Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 28, 1967, edition 1 / Page 1
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OW I o By JOE SANDERS The past academic year and the first summer session have been marked by an increasing controversy over women's rules here at the university. Numer ous letters have been written to the "Tar Heel" by both male and female students, and this year's "Yack" devoted two pages of editorial to the sub ject. "Dissatisfaction" is the word of the day. Not only are cer tain rules becoming more odi ous to the coeds, but the dou ble standard, which causes the same rule to be enforced for the women and overlooked for the men, is coming under heav ier attack from all quarters. All serious infractions of wo men's rules are the concern of the women's attorney general, a post that was filled the first summer session by Laura Owens, a rising senior, who gives her opinions here on the state of women's rules at Caro lina and how they can be changed. f k - w 5 . j ! - . i f ' ,- ti"' ' A- l , ji f- v. "-v! m" i ma - y- Tlmfz- - r THE PARKING PROBLEM is so bad that sme answers when their survey is corn some people have missed. But the work of pleted. Wilbur Smith and Associates should have Report A preliminary report on the University parking problem has been delivered to the adminis tration by Wilbur Smith and Associates, traffic consultants. Traffic and Parking Com mittee Chairman Allen Waters said this preliminary report of fers no proposals which can be pujt into effect this fall. Tinancing of the proposals will be difficult and can't be put into effect right away," Waters said. Wilbur Smith and Associates were commissioned last fall to do an $18,000 study of the parking problem. The preliminary report, which has not been formally presented to the traffic com mittee yet, includes initial pro posals for two multi-level lots, one near the hospital and the other near tfoe new student union. Estimated cost of the new lots is $30 charge to every car owner and this does not guar antee sufficient spaces. This preliminary report also included a proposal for cars to be coded as to staff, student Attack And Change Women's Rules TAR HEEL Last year there were a few rules that were re laxed, such as the extension of dorm closing hours on certain weekends. What groups were responsible for these changes and for rule changes in gener al? Miss Owens There are three groups which must interact for there to be any rule change. One, the Administration, which in this case is Miss Carmichael, (Dean of Women). The second Vol. 74 Given On and faculty. A long range viewpoint on a bus system was also mention ed in the study. Waters stressed that this is Faculty, Other Appointments Announced Following Approval Forty-six new faculty ap pointments, plus a new direc tor for the Institute for Re search in Social Science and an associate University Physician were named recently. Announcement of the new fa culty and administrative ap pointments is made by President William C. Friday and Chancel lor J. Carlyle Sitterson following approval of the UNC Board of Trustees Friday, July 14. Included in the new person nel changes are a Dean of Nursing, head of the Deoart- is the Women's Residence Coun cil, or the judicial branch. The third group is the co-eds. This past year, the only group vocalizing demands officially was Sharon Rose's group, the judicial branch. Of course, she was acting for students who had spoken to h3r, or in keep ing with the general sentiment. Tar Heel If the Women's Honor Council felt that a rule was unjust, could they, In ef fect, declare a rule unconstitutional? FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1987 .... - - I, li I I..K.M J Parking just a preliminary report and the engineers who made the study have not made a presen tation of the report yet. "This preliminary report of ment of Public Health Admini stration, Assistant Dean of Pharmacy, and Associate Di rector of the Carolina Popula tion Center. Ten of the new appointments are to the medical faculty, six; to the mathematics faculty' and five to public health. Political Science Prof. James W. Prothro will become direc tor of the Institute for Research in Social Science. He holds the Ph.D. from Princeton and came to UNC in 1960 from Florida S t a f e University. Sociology Miss Owens Absolutely not. We have to work within a frame work and operate on those rules that exist, no matter how we feel about them. There is a difference between the spirit and the letter of the law, and an example of this is the double standard. Neither men nor women are supposed to have liquor in the dorms, but with men its an open thing and with the women we have cases like a girl being tried for keep ing flat beer in a spray bottle Wttl Nearly iat. Drink At By DONNA REIFSNIDER Even Silent Sam donned a bright red grass skirt and pink lei for the occasion and joined nearly a thousand students and faculty for the luau Wednesday night. Well before serving time, long queues of hungry people stretch ed from grassy McCorkle Place to Morehead Planetarium and waited impatiently as smells of chicken royal Hawaiian, suck ling pig and barbecued spare ribs wafted through the air. Across the lawn in front of Survey fers nothing really alarming and startling," Waters empha sized. "I don't believe anything is going to be done for quite some time." Prof. Richard L. Simpson Jr. has been acting director since the resignation of Dr. Daniel O. Price in June, 1966, to accept a position at the University of Texas. Dr. William D. Poe of the University of Florida will be come Associate University Phy sician for Student Health Ser vice. Lucy H. Conant of Yale will become professor and dean of the School of Nursing Jan 1. She received her degrees from (Continued on Page 8) SG so she can spray her hair with it. Tar Heel What types of cases were most frequently tried by the Honor Council this past year? Miss Owens The most fre quent violations were of the campus code not lying, cheat ing, or stealing. Usually they were latenesses or alcohol in the dorms. We had only ten cases before (Continued on Page 3) Number 12 1,000 nana GM were long rows of low, white-clothed tables spread with whole pineapples, generous slices of watermelon and bana nas. The lines began to move and lei bedecked waiters heaped plates with fried rice, baked bananas, peas with water chest nuts, candied yams and other Hawaiian cuisine. Enthusiastic diners sat spraddle-legged at the low tables and were soon devouring a menu well pre pared by Lenoir Hall. Over a hundred hungry peo ple were turned away from the sell-out Hawaiian meal. But some remained to wander along the sidewalk and watch the spectacle of bright mumus, shirts and flowers. Seen among the crowd were Chief of Police, Arthur Beaumont in straw hat and lei, Miss Otelia Connor and Mr. Edward French, assistant director of admissions. He was wearing a genuine vintage '53 Hawiian shirt, he said. Afterwards, many lingered lazily, listening to the Attrac tions Combo and eating water melon as dusk began to fall on a very warm July night. But before long a truck roll ed across McCorkle Place and an energetic clean - up crew chased lingerers to blankets in front of GM. Quickly they gath ered up banana peels, paper plates and cups, watermelon rinds and pineapple tops and piled them in heaps beneath the trees. Soon McCorkle Place began to look like its usual well-kept self. The student government luau is the first of its kind at Caro lina. Students paid $.50 for a meal that cost $1.50 per person to prepare. The University paid the remaining dollar. Director of Food Services, Mr. George Prillaman, directed the pre paration of the special menu in cooperation with Don Duskie, who engineered the luau.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 28, 1967, edition 1
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