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Vol. 78, No. 93
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by Sue English
) StaffWriter
The 25-mile March Against Hunger will
take place on March 20, according to
coordinator Scott Morgan, a sophomore
from Fair Haven, N J.
Community residents, high school and
college students will take part in the
Chapel Hill walk, regardless of weather
conditions. Morgan estimates there will
be between 500 and 1,00 participants in
the march.
Technical arrangements for the walk
have been arranged by a committee that
meets at the YMCA at 7:30 p.m. every
Monday.
The committee, consisting of
approximately 20 people, has mapped the
route, drawn pamphlets, arranged for
food and' health problems of the
participants, manned the checking points,
arranged transportation for. those who
cannot finish the walk and planned
publicity for the walk.
Registration for the walk will be from
7-8 a.m. on March 20. Walk cards,
available later at the Y, must be presented
at this time in order to verify the walker
began at the starting point.
Starting-point for the walk is S a.m. at
the Institute of Government Building on
South Road.
"We are trying to get into as many
different areas of the community as
possible," Morgan said. "We are shunning
highways whenever possible, but we
sometimes cannot help crossing them
because they are the only connecting
areas."
The walk will head toward Carrboro,
swing north and hit Franklin Street in
order to have lunch at the Planetarium. It
will then continue north to Estes Drive,
'"swing East "by Eastgate Plaza and come
back to the Institute of Government.
Morgan said the overall purpose of the
march is that it is part of a nationwide
program trying to make an issue out of
development.
"The government has recognized the
walk, but recognition and action are two
different things," he said. "We want to
make an important issue out of the
problem of development."
Secondary to the overall issue is the
money-raising aspect of the march. The
money goes to two projects in the
worldwide, famine situation, the
Inter-Church Council and the American
Friends Service Committee in Mexico, a
training project for Mexican farmers.
Any questions conerning the walk
should be taken to the Y.
20
DMC squad outscores invisibles
Nyfle
by Steve Calos
StaffWriter
An invisible triumph, cleverly
disguised in the garb of defeat, was
registered by the Invisible
University of North Carolina
oett Aedee to give residl ins: here
The renowned poet and essayist W.H.
Auden will give a reading at 8 p.m. Feb.
25 in Memorial Hall.
Peter Brown, chairman of the Carolina
Forum, said tickets for the reading will go
on sale soon at the Carolina Union.
"The admission price of 50 cents is
Pass -Fail
Today is the last day for students to
designate courses as "Pass-Fail."
Students should make the designation
in the office of their dean. Once a course
has been selected as "Pass-Fail," the
selection is irrevocable.
The following regulations apply to
Pass-Fail courses:
A maximum of 24 hours of
"Pass-Fail" credit may be applied to
graduation requirements.
Any course may be designated for
"Pass-Fail" except: English 1 and 2;
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University maintenance crews caught a touch of spring
fever this week and started to work on this year's spring
cleaning, by scraping paint, putting on new paint, climbing
l mm
(IUNC) Wednesday night as they
defeated the Devil May Care (DMC)
squad by a 56-112. count. (The
vaguely visible scoreboard recorded
a 112-56 win for DMC.)
The Invisible, but horribly
necessary because this year's speakers
haVe been so expensive," Brown said.
"We wanted to branch out in our
selection of speakers since they were
mostly political last semester," Brown
said.
AVkW.W.V.VAV.'.V.V.V.'AVASUVAVA'A'AVAV
deadline
courses taken to meet the foreign
language or math sciences requirement;
the eight courses chosen as divisonal
electives in the new General College
curriculum; courses in the major; related
courses specifically required (and
designated by number) by the major
department or curriculum; courses taken
to validate credit for preceding courses;
summer courses.
Fifteen hours of letter grade credit are
required to qualify for entry on the Dean's
List.
78 Years Of Editorial Freedom
Chape! Hill, North Carolina, Friday, February 19, 1971
A.
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ladders, washing windows and replacing panes broken
during the winter. These workmen are retouching the trim
on one campus building. (Staff photo by Cliff Kolovson)
G
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audible, Marching Band of one
trombone and 69 kazoos provided
the spiritual impetus for the contest
of three quarters that featured
innumerable invisible shots by Nyle
I. He managed to hit the rim three
The Carolina Forum is sponsoring
Auden's appearance, which was secured
last summer.
Born in Birmingham, England in 1907,
Wystan Hugh Auden has been a U.S.
resident since 1929 and citizen since
1946. He was educated at Gresham's
School, Holt and Christ Church, Oxford.
Auden began writing poetry when he
was 1 5 and his first book of poems was
published when he was 20.
His two most recent volumes are "City
Without Walls," published early in 1970
and "A Certain World," which appeared
last summer.
His volumes of verse include 'The
Double Many," "For the Time Being,"
'The Age of Anxiety," "Nones" and
'The Shield of Achilles " which received
the National Book Award in 1956. In the
same year, he was elected professor of
poetry at Oxford University..
Auden's works are known throughout
the world. Most of his writing has been
translated into several foreign lanauages.
liFM
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mpk to die
times in several attempts at
around-the-back shots from the
mid-court stripe.
Visible, but unbelievable,
shooting and board-work by Judge
Mattocks, Ricky Lanier, Andy
J.
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W. H. Auden
.Female
eadeirs
alt coniireireinic
by Jessica Hanchar
Staff Writer
Sheila Tobias, a founder of the
National Organization of Women (NOW),
and U.S. Rep. Martha Griffiths (D.-Mich.)
will highlight the Spotlight on Women
Conference at UNC Saturday and
Sunday.
Miss Tobias will speak on social
obstacles to leadership for women on
Saturday at 10 a.m. in 08 Peabody Hall.
A leader in the fight for women's rights,
she is associate provost at Wesleyan
University in Connecticut, where she was
instrumental in making Wesleyan a coed
university.
Rep. Griffiths will address the group in
the afternoon on the implications of new
legislation for women's rights. A 16-year
veteran of the House, she successfully
introduced the Equal Rights for Women
Amendment to the Constitution during
the last session of Congress. The
amendment died in the Senate, where it
was opposed and amended by N.C.
Democratic Senator Sam Ervin. Rep.
Griffiths plans to push the amendment
again this year.
A panel of women faculty members
from Carolina and UNC-G will discuss
social barriers and the roles of women
Saturday afternoon.
The panel will be moderated by Dr.
Frances Byerly of the UNC School of
Social Work, Linda Robson of the UNC
Undergraduate Library, Adelaide Walters,
former member of the Chapel Hill Board
of Aldermen and Carol Stoneburner of
-tbe UNC-G x .Center- for -Continuing
Education for Women.
Jane Kay, administrator of Office
Employment for the Detroit Edison
Company, will speak Sunday. Her talk is
entitled "The Career Woman of the
Relocattie
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by Richard Helbig
StaffWriter
The Senate of Scott Residence College
has unanimously adopted a proposal
introduced by Governor Steve Brooks
Skakle and Captain 4-Q sufficed to
swamp the IUNCers led by Nyle I
(Nyle Frank of Political Science 41
and Carolina Union fame), former
Carolina roundballers Jim Delaney
and Dick Grubar and Ricky Mill,
formerly of the University of
Georgia basketball team and more"
recently of the Carolina Campus
Crusade for Christ.
The first of the three quarters
featured basketball played in the
normal fashion, while the first half
of the second quarter was played
with players not being allowed to
shoot from within the foul lane. No"
dribbling just passing was
permitted, while two full-court
games with 10 men per team was
played in the final stanza.
IUNC's invisible invincibility will
be tested further in the March
. IUNC-DMC Tennis Tournament
and the World Series of Seven
Sports.
During the interim, however, the
invisibleness of IUNC has been
challenged by Barrett Joyner, who,
in addition to being the executive
director of IUNC, serves as the
"Crown Prince of DMC."
"DMC is far more invisible than
IUNC' he asserts. "We're so
invisible, I don't even know who
our members are."
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Founded February 23, 1E33
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Sheila Tobias
70's-The Revolting Minority." A
part-time instructor at Wayne State
University School of Business, she is a
past president; of the International
Association of Personnel Women.
The Spotlight on Women Conference is
the 16th annual educational meeting of
the North Carolina Federation of
Business and Professional Women. Its
theme is "The Emerging Role of the
Woman of the 70's."
Approximately 200 organization
members are expected to attend the
two-day conference, representing leaders
- -of -women ia "business and the profusions
in the state.
Persons who wish to hear the speakers
but do not wish to attend the
organization's banquet Saturday can
register at a reduced fee.
TO)-
reject
cott ire
which declares "Scott College and its
residence units are unilaterally opposed
to any effort to relocate Project Ilinton
in Parker Dormitory."
Floor senators, who circulated the
petitions last week, obtained 242
signatures ratifying the statement.
The actions of Brooks and Scott
College have been prompted by the
recent attempts to move Project Ilinton,
a coed living experiment which is
currently located in Ilinton James
Dormitory.
Mrs. Diana Vincent, residence director
of Parker, supports the students' efforts
to preserve the present status of Parker as
a cohesive female dorm.
"No one wants to see anything
changed," Mrs. Vincent said. She
indicated it was what the Scott residents
wanted and said, "I'm behind the
students on this."
Fred Culbreth, assistant director of
Residence Life, was surprised to learn of
the concern in Scott College.
He said it was "extememly improbable
that Scott College would be used for
anything other than Scott College."
Culbreth felt a misunderstanding had
arisen at the Residence College
Federation's mini-retreat held last
December, when Dr. Mark Appeibaum of
the psychology department remarked
three dorms such as Parker, Teague and
Avery would be ideal for housing the
special residence groups such as Project
Hinton, the Honors students and the
foreign exchange program.
"Appeibaum used Scott College only
as an example," explained Culbreth, who
said the goal of the Residence Life office
was to "create as many different life
styles as possible" in the campus
residential units.
Interviews set
for Orientation
Interviews for men's coordinator and
other Orientation Commission positions
will be held in the Orientation
Commission office in suite D of the
Carolina Union this week and next.
Interviews will be held today from
3:30-5 p.m. and 9-1 1 p.m.; Wednesday
from 8-10 p.m.