Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 1, 1971, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Monday, November 1, 1971 . v.v.;,v.;.v.;.;;X'Xvv.v.vv.sv.".'.v."--.,.".'. .".."...... .. ".".".".........' Asia s he ''.-a tell students News around campus Chinese 6live revolutionary lives9 I Dor m discourse set The Daily Tzr Heel by Lynn Smith Staff Writer The people of mainland China are "living revolutionary lives" by applying trie teachings of Mao Tse-tung to their everyday existence, according to a couple ho visited Red China this summer. Ann and Uldis Kruze, members of the Committee of Concerned Asia Scholars (CCAS), spent a month in the People's Republic of China this summer. Uldis, 27, a graduate student in Chinese history; Ann, 26, a primary school teacher; and 13 other Americans Inspector must cure Chapel Hill Fire Inspector J.H. Robertson Jr. said Sunday UNC fraternities and sororities must correct fire hazards cited in a recent inspection report before Friday. The deadline for compliance with fire regulations is part of a new policy formed last week which gives fraternities and sororities two weeks to correct deficiencies after their houses are inspected, Robertson said. The policy came out of a meeting of Robertson, Chapel Hill Fire Chief Everett Lloyd, fraternity representatives and Assistant Dean of Men Pete Hall. Robertson said hazards which were not life hazards or building hazards often met with little or no compliance from fraternities after his previous inspections. Fraternities previously had 30 days to comply with inspection reports, he said. Fraternities failing to correct hazards can be closed down under state law, he said. Robertson said he will inspect fraternity and sorority houses again beginning Nov. 8. "All the fraternity representatives (at last week's meeting) were agreable to the new policy," Robertson said. "We had an hour and 45-minute session with them. "Chief Lloyd talked to them about how to prevent fire and we had a general discussion on how to protect the houses from fire." ABE YOU FLAYING iFiiMisimEieoin) Making love is great. But why should you diminish the pleasure by having to worry about getting her pregnant? After all, it's your future (and the future of someone close to you) that's at stake. If you really give a damn about your life and hers. ..then you'll want to prevent accidental pregnancy. By using one of today's gossamer thin, supremely sensitive condoms that keep the pleasure in sex, but remove the worry. And now you can obtain these remarkable new condoms without any embarrassment, by ordering them privately by mail. ..from Population Planning Associates. The 11 top-quality brands we offer are electron ically tested and meet rigorous FOA standards. Fast Delivery Money Back Guarantee Discover how sensitive condoms can be. Send just $4 for a deluxe sampler pack of 13 assorted condoms, plus an illustrated brochure describing our complete selection. The deluxe sampler contains 3 dif ferent brands, including the Fetherlite from England, the very thinnest latex condom available in the U.S., and the extremely popular Natura lamb. made of highly sensitive natural animal membrane for maximum transmission of heat and sensation. Or send just $1 and get our exclu sive imported condoms: 2 Fetherlites and the pre-shaped NuForm, plus the brochure. For brochure alone, send only 25. All orders are filled the same day received and sent in a plain package. If not delighted, you may return the unused portion of your order for a full refund. Mail the coupon today. r Population PUnnini Associates 105 North Columbia DepLH-475 Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 Please rush me in plain package: Deluxe sampler of 13 assorted condoms 5 different brands, in cluding the super-thin Fetherlite and the Naturalamb made of nat ural animal membrane, plus illus trated brochure, just $4 2 Fetherlites; 1 NuForm, plus brochure, just $1 Illustrated brochure only, 25C 26 oz. genius. Sharp ELS1-8. gSOLUERS- studying in Hong Kong were invited on a tour of China by the Peking government. They arrived in Chapel Hill noon Thursday as guests of the YM-YWCA, political science, history and geography departments and the Carolina Union Current Affairs Committee. In a discussion at the Wesley Foundation Thursday afternoon, Mrs. Kruze said, "The people feel they have been freed from a wheel of fate. They know now their lives don't have to be determined by what their ancestors did. "Now factory workers are writing poetry. The people's government says ire The new fire policy resulted from the Oct. 24 fire which gutted the Delta Kappa Epsilon (DKE) fraternity houe, causing an estimated $200,000 damage, Robertson said. He said one of the major problems with older fraternity houses such as the DKE house was that they are exempt from several fire regulations because they were built before existing fire codes went into effect. The DKE fire could have been a "15 or 20 minute fire on the ground floor f For U.N. participation laepiib The UNC College Republican Club has passed a resolution criticizing the U.S. participation in the United Nations. The resolution urges the withdrawal of United States' financial aid from the U.N., termed a "semi-fictitious entity." The resolution also advocated consideration of the elimination or reduction of "foreign aid and military (D'ai print) address I state I 237 i city H ZIP I I enclose payment in full under your mcney-back guarantee. thc wprld's "largest maker of electronic calculators v 016 b- 12 OTHER SHARP PROBLEM THE WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR LINE. For Free Demonstration In Your Office I Write or Call: I ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS, INC. I P.O. Box 1745 t Raleigh, North Carolina 27600 I (919)832-6870 I encourages individuality. Creativity i$ brought out." The peasants realize they are stl materially behind capitalist countries, she said, but they arc taking pride in what they have accomplished. "They all have enough to eat," her husband said. Mrs. Kruze said a peasant grandmother told her "this was the first time in my hie that I've had more than a month's supply of food at one time." The Kxuzes think the government is responsive to the needs and wishes of the people. Greeks hazards with smoke damage upstairs" if the building had an enclosed stairway and a fire door, Robertson said. Robertson and Lloyd have urged older fraternities to include such features in remodeling plans. Many of the older fraternity houses have fire ladders rather than action fire escapes, Robertson said. He said fire ladders do not meet the standards set by the present fire codes. Robertson said none of the older fraternity houses have fire alarm systems to warn occupants. iican club equipment, gifts and sales to those nations which have the audacity to accept U.S. money, cry for protection and aid, insist on their protection and security and then allow a freedom loving and anti-Communist nation to be expelled from the U.N." The disproportionate representation, "grossly weighted toward the third world Tfl Mushroom Lamps THESE UNUSUAL AND VERSATILE LAMPS ARE ANTIQUE FIX TURES FROM THE ORIGINAL CAROLINA INN. MOST ARE BRASS OR COPPER, $ COME IN ASSORTED SHAPES i COLORS. FROM $7 So CHICKEN LITTLE, Incorporated 11 Magnetic card programming 144 program steps 7 memory banks "The only freedom they no longer have is the freedom to exploit other people," Mrs. Kruze said. "This government benefits about 95 percent of the Chinese people." Leadership does not lead to personal privilege, she said. She said she and her husband visited homes of government officials and found their houses, clothes, and pay to be little above that of a common citizen. Kruze said the people were directly involved in the things that involve them. "The commune decides productivity and profit," he said. "The leaders base decisions on the requests they get from the local groups." The Kruzes said thay were impressed with the Chinese hospital system. Para professional people (comparable to a registered nurse) work in the fields with the people, they said. "The medical aid is not the best, but it is available without going long distances and it only costs the peasant one percent of his monthly salary to get a year's medical service," Kruze said. "And the drug prices have gone down in the last five years." When discussing America with the Chinese, the American students were surprised at their knowledge of current affairs. "People asked us about the split in the Panther party and what we thought about The Greening of America'," Kruze said. "The universities carry many U.S. newspapers and magazines, and English is the first foreign language they learn." hits "t nations" and the ousting of Nationalist China, one of the "founding members of the U.N." were cited as reasons for the resolution. An amendment to the resolution by Club President Mike O'Neal placed direct blame for the ouster of Taiwan on President Nixon. The amendment which read: "We view the expulsion of Nationalist China as an affront to the integrity and creed of the United Nations and must regretfully conclude that President Nixon failed to exert full spiritual and actual committment to the maintenance of Nationalist China's seat in the U.N." Vi PRICE COLOR PRINTS? SAVE Oil SLIDES-MOVIES -BM7 PRINTS, TOO This low price saves you up to 50 over usual "drug store" prices, rushes high quality color prints back to your door in just a few days. Try the film service used on many mid-west and southern campuses. SO EASY, SO CONVENIENT . . . just use your own envelope and the coupon below. Fill in name and address, write name on roll or cartridge, enclose coupon and remittance. Or, use the coupon to get film mailers and dis count coupons; order film and flashes at low prices ... a better deal than "free" film. Savings and processing quality guaranteed. YOUR ORDER MUST INCLUDE THIS Name Address City .State. Sd mt tret Mm mr eop tni d:ieont taupo" I'm enclosing rem o' fl! ntf pirTfl! 'i U rn Ui. 0) I n endon"! tn eitr ?Sc p' foil tor eip'esi tantunf in4 (k$ij trtil return 12 p KoCxxx .IN 12 11 20 ip HoCjcsKk 4 41 3 55 MAIL TO: SPE-D-PICS Bo A panel of housing officii! and residence coll eft leaders will discuss University housir policies and the overcrowding problem at S p.m. Thursday in 101 Greenlaw. The panelists will present alternatives to the present housing situation in the procram, sponsored by the Carolina Union Current .Affairs Committee. The panel includes Robert Kepner, director of Residence Life; Walter Darnels, governor of GrinvJIe Residence College; and Al Hayes, a member of the committee which presented the "no vacancy" report on the housing problems in Chapel Hill. "Included in the discussion of alternatives to the present housing situation will be the suggestion of improving South Campus, expanding married student housing and expanding private dormitories such as Granville," said Seth Effron, a member of the Current Affairs Committee. A question-and-answer period will follow the panel discussion. Effron urged all interested persons to attend the meeting. Lecture slated on meditation Doug Hertz, teacher of transcendental meditation, will give the first lecture for the campus Students International Meditation Society (SIMS) at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Student Union. Hertz is currently taking a year off from college to work for SIMS in the triangle area. SIMS has about 200 followers on campus, according to group organizers. Weekly meetings will be planned after the first lecture. The statewide organization has about 700 members. The international organization is led by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who conducts a temporary school in Spain. Hertz said individuals use only a small part of their minds - four to 10 percent. But, through transcendental meditation, meditators can increase their mental utility until they reach the highest level of the mind, the "source of thought," he added. Transcendental meditation followers believe problems can not be confronted and solved at their own level but only through meditation, Hertz said. COUPON - 5-1 12 eia B c I Vt 20 tig B'Kk I WMe 20 eis 5'idw v 8 w 1.21 in 141 n Ml 1-22 Sd tit trnti Kodjcoic o f nhn Cc!t your ure Gunil ) JSC c lns!m(ic 125-12 127 120 122 Crc puf rsi fhrnit two litem! iac tc Cube Atl W-2 Ml Mj(,cti j: 13 IK 299 Cincinnati. Ohio 45214 Dept. NN It's easy to smile when you know your job. Wachovia people do. Mnbr Federal Depmit lasur&nc Corporation "World problems ire due to ir.droj..: problems," Hcrti sajJ. He said meditators usually hjT- : 15-mmute sessions a day. during noticeable physioiopcal charges u; place, such is decreases m cx consumption, heart rate, ar.d xV -resistance. Hertz said many meditators h; ; experienced tremendous perv-r-improvement. "w don't try to directly chir.sre :r hfe style of the individual," he u:d . meditating, naturally and sponta.-.f -. his life becomes better." Sociology group meets tonight A group of undergraduate socio. . majors, concerned with pooling stud;r.: interests, talents and resources vuthin th. sociology department, :11 hold i organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. ir. Peabody Hall. The group. Undergraduate Aswiat: of Sociology Majors (UASM). is drs c for sociology majors but also ue'eor:: all students taking sociology courts interested in majoring m the subject "We want to encourage cjx.. relationships among sociology stuJe-.: and give undergraduates an epportur to provide real input into :l department," Larry Reid, a gr coordinator, said. Another coordinator, Ron Hur.r.:-. said the sociology department tne : recognize the needs of the mdiv.J... students, but there is no consensus jrn students concerning the identity of t" needs. "There are 283 undergrade:, sociology majors at UNC and we rare;, come together in casual situations o?h; -than in the class room," Hunmr.gs vi..: "We all have a lot to offer each other a: : we'd like to have an organ : interaction." UASM will examine, question a:. , criticize such areas as curriculum, facu!; . relations and teaching method counseling, employment opportunity and graduate programs. Reid said the sociology faculty ha been very receptive to the idea of ar. association. The association will provide a purely social outlet, too," Hunnings said. "It will give people a chance to know each other in a non-task-oriented way." Jobs service sets schedule The University Placement Service h.: announced the following organiza!i r. will recruit on campus during the week : Nov. 8-12: Monday-Burroughs Wellcome Co.; Tuesday-Lybrand, Ross Brothers ar, J Montgomery, Kendall-Textile l):w,: Rose's Stores, Inc., Allied Chemical C-cr and Catholic University law school ; Wednesday-Bureau of the Cerv j Consortium graduate study management, General Electric Co.. ' : Southern Baptist Convention hducar; Commission; Thursday -American Enka Co., E . Lilly Co., Fieldcrest Mills, Inc., A " Pullen and Co., and Southern Bar: Convention Education Commission; Friday-S.D. Leidesdorf and Co. -r. Coca-Cola Co. ! i t i . i I ! ! A.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1971, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75