Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 26, 1966, edition 1 / Page 6
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- ' t , - - ' Wednesday, October 26, 1966; THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 6 s i Peace Corps Offers Travel And Ideals By LYTT STAMPS DTH Staff Writer "The Peace Corps offered everything I believed in," the Corps' 10,000th returnee ex plained yesterday in telling why she joined the Corps. "In addition to the oppor tunity to travel," Sally Poland said, "it offered a fulfillment of my humanitarian ideals." Mrs. Poland joined the Corps in 1964 after she and her hus band graduated from the University of Louisville, in Kentucky. Both she and her husband had been active on campus she was president of Kappa Delta sorority; he, of Deta Upsilon. They both were mem bers of the university honors society and were cheerleaders. Mrs. Poland said she had the idea of joining the Corps from the time she first heard of the project until she and her husband decided to join. She was and is enthused about Peace Corps opportuni ties. "There are so few draw backs and so much good that the program offers," she said. "It helped us to solidify our goals," Mrs. Poland said. "I had been interested in social work and my work in the slums of Turkey helped me to decide definitely to go into social work." Her husband also decided to come here to do graduate work in the School of Public Health while in Turkey. Mr. and Mrs. Poland worked in Ankara, Turkey, in an urban community development pro ject with a team of six others. PLAY PASS OUT A hard drinkin', hard smokin adult game! $4.98 DIULY oimiun' EASTGATE OLIVE PARKAS WAIST $3.00 KNEE $4.75 ILL OUTLET SALES ROOM OVER SUTTON'S DRUG ',4.. ARMY mmwmmcMs ) i A v li? W wmn-minwYN-WAYFR aifshf Dnn tavi HDoTDnno unwAon. mi qi ihum iULiniLUi nlvui iiunnau uilloluuihi t! PETER THmXHTs5oRJ0N PENINGIDN The pilot project included beginning a community cen ter which was busy from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. It was used as a library, a kindergarden, a literacy course for women, a study hall and tutoring program for junior high aged students and sewing for young girls. Projects which the team completed included building a hospital and a post office and got a sewage ditch covered. "The people were most re ceptive to our work," Mrs. Poland said. "I think we helped the com munity, although we may not have made a major effect on the country," she said. "I think the Peace Corps is doing, a good job." Mrs. Poland and her husband completed their stay in Tur key in mid August. She was the 10,000th Peace Corps vol unteer complete overseas ser vice. Indonesia (Continued From Page 1) whitewashed court room and replied: "No." The court how ever, gave him 30 days to ap peal to Sukarno for clemency. But at last week's final session, the 52 year old Su bandrio appealed to the mili tary court to base its judg ment on "justice and humani ty." He denied involvement in the coup that failed Oct. 1, 1965. He said he had heard the coup rumors but did not pass them on to Sukarno because he believed that was a job for army intelligence. The tribunal's decision did not stipulate how or when the sentence would be carried out. Several others accused of in volvement in the plot have been sentenced to death and some are believed to have been executed. Themes Continued from Page 1) we read in the newspaper that he was taken out as our teacher. "The whole situation is ridi culousthat one teacher could assign one theme to one class and stir up all this contro versy,", . t . . . , Concerning the charge thai the normal student-teacher re lationship was impaired, she said, "That was the grounds he was removed on, but I don't feel that they were valid." She concurs with those groups demanding Paull's re turn to his class. "He didn't disturb me one bit I thought it was an in teresting class. "I hope we do get him back. If he is reinstated I think he'd try just as hard to be a good teacher as he did in the beginning." The Ecstatic Boutique for Women - to be opened on October 26. TODAY Upstairs 133 2 East Franklin Monday Friday 11-6 Saturday: 9-5 . . Fashion for the Adventurous . . . FROM JzZ i rninTnimic rn nnnrnem 1 i nin1ITftlTrift:-:-;-;-;-;.:.x.;.;.;.; . . XWWOWViijoowJ fi i im pRnnnnnnM Y -HARRY FINE-JACK CARDIFF .PANAVISIONT. METROCOLDR WED. THRU SAT. I W ' r'J ft r 1 THE UP CANDIDATES for the Class of '70 Roberts, social chairman; Judy Froeber, sec are (left to right) Alan Albright, president; retray; and Randy Merril, treasurer, president; Joe Chesire, vice president; Jean DTH Photo By Jock Lauterer 1,-1 . - "5 -.i,- tr - Ml 1 w 11 ' ;K ( ' I I" Ct ) -Z, J .f L.il riL FRESHMAN CANDIDATES from the SP are (left to right) Betty Marye, social chairman; Pets Powell, vice president; Nancy Smith, Campus Gulemdur WEDNESDAY The Community Council for Adult Jewish Education will sponsor Professor Shalev Gi nossar, Dean of the Law School, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, tonight at 8 at Duke's East Campus, Music Room. Dr. Sam Hill will speak on "God Is Dead Theology" at Celanese Corp. To Interview Celanese Corporation has openings for foreign students from Colombia, Mexico, Ven ezuela, Peru, Belgium, Hol land, Germany and Canada. Students with bachelor's or master's degrees in chemical, mechanical, or textile engi neering are preferred but students in business adminis tration or related filds wille find excellent opportunities with the company, which is expanding rapidly in Latin America and Europe. A representative from Cel anese will be on campus on October 28, and any foreign student who thinks he can qualify should make an ap pointment through the Place ment Office, 204 Gardner Hall. Further information on the company and its activities is available in the office of the Adviser to Foreign Students, 216 Murphey Hall. ohf imr-nFn nr 5 ? v V Shows at: 1:00-3:00 5:00-7:00-9:00 i 6 . V i Mill V I I ' v? ft MGM n - ? r 'iV' '4 ( it f 1 V; - i a banquet style supper at 6:30 in the west end of the Granville Towers cafeteria.' The 1967 Fine Arts Festival committee chairmen and faculty advisors will meet today at 5 in RP I in GM. There will be an MRC meet ing at 7 on the fourth floor of New East.' Stray Greeks will meet at 6:15 in Brady's Restaurant. Students interested in riding to New York for Thanksgiving holidays on a chartered bus at a cost of $22 should con tact Doug Barba at 968-9305 or 9062. Concert Band practice tonight from 7:30-9 p.m., Room 107, Hill Hall. All interested per sons please be present. Elections Commission will meet this afternoon from 4:30-5:30 in Roland Parker III. It is urgent that all members attend. If unable to come, please contact Doug McKeown, 967-3385. The Murdoch Committee in vites all students interested in working with retarded children at the Murdoch Cen ter to meet with the Commit- : tee at 2 p.m. in front of Y Court. Students who can, please bring cars; you will GPERATIOU iiiiiiiiiiiii iw,; ir""" I " ;-; V is go:.i::g! Jobs Available Contact Roger Werner at 1 Pettigrew, 968-9174 IS:: Sing WUtam RESTAURANT STEAKS CniCKEH SEAFOOD IMPORTED end DOMESTIC BEVERAGES SPECIAL THIS WEEK COUNTRY STYLE STEAK Served with Tossed Sotod (Choice of Dressinfl) French Fries Rolls and Butter U5 RESTAURANT Wi miles from campus PITTSBOKO nw" Open for Breokfatr, Lunch and Dinner frery Dey Open for Breakfatr, Lunch and Dinner frery Dy V2 MILES FROM CAMPUS ON PiTTSSOSO ROAD 7 1 i i 1 j j -. secretary; Bland Simpson, president; and Joyce Davis, treasurer. DTH Photo By Mike McGowan be reimbursed for gas mon ey. Last day to sign up if you are a Chapel Hill girl resident " and interested in baby sit ting for 75 cents an hour. Sign up at the GM Informa tion Desk. Dr. A. T. Stewart will speak on "Asymmetric Fission" at 4 p.m. in Room 215, Phillips Hall. The UNC Amateur Radio Club will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Caldwell annex building. All interested persons are in vited to attend. ADULT EDUCATION NEW YORK (UPI) The New York City Board of Edu cation reports about 75,000 adults have registered for classes in fundamental edu cation conducted during the day and evening in more than 200 city schools. PIN-POINTED WATERBURY, Conn. (UPI) Archeologists have docu mented that the first type of safety pin was used in the Bronze Age, about 1400 B.C., according to researchers at Scovill Manufacturing Co., the largest American producer. p6 ATGU Sino-Soviet Shift Seem A UNC political scientist and authority on Asian affairs de tects a significant change in the nature of the Sino-Soviet dispute. Prof. Robert A. Rupen, a specialist on communism, ob serves that internal Chinese ideology is occupying a much larger place than formerly in the continuing dispute. "China has recently lost heavily in the Sino - Soviet rivalry and her inter - nation al position is extremely weak," he says, pointing to declining Chinese influence in Indones North Korea and North Viet nam. "The dispute now turns in great part on ideology applied domestically in China, but al so includes a foreign policy element in Vietnam," Rupen explains. "As a foreign policy matter, the dispute is much less important than formerly. The ideological factor has be come more important, main ly internally in China." This internal, t idological struggle in China is currently taking the form of an attack by elder generation revolution aries, headed by Mao Tse Tung, on "revisionists" or bourgeois" Chinese, whom they characterize as selfish, materialistic and capitalistic. Rupen cites Chinese ideology as the key factor in the cur rent Sino - Soviet dispute and explains that Chinese attacks on Soviet revisionism are real ly aimed at "revisionists" in China rather than in the So viet Union. "The rest of the world might as well not exist," he says, "china is looking at herself, and this introspection now ov errides territorial claims and world power ambitions." Chinese leaders believe the Sovit Union has "sold out" and surrendered to the selfish and the individual, Rupen ex plains. In Chinese eyes, Rus sia is soft on communism and has "gone bourgeois." Increa singly, they see Russia as an example of what might happen to China, as calls for mater ial comfort, peace,-relaxation and privacy have already been heard in Communist China. Rupen feels Russia has be come almost irrelevant to the Sino - Soviet dispute. So viet revisionism, he believes, is attacked as a conveni ent scapegoat. It enables char acterization of "bourgeois" Chinese as agents of a for eign ideology, and hence trai tors. ' ' 1 ' ' ' ' "Attacks on Russia and Khrushchevite revisionism by Chinese leaders are but cam ouflaged attacks on Chinese who are not 'revolutionary' enough and not sufficiently self - sacrificing," says Rup en, "Chinese leaders fear re visionism in China more than they fear it in Russia." He views the current strug gle for succession to Mao Tse - Tung as a practical ex pression of the conflict be tween revolutionaries and "re visionists" in China. "Chinese leaders have al ready seen enough signs of in dividualism and fbourgeois This Week in the Old Book Feature Case Psychology and Psychaiiry Here is a lively but small col lection, that runs from basic works by people like Freud and Jung to more popular ap proaches. Prices are mode rate. The Intimate Bookshop 119 E. Franklin Street Open Till 10 P.M. Hi Si TG)'n with Old Spice Lime Precisely what things depends on what you have in mind. Whatever it is, Old Spice LIME can help. Its spicy, lime-spiked aroma is very persuasive. . . but so subtle, even the most wary woman is trapped before she knows it! Worth trying? You bet it is! Old Spice LIME Cologne, thought' among the Chinese to disturb them seriously," Ru pen reports. ,4Urgency is add ed to their concern by their own advanced ages, with an accompanying shortage of 'sat isfactory' successors. "Deep revolutionary con viction is dying with many of the old men. Mao and his co horts fear China will repeat the scandalous 'surrender of principle' with which they charge the Russians." As to the future of the Sino Soviet relationship, Rupen thinks the dispute will con tinue long after Mao's death and will not be affected by the outcome in Vietnam or any other devopment abroad. "Russia has already develop ed beyond the possibility of reversion to a HUhinese line, " Rupen reasons. "Therefore re solution of the dispute depends on developments in China, not in Russia. The Sino - Soviet question is a Chinese question." Rupen predicts that the ideo logical basis of "anti - revis ionism" will eventually wither away in China. Increased de mands for food and goods for the country's huge population, he says, will force China to compromise by favoring "ex perts" more and "Reds" less. , . "Mao's struggle is lost and Red Guards cannot make his vision work," Rupen obser ves. "Sooner or later, what he calls bourgeois and 'revision ism' will come to the fore. It will happen before 1984." Rupen adds that when the ideological basis of 'anti-revisionism withers away will there come abouta reconcilia tion of the Soviet Union and China. The professor also has some opinions as to how the Sino Soviet dispute is affecting the United States. He says Amer ican containment of China "makes sense" and that the United States should work "to confine Chinese irration ality to China itself." "Let us not count on Chinese rationality to save us from disaster," he warns. "Chinese fears that future China will 'go revisionist' and fail to pursue aggressive policies could lead it to run risks now and not trust the future." Rupen concludes that the out come of the internal ideologi cal struggle in China, and its practical expression in succes sion to Mao Tse - Tung, is far more significant for the future course of Sino - Soviet rela "fc. a. ivy BERT BARBARA VffiLE bbiree montgohery BIKH WERNBI PE1S JMS HEacARIHW and Produced Of WITON SPERLING. PHILIP V0R04N . Directed b, KEN 2 SHOWS! ii mill -ir m ii ii i "H n riiitniinr wni niiiw iltininiliiiii intiiiiil riiirriii WMiwiiifi ULTRA PANAVISION--TECHNICOLOR". FROM WARNER BROS. I After Share, Gift Sets. By the maker, tions than the outcome in Vietnam. ... . "But insofar as Vietnam poisons U. S. - Russiau rela tions, 'it serves China's pur pose. China is at least as in terested in a continuing U.i. Russian dispute as we are m aa continuing Sino-Soviet dis pute." Have You Discovered branny s Attic? n V.J- If you need to brighten your outlook, buy a plaid suit. There's something about wearing: a plaid suit that brings out the optimism In men, and maybe that accounts for its enduring popularity. All manner of plaids, in; all kinds of colors, await your Inspection! Vested plaid suits from 85.00. Mm a Iw Clothiers of Distinction FRANKLIN STREET STARTS SUNDAY UiiLIKE ANYTHING YOU HAVE EVER SEEM THE SUPER i r ACTIQil SHOW OF RYAN - DANA ANDRE n hardisi - charus broos m is en IHiY SAM SlDMEV HARMON in ltul -ih - ------ - ..w.wi. v. riUUUtdOn ANNAKiN . Written 0y PHILIP TOROAN. MILION SPERLING. JOHN KELSON UNIIED STATES PICTURES. INC Production ODD of original Old Spi ice. 1 Sir V 1 vrntowm 19: 1 "3 r ' n
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 26, 1966, edition 1
6
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