The Dal?- Tar Hzl
6 V,
! 1
i
jj tw
Wednesday, 5. 1971
0
S
Dales
goal-
solve
JH
smaent jee crisis,
undine hassle
grad
by Jessica Hanchar
Staff Writer
Don Dale, nominated Monday by
Student Body President Joe Stallings to
serve as treasurer of the student body,
says his first main projects are finding a
workable solution to the student fee crisis
and settling the matter of graduate
student funding.
"We are making progress under the
University Trust Fund Office requisition
system," he said, "at least as far as
-
!
A
v. - !
;
K-' ----- I : . 4 - --
; - , ; V r ; '
;- ' v - ;
V
1 I
Don Dale
reaching better working mechanics.
"The money is in the trust fund, so we
might as well do the best we can with the
system."
Dale will handle over S250,000 per
year as treasurer. His duties include
writing checks to pay bills of Student
Government, making requisitions from
the University Trust Fund Office - for
organizations funded by Student
Legislature, making recommendations on
financial bills to Student Legislature (SL),
and helping to draw the budget for the
SL Finance Committee next year.
He will also function in an advisory
capacity for new financial policies or
matters to student organizations.
In addition to performing as a
financial advisor to Stallings, Dale is
currently treasurer of Morehead
Residence College and treasurer of the
resign these posts upon confirmation of
his appointment. .
Dale, a junior business administration
major from Wilson, has been working
with current treasurer Guil Waddell to
"learn the mechanics and procedures of
the job." :
Dale will succeed Waddell as treasurer
provided his appointment is approved by
SL Ways and Means Committee and by a
two-thirds vote of SL at its meeting
Thursday night.
"Guil's been a good treasurer for two
years," he said, "and he will be hard to
follow, but he is teaching me everything
he knows about the job.
"This is a big job, but I plan to do the
best I can," he commented.
by Evans Witt
Staff Writer
The Consultative Forum set up formal
procedures for operation of the group
and for the calling of meetings in their
regular spring meeting Tuesday
afternoon.
In other action -by the 60-member
group, a statement by the Forum to the
Warren Commission studying higher
education in North Carolina was
approved.
"Instead of taking up, say, student aid
or some other big issue, we focused
attention on our housekeeping duties,"
said J.R. Gaskin, chairman of the Forum
and director of institutional research for
the University.
The Consultative Forum is an advisory
body appointed by the Chancellor to
advise him and the general administration
of the Chapel Hill campus on major
issues.
The group formalized membership in
the Forum at 15 members of the student
body, 15 members of the Board of
House approves
student trustees
United Press International
RALEIGH-The N.C. House Tuesday
passed a Senate bill adding the student
government president of each campus of
the University of North Carolina on the
Board of Trustees of the Consolidated
University.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. L.P.
McLendon, D-Guilford, passed by a voice
vote.
It provides that the student
government presidents of UNC campuses
in Raleigh, Chapel Hill, Asheville,
Wilmington, Charlotte and Greensboro be
added to the Board of Trustees as
ex-officio voting members.
L"
Z3
nnn n n-
0 II n fKirh c; rirTrM !t
at . .
USED ALBUMS
$1.50-$2.50
Huge Selections
INGS 515
405 W. Franklin St.
Rare Old
Prints and. AAaps
AAafce
Wonderful
Gifts
The Old Book Corner
137 A ..East Rosemary Street
Opposite Town Parking Lots
Chapel Hill
Crossword Puzzle
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
1
5
8
12
13
14
15
17
19
20
21
23
24
26
28
31
32
33
34
36
38
39
41
43
45
48
50
51
52
54
55
56
57
ACROSS
Flower
Remuneration
College society
(colloq.)
Part of
stove
Devoured
Boundary
Man's name
Rocks
Slumber
Expels
Blackbird
Unadulterated
Flying
mammal
More
rational
Stitch
King of
Bashan
Negative
Note of scale -Spider's
trap
Commemorative
disk
River in
Scotland
War god
Affection
Land
measure (pi.)
Classifies
Least
concealed
Retreat
Employed
Be in debt
Paradise
Spreads for ....
drying "
Still
Sow
DOWN
3
4
5
6
7
Choose
Go in
Equality
Near
Affirmative
8 Bread
ingredient
9 Washes
lightly
10 Dillseed
11 Girl's
nickname
16 Epic poetry
18 Journey
22 Diminishes
23 Part of
flower
24 Nod
25 Mature
27 Bow
29 Before
30 Tiny
35 Prohibited
SlOlLr S
A RA JT
P A 5 SlE
"j T Ag
Im e p
T E pDR;
A! M Q S E
TH O P
sjp e Tp
-1 t0m
a Hoe.
BApfeH
E ,.JE T 1 A
setS ep
E j H A rTe"
P ElSL. S R
AGpS E.A
t -IE T AlH
JL, E At
P I P p eTp
Ilftil
M SI, jE UlM
WATERBEDS
Why Pay More?
Take One With You
This Summer-Only $33.98
967-5104
36
37
38
40
42
Army .
meal
Be ".v
defeated
Mock
Musical
instruments
Ballots
43 Border
on
44 Crate .
46 Woody
plant
47 Dispatch
49 Plaything
50 Soak
53 Pronoun -
The Daily Tar Heel is published by the
University of North Carolina Student
Publications Board, daily except Sunday,
examination periods, vacations and
cummer periods.
Offices are at the Student Union
building. Univ. of North -Carolina,
Chapel Hill. N. C. 27S14. Telephone
News,
Sports-9 3 3-1011;
Circulation,
numbers
9 33-4012 : Business,
Advertising 933-1163.
Subscription rates:
$ 5 .0 0 per semester.
Second class postage paid at U. S.
Office in Chapel H ill, N.C.
$10.00 per year;
Post
1 Tiers
2 Cylindrical
11 2 3 4 55$ 5 6 7 8 9 10 H
12 " &13 : 8U ' I
I I sssa fexa
15 16 $3 18
P 22L m 26 27 28
43 44 47
48 ' ! 49 S&S 50
7T 52 53 54
55" 56 57
5
The Student Legislature shall have
powers to determine . the Student
Activities fee and to appropriate ail
revenue derived from the Student
Activities fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student
-Constitution). The budgetary
approDriation for the 1970-71 academic
year is $28,292.50 for undergraduates
and $4,647.50 for graduates as the
subscription rate for the student body
($ 1 .84 per student based on fall semester
enrollment figures).
The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to
regulate the typographical tone of all
advertisements and to revise or turn
away copy it consider objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not consider
adjustments or payments for any
advertisement involving major
typographical errors or erroneous
insertion unless notice is given to the
Business Manager within (1) one day
after the advertisement appears, or
within one day of the receiving of tear
sheets, of subscription of the paper. The
Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect insertion of
an advertisement scheduled to run
several times. Notices for such correction
must be given before the next insertion.
Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
'' sa uRE I AM I'LL PK03A3Ltf GET SICK ... I I CAN 5 THE HEAPL1NE5 NOW, . S V . .
cVeONl A5CU00L SHOULD HAVE BROUGHT SOME RVAf?-0LP 6lKL HUACK5 ' oi P
I WU CLA55 6a;K5j THAT'5 DJHAT I fHOULP HAVE OWE. $H0UTEp" k V S I
i f ' c. . c '
;tm.iMt..if;. k '&fiS.
voir m 11 rNVPcT "1 : N I BILC COUUbNEfI I 'E'STHEONW BLOKE 1
( i ?rk Sfp assV; I I'VE JUST S A COUPLE -y- A CIGARETTE AN 1
VACTJPLE O FAg Nun OUTJ . . D0 '
-p . r .y- -Z
Trustees and Alumni, 15 from the faculty
and 15 from administrative and
non-academic personnel
Four ex-officio members of the Forum
were established: the Chancellor, the
chairman of the faculty, the president of
the student body and the president of the
Graduate and Professional Student
Federation.
A steering committee was set up by
the group to consist of two members
from each of the five constituent groups
which make up the forum.
The student members of the group wC2
be chosen by the president of the Student
Body and the president of the GPSF.
Two regular meetings, one in each
semester, will be held by the group in
each academic year.
After procedure for regular meetings
was established, ..methods for calling
special meetings were set up.
A special meeting of the Forum can be
called by a majority of the steering
coranitte or on petition of a majority of
the members of sr.y ore of the five
constituent poups.
The statement o the Warren
Commission by the Forum was drawn up
by Gaskin and a small drafting
committee.
The statement did not endorse any
plan for the direction of higher education
in North Carolina but did caU for the
preservation of the excellence of the
University. e
Of attorney-general nominee
IT- (r 0 n n n
Liiliiiii M1ULMH, SILUJ1VU1C;MU.0, J1S) "tEAV&sii
by Jessica Hanchar
Staff Writer
t
L
Mike Medford
, Mike Medford, nominated for student
attorney-general by President Joe
Stallings Monday; plans to find better
ways to inform students about the honor
system and its violations.
"Forty per cent of the offenses
committed could have been eliminated by
knowledge of the systems, he said. .
As coordinator of suspected violation
cases reported to the attorney-general's
office, Medford will first decide if a
report constitutes an honor code, campus
code or residence hall violation and which
court has jurisdiction over the case.
Once a case comes to court, he assigns
an investigator and, if a student desires, a -defense
counsel.
Medford served as investigator and
defense counsel in the attorney-general's
office last year. This year he has been
assistant attorney-general for honor
court.
Medford will coordinate the activities
of all the investigators and defense
counsels who prepare the cases.
"We don'T actively seek out cases of
violations, he said, "but we prosecute
those that are turned in to our office.
Violations such as firecrackers in the
dorms, stealing from Student Stores,
cheating, plagiarizing and drug : and
visitation violations have been reported to
the attorney general's office. , .
The attorney -general serves as advisor
to Student Government - and to any
student body member on judicial matters.
"We can advise students who are
arrested for any vioiation on his legal
relationship to the University and how
the arrest will affect that aspect," he
remarked.
Medford will probably be working
with the Student Government lawyer on
matters that affect individual or groups of
students such as drug and visitation
policies.
A sophomore political science major
from Canton, Medford will succeed John
McDowell as student attorney-general
provided he is approved by Student
Legislature (SL) Ways and Means
Committee" and a two-thirds vote of SL.
$200
1971 T-BIRDS
$200
1
4
I
!
I 1
nn
RENTAL CARS
TO STUDENTS & FACULTY
S
'i O
V
O
o
-
o
o
o
e
Q
i
!
je
t
o
; SSJljRD MtlMO Of rant UiOng CmporaBpt I H
nsvoVl izzX 2 vtr: err ?"'
1. V. 1 1 .3 1 -i v
.r;v-.J rrif;'.
" DOOR LANDAU - r- r- -INCLUDES
AT NO EXTRA COST
- 429 CIO V 8 CYL ENGINE
SELECT-SHIFT CRUISE-O-MATIC
"POKER STEERING
P0MER FRONT DISC BRAKES
WHITE VINYL ROOF
SEQUENTIAL REAR TURN SIGNAL
REMOTE CONTROL MIRROR
ELECTRIC CLOCK
FRONT CORNERING LIGHTS
ALTO PARKING BRAKE RELEASE
WHITE M
BROUGHAM CLOTH AND VINYL TRIM
lit 225R15 MIChELIN STEEL-BLTD
HADIAL PLY KSW TIRES
TURNPIKE CONVENIENCE GROUP
CONVENIENCE CHECK GROUP
POWER 5EAT-6 WAY FULL WIDTH
AIR C0NDAUT0 TEMP CONTROL
AMFM STEREO RADIO
POWER ANTENNA
EXTERIOR APPEARANCE GROUP
PROTECTION GROUP
TINTE0 GLASS-COMPLETE
POWER SIDE WINDOWS
POWER TRUNK LID RELEASE
TOTAL OPTIONS
5399. 00 '4182: 38
NC;
NC:
NCi
nc;
NCl
NC
NC!
NCi
- NCi
NC
162
NC
227
10i
104
514
150
31
61
26
50
127
14100
1567100
00
NCi
NCi
NCi
NC;
NC;
NCi
NC i
NCi
NCi
NCi
128; 18
NCj
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
179
79
82
406
118
24
48
20
39
100 51
11:07
1239176
61
92
27
66
65
49
26
59
55
o
o
o
e
o
o
We Also Have Rentals
Pintos, Mavericks, Torinos,
Mustangs, Galaxies, LTDfs
i
-OTAL TOM VtNKU
8 GALS GAS
FDAF
358.40
;
I
139; 00
7104100
20
H
139100
5561 i 14
2 64
ioo
O
o
o
EXAMPLE:
List Price ......
Factory Invoice . . .
Discount
. .$7,104.00
...5,583.78
; . .200.00
rorM. m wnacu
5583
PRICE
78
CROWELL LITTLE MOTOR CO 1 25F217
100 W FRANKLIN ST
CHAPEL HILL NC 27514
11 j 16 70
urn
5HTOaTMOI1MflAfvMI '
iHTMOUCM
25L2891
C32
CD B7
$5,3p3o7o
1Y84NH4311 jWIXCM ASSEMBLY FORD MOTOR CREDIT 000001 O
ur BINB COTT
Special Financing Through A
National Institute For Graduating Students
Must Bring This Ad With Identification
1971 Pinto-$4 Day 81 $.04 A Mile
Weekly And Monthly Rates
(But Must Bring This Ad)
mil
n n
u
1 IP
i
r3 " ( I
J -kIjuuuJ
1 1
Open Until 9:00 P.M., Monday-Friday; 6:00 P.M. Saturday
Durham 544-3711
Dir. No. 00885 Chapal Hill 42-3143