said if students made
their own rules, there would be
less need for structured
enforcement.
On the visitation policy, the
five were in basic agreement
that each house should be
allowed to set its own
visitation hours up to 24
hours a day, if it so desires.
Bello said if the University
wants to require students to
live in dormitories for two
years, it must decrease social
regulation.
Alan Hirsch said the
local -option visitation policy
could be secured from the
administration by increased
pressure.
Daughtry, Waddell and
Hirsch stressed that visitation
privileges are a basic student
risht.
the
'AO
outstanding contributions are
from artists John Lindsay and
yizc Boggs.
Boggs. a graduate fellow in
the art department here has
transported from his far
in
the country
. it . -
an
untit.ed
aisemukxi.e. vvnun is
which
rather
hard to describe but which one
should definitely see. Using the
forest as a background, as pan
of the exhibit, Boggs has
erected a series of poles and
dikes juxtaposed against the
treei and foliage of a glade off
the southwest comer of the
Union building.
He says, "The metal
sculptures blend in with the
trees and become part of the
natural environment.
Conversely, the trees
A
JH
Perhaps
QTrn zap HPTk IMF en rm
Superb passing ala the old
days and exceptional defensive
rebounding by Dennis Wuycik
and Lee Dedmon led the initial
Tar Heel spurt. Carolina picked
apart the Jasper 1-3-1 zone
with precision passing that
resulted in Wuycik and
Dedmon getting easy
five-to-eight-footers.
Spurred by a rock pep band,
20 cheerleaders and a thousand
students that continually
pilfered the court with physical
and verbal debris, Manhattan
emerged from its daze and
reeled out 10 straight points to
move within three of the lead.
Hot-shooting Matt . Lynett,
gangly center Jack Marren and
fiesty guard Brian Mahoney
triggered the Jasper spree and
ignited the Garden fuse that
exploded in pandemonium at
the final buzzer. From midway
through the first half on, the
Manhattan cheering section
was so rowdy that extra
members of New York's Finest
were summoned. Thank
goodness for the victory. It
Symposium Schedule
Following is a schedule of
speakers and topics for the
Carolina Symposium, "Man
and Environment."
Sunday-9 pjn. Stewart
Udall, Former Secretary of
Interior-"An Overview of Man
and Environment."
Monday -3 p.m. David
Bower, President, Friends of
the Earth "How to be a
Friend of the Earth"; George
Woodell, Senior Ecologist at
Brookhaven National
Laboratory "People,
Resources and Government."
Monday-8 p.m. Garrett
Hardin, professor of Human
Ecology at the University of
California at Santa
Barbara "Need for and Ethics
Viewi
On the food service
question, Waddell called for
the University to provide
eating facilities next year.
Hirsch said he desired the
same thing, and added Student J
Government should finance the
food service if the University ;
refuses to operate one.
Bello called for a more
efficient private contractor to
be used.
- Fagg also wanted a private j
food service, but said none ?
would come after the
experience SAGA had. He said
the L-niversity must then
provide a food service.
Daughtry said the food
service issue should be decided
on the basis of the needs of the
students rather than on a solely
financial basis.
Each candidate said the
University does have a moral
obligation to provide some sort
of food service.
: co
entire exhibit and nuke she
thing work a a whine."
To svi"b!e the sculp Jure
Mac &iggs srvnt the better
part of zn afternoon d:gg;n4
post holes iwhh permission i on
the south comer of the l"non
lot. Wiping the sweat off his
forehead he said. "You can Nee
how the
lih!
;ree n of the
piece b Sends with all the
plants and tends to change as
the seasons change."
Sculpture
John Lindsey, a local artist,
used canvas hammocks to hoist
a wooden environmental
sculpture up over the front
lounge by the desk of the
Carolina Union building.
may have saved the lives of the
officials and everyone wearing
Carolina Blue.
The Tar Heels hung gamely
to their lead, but poor shooting
took the spunk out of the UNC
attack.
Manhattan broke from the
second half gate like greasy
New Yorkers and scored nine
straight points to gain a 49-48
lead. Missed shots and
turnovers gave that Jasper
trio Marren, Mahoney and
Lynett the nine equalizers
that erased in two minutes
what the Tar Heels had worked
for for the first 20.
During the opening
moments of the period, the
tide changed for the Tar Heels
and the curtain began to fall on
1969-70 Carolina season. You
could sense it.
UNC spent the entire first
half drawing intelligent fouls
that put three Jaspers in
personal difficulty. Only
Wuycik had more than one for
Carolina at the break.
But as the noise grew louder,
of Population Legislation."
Tuesday-3 p.m.-Gov.
Robert Scott "Environmental
Quality in North Carolina";
Abel Wolman-"A World View
of Population."
Tuesday-8 p.m. Senator
Edmund Muskie "Air and
Water Pollution-Abuse and
Control."
Wednesday-3 p.m.-Chr-istopher
Demuth, former
Nixon Administrative Assistant
on Environmental
Affiars-"Environment and
Policy Issues."
Wednesday-8 p.m.-Rene
Dubos, professor of
microbiology at NYC
Rockefeller University-"We
$-
J- v ,
i
0
in
s niov
Ski
imliwed setup; ure
cordis; ot a .ser.es of frames
and reeUrgur structures
punctuated with holes. The
frames re on an ov.'.l frame
h:eh connects to a crossbeam
between the open pav.
The .1 r e of the circles
charges with T.e s perrevtive.
as does the reflection of hgh;
off of stneral p:eee-s of clear
plut3C t.ned the wind
frame, ll is a fastinat .n piece,
and tM-.e cannet tr. i.vs it - if one
remembers to !ok up in the
Union bu:!ding. The sculpture
weighs approximately
pounds and it has been
reported that !ess pp are
studv ing on the nn;ches
immeduielv biov it.
In the nir.h lour.ge of the
Continued on pige 4)
ROOM Di:rosiTs
All men students residing in
University housing next
semester must make a 525
deposit on their room
reservation before Mondav.
The
Founded February 23. 1 893
Drop
Im o ihl o im
the calls also turned against the
Tar Heels. Dedmon picked up
three fouls within 12 minutes
and Wuycik was forced to leave
with still six minutes showing
on the clock.
Meanwhile, Marren and
Lynett continued their si ..ling
shooting while Carolina
struggled for every bucket.
With the score tied at 65,
three straight field goals gave
Manhattan the lead it never
relinquished.
The Tar Heels closed to
within four three times and to
two on another occasion, but
crucial shots just wouldn't fall
and critical fouls sent
Manhattan to the free throw
line too often.
Dean Smith called four
timeouts in the last three
minutes to apply his wizardry
But the cause was futile.
Cut the Tar Heels connect
from the field and down with
that failure went a golden
opportunity Carolina was
lucky to have.
Are the Environment."
Thursday-3 p.m. Kenneth
Boulding, professor of
economics at the University of
Colorado (Boulder,
Col.) "After Development,
What? The Re-entry Problem
into Spaceship Earth."
Thursday-8 p.m.-Ansley
Coale, director. Office of
Population Research at
Princeton University "Man
and Environment: A
Synthesis."
All lectures will be in
Memorial Hall.
Union Information Centers
with exhibits will be open in
the north lounge throughout
the Symposium.
A
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