2 The Daily Tar Heel Thursday. October 11, 1979 t-w tk tvts ni II ti irakTrw jn i Law n n tr n r i si n r ti i k i r n tfw By BILL DURHAM Staff Writer "We are living in a time when the racial tide has turned." Georgia state senator Julian Bond said Tuesday in a speech at Duke University. . During the '50s and '60s there was an increase in civil rights reform. Bond said. But, "the discrimination still festered and grew.' "The parade of paper promises certainly seemed impressive. And on paper it certainly was." But when Richard Nixon was elected president, there was a move to roll back the advancements of the '60s, Bond said. "Cruel callous castrators," interested only in "self righteous swinishness," succeeded in hastening the regression of the black position in the United States, he said. Blacks, who were the victims of a racial crime, were made to feel wholly responsible for their position. Bond said. The black man was told to improve himsell although he generally was hampered by a disadvantaged background, he said. Jimmy Carter appealed to blacks as a presidential candidate because of his experience with the black community. Bond explained. - "Because of and in spite of his origins he promised to close the gap between the shadow and substance (of equal rights)," he said. However, he said. Carter has turned out to be a man who "knows the words to our hymns but not the numbers on our paychecks." Bond called the Bakke reverse discrimination decision a disaster for equal rights in this country. In its decision, "the Supreme Court became the protector of a pernicious type of quota," he said. As a result, "the male and pale will enjoy a monopoly on positions in J universities and government.' Bond also criticized cutbacks in government spending, especially California's Proposition 13. While popularly seen as in the public interest. Proposition 13 is "the opening shot in class warfare in America." Bond said. The emotion of the '60s made it easy to believe the major battles in the civil rights movement had been fought and won, Bond said. But he said, "They have moved from the back of the bus to the front of the unemployment lines." Blacks are still "the last hired and the first fired,'" he added. Many blacks now believe blacks in high places will improve the status of all blacks. Bond said. "The elimination of American apartheid , has made their position better, they think," he said. "But, nothing could be further from the truth." Julian Bond Villella praises U.S. originality From page 1 clear, that logical, that simple is to make great art. "He has opened the 20th century door with his Neoclassic style," Villella said. "He made it all right for choreographers to be innovative. We'll spend Jthe rest of the century developing what he has started." Villella discussed the development of his own career. "It takes a very honest person to be a sucess," he said. "You have to face your shortcomings and deal with them. I had a great problem with finesse. 1 had missed out on four years during school and I wanted to make up for them, so I used to throw myself across the stage and ignored the quality." Villella learned to refine many ballet techniques. "Prodigal Son was a fantastic challenge to me," he said. "I had to maintain the same intensity when crawling across the stage as when doing leaps." Once cajled "the most physically exciting man in Want to get involved? Keep an Daily Tar Heel every day. the American theater" by dance critic Arlene Croce, Villella. 43. suffers from physical handicaps typical of older dancers. Villella now teaches, lectures and produces television specials and is slowly winding down his performance schedule. "There is nothing like the stage," he said. "You are in conversation with the audience. There is nothing like the spontaneity and immediacy of it. I dance for the sheer joy of it. It's hard to realize that 1 won't be dancing. "But once you reach a certain level, that's when you want to leave," he said. "It's very healthy to go on. There are so many things 1 can do now. 1 wrote three TV shows. 1 won an Emmy me from the Maritime College. It impressed the hell out of me. It's amazing what you're capable of." report From page 1 eye on Campus Calendar in The Kenneth Reckford, a professor in the classics department, said .that speaking from a parental perspective with children in college, he thought it was necessary to have some kind of structure. Tony Jones, associate professor in the sociology department, said the Thornton repo"rt did not place enough emphasis on a strong background in the social sciences. Thornton said there was still a strong requirement for students to take courses in the social sciences, but the requirement was spread out and divided among other requirements. Any attempts to redefine the report should be made in educational and not administrative terms, Thornton said. Another committee should be set up to re-cast the report in the light of recent faculty and student criticism, he said. Samuel Williamson, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said that this committee will consist of the dean of the graduate school; the chancellors and vice chancellors of the humanities, fine arts, natural science and social science divisions; representatives from the professional schools; and Thornton. vaaa ripi fx l L..J I taaa Sl . ii mm " ' ' ' PASS .HUM r J J i V ) . m i -A S 1 i y iu i 11 y t53t&kr (BMAEAfGGnD PASO EFDDMJ UEEG, 3 m . - n For freshmen and new students especially, going without personal wheels means the bus is more than a welcome convenience. It's a necessity. And for the thousands of folks who live at South Campus and other faraway places, nothing beats the bus for hauling home a small library of books, transporting several bags of canned goods from some store, or simply going out for a night on the town. When you're late for class and still far away, those hills and valleys between you and class can get awfu! steep. Unless you take a bus. On the campus bus route, you're never more than five minutes from any stop on the line. When it comes to beating those hills, the bus really makes the grade. Going without a car doesn't mean you can't get around. With a bus you can travel just about anywhere in the village, take along as many friends as you want and not worry about driving home with one too many under your belt. And if you want to go on nights and Sundays, there's Shared Ride, a service to bus pass holders that takes you anywhere in town for the price of a bus fare. " 'a'a tn:2w'2-T Cost! a trss. Our drivers know exactly where they're going, even if C i you don t. And they don t mind answering your ques tions, when there's someplace you want to go. If you really want to learn the village, there's no easier way than cruising it by bus. Pass Cz3 cC2i .32. When you trade your bag of nickels for a bus pass, you can ride unencumbered for a whole year. No fumb ling for exact change; no cards to punch. Just flash your pass and you're home free. $3G coos a Zzzz3 r.av- Compared to $72 for a parking permit, a bus pass is a classic case of more for less. And you don't spend your day and your temper hunting for a parking place or fignting rush hour traffic. If you plan to stay around . here for four years, the bus will help get you off to a good start. So give us a call when you get to town. We're at 942-5174. Remember, semesters coma and go, but the bus will nsver fail you. VJ2 C; 4 CHAPEL MILL COMMUNITY TRANSIT Information Number 942-5174 CHAPEL HILL COMMUNITY TRANSIT 1 llil Tir unr Hews ubd po'ceii ! Snowstorm surprises East The Associated Pre An abnormal October snowstorm surprised the E2St on Wednesday, breaking records and burying summer's foliage under accumulations up to a foot deep. Hundreds of thousands of homes went dark and schools closed as leaf-laden trees toppled onto power lines in the earliest snowfall many areas had ever seen. In the suburbs of Washington, D.C., where the last time it snow ed this early was Oct. 5, 1 892, more than 72,000 utility customers lost their power and a layer of slush up to 4 inches deep made driving treacherous. It was the earliest snowfall on record in Newark, N.J., and weather officials in Virginia said no snowstorm of such intensity had hit the state so early in the season since the government started keeping records in 1872. Mock Cuba assault force prepared MOREHEAD CITY (AP) The 38th Marine Amphibious Unit, 1,700 Marines equipped with attack helicopters and tanks, moved aboard three Navy ships on Wednesday for a mock assault on Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The exercise was ordered by President Carter last week as a show of United States military muscle in the face of Soviet troops stationed in Cuba. The unit was scheduled to move into the Atlantic Wednesday night for the trip to Cuba, but officials expected to continue loading the ships until midnight and then move out early today. Brown calls for SALT passage WASHINGTON (A P) Secretary of Defense Harold Brown, calling for speedy approval of the SALT II treaty, said Wednesday defense spending is likely to increase in future years by more than the 3 percent President Carter has promised. Signaling the administration's willingness to try to placate senators seeking military spending increases of 5 percent beyond inflation as a price for ratification of SALT II, Brown said the administration's five-year defense plan "will require annual expenditures of at least 3 percent real growth and could well, after analysis, require more." Senate passes its own spending bill WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate, rejecting two House-passed emergency spending bills, voted instead 81-15 Wednesday to stick with its own version of legislation needed to keep the government operating fully. The House-Senate dispute, stemming largely from differences over federal financing for abortions, is forcing seven major government departments and numerous smaller agencies to get by on funds left over from the fiscal year that ended 10 days ago. Some programs already have been cut back, and about 90,000 employees of the departments of Transportation and Labor will receive only half pay when their next paychecks are due, officials of those agencies said Wednesday. Actors protest 'discrimination' LOS ANGELES (AP) Ed Asner, Dennis Weaver and other actors denounced the film industry's portrayal of women and minorities Wednesday in a demonstration staged by the Screen Actors Guild. Guild spokeswoman Kim Fellner said the SAG filed unfair labor charges Wednesday against the Academy of Motion Picture and Television Producers with the National Labor Relations Board in Los Angeles. The protesters marched in front of the academy's offices, carrying signs bearing such slogans as "Women and minorities not seen on the American scene and we want our snare oi me lamasy. ROY ROGERS FAMILY RESTAURANT" 0 HELIWa.vITED Full and Part til Hours negoti; Apply in person between 2:00-4:00 afternoon rr it-; : s 1 r I l I mons avanaDie tVBur schedule THE Daily Crossword Dy James A. Brussel ACROSS 27 Road marker 1 Items for 32 Spanish boy charwomen 33 " and 5 Compulsive Peace" action 34 Steeple 10 Unruffled 36 Is wanting 14 Inspiration 39 Turkish 15 "My Mother officials Was " 41 Vaudeville 16 Opera song acts 17 Snug home 43 Gumption 18 Memento 44 Like some 19 Bench's fish glove 46 Asian 20 Street capital level 48 Pie mode 23 Haggard 49 Minim novel 51 Henry VIII 24 On pension: in a film abbr. 53 Nicaraguan 25 Kitchen city appliance 56 touts XIV Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 57 58 64 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 Moham medan name Force of a sort Entreaty Bali apparel Stubborn one Filigree Moslem world Seed cover Regards Adolescent years Racecourse circuits JL 0 fAj? tDjgl pJXlpJ 4 prgMitE jl mMRs 6 ' FT Wt 11 iLiiili J 7 f T T Tltt fAfT Oftl r$77Mv tin raMIl JMU- EEC mm i mmm mm.. 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