Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 7, 1971, edition 1 / Page 2
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Wednesday, April 7, 197 1 rr icaitons ojjei PaMMa plains n 0 " - o n 0 mon siciiiivii'iLiies oivs Program The Daily Tar Heel Appl U for Fe by Marc Shapiro Staff Writer Chuck Patrizia was recently selected as the new president of the Carolina Union Activities Board, and will succeed current president Richie Leonard in May. Patrizia, a junior from Winston-Salem, is a double major in political science and psychology. As president of the Union Activities Board, Patrizia will coordinate the programming of 10 different committees whose chairmen make up the Activities Board. The Board chooses the concerts and major productions to be presented each year. Each committee is responsible for their own field. According to Patrizia, he or any other committee chairman can challenge another chairman's program if he does not feel it adequate. The aim of each committee, said Patrizia, is to present a balanced program to benefit as much of the student body as possible. For example, rock music entertainment should not predominate in the Coffeehouse to the exclusion of other types of music, such as blue-grass or classical. The Current Affairs - Committee, chaired this year by Patrizia, included a film series of recent documentaries, a penal reform symposium, discussions with faculty, encounter groups and an upcoming program entitled "Alternate Forms of Community Living" scheduled for April 21-22. Among the speakers for the community living program are people from local communes and representatives from Twin Oaks in Virginia, a community based on the experiment described in "Walden Two." Included in Patrizia's long range plans for the Union is the expansion of student participation in the Coffeehouse, creation of a new committee labeled Special Projects, and more important to Patrizia, greater cooperation with other student groups such as residence colleges. Patrizia feels the Activities Board is a body of skilled people whose knowledge can benefit other student groups. Should the International Student Center want to present a film series, the Chairman of the Union Films Committee should be able to offer immeasurable aid, Patrizia said. According to Patrizia, subgroups could more easily accomodate 18,000 students in the programs and greater balance would be achieved. Patrizia cites the. recent debate of whether or not to limit Jubilee to UNC students and their dates as an example of the way the Activities Board operates. Those favoring a more open weekend said that security precautions limiting the activities demanded would harm the atmosphere of . the weekend andsuggested that many students enjoyed entertaining guests for Jubilee. Proponents of the limited weekend said more students preferred the smaller crowd limitation would provide. They also felt, was the fact UNC students had paid for the weekend through their student fees and it was felt they should be entitled to its benefits. , v Chuck Patrizia UNC delegates aid passage of 3 bills in Raleigh by Jim Minor Staff Writer UNC delegates to the State Student Legislature (SSL) of North Carolina introduced two bills and co-sponsored another at the legislature's sessions March 31 -April 3 in Raleigh. All three bills were passed by the legislature, and sent to the N.C. General Assembly. The legislature is an assembly of representatives of public and private state schools. UNC was represented by 13 voting delegates in the House and two -delegates in the Senate. Schools participating in the activities could submit bills to the legislature. The bills passed were sent to the General assembly for observation. -' A proposal to ratify the 19th and 26th amendments to the Constitution was made by UNC's Lee Hood Capps and David Gephart. The 19th amendment concerns women's suffrage. The 26th gives 1 8-year-olds the right to vote. Bob Smith and Robert Grady of UNC introduced a bill providing for the education . of North Carolinians in the area of international trade. UNC co-sponsored a proposal with East Carolina University, N.C. State and Duke" asking the state to buy Bald Head Island. The legislature passed a Wake Forest bill calling for an act to liberalize the laws concerning the use of marijuana as it appears in the general statutes of N.C. The bill stressed a contrast between the dealer and the user. Also included was a provision for drug counseling centers across the state. East Carolina proposed the creation of a consumer credit protection act. The bill was passed. s A state-supported program of funding for small business investment companies proposed by Greensboro College was passed. . A bill providing for state scholarship funding for both private and public schools was passed. However, a proposal for direct state aid to private schools was the only bill defeated by the legislature. Five UNC students were elected 1971-72 legislative officers. They are Janis Bickett, permanent secretary; Susan Case, secretary of the House; Annis Arthur, leading clerk; John Davidson, sergeant at arms; Jim Flynt, parliamentarian. Lacy Presnell of UNC was voted Best Debater in the House. Use DT i i a i j s iio3JEn. Oar-UsftmisiajB'Q anm 0) iufl) lira iliC- Luncheon Special '11:30 A.M. -2:30 P.M. BRAISED BEEF RIBS w2 Vegs. & Rolls . $.97 fnflP if fW y flifini extraordinary tfpZs i w w zy u y x -3 u u u u a o Wednesday April 7 8:15 Page Auditorium, Duke University Tickets on sale now Page Box Office $2.00 Reserved $1.50 General Admission Phone: 684-4059 Mail Orders: Box KM, Duke Station Page Box Office Durham, N.C. 27706 i LEATHER BOOTS WITH A CAPITAL "L" 4 : 4 WUIAM WYIER RAY STARK li 4 Academy Award Winner il iCTKESS f t Barbra 01lUM3iAPCHlfKSSSTfiPSCXXX:TiCiS BARBRA STREISAND-d!AR SHARIF V v : r " TECHNICOLOR PAMVSSiON Si g V N " v. , SHOW'S 2: 30-5: 05-8: 00 NOW SHOWING 1 ii v.V--. . .-' T i x) The story cf a young mn wn f m r n i a f .. . .. Century Fo Preients L. , COLOR cntnswavuD. rlOYJ SHQttttiG 3-5-7- l j Z II For the past two years Milton's L has quietly been designing and gathering a collection of boots and slip-ons that are so. exciting words won't describe them. These include lots of our famous Semo Remo boots ours alone in the entire Southeast. See what makes Tres Grande Cupboard patrons come from near and afar for our total inimitable look. Join Milton's Exclusive Boot Parade from $20.00 and higher! Among the activities of the meetings was a reception at the Governor's Mansion at which members of the legislature met state leaders. Many of these, including Governor Bob Scott and Attorney General Robert Morgan, are ex-members of the student legislature. The North Carolina Fellows Program, formerly the Richardson Fellows, is now sending applications for summer internship programs to University freshman students. Headed by Dr. James R. Leutze, director, and Mrs. Bonnie Baia, assistant director, the program searches for talented students who possess intelligence, creativity, high academic achievement and outstanding leadership potential. From the applications, which have a May 1 deadline, semi-finalists will be chosen over the rummer. The final competition and selection will result with 1 5 finalists announced in October. The program has previously offered opportunities to potential leadership students in enabling them to secure summer internships with established leaders in many fields. Past fellows have worked with Duke. University President Terry Sanford, Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind), Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C), and N.C. Democratic Congressman Richardson Preyer. Other students have worked with governmental, business, or educational organizations such as the Smithsonian Institution, the African Studies Institute of Legon and Ghana, and the Housing and Urban Development in Washington, D.C. The program conducts seminars with leaders on the national and state scene such as state Sen. Hargrove "Skipper" Bowles (D-Guilford), Sen. Ervin, and Watts Hill, Jr., a member of the N.C. Board of Higher education, along with seminars on the nature of leadership, public problems and existing institutions. Fellows may also undertake independent study projects one fellow spent a summer in Europe investigating the causes of student unrest while earning course credits at the same time. The North Carolina Fellows Program is sponsored by the North Carolina Leadership Institute vhieh believes creative leadership in public and private affairs can be improved by encouraging undergraduates to consider the major problems of our society and the best way of solving these problems." All interested freshmen are urged to submit their applications before May 1. Those who have not received their forms in the mail may pick up a copy at the Fellows office, 103 Phillips Annex. olzheeitsye talk slated Dr. ' Donald Fanger of Harvard University will discuss "Solzhenitsyn as a Figure in World Literature" at 4 p.m. Thursday, April S, in the Dey Hall Faculty Lounge. Fanger, professor of "Slavic and comparative literature, is author of. "Dostoevsky and Romantic Realism," a study of Dostoevsky in relation to Balzac, Dickens and Gogol. He has written on the problem of the city in modern Russia and west European literature. His lecture is sponsored by the Curriculum of Comparative Literature and the Slavic Language Department at UNQ and the Duke-UNC Cooperative Program in Russian and East European Studies. r ' J 3r "" "" " if n ii in win mm i. Mill' ii rCcn:ct!::ng cbs f rem thz director cf b3ACH a. n ,; - i as I JAY ) i 1 1 Books for the new season poetry and song books to help you tune up for the rising of the sap; titles to help one patch up house and garden; travel books for lands both near and far. Plus new Spring titles all over the shop! Come for a Springy browse! -The Intimate j,f 'Bookshop. Chapel Hill Open evenings 'til 10 IZ3 SOUND VALUES AT BURGNER'S NOW! A Complete Line Of Stereo Component And Stereo Equipment At Burgner Music. All Quality Equipment At Lowest Possible Prices. 8 Tracks For Your Car Too. Our Sound Values Have To Be Heard, So Come And See .And Hear Us. SPECIAL PURCHASE A Complete .Stereo System Featuring: 100 Watt Amp With AM-FM-FM STereo Air Suspension Speaker System BSR-Mini Changer WDust Cover Roll About Cart Stereo Headphones $239.95 Value $169.95 Plus Free Album & 8 Track Tape SUPPLY LIMITED-HURRY CAR TAPE PLAYERS From $49.95 Installation Available 8 TRACK TAPES Original Artists $3.99 We Trade, Too! Handyman Special Used Guitars-Some Damaged But All Repairable. Come And Take Your Pick. $5.00 To $50.00 The Above At Our Franklin St. Store Only Burgner Music 405. W. Franklin St. 929-3540
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 7, 1971, edition 1
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