rKV vfV In I X Vol. 80, No. 38 Thursday. October 14. 1971 Founded February 23, 1S93 on Bi .Ricliards il i A. I f i ! i fl f. " J i : - :?H,;- . a ' I f I " - f : n J i " ' . . - .-' i s''' ' - i k - 7' -",,, -;.r.,v.:: ..- A-.. i i i Tlie Association of Women Students is beginning another push to organize women on campus. Delta Delta Delta's Jill Johnston (I.), AWS secretary Susan Case (m.) and Kate Whittington (r.), from Spencer Dormitory, paint the cubicle in The Pit to help their cause. (Staff photo by Leslie Todd) AW discusses upcomin by Karen Pusey Staff Writer The Association of Women Students (AWS) evaluated Women's Week and discussed annual projects and plans for continuing them at its weekly meeting this week. AWS Chairman Cathy Cauthorne said she thought Women's Week was good and that most people would like similar activities continued. "But we're about out of funds." she said, "and the rest of our money goes to the Bella Abzug speech in November. "AWS is taking a new direction this year. We're trying to see what appeals to women on campus. b:t we are in a vicious circle. "We have to spend more.-, to make people aware of us," Mis Cauthorne added, "but after they a;e, we don't have any more money to spend." Miss Cauthorne said the AWS day-care center committee plans numerous activities and needs help for the project. 3lan She asked for volunteers for the Community School for Children Under Six. The committee is also trying to get toys and other equipment for the center. AWS also plans to survey dormitories in the next two weeks to determine the degree of interest in a women's defense program and what women expect from AWS. In addition to the survey, Miss Cauthorne hopes to issue a newsletter at the end of the month on past and future AWS activities. Miss Cauthorne said a committee on the research and status of women will incorporate its literature on women with the files of June Allcott in the Testing and Guidance Center so women may have a place to find out about jobs and graduate schools. Miss Cauthorne said although Women's Week events did not have much attendance, members noticed the ideas generated by the week's activities being picked up at the residence college level. James Residence College is considering its own defense program, she said. A 71 n IPIMMO death .LPooley by Howie Carr Aiw.'jni Sf- rr Fd,: r i'nc y-.jd f;-,-:: v .h b.i: i --'; a.vUveJ a former fenbiii rh- of 'using" the death o: Bill Arnold during an crnotion-vharged press ..-nt-.-rer..:-;-Wednesday attended by the I NC football team and coaching staff. 'Who are you to use the death of Bill Arnold to further our own aim5-." Dooley asked Bili RLhardson. chairman of the Committee f Concerned Athlete. "Who set you up to be s:::ebod ,-" Arnold, a sophomore guard in m Staten Island. N.V.. died S.pt. 21 after suffering a heat stroke dunr.- pra.tue Sept. 6. The press conference, which began at 4 p.m. in the Student Cnion. had been For separation . i t . . . .' uieu r v t r; e vcmmuiee ci whedaled Concerned Athletes "to reiterate the goah cf this group" and to "publicly request the opportunity to speak before the team, so as to present our motives and objectives clearly." The committee had raised numerous questions about the Faculty Council's Committee on Athletics' report on the death of Arnold in a Sunday press conference, prompting state medical examiner Dr. Page Hudson to call for a new investigation. Richardson, former All-ACC linebacker, was the only member of the committee present. No other members attended because the press conference was not scheduled as an open meeting. About five minutes before the press conference heean, the entire team and coaching staff, dressed m full practice gear, walked into the upstairs meeting room. Richardson read the croup's statement and then commented on Dcvlev 's statement Tuesday that former team members RichVrd Garrett. Don McCaulev and Flip Ray were supporting him. "We ask if they've read our report." Richardson said. "They're honest people, and we don't feel that they could den our accusations and face themselves." At this point, Dooley. sitting m the front row . interrupted. team 1 have talved to .eru: the team 1 t .o'd them about . the said tf.es ere cor.ee football tem at l'C." A s the d;c-.:sio: . a e coal o R c o r. 1 1 n u ed . sad. "Wf i-e not out to destros the I NC lA-al! tear; W c are not after Coah Doo!e 's iob "You vo-ldn't get it anwa. B:'.!.' Doole answered, provoking mar.v plavers to cheers and applause Ar.or. the plavers and co.Khe who "You made statements that our current team feels the way you do on a number of points." Dooley said. "The team speaks for itself." Richardson answered. "1 have never said that I represent the I'NC football to hear OTad case by Woody Dovter Staff Writer A series oi resolutions hy the Ciruduate Professional Student Federjtion (GPSF). including one proposing a referendum on establishing a separate graduate student government, will come up before Student Legislature (SL) tonight. The resolution specifies Nov. 14 as the latest date for the referendum. Another resolution concerns provisions of the elections law the GPSF considers unfair. Jim Becker, presiding officer of the GPSF Senate, said if the resolutions are delayed or defeated by SL, "petitions will be started to achieve approximately the same effects." "I don't feel there is much opposition to establishing a separate graduate student government among the average undergraduate," Becker said. "The GPSF has a constitution which has been operating remarkably well since last February and I see no reason why we shouldn't be independent." Becker said the GPSF constitution was approved by approximately 05-; (,f all voting graduate students in a referendum last January 15. In other action, the SI will tonider a bill by Rep. Charles Gilliam to establish the procedure for impeachment of Student Government officials. "There has never been a specific provision in the Constitution for impeachment," Gilliam said. "The Student Constitution says you can impeach someone but it doesn't say how." Gilliam said anyone elected under the election law is liable for impeachment under his bill. This includes student body president, vice-president and members of SL. It excludes dormitory governors and certain appointive officers such as the editors of the Yackety-Yack and the Daily Tar Heel. However, many of the appointive officers, including student body treasurer and the chairman of the Publications Board, are liable. To begin the impeachment procedure, a number of legislators must sign the articles of impeachment which spell out the charges against an officer. The number of signatures varies with the officer being impeached. Gilliam said the only ground for impeachment in his bill is "malfeasance of duty." However, it is up to the SL to spell out exactly what malfeasance includes. After the necessary number of signatures have been gathered, the articles are introduced into SL and referred to the Ethics Committee. That committee must report the articles out with a recommendation on the prima facae case against the officer being impeached. If the Ethics Committee recommends there is a prima facae case, it would be up to the Legislature to decide the same question. If a simple majority of Legislators voting cast their ballots yes, the officer would be impeached. After impeachment, the Legislature would resolve itself into a court. The articles of impeachment will specify two SL members to act as prosecutor. The accused would have the right to choose his defense from anyone in the student body. At the trial, witnesses would be called and evidence would be presented as in any court of law. Following the trial, a two-thirds vote of the Legislators would be required for a conviction. After conviction, a majority vote of the Legislators would remove the officer from his position. The conviction could be appealed to the Student Supreme Court in points of law but not in the finding of fact. attacked Richardson's committee J Paul Hooluhan. a 10 All-U C otfenMve guard and now a graduate assistant . "Everybody is satisfied with the findings." Hooshan said "We do not back you. The team is here en mavse to express their opinions." Bull Sigler. a sensor w.ngback. denied the questions the committee had raised concerning players' tearfulness to testify before the Faculty subcommittee. "Everybody in there sjsd exactly what he thought." he said. "I told exactly what I saw ." John Bunting, a senior linebacker, told Richardson. "I a -n't t'or.k you talked to enough people. ; ou didn't talk to me. Paul Miller or Johnny Cow ell." Richardson, readme from his subcommittee's report, cited an NCAA News article which advwd coaches to schedule water breaks to prevent heat exhaustion. "You're not a doctor and neither am I," Dooley said. "Water has nothing to do with heat stroke. You don't know what you're talking about." Coach Jim Carmody. a coach Richardson had praised in some reports, said that "Bill Arnold was not mistreated or abused. 1 was there when two coaches picked him up." After about 40 minutes, the team left. "Some of the team members I talked to said they could not disagree with what . t . T.ir jTdson im a ft rw 3 r'i . ' don't believe that any of the team members can honestly say we lied." m. , . . TODAY: partly cloudy and warm; highs in the mid "70s. low in the mid 50s: chance of showers this afternoon. Delay list selection oimiii i s s ioner s aid student juries by Greg Turosak Staff Writer The Orange County i u r y commissioners decided Wednesday to accept a supplemental list of registered voters as late as Nov. IS to insure students of an equal chance of being selected jurors for the next biennium. The jury commissioners had originally set the deadline for the voter list at Oct. 18. The commissioners use the list and the tax rolls for choosing jurors. Barry Nakell, president of the local The commissioners set the Oct. 18 deadline to insure proper examination of the list for removal of any ineligible persons, he said. Jury commissioners Ruth West and Dewey W. King "seemed to accept the idea that students were registering to vote for the first time and were not aware they had to register early," Nakell said. "I hope that as a result of the additional month, students will become aware of the need to register to vote early in order to qualify for jury duty," Nakell said, "thereby allowing students to chapter of the N.C. Civil Liberties Union, appeared before the commissioners and requested the deadline change. "Most students thought they didn't have to register until April since the primaries are in May," Nakell said after the meeting. He said students not registering this fall are disqualifying themselves from jury duty. Nakell said there "was no intent to disqualify students" from jury duty, but, "by statute, the jury commissioners must have the jury list by the beginning of December. participate in the judicial process and making it possible for young students to have a jury composed of their peers " Students may register to vote every Thursday on the second 11 or of the Municipal Building in Chapel Hill or any day at the courthouse in Hillsborough. The Bojrd of Elections vcill consider Nov. 2 a proposal to provide a registrar on campus The civil liberties union will be represented at the meeting and plans to request that more days be available for registering at the municipal building. w ilm,, slower mow? tvants to keep in touch by Jim Minor Staff Writer Dr. Louis Round Wilson, the UNC librarian, says he has slowed down since he quit teaching in ll51). but he still wants to keep in touch with students. "I still work on some manuscripts and other work." the 4-year-old librarian said in a recent interview. "I want to keep in touch with the students even though 1 can't make public speeches anymore." Wilson has been in touch with the students since ll)01 when he became the UNC librarian. His accomplishments resemble a list of "Famous First Facts of UNC." His energy and versatility is reflected in his service as the first director of the UNC Bureau of Extension. University Press and School of Library Science. He was the first editor of the "Alumni Review" and first chairman of the N.C. Library Commission. He also served as dean of the Graduate Library School at the University of Chicago and as chairman of the UNC Faculty Committee on Publications. He was made a Kenan Professor in ll20. Wilson's office, in the graduate library named alter him. is stacked with books, pamphlets and manuscripts written or edited In him. He has written various histories of the Unicrsit. including "UNC !l00-lo0: The Making ol a Modern University" U57) jnd "UNC Under Consolidation. luol-ll)do" "I guess 011 could say l"e been pretty energetic." Wilson said, lie attributed his success in so many areas to "sticking to a job and seeing it throiiiih." "1 used to play a lot of tennis until I got tuberculosis in I -1 (." he said. "The doctor told me 1 had to choose between playing tennis and working. He said I couldn't do both because of my health. 1 decided I would rather work and le been doing it ever since then." His work has required a knowledge of business. Financial backing and detailed planning are required for the updating ol a uniersity. "These buildings on campus weren't always there." he said. "We had to find people to pay for them. 1 proposed the building ol the Graham Memorial in 1()20. but we had to work for 1 1 years before we found enough money to build it. "I never got the things I was working on mixed up with each other." he said. "There was a time in 12( when I was mini: to raise money for the library school, a steeple for the Methodist Church, the new library, the Graham Memorial and the University Press all at the same time. "I laid awake the other night, when I should have been sleeping, thinking about that time. It took many extra hours, but somehow they all got built," he said with a soft laugh. Despite the other projects he has headed. Wilson's first devotion remains the library. "I believe in what Bacon said, that 'Reading maketh the full man.' When I became librarian in 1901. I was concerned b- ausc 40 percent of the students were destined to tail at least one subject." he said, adding: l convinced the administration to give reading prizes to outstanding students and it helped to stimulate an interest in books. "Helping to get state and ledcral aid is the most fruitful thing I've done for libraries. We pushed this through the U.S. Congress when I was chairman of the American Library Association." The aid helps all Chapel Hill libraries, he said. Wilson said. "Very lew N.C. cities had libraries before the aid came through. Now every county has at least one." He spoke with pride of the North Carolina Collection in the library. "The N.C. Historical Society had a near defunct collection when I became librarian. It amazed me that some of their rare books were worth more than S 1 00. I put these in glass cases with good locks and hunted for more books. "The library is a social institution." he said. "It senes people in many different way s."

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