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U.fi.C. in Bx 870 P ' BILL AMLONG Daily Tar Heel Staff housW IfJ you .see those kids in PtoceX ther wortruLf a social cSL? lthG Univty has been S a l G0V' Dan K- M for hir ing proU W3S taDdng 'ab0Ut hous- Sln!!1 lankV and with a tribal of aristocracy about him fenkeharhe U mnt'iL remember very well how my sL Prtflent 1 was PPosed to say hZ KUSt 0lJt- If und out she had a job they'd throw us out of the pro- Cloudy Variable cloudiness through Friday. Cooler Friday with highs mostly in 60s. Saturday variable cloudiness and quite cool. Volume 75, Number 15 Faith -a L:, sip f" ' V;' (X( i MM Nuclear Force Increase Planned WASHINGTON The United States plans to increase its nuclear striking power against the Soviet Union fiveJto4en fold in the next few years authoritative sources reported Thursday. This major jump in he arms race is scheduled Ito take place through deployment of "multiple warhead" missiles both land based and submarine-launched. Deficiencies Ground Choppers SAIGON A structural deficiency was reported Thursday to have grounded about 40 per cent of the U.S. Marine helicopters used to ferry food water and ammunition to Marines at the artillery-battered Con Thien outpost just south of the Demilitarized one. Marine sources at Da Nang said the affected aircraft were CI 146 helicopters ordered grounded because itheir tail assemblies were falling apart. The sources said the helicopters would be flown only in extreme emergencies. A U.S. military spokesman in Saigon confirmed there had been groundings but said only about 20 per cent of the Marint-. helicopters had been affected. France Calls For Bombing End UNITED NATIONS France Thursday called for an end to the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam to "put an end to the suffering of many Vietnamese." French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville put con cern for the Vietnam population as the primary reason for a cessation of raids. Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam Malik also joined the swelling "stop-the-bombing" ranks Thursday afternoon declaring that "if a peaceful settlement at the conference table is to be reached promptly' the first step must be the immediate and un conditional end to the bombing of North Vietnam in order to pro mote conditions conducive to mutual agreement and set tlement." Chinese Struggle Seen Ending TOKYO A Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman said Thurs day that Communist China shows signs of returning to normal after a long struggle between supporters and opponents of Com munist party Chaircnan Mao Tse-tung. Radio Peking Thursday quoted Oimese Premier Chou En-lai as saying Mao's opposition "has crumbled. The radio also reported the public execution before 10.000 cheering Chinese of an alleged U.S. spy. A ject." Without the extra money he said they could not have made it. They finally did get thrown out Filler, his mother his sten father. Put he still remembers what it was like and says things haven't changed that muchs around housing projects. "What we're asking (in Durham) is that they build public housing throughout the city instead of just in the ghetto and that they start building single family dwellings which people with low incomes could buy over a period of time instead of concentration camps which is basically what public housing is." he said. Fuller who now lectures on com munity organication to one graduate sec tion in the School of Social Work is one of the key figures in Durham Negroes' drive to change that city's public housing Kept World News BRIEFS By United Press International Mod (fT) of DTH Staff Photo by Steve Adams CAROLINA FANS braved balmy (crazy) weather for one of the best pep rallies of the year. Keeping the faith was no problem. It seems UNC students keep it better than anybody. At least when it comes to Tar Heel teams. Conversion, Costs Go-To $75,000 By PAM HAWKINS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The renovations for. con verting Connor and Joyner ttorms into women's darens has cost about $75,000 to date ac cording ito Walter Hamilton of the 'buildings department. The former men's residence dorms were given over to the women this year with the coed enrollment increase. Hamilton said that one of the main areas of change was the addition of a suite for the housemother. - "We took some of the rooms that had been used as dorm rooms and converted them into a suite. "Former first floor lounge rooms were made into parlors . and the basement has been made into a study room." Other renovations included turning what used to be a trash room in Joyner into an in formal study room with desks and chairs. Hamilton said that the cost Girls Enjoy Phoning lu By PAM HAWKINS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff It's a funny kind of irony. . .the telephone situa tion in Connor Dorm, that is. On the second and third floors of the dorm one outside phone serves more than 50 girls. Now, that of itself is not ironic. Absurd, maybe, but not ironic. You have to look in a girl's room, in a closet, behind a rank o f clothes to see the irony because that is where a second phone was installed on each of those floors. It wasn't supposed to be that way. But that's the way it is. It wasn't anyone's fault. Just an honest mistake that no one in the Buildings Department Of MM policy. , Some 200 persons met Wednesday., night in the basement of the St. Joseph s , A.M.E. Church in the Hayti section to discuss opposition to the building of a new housing project on Bacon Street. "In the southeast corner of the city they already have some 70 per cent or better of public housing" he said in an interview Thursday. "The argument is that all this is doing is expanding the ghetto." Fuller who formerly worked for the Office of Economic Opportunity and now is director of community organization for the North Carolina Fund was one of the leaders in the demonstrations for better housing and jobs in Durham during the swmmer. He was suspended from fthe O.E.O. job following the demonstra tions. The mood of Durham s 75 Years of Editorial Freedom CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER whi ch was not complete due to work still being undertaken! in the idorms also included new draperies caiT)eting and furniture for the parlors plus new beds and (mattresses for the rooms. "We propose to put vinyl asbestos tile on the floor of the Ibasement study rooms. And now it is just a question of get ting a contractor scheduled to do the work." He said that telephones which will serve as inter-house phones are on order and . will foe installed immediately upon arrival. "We plan Ito have four telephones placed in the lobby which will each be connected to a separate floor so (that callers can reach their dates" he said. According to Hamilton- new mail boxes for Joyner, Connor and Winston dorms have been ordered and released from the factory. "They should be ar riving within the next two weeks." realized until this week. Walter Hamilton of the' Buildings Department said, "We requisitioned from the telephone company two telephones for each of those floors with the understanding that one would go in a closet directly off the hall and the other would go in a closet in the ironing room," said Walter Hamilton, director of Physical Plant. Problem is those "ironing rooms" had to be changed to residence rooms because there were too many girls. So now the girls in rooms 219 and 319 have a phone in their closet. . The telephones are only for outgoing calls, though. "It's kind of fun," said Bestsy Crawford, junior Uamcy? w!5refl the meeting Wednesday and during fee summer demonstrations-is one of militancy but not of violence Fuller said. "They're ready to go" he said. "They still sing we ShaH Overcome' and 'talk aoout non-violence and I don't think jneyre going to initiate any violence but J, ttluf they're going to protect themselves. "The day of just sitting there and let-" 'ung people beat on you is over." Fuller said that the purpose of picketing a National Guard riot control practice in Durham Sunday was to show other Negroes that if they engage in legal activities they need not fear the Guardsmen. Gov. Moore's office .commented Mon day that: "The Governor cannot un derstand why anyone would protest riot training for the National Guard as n T o Student Body President Bob Travis reissued his call Thurs day night for an increase in student fees so that Student Government can function with out being hampered with lack of funds. In a "State of ithe Campus" address to members of Student IJeigMiature Travis said the present fees of $9 per semester during )the year and 50 cents per student during the summer must , eventually be raised if Student Government is to represent 'the student body adequately, The president first proposed lan increase iin fees last spring. Last night he did not specify when or by how much ithe (fees should foe increased. Hie Said however that such a move would require approval by the Administration and BOard of Trustees. Travis also outlined plans for educational judicial and finan cial reformis. , In the area of educational reform he said the Ex perimental College program will be expanded this year, a course and teacher evaluation program will be improved and TFJio's Got The Pure Pork Sign? Somebody has nabbed the Jesse Jones "pure pork sausage" sign which i s customarily towed by plane around Kenan Stadium on foot ball Saturdays. According to Thomas Stan di, pilot of the plane which tows the sign, the sign was "lifted" at Horace Williams airport. And he wants it back, or any part of it. In fact he'll pay $25 reward for its return. Whoever has it or knows where it is is asked to bring it to The Daily Tar Heel office on the second floor of Graham Memorial. American Studies major in room 219. "We meet a lot of people that way. The girls come in to use the phone, but it's not really an in convenience. "It's just a pity that the phone isn't in the hall where everyone would have access to it, bacause I feel that the girls are somewhat hesitant to come into our room to use it." "Betsy and her roommate Gil Edmunds have a sign posted on their door saying that anyone is welcome to use the telephone when their door is open. The note continues that they don't mean to be "ugly" but when the door is closed, they are studying or asleep and would really rather not be disturbed. "The closet doesn't make a Na& Of Vioiemce ordered by the Pentagon unless he was planning to engage in a riot." But Fuller said Thursday that wasn't so. "It's not that they want to get out and riot" he said. "The understanding in the black com munity about the Guard is that they (Guardsmen) shoot black people. We were trying to show that you have nothing to fear with legal assembly." He said in one area of the state a Na tional Guard practice had scared Negroes so much that now -they were afraid to organize themselves at all "It was an idiotic place to hold the xhing" he said of Sunday's practice. "They should have held it at the fair grounds.' Fuller said he participated in the demonstrations to keep faith with the mm 29, 1967 n a student advisor program will be established to aid students in selecting courses. Judicial reforcns mentioned by Travis include HinSting the Campus Code to the University and Chapel Hill area instead of continuing the present system in which a student may be charged with a campus code violation for an act committed anywhere. iSuch a change would require a campus-wide referendum. Olairification of jpnaMes and. ' procedures for Honor and. Campus- Code violations and .Fees Om EDrm By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A group of UNC students in terested in "setting up an in tensive study of the nature of drug abuses" will hold an open meeting at 5 p.m. Monday in 111 Beard Hall, according to Karen Gibbons, spokesman for the group. "Anyone interested in drugs can attend," said Ken Day, a member of the organizing committee. "This session on Monday will be a 'brainstorm session'. There is no concrete agenda. How far this program goes depends on how much interest there is." The idea for the discussion group came from a meeting with representatives from Smith Kline and French Laboratories who discussed programs on drugs that had been successful at other cam puses. The meeting was planned by Dean Hager of the UNC School of Pharmacy. Enough interest was shown at the meeting to warrant more study on . the subject. "Our program will be a com bination of elements from Closets very good phone booth," Betsy said with a laugh. You have to shove the clothes out of the way or throw them on the bed. And my closet is crammed full with suitcases and boxes. Last night I found the phone receiver in my laundry bag. - .it had fallen off the hook. . . "The extension cord extends about three feet, but then all you can do is stand between the closet door and the walL "The phone isn't really any trouble, but I wish we could receive outside calls on it because the telephone situation with so many girls is terrible, she said. . . Tonia Poe, junior journalism major in room 319, said that (Continued on Pae 6) j wv eeded. TO creation of a separate coed . honor court composed of men and women students also was outlined by Travis. He said a supreme court bill of procedures will be in troduced into Student Legislature and he advocated an lmtensive program Of training defense counsels. The president said the Office Of Student Body Treasurer should be abolished in ifavor of a part time paid student to handle Student Government ' funds. ' . ; He also tsaid he will ask Stu those used at other schools with additions by our own group," said Day. "Dean Hager will be able to get speakers, top notch people who will be able to speak on all aspects of the drug problem, medical, legal, psychological arid" sociological." "There is no widespread drug problem on campus, as far as I know," continued Day, "But as long as there is a single individual hospitalized s. Ab Student Advisors Aid In Course Choosing Bv RICK GRAY of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A new Student Advisory Committee has been formed by Student Body President Bob Travis, with Lloyd Simon as chairman. The committee resulted from a proposal by Simon that the academic ad visory system be supplemented with a system of student ad visors. Simon thinks that the ad visors are "too far out of touch" with the students. He feels that upper-classmen know the instructors and courses better than the ad visors, and can, be more ef fective in advising freshmen and sophomores what courses to take in preparation for work in their major. Simon had heard of a similar system at the University of Michigan and several other large universities. Part of the committee's work will be to in vestigate the operation of the system at Michigan and the other universities in an effort to organize the system here. Student advisors will be chosen on the basis of faculty recommendations and in terviews. The interviews will be held in Roland Parker Lounge No. 2 from 3-5 pan. Monday through Thursday. The juniors and seniors who would advise general college students would have regular Negroes whom he is trying to organize. "I dont classify myself as a leader" he said. "I classify myself as a person who is working to develop indigenous leaders but these people need someone to stand up with them. "If I've been preaching this in volvement I've got to be consistent. "If it (participating in a demonstra tion) means you lose your job then you lose your job. You have to stand up for v.uc c ill. Fuller said he plans on staying in North Carolina to continue his work and that he has already turned down job of fers elsewhere. "I believe I've become involved in something and I don't want to walk away from it" Draft Notice Graduate and undergraduate students who wish to have the University notify their local Selective Service board of their enrollment should fill out the request forms which are available in 1 Hanes Hall if they have not already done Founded February 23, 1893 dent Legislature for funds to match a $500 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to help finance a study of student stress. A leadership training pro gram is being developed he Said which will be available to - student leaders. It is designed to apply new techniques of ap plied behavioral science. He also called for a measure whereby the Attorney-General would be notified before any Student was dismissed by the Administration for disciplinary reasons. uses by drug misuse it is the con cern of all students." "Students don't know about drugs. They don't know what the risks and benefits are. "If, for example, my room mate wanted to know what would happen to him if he took Dex (Dexedrine I'd like to be able to tell him." Day doesn't know the extent of the drug problem on cam pus, but he suggested one of (Continued on Pare 6) office hours and would counsel students planning to enter the same field of study as the ad visor. That way the advisor would be able to tell the stu dent which courses to take and which semester to t a k e them. Simon emphasized that the greater the student participa tion in the system, the better the advisor-advisee ratio would be. Parking Lots Will Close The following areas will :be closed to traffic andS & parking at 11 p . m . :: tonight. :j 1. Area between Woolen Gym and the Tin Can. g 2. Bell Tower Rd.S :: between Bell TowerS gTeague. 3. Rain Varsity parking :$ g lot behind Kenan Field House 4. Area behind Nurses' S : Dorm adjacent to South gate No. 6. : Students with c S g stickers will be allowed to y. park in the Bell Tower g parking lot Saturday?: :$ morning. x 4 . i r JL. n J Is
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 29, 1967, edition 1
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