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79 Years of Editorial Freedom
Chape! Hill, North Carolina, Friday, May 7, 1971
Voi. 79, No. 56
Founded February 23, 1S93
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Stadeeus
T!
teller Hall.
JU I 'X -
1
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1
to replace
A
Bad.
Peter Welles Hall, a UNC
graduate, has been named assistant
dean of men here. He will join the
staff on June 15. .
Hall will work with fraternities,
the orientation program and
publications, activities now handled
by Richard Baddour, who is leaving
the office to take another position
with the University.
Hall now teaches 10th and 12th
grade English at Sanford Central
High School.
A Morehead Scholar at UNC, he
received the Algernon Sydney
Sullivan Award at achievement day
ceremonies here Wednesday. The
award, presented by Chancellor J.
Carlyle Sitterson, is given to the
senior man and woman "who have
demonstrated an unselfish interest in
the welfare of their fellow man."
Hall was initiated into Phi Beta
Kappa last year. This spring, he was
tapped for the Order of the Golden
Fleece, UNC's highest men's
honorary fraternity. His honors also
include membership in the Order of
the Grail; Order of the Old Well;
and Phi Eta Sigma, national
freshman scholastic honorary.
A member of Chi Psi fraternity,
Hall served as president of the Inter
Fraternity Council this year and
vice president in 1969-70.'
He played freshman soccer, was
Vice president of the freshman class
and served as an orientation
counselor.
A native of Hartford," Conn.,
Hall, attended the Hbtchkiss
Preparatory School v in Lakeville,
Conn. He studied for one year at
the Westminster School in London,
England, on an English Speaking
Union Exchange Scholarship.
Hall is married to the former
Katherine Romans of Williamsburg,
Va. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas W. Hall of Shaftsbury, Vt.
TODAY: variable cloudiness and
windy through Saturday with a 40
per cent chance of thundershowers
rtoday and tonight; high today in
the low 80's; low tonight in the mid
40's.
Kappa Psi
Kappa Psi professional pharmacy
fraternity raised over $823 for Genesis
House Wednesday afternoon during
"All-Sports Day" at Eastgate Shopping
Center.
The fraternity sold autographed
Carolina footballs and basketballs, ran
!trasketball games between Carolina
Cougar team members and Chapel Hill
youths and solicited from shoppers
around the center.
Genesis House is a farm house just
north of Chapel Hill created to cure
heroin and other drug addicts.
.Con
United Press International
WASHINGTON As a last-gasp protest
march fizzled on the rain-dampened
streets of the capital, members of
Congress on both sides of the Vietnam
issue denounced this week's antiwar
demonstrators and criticized congressmen
who welcomed them to the Capitol.
Rep. Edith Green, D-Ore., received a
standing ovation of the House floor when
she noted her long-standing opposition to
the war and her support of last Saturday's
peaceful mass march in Washington, but
added: - "I will not go on record in
support of bands of crazies
roaming
The Connor girls invited the Alexander boys to a cookout
Thursday. The threat of rain forced the group to use a little
ingenuity, so the Jubilee canopy appeared from somewhere
For dorm course suggestions
CF
The Residence
College Federation
Wednesday night
meeting, approved a
department heads asking for suggestions on
could be set up in association with the residence college
program.
The letter, co-signed by Mrs. Jane Poller, assistant
director of Residence Life, and RCF Chairman Steve
Saunders, suggested a steering committee be set up to
initiate these courses and interested persons be
encouraged to participate.
Calling for a review of residence college courses,' the
letter was inTesponse to indications at
meeting that department heads were
teaching courses at dormitories.
Several department heads had indicated
over ffacoly fin
by Jim Minor
Staff Writer
The director of the undergraduate
library expressed discontent Thursday
with the Administrative Board of the
Library policy of not charging the faculty
fines on overdue books.
D.W. Schneider, library head, said a
policy of fining faculty members has been
used since last fall, but he was notified
Monday faculty fines would be
discontinued. The notification came
through a report by an ad hoc committee
on fines.
The report said on Oct. 2, 1963, the
Administrative Board of the Library
approved a lending code saying faculty
helps drug center
"This is the first big project of Genesis
House here in Chapel Hill," said Woody
Gardner, chairman of the fraternity
project.
Members of the Carolina basketball
and football teams were on hand to meet
shoppers and sign autographs.
Carolina Cougar members set up
basketball goals on their vans. Young
boys at the tenter played basketball with
the members for a quarter.
Dick DeVenzio, Duke basketball
player who has adopted Genesis House as
a special project of his own, was also on
around Washington this week. The right
to try to persuade is one thing. The right
to coerce is another."
While Rep. Bella Abzug, D-N.Y.,
defended herself against criticism by four
colleagues angered by Wednesday's
antiwar rally on the House steps, about
75 demonstrators abandoned pains to
march on the South Vietnamese embassy
and the District of Columbia jail. They
showed up at Sheridan Circle but soon
drifted away when they realized they
were outnumbered by police.
Companion demonstrations petered
out elsewhere across the country, except
for isolated incidents at Madison, Wis.,
and East Los Angeles, Calif., and a major
ev - - -
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peiMiiop oepariimeras
(RCF), in a
they had no interest in continuing the present methods
unless changes were instituted.
In other RCF business, Alpha Phi Omega (APO) and
Gamma Sigma Sigma (GSS) campus service organizations
presented trophies to the residence colleges placing first
in Campus Chest contests.
Praising the success of the carnival, and RCF's
contributions, an APO representative presented trophies
to James, Granville and Scott residence colleges.
Student Legislature Finance - Committee, RCF
members were told, refused for the second year in a row
to match funds with RCF for Morrison televisions.
The committee felt funds would be made available
next year from Student Stores profits.
letter to all
ways courses
the last- RCF
opposed to
K
to Mrs. Poller
members would not be subject to the
same regulations as students. This policy
was never changed by the board, the
report said.
The only penalty imposed should be
the suspension of library privileges until
the overdue books are returned, the
committee said. It cited the problem of
having no way to enforce fines.
"We have no mechanism to get the
faculty to pay fines," Schneider said.
"With students, we can enforce it by such
actions as withholding transcripts, but we
can only request faculty members to
return overdue books."
"This is unfair to students. It keeps
them from getting books they need for
classes," he said. "Many of these books
hand at the shopping center.
"We had just about full cooperation
from the fraternity house on this
project," commented Mike People;,
member of the fraternity.
Kappa Psi will set up booths in the
School of Pharmacy next week for
donations to Genesis House.
The fraternity also plans to sponsor
other projects for Genesis House in the
fall.
Contributions to Genesis House may
be sent to Genesis House, Box 2226,
Chapel Hill.
confrontation between 4,000
demonstrators and 1,000 policemen at
the federal office building in Boston.
A quiet, three-hour standoff in Boston
abruptly ended shortly after noon when
police swept about 1,000 of the
demonstrators away from the front of the
building, charging with fists and clubs.
More than 100 persons were arrested, and
several protesters were bloodied.
About 50 students ended a two-day
sit-in on the campus of Kent State
University in Ohio that forced officials to'
close a classroom-office building housing
the ROTC. At College Park, Md.,
National Guardsmen set up a command
post near the University Wednesday night
and, after it was finally put up, the cookout went on as
scheduled. (Staff photo by Cliff Kolovson)
set
up
icy
po
are probably sitting on a professor's
shelf."
"It's funny that the ones who can
afford the fines are the ones who do not
have to pay them," Schneider said. 'The
faculty has equal access to all materials in
the undergraduate library. Along with
this right should go the responsibility of
returning books on time."
"I know of no other school that
charges their faculty fines," Miss Francis
H. Hall, chairman of the committee, said
Thursday. 'There is no way other than
taking court action to collect them."-
The report recommended a policy
patterned after the one followed by
Wilson Library, but adopted to a
different time schedule. Wilson Library
allows faculty to keep books up to six
months without renewal.
The present policy in the
undergraduate library calls for a 25 cents
daily fine on books.
"I would like to begin some sort of
variation policy, such as charging 15 cents
if the fine is paid at the desk and 25 cents
if the person has to be billed," Schneider
said. "But we have no definite plans at
the moment."
He said approximately $10,000 was
collected by the undergraduate library
last year. This money was budgeted back
to the library by the state.
"We are not trying to make money by
collecting fines," he said. 'The only aim
is to get the books back when they are
due."
to disperse 1,000 students blocking U.S.
Route 1.
The People's Coalition for Peace and
Justice and Chicago Seven defendant
Rennie Davis, leader of the May Day
Tribe, held a news conference to
announce "suspension" of antiwar
activities in Washington after 17 days of
demonstrations.
The "spring offensive" began with an
open-air " encampment of Vietnam
"Veterans against War whose petition to
Congress seemed to leave a number of
legislators respectful if not impressed.
But legislators' speeches Thursday
suggested that that spirit was sharply
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by Jessica Hanchar
Staff Writer
The School of Public Health Student
Union sent a letter to Chancellor J.
Carlyle Sitterson Wednesday asking that
he "immediately" release the entire
contents of a report on the Student
Health Services sent to him April 30.
The study was prepared by three
professional health consultants who
visited the campus in March to examine
Student Health Services and its functions.
The letter said in part, This
n
Saunders proposed a resolution be sent to the
Chancellor requesting the reinstatement of these funds
for the residence colleges.
RCF discussed the projected rezoning of commuter
parking spaces in front of Scott College to permit
residents to park there. Proposals will by-pass the Traffic
and Safety Committee and go directly to the Chancellor.
Winston Dormitory announced it will sell their
possessions bought from the dorm's social fees. These
items include refrigerators, color TVs, washers arid
driers, and various house utensils such as coffee urns and
punch bowls.
Those living units interested in purchasing these items
should contact the Winston president Bev Tedder.
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There aren't many places to sunbathe out on South Campus, but this pair didn't
seem to mind being out where everyone could see them. Right by the road, bicycles
parked nearby-it was a nice day to catch some rays. (Staff photo by Cliff Kolovson)
Mayday pirotiesli
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, dispelled when militant activists started
Monday to try to shut down the
government.
Sen. John V. Tunney, a liberal
Democrat from California, said the
militants' behavior on Washington streets
had actually hurt the peace effort.
"They have alienated a great many
people who have long been working for
peace," Tunney told the Women's
National Democratic Club. "Their actions
have been an affront to many who have
, worked to end the war."
On the House floor, Keps. Joe D.
Waggonner Jr., D-La.; Dan Kuykendall,
R-Tenn.; Robert McCIory, R-IIL, and
T
HI
assessment of our health services deserves
full consideration and discussion by the
entire student body while it is still in
session this semester."
Dr. Claiborne Jones, assistant to the
Chancellor, said Sitterson had not had
time to study the report as of Wednesday
and therefore could not relase the report.
The Chancellor could not be reached
for comment.
The letter went on to point out some
conclusions the School of Public Health
Student Union believes the report made.
These include:
UNC students are not getting their
money's worth in health services for the
health fees they pay;
Students should participate in setting
the policies of the health services as well
as choosing the new director;
If a new infirmary is necessary,
students should not be assessed for the
fees to build it, but an assessment of
student health needs does not
substantiate the need for a new building;
And, a new infirmary director should
not be appointed until the extent of
student health needs are ascertained and a
philosophy consistent with meeting these
needs is developed by students and other
health professionals.
. The letter said, "We feel that
publishing an abstract of the report in
The Daily Tar Heel will serve to educate
the student body as to the types of health
services they need and deserve.
. "We would like the student body to
know that if they do not read the text, or
an abstract prepared by students, of the
consultants report in The Daily Tar Heel
before Thursday, May 13, it is because
you have failed to release the report on
time for publication."
1
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John E. Hunt, R-NJ., sharply criticized
Mrs. Abzug and three other antiwar
congressmen who welcomed and
addressed 1,500 protesters who thronged
the Capitol grounds Wednesday. Nearly
1,200 of the demonstrators were arrested
on charges of unlawful assembly.
Sen. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., who
slugged a policeman in the chest during
arrests at the Wednesday rally, accused
Washington police of a
encroachment of civil rights .
"deliberate
. . that can
lead us down the road to a police state."
He spoke of Police Chief Jerry V.
Wilson's decision to make mass "sweep
arrests" and suspending normal f! 2d
arrest procedures.
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