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Wednesday. November 19. 1330Ths Daily Tar Heel'3
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MARK AN CON A
Miff V riier
RALEIGH Six
pretested the Nazi
UNC students
party with signs
reading "Kill a Nazi in self defense" and
the "The Frankenstein of Racism must
be destroyed," at a press conference
held by national Nazi leader Harold
Covington Tuesday.
The protest came one day after the
acquittal of six Ku Klux Klansmen and
Nazis on five counts of murder and one
count of felonious rioting in Greensboro
in what was the lonsest trial in the state's
history.
At the press conference, Covington
announced hjs party's plans to create a
"Carolina Free State" where North and
South Carolina would be separated from
the jurisdiction of the federal
government and "serve as a homeland
and a haven for all white men and
women of all Aryan peoples."
Craig Crutchfield, a UNC student
protester who gathered with five others
across from Nazi headquarters, said
liberals were getting together and that
the age of the '60s was on the verge of
returning.
"We are not for the Communist
Workers Party but instead against the
fact that five people are dead,"
Crutchfield said. .
Covington appeared at the door of his
organization's headquarters, thumbed
h!-: noo nd lauohd at the student;.
the press
During
described his "Carolina plan" which
consists of six major points. They are:
conference
he
a complete break with the present
system of government on the part of the
National Socialist Party of America.
the adoption of the name "White
Power Party" with a de-emphasis on
Third Reich-style uniforms.
the importation of hundreds and
eventually thousands of white racists
from around the United States and
around the world into the Carolinas.
the active promotion of the Carolinas
as the "racist Mecca" of the world.
the adaptation of the party to a semi
. underground status in preparation for a
time of government persecution.
1 .!
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flozls dsscriba Carolina p!cn to mcfce tha stst3 a 'racist f.'iscca'
(Left to right) Nazis Mark Conway, Harold Covington and Roger Pierce
the formation of a
committee that would
constitutional
produce the
constitution of the Carolina Free State
this winter.
The conference was spurred by the
verdict reached Monday. Covington said
earlier that he would wait until a verdict
was reached before announcing the
future plans of the party for fearjof
influencing the jury's decision.
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He called the trial a massive
conspiracy by the state to violate the
right which the Constitution guaranteed
the defendants.
"The only "crime" these, men
committed was the hideous sin of pride '
in their country,". Covington said, in a
press release.
o 'hi
From page 1
University affairs. He is to work with minority students
through the departments of undergraduate admissions
and financial aid and the offices of student records and
registration, the registrar and institutional research.
Today a curriculum in African and Afro-American
studies offers courses in the black experience, urban
politics and the black experience and minority child
development.
Recruitment of minority students began under
Sittcrson, and recruitment programs by the University
and the BSM continue to expand.
The Chancellor's Committee on the Status of the
Minorities and the Disadvantaged also exists to
coordinate activities among students, the
administration and the admissions office on minority
issues.
Allen Johnson, a former chairman of the BSM who
is now employed by UNC, said he remembered white
students ridiculing him simply because he was black.
An incident near Avery dorm in 1977 typified the
feelings of animosity that were and still may be present,
he said. Residents of Avery threw objects at a group of
blacks and called them "niggers." Though University
Police investigated the incident, no action was taken
against any students.
In the past few years, black students also have
CG..C to..'hold-forum t
received threatening phone call, often from people who
have claimed to be aligned with the Ku Klux Klan.
These incidents are part of a general attitude among
white students that has prevailed since the first blacks
arrived on campus, Johnson said.
"We (blacks) really threaten white people when there
is a significant number," he said. "It is a historical fact
that blacks have been dealt with easier in small numbers.
"Oh, we think everything is much better now, but
there has been a curious backlash. Someone told the
whites that the blacks have gotten something, so they
say to us, 'stop complaining.' The thing is we haven't
gotten anything."
Hayden B. Renwick, associate dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences, also agreed that attitudes have not
changed dramatically over the years.
"The most significant change is the attitude of the
black student," Renwick said. "In the last five or six
years, the black has said 'I'm a little tired of reaching out
to whites. I'll just stick to my own,' what whites call
voluntary segregation. There's very little reaching out by
the whites. It's a simple matter of a lack of practice.
"The biggest problem is the two races fail to be up
front, honest and sincere when an issue is discussed,"
he said. "It is sort of like building a building; everyone
wants to start in on the fourth floor instead of the
foundation or basement."
Sitterson attributed UNC's race relation problems to
u election
iiie reyioe
The Campus Governing Council will
hold a forum on revised election districts
today.
The forum will be from 4-5 p.m. in
Room 204 of the Carolina Union. The
forum originally scheduled for 7 tonight
has been canceled.
Under the revised system, there are
eight off-campus, seven on-campus and
eight graduate districts.
District 13 will be Cobb, Joyner,
Graham, Stacy, Winston, Connor and
Alexander dorms. District 14 will be
Granville East, West and South. District
IS will be Hinton James and Morrison.
Also, there are some situations where
CllOt
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property lines
boundaries.
Northampton
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Dinner 5-9
Tucs.-Sit.
Lunch 11:30-2
Tucs.-Fri.
- DURHAM ft
It A(St8CH
CHAM I I i 'Ctl
MU r .
Tniii mum I
are used as district
One is between
Terrace and Plaza
Apartments (in District 23) and
Townhouse Apartments (in District 16).
Another boundary line runs from North
Street to Hillsborough Street, parallel to
Rosemary Street. Also, Colonial Arms
Apartments is in District 18 and no
longer part of District 16.
Dianne Hubbard, CGC finance
chairman, and Eleanor Smith, CGC
student affairs chairman, will be present
to answer any questions.
BILL PESCIIEL
"CALABASH STYLE '
DRY DOCK OYSTER BAH
MIXED BEVERAGES
MODERATELY PRICED
Phone :
967-8227
Chapel Hill
Kohway 54 &
Feringion Rd.
the culture or environment.
"We're in a stage of society in which, at this
traditionally white-oriented institution, you have a
small minority of blacks who are in a sense (both)
adjusting to and participating in the institution while at
the same time maintaining a dignity of different racial
grouping," Sitterson said.
BSM Chairperson Mark Canady agreed that there
was an ingrained racism that has separated the races on
campus. , !
"It is bred through ignorance. The type of racism
that starts as ignorance evolves into fear which evolves
into hatred," Canady said. "All you have to-do is read
the bathroom walls to know somebody hates. It is an
indicator of this type of attitude."
Canady suggested that greater . recruitment or .
enhancement of the minority presence on campus
would help alleviate some of the problems.
Henry Frye Jr. arrived on campus in the fall of 1979.
Unlike the time 24 years earlier when his father was
here, Frye said he believed problems existed in the race
relations on campus,
"I don't think there is enough communication, now
between blacks and whites," Frye said. "The majority
of blacks are on South Campus and intermix down
there; if they were to move on to North Campus there
might be better communication.
"They really don't try to reach out as much, I
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November 19-22
8:00 p.m.
Great Hall, Carolina Union
Students $3
Others $5
At Union Box Office
Brim n hanic M Kxf anJ Hinc h pvrmiricJ.
A Prerualin of II. ntxUnm t"nt.o
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The Fleming Center has been here for you cinco 1974...
providing private, vmderstandlpg health care
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The Fleming Center... vre're hero vhen you need us.
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Ho, At, No! Fizzed don't
break the glass.
It's It mo for Carolina
Basketball e;n and
thousands of Tcr Heel
fens era looking forward
to tho non-tcfevtcod
season exhibition
cp oner joins t a strong
tczm cn Wednesday
I evening, November
I it I US t- IM.w..l
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- Cy LEE D UNI! AH
Staff Yr::er
In a meeting Tuesday, ChaIIor
Christopher C, Fordham III conferred
with the chancellors from the
department of business and finance and
the head officials of the Area Health
Education Center to discuss the
possibility of restricting flight training at
Horace Williams Airport and the
possibility of building another airport.
Vice Chancellor John Temple,
Associate Vice Chancellor Charles
Antle, AHEC Director Dr. Gene Mayer,
Deputy Director John Payne and
Director of University Air Operations
Alan Fearing also were present.
The main topic of discussion related
to the consequences of restricting the
airport usage to the five AHEC airplanes
presently flying out of the airport. "We
basically discussed the financial
liabilities of the airport," Antl; said.
''It's presently self-sufficient, but if we
only stationed the AHEC plans there.
we would have to figure cut if AHEC
would use its own funds cr receive
money through state appropriations,
because there would be no outside
mcce."
The second issue involved the
definition of the role that the University
would play .in the construction of an
alternative airport. "We discussed what
cur part would be if a private group
developed the plans for an airport, to
what extent we would interact. We aho
talked about how we would work with
the town and county in developing the
airport," Antle said. "Abo the financial
aspects were examined, whether it would
be financed by Chnpei HiU alone, or
with other towns, or the county, or with
Durham County because they're so
close, or any combination thereof."
The participants in the meeting
stressed that no decisions were made.
"We have a lot to discuss with the town
and a lot more investigating to do,"
Antle said. "It's impossible to make any
decisions yet."
SAY 1 LOVE YOU ' . T A w
IN TIIE Ulti SlZLUVIFlIJD
NESSEE'S.tWALT-Z
A cabaret based on
poetry by Tennessee VJiiliams
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