,f"" I.. .I,, a V A Vol. 80, No. 27 Friday, October 1, 1971 FDu"d-?d February 23. 1S93 olmtion re attacks 1 V Three coeds share a orrison " lAAY ectures on sex by Ham Phillips Staff Writer Morrison Residence College will present three lectures on various j-uvts of human sexuality beginning Sunday with a lecture by Dr. Takey Crist on "Sex and the College Student." Crist, assistant professor of gynecology and obstetrics in the School of Medicine, will speak at K:30 p.m. in the main social lounge of Morrison. He will show slides, contraceptives, charts and a movie on child birth before fielding questions from the audience. "This is probably the most important academic event of the semester," said Joe Grier, governor of Morrison. He said the topic was chosen because of its TODAY: Ram ending by noon, cloudy and warmer this afternoon; highs in the high 70s. lows in the low 60s; 20 percent chance of precipitation tonight. by Al Thomas Staff Writer ATLANTIC BFACH Sprawling Huiricane Ginger battered the central North Carolina coast with "0 mile-an-hour winds Thursday, toppling telephone potes and sending flood waters raging into low-lying areas. An amusement park here was virtually destroyed by the high winds while coastal highways and at least two trailer parks were inundateu by flood tides. Winds here, reaching gusts of l)2 miles-an-hour just before daybreak, also ripped up shingles, twisted metal awnings and smashed business signs. Along the main street in Morehead City, a row of seven telephone poles were lying in the median by mid-morning. Electricity and telephone service was knocked out shortly after 1 a.m. with electrical wires dangling bv the sides of the roads. Cottages and motels along the beach front, however, were spared most ot the heavy damage. As of 4 p.m., there had been no confirmed reports of deaths or serious linger TA"TT! n-lU VV iilLiLJI Jl 1 r Op . , -" V teCcTjLa7 . , V - -- -; , ; - ' 4 f i ? 1 Staff photo hy Leslie Todd scarce umbrella... to importance and popularity with college students. Professor Sam Hill of the Department of Religion and Rev. Harmon Smith of Duke University Divinity School will discuss at 8 p.m. Monday '"Religious Aspects of Sex." This meeting is in the large social lounge also. Dr. Clark Vincent, termed by Grier as an "'outstanding" speaker, will speak at 8 p.m. Wednesday on ""Identity and Communication in Human Sexuality." Vincent is the chairman of the Behavioral Science Center at Bowman Grav Medical School at Wake Forest University. Grier said the seminar has been under consideration since this summer. The speakers were chosen to provide a broad basis of discussion, he said. Crist is familiar with local aspects of human sexuality. Smith and Hill with moral concerns and Vincent with the psychology of sexual patterns. A similar program initiated last year in Morrison received a favorable response. Since the present residents are 50 percent freshmen, there is little chance of overlapping audiences. Grier said. A seminar on extrasensory perception is tentatively scheduled for later this semester. hiffh 9 injuries caused by Ginger. The unusually large storm, with an eye extending 75 miles in diameter, stalled 35 miles off the coast here for more than four hours Thursday morning. Ginger finally moved inland around noon with the Fort Macon Coast Guard Station reporting lowest barometric pressure at 2l.0o inches. When the storm hesitated east of here, however, winds gradually decreased. Highest sustained winds here never reached over 7o miles-an-hour. although early morning gusts hit 2. Sec nil led stories, p. 2 After reaching land. Ginger began to increase in toward speed, moving north-northwest at 1 2 miles an hour. Hurricane warnings remained in effect from just north of Wilmington to Virginia Beach, Va. at - p.m. Thursday. Gale warnings were extended along the entire North Carolina coast northward to Rehohooth Beach. Del. Reports from along the coast here Thursday afternoon showed most damage had been caused bv the hieh tides. ' iii, " ' ft--- batters soplkoiiaoFe by Jessica Hanchar StJlf U'rUt r The Residence 0!kgt FederaUvr. (RCFt passed a resolution Wednesday night reaffirming its desire tor the permanent abolishment of University housing requirements for sophomores ar.J junior transfers. '"Students should have the basic right to determine for themselves where they will live," the resolution said. The required residency policy for sophomores and junior transfers was waived this year due to overenrollment. ""We want the policy in effect this year to be made permanent," said Steve i l .. A - v. V ? " ...while this pair loses their protection residence college For by Jim Minor Staff Writer A.J. DeKeyzer was elected governor Wednesday of the new residence college consisting of Alexander, Conner and Winston dormitories. John Pegg won the social lieutenant post and Walter Futch was elected academic lieutenant governor in Wednesday's elections. New senators from Alexander are Steve Auerbach. first floor; Richard Schneider, second floor; and Gary Leatherman. third floor. Connor senators are Ann Byrd. second floor; Leanne Miller, third floor; coast wind. Flood waters up to six feet deep reportedly covered almost a third ot nearby New Bern's downtown section. Three feet of water was reported in the lobby of the Holiday Inn. Reporting stations along the Outer Banks told of tides five and six feet above normal and substantial beach erosion. Wanch.se. N . C . . locate d approximately 35 miles north-northwest of Cape Hatteras. reported 8.5 inches of rain from Wednesday until Thursday afternoon. The Naional Weather Service predicted an additional four inches of ram would fall on the Outer Banks" area. The large storm also affected the weather in eastern and central North Carolina. Chapel Hill received a driving rain and wind gusts up to 3: miles-an-hour during the late afternoon. The 21 -day-old hurricane, the oldest in Weather Bureau history, was born in the Atlantic south of Bermuda. Alter stalling about 700 miles east ot Florida . the storm began moving toward North Carolina Monday with gale torce winds striking the coast Wednesday afternoon. Saur.-Jer. RCF .hairrr. "Fat e-r r.r.y g " e are -1:1! tror.U convinced we will continue to fight this pol.cv ." RCF. :n its reScl;:ti..n. countered the administration's belief -that re.idenc tn University-owned or approved hou:r.g i an essential educational requirement." The resolution added. "We argue that freshmen benefit from on-campus lite under normal Owcupancy conditions, we do not believe thai campus residency has so great an educational significance for sophomores and transfer students. " The statement continued bv citing the Tt" . . 1 is..: l '4 - 1 i & ft .S7jf photo bv Scott Sti wcrt dorms elect and June Brooks, fourth floor. A run-off election will be held today for the first floor senatorial post. Senators for Winston are Chip Black, first floor, and Stuart Gordon, second floor. Runoffs for the third and fourth floors will be held Monday. DeKeyzer, a senior business administration major from Wilson, has previously served as president ot Alexander. He was chairman of the steering committee before the residence college was formed. Voter turnout was: Alexander. 77 percent; Connor. 68 percent; and Winston, 81 percent. I I i : .. I ! if ! r , ': I I liYcU I i- -; 1 tr ' ; A-y)! ' hCT - . f- l!: 3 tj jj m j : I v - y ivJI , 1 --" fm t - , 5:. - -r i I - I "tT 1 Hunicane Ginger ravaged the N.C. coast Thursdj morning serves as evidence of a hurricane's destructive powers. (Staff with 90 m p h. winds. The fallen ESSO sign in Morehead Citv photo by Al Thomas! sung r h e c -f - 1 'T.; , ,i f , wTCc'tC J 1 , i . 4 . 1 r JLL ;ru, e Governor Robert S c viij Wednesday he thinks the Con--, -1 -J.:! s.i UniverMty Board ot I rttccs w n.-v-.r-. its position and back hi- plan tor m: "!e board to govern ! h-e Ntatc--'. :: -rtc: universities. Scent made his vj acnicn! -n Associated Press i AIM interview. "I think I dn reaon.jbl v: th. majority of the UNC Hoard of lr:.tees will reverse now to the concept ot ,i mgU governing board," Scott said. The governor said lie believ-,- the board will switch to ""a more tlexible position" as a result of recent negotiations with a trustees committee and from talks with i" !: :.'::.:! !r".-! ee . The full board holds its quarterly meeting just before tiie N.C. Genera! Assembly convenes ()ctiber 2f in a special session to discuss restructuring ot higher education . ''It's my feeling the trustees vv;!! lavor some single governing board coiuep' if they're going to cJum'f to .:vt;:ve." Sccitt told AP. f ew I ) e K e y j e r e x p r es s e d p ! e a a r e w ; turnout. "This shows the studen interested in the college and are vj get it underway." he said. "I he high turn-out at Win-ton v. partly to the tact that hou-e e' were also held, he sa;d. He announced appointments i posts. These will have to be apj before becoming official. 'I hey are tlliott. secretary. Carol Wils,.,n. tr. and Becky Stuntz and Ikbra -publicity co-chair w omen. A senate meeting will be held li i : as the run- f positions : said. DeKeyer said. -V started as soon as p"S-,ib;e. Scott o o 7 predicts I reverse I :.. :' oh he vs ill k ;!1 the .-'e t-- d v H-e :Sa;l -vhl..;-; I ttu-tee. h'oe t.:: .-, TP'' ' :'v tcMiudoie hn'h ehnr.n.itsr-;.' tl e c t .ted ! "oero- wou'J ,ct up -s ! , .If v ;genS with budttetatv mr 'i over t he I ' and progra st.it e-siipported universities. 1 . !i ot the unsvetsities would have a hoard ot trutees to govern its individual workings. Scott v. .. also asked in the AP interview whether Consolidated I'idees.oK Psid -ot V.p..-" C. I "d iv had been promised the job o! I'rcotJent ot the new higher education Kurd. "It vu.Hik! not be for me to d o." Sco-lt answered. -If w-i!d to- the re- p'-.nvHh I !o.ird s vh::u!. f !:e r urro. I !. d v t. -pc ( ! , ;h , f."t! w h o -. er : v er v.: i . Ch -pel IF I'M' Fa.i.'t' 4 ncers DeKever voJ r- die; I he no o ::o! i : aes o- the '::! on t :-:,vri;a! the ! h o 1 1 ! : t j s the He : lerue " ! ' i !'( I R ( ..t I hi :. J the I ar :h ( a: jr"

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view