CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1966 No. 4 Friday Says He Will Stick With The University Vol. 73 Releases Brief Statement After Departure Reports Consolidated University Pre sident William C. Friday yes terday dismissed reports that he has accepted a key feder al post. In a brief statement releas ed from his office, Friday said: Campus Girls Told Not To Walk Alone A spokesman for the Dean of Women's office said yesterday that a warning issued recent ly to women students against walking alone "was just fair ly routine." Mrs. Dorothy Fulghum, as sistant dean of women, said the warning was issued to all women students after a co ed was stopped in the Bell tower Parking lot one night last week. Mrs. Fulghum said the co ed was not injured, "just frightened." The notice, issued at called meeting in all women's resi dence halls and sororities, said: "It is strongly advised that when leaving or returning to dormitories at night, women students use only those walfo that are well-1 i g h t e d, and regularlv used. It is also ad vised that women students should avoid walking alone on campus. Whenever possible, they should walk in groups of two or three." Mrs. Fulghum said similar notices are issued at the be ginning of all regular and summer sessions. Mrs. Fulghum said the in cident "prompted the issuance at that time." The meetings were held last Thursday and Monday lights. A little less than one year ago, a visiting coed from Greensboro, Suellen Evans, was slain while walking through the- arboretum about noon. At the same meeting Dean Carmichael issued other in structions governing the pro tection of women students. Heads Commission Dr. Stanley J. Weidenkopf of UNC School of Public Health has been named by the Armed Forces Epidemio logical Board as director of its Commission on Environ mental Hygiene. He is presently a member of the 16-member commission which functions under the U. S. Department of Defense as an advisory group to the surgeons general of the arm ed forces on worldwide mili tary health problems. "I feel it a privilege to be associated with the University of North Carolina and I look forward to continuing my work here." Later, Friday said a recent four - day trip to the nation's capital was not connected with "the situation." He had reportedly been ask ed by John Gardner, secre tary of Health, Education and Welfare, to become assistant secretary of education. By direction of President Johnson, the assistant secre tary is chairman of the gov ernment - wide coordinating committee on educational pro grams. He has authority which goes beyond departmental lin es and strong advisory con nections with the president. Many administrators feel that during the next few months the University will face one of the most crucial per iods in its recent history. En rollments are booming, all four campuses are expanding, and the University is heading in a new direction. Friday's State of the Univer sity message delivered last week was interpreted by many as the go - ahead for the four branches to meet new educa tional demands. Enrollment is expected to increase by 10,000 by 1970 and the University is request ing $179 million from the State for the next biennium. Complicating the situation are two new chancellors D. W. Colvard at Charlotte and J. Carlyle Sitterson at Chapel Hill. If Friday had left, the "new direction" of the Consolidated University would have been jeapordized during the next few months. Friday returned from his trip to Washington Saturday, but said the visit had noth ing to do with the reported job offer. On The Inside Partial Text Of Friday's Address North Carolina From A Red Carpet The News Of The Week In Review UNC Golfer In NCAA Tournament Pierson Gives Fund Where Does All The Ticket Money Go Peace Corps Is Training Here a It's hot, boy is it hot, and Kessing Pool is the place to go. See story page 9. Vietnam Experiences Told By Former Infantry Medic EDITOR'S NOTE: The fol lowing is the first of an eight part series by Tar Heel staff writer Mike McGee. Mike spent a year in Viet Nam as a medic. By MIKE McGEE For the past year I was in the Republic of Viet Nam as a PFC in the Army. Now as a private citizen (after three long years of service) I would ' like to relate PJ some of what JPHL might befall the luckless GI if he should get to Vie Mom nnH Jf , miss the glorious - ' obU opportunity to distinguish himself in combat with the communist foe. zzzdL ----- . i - -rVV We were the Saigon War riors, called that by the infan try because of our brave ex ploits behind big desks in the capital area. On the plan going over in May of 1965, images were run ning through my mind of crawling through rice paddies, dragging the wounded (I was a medic) through a withering fusillade of enemy fire. Pic ture my surprise when, al ready sweating and panting from the heat, I was taken by jeep to Ton Son Nhut, to a pleasant compound with one story wooden huts, flower gar dens and banana trees wave ing gently in the breeze and an air-conditioned dispensary. Man In Jail Charged With April Break-In A 20-year-old Chapel Hill man was bound over to the grand jury yesterday after a preliminary hearing in Chap el Hill Recorder's Court on first degree burglary charges. Willie Fikes, of Mitchell Lane, is charged with break ing into the home of Univer sity English professor Lyman Cotten's home on Hooper Lane April 21. Fikes was arrested here last Saturday on larceny charge. Chief William Blake said that Fikes was then linked to the April break - in. - The compound was the head quarters of the 145th Aviation Battalion, a combat helicopter unit operating throughout the III Corps area. I learned in time that the dispensary was air-conditioned to facilitate medical treatment (still, it was nice). In our compound we handled most of the mountain of paper work that goes with the run ning of a combat unit. There were reports, requisitions, or ders, amendments, recommen dations and correspondence. Our unit gathered medical sta tistics seemingly the ton, along with our regular medical treat ment, disease, prevention and information giving duties. So I settled down to my desk. Two weeks later my first mission came up. There had been a big explosion at Bien Hou Air Base, 30 miles north east of Saigon. That was the one where the B-57's exploded on the flight line. Some of our units had been in the blast area, so three of us drove up the next morning to relieve the medics on duty. We got there as the last of the bombs were exploding. Our Bien Hou dispensary had set up a tent just outside the danger zone. There had not been any serious army casual ties, just a lot of cuts and bruises. Everybody was standing on top of the bunkers trying to get pictures of the blasts. A great cloud of smoke, then a shattering roar and a shock wave like a strong gust of wind would arise. It was here that I met Capt. Altomonte, the doctor at the Bien Hou dispensary. Hearing (Continued on Pare 7)