Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 2, 1967, edition 1 / Page 1
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Clo"dy And ? to 'C. COs- "uay. 's and mild -N State Affairs 5Icct SUte Affairs will meet at 4 p.rrt. today in Rolacd Parker III. ClusceEor J. Carijle Slt terson will talk to the com mittee. Attendance is maa datorv. 75 year o Editorial Freedom l?75 Number 44 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. Vnvnmrp o 1937 Founded February 23, 1833 vo On Draft To By HUNTER GEORGE 0 Th Tar Hi S to help students understand their own feelings hLl u situation" wiS begin here later this month, uegun as an outgrowth of Vietnam Summer, a national anti-war group, the counseling service will be neither pro-war nor anti-war, a spokesman said. Instead, it will provide in formation on the new draft law fl V-A World News rm jnj briefs Humphrey Arrives Jn Malaysia KUALAL LUMPUR - Police using tear gas and clubs smashed Ana-American demonstrations in two Malaysian cities Wed nesday shortly before Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey ar rived for a three-day visit. Humphrey saw nothing of (the demonstrations, which erupted before Ms blue and white U.S. Air Force jetliner landed and oroke out briefly againj after he had been driven to the hilltop residence of Prime Minister Tungku Abdul Rahman Threats of large scale demonstrations and rioting failed to materialize. Because of the ithreats, security for Humphrey's visit was even tighter than for President Johnson's visit here one year and one day ago. U.S. Reports Major Viet Victories SAIGON American officials Wednesday reported sweeping victories in South Vietniam (that killed 1,722 Communists and the eighth consecutive day of massive air strikes against the Hanoi Haiphong area. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey flew over battlegrounds close to North Vietnam and said he believed "we are winning this struggle.1" Hie American high command claimed a major military vie- Jl. IL IIL and on the requirements for conscientious objector status and other areas of concern to male students. So far, about 15 faculty members, graduate students and clergy have agreed to do the counseling. "At this point we are still counseling the counsellors," said Judy Weinberg, a 'graduate student helping to coordinate the program. She said one workshop has already been held and two more are planned before Nov. 15, when the program will of ficially begin. However, more, than 25 students already have inquired about counseling concerning their draft status. When the program starts, it is expected that posters will be displayed around campus giv ing a phone number people can call to set up an appointment with a counselor. 'The counselors are not allowed by law to advocate a position on the draft," Miss Weinberg stressed. T h e y might personally feel a certain way, but it is illegal and im moral to advocate it to anyone else." "All the counselor can do is help you understand your own feelings," she said. The service will be free. A similar service is being begun at Duke University. Committee Gives OK Sellout Seen For Scrimmage Tickets for the Blue White intrasquad basket ball game following the Clemson football game Satnrday are still on sale. The game will start at 4:29 p.m. in Carmichael. Tickets are Si Tickets are on sale at the Carmicbael ticket of fice until Friday. The ticket office is open from 8:39 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Fellowship of Chris tian Athletes, sponsor of the scrimmage, expects a sellout of the event, ac cording to Albert Long of the FCA. Six thousand five hun dred tickets are being sold for the game. .Financial IT Goes rrn 1L0) D A8 rm ILOffll Bill IgJaLlD By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A bill to make the Student Body Treasurer an appointive wfice, create a Department of "the Treasury, and abolish the Audit Board and Budget Com mission will be considered by the Student Legislature tonight If the bill passes wife a two thirds, majority, it will be -voted on by die students in the Nov. 14 election where it must get a simple majority to go in to effect. wrm a - me reform bill was in troduced into judicial com mittee Wednesday by George Krichbaum, SP from Lower Quad. It passed out favorably. The functions of the Audit Board and toe Budget Com mission will be assumed by the new department. The bill also provides for paying the treasurer, who would be the director of the new department. The director of the Student Activities Fund, presently Mrs. Frances Sparrow, would be the assistant director of the "" f """. 'a ' department. The Student Body President -would appoint the treasurer, subject to twotbird's vote ap proval by legislature. Present student body treasurer Hugh Saxon testified in favor of the bill and said the last two treasurers had "recoenrnended that the selec tion of the treasurer be taken oat of the electoral process." "You can get a more qualified treasurer that way," according to Saxon. Ken Day, executive secretary to Student Body President, Bob Travis said the financial system reform was needed because of the increase in SG budget and activities had made the present system out moded and confusing. "Committee chairman Tom Benton, SP from Craige, ad vocated the change so 'the president of the student body doesat have to sit around and worry about which committee does what." Presently the Budget Com mittee prepares the budget and submits it to the SL finance committee which usually re- prepares it, according to Sax on. The committee also is in charge of transferring funds within the budgets of organiza tions receiving money through the Student Activities Fund. The Audit Committee supervises the Student Activities Fund, and has the power to supervise the books or investigate the expenditures of organizations. The watchdog functions of these committees would not be affected, according to Benton. They would be assumed by the treasurer and the Student Activities Fund. A salary for the treasurer is needed, according to Day, because of "the burden that is to be placed on bis shoulders and the expertise that is re quired." The treasurer under the pro posed system "would have a lot more work and responsibility," Saxon said. The past two treasurers, Hugh Saxon and Don McPhall, have run unopposed in the elections, with double en dorsements of both parties. Dex No Help, C 7Th TTWV" II ti C3ULVS LP(R WflL Ur. tyi.. ! U- l ,1 Ui.lt- r T T!L mn If - 1 . . i " wijf m tiic uiree-uay uauie ui ijuc ixmii, u mues norm oi oaigon rTfl near the Cambodian border. It said 369 Viet Cong and North Viet- (J jTh Q yT (pT Q namese were killed in desperate attacks against an American -.-vv-r y.t oa.o Green Beret Special Forces camp and a nearby South Viet- v . namese compound Class Of ficer Candidates Given Rules Saturn V Rocket Launch Delayed The appointment of ' Laura Owens as Assistant Attorney General for Women's Court, replacing Carol Stein, passed ifavca-ablv out of Ways and Means Committee of Student CAPE KENNEDY Preparations for the unmanned launch Legislature Tuesday night, debut of the powerful Saturn S moon rocket lagged Wednesday Legislature will consider her and were expected to delay che all-unporxarit test a cay to Nov. appointment tomgnt. 8. A spokesman for the federal space agency in Washington! said a decision on a revised target date for the Apollo flight test was expected Thursday. . Officials said no significant problems were encountered but that work was taking longer mat planned. Program director Samuel Phillips said last week that such delays were likely because "we are in a very complex learning process." Students running for class officer positions in the Nov. 14 election were briefed Wednesday on election laws and procedures for filing expense accounts. Thirty-six candidates representing the three parties met in Roland Parker Lounges of GM. Where There's A Will.. Smith Girls May Have Way To Save Residence Hall Senate Releases Riot Statistics ' WASHINGTON Senate investigators said Wednesday riots and other major racial disturbances in the United States killed 130 persons, wounded 3,623 (and caused an estimated $210.6 miffion property 'damage since 1S63. The riot statistics were the first ever compiled nationally. They were released by the Senate permanent investigations sub committee as it began what is expected to be an exhausitve and lengthy inquiry into slum violence. Chairman John L. McClelian told the opening hearing the riots are becoming a 'tangible threat to the preservation of law and order and our national security.' 1 on frr fhi sumner's Detroit riots to the 1965 civil rights march in Selma, Ala., where there was no sniping, looting, arson or vandalism. Miss Stem was dismissed Oct. 23 by Student Body Presi dent Bob Travis for allegedly withholding information in the prosecution of a coed. Her dismissal drew criticism at that time because Travis didn't give any details of the case. On Oct. 28 he said he had asked her to resign, and then att t to keep Smith from fired her when she refused He tumed to an office iar OTiamw in uiwib wo- building. The residents were told by By KAREN FREEMAN of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Smith residents are hoping that James Pleasant Mason. long a supporter of the hanging undisturbed and un separated in Smith. If the University violates the stipulation, the 800 acres of land, including Finley Golf ... i i 1 IkAMM J vt a mWffiOTT At rhe subcommittee said us siausucs were imscu Wuiui,v4 w snorted 101 "maior" disturbances in 76 cities. whv he had fired her. Miss Owens, a senior, has been an assistant to Miss Stein since April. During the first session of summer school she served as the Assistant At torney General for the Women's Court Attorney General David LeBarre, testifying for Miss --: J 'u' KoKU, uwece, aaiu ,oW stipulation that would not make any maior , changes in Miss Stems staff. his two daughters are kept University until his death, will Course, will have to be return come to their support in their ed to the estate. Dean uarmicnaei was unavailable Wednesday night for confirmation. Smith girls admit they may be grasping at straws the rennovations could be built around the portraits but say "there's no harm in trying, or even trying to talk to the trustees." The portraits are hanging on an inside wall to the left of the center parlor, probably in about the same place the men with blueprints who have been invading Smith have been Dean .-Katherine Kennedy C&rmichael during orientation week about Mason's will, which conceivably could stop administrators from going ahead with the conversion. The will donated to the University the 800-acre Mason farm and $1.000 on the portraits of Pleasant Mason and Residence College Radios Railroad Merger Returns To Court Considering NeW NetWOrk WASHINGTON The controversy over merger of the New York Central and Pennsylvania railroads reached the Supreme Court Wednesday for the second time. Other lines affected by the consohdation-lrgest n cor nomtP history asked the court to block temporarily a lower urt decSion of Oct. 19 that would place the plan ineffect. They urged the Supreme Court to delay the merger in order to hear two asoects of the case. One is the merger itself. The other is an Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) order that the Erie-Lackawanna toe Boston & Maine and the Delaware and Hudson be brought into the Norfolk and Western system. Because of the special attention fhel Lee small lines have been given by the ICC, they are Sd many month, ago. But the rarriers which are appealing wuu a ouyicwc wuiv u. same By STEVE KNOWLTON of The Daily Tar Heel Stag The idea of radio stations within residence colleges, itself a radical concept a year ago, is adding a new dimension an inter-station network. ,. A residence college network "can have all the advantages of the controversial campus radio," said Bob Bass, governor of Granville Towers, "but with far less cost." Each college with a radio station can join, the proposed network simply by having a telephone line installed from the time can simply plug this telephone wire into the station transmitter," Bass said. Bass said there would be a switch hooked up to each line so one station along, the line . could by-pass the network show if it so desired. for a telephone line, Bass said. Bass, who has done most of the wiring for WILD, said a line between Granville and Morrison will be installed as soon as Granville's station of ficially goes on the air. "Then At present, Morrison's WMO we can add others as they get wu"" "X-Trnin determine "the ultimate fate" puuuc ome insiauea irom on Marcn z requu5 . . i 7' " i t " one college station to the next. of the proteciea ruaua to rr uass saia tral. Pope Paul To Undergo Operation xr a tip am CITY Pope Paul VI will undergo surgery to cor "When we nave a show that we want to put on the network, the disk jockey on the air at is the only college station on the air regularly, but Gran ville's WILD radio is slated to start next week and. James' WSCR (standing for South Campus Radio) is due to start regular boradcasts before Thanksgiving. After the initial cost of in; stalling the line, the only cost to maintain the network would be about $6, per month per col lege, the regular monthly rate . . j ct3to piand "within the next few davs ?ti??sdSs announced Wednesday night The pope has been Sortabte and occasionally feverish for almost two mon- th9Thp. announcement came as a minor surprise, although aha(j been indicated for the 70-year-of Pope. Reports earnerthis week said the operation would probably be performed about the middle of November. 'Tank The Tiger" The cheerleaders tcill lead a 'Tank The Tigers' pep rally at 10:50 Friday on the steps of South Building. their stations - going," n e said. '. "This network idea can com bine the best of two good ideas regarding residence colleges," Bass said. "We will be able to have far greater inter-college communication with a network, and at the same time, no individual college identity will be lost." A bill to appropriate $500 to the Men's Residence Council to establish such a network is presently before Student Legislature. A second part of the bill requests a $250 ap propriation to each residence planning to put an office. The will could be circum vented by making Smith one of the few office buildings on campus with one-fourth of a parlor, or by building an office with a very old-looking walL The Smith residents were told the story of the win during orientation week by Dean Katherine Kennedy CarmichaeL If the will isn't sufficient to prevent the take-over, the girls will try to contact the trustees, and perhaps appear before them at. the trustees' November meeting to plead their case. Jo Ann Porter, president of Smith, said that the music faculty is behind the residents who want to keep Smith as a fine arts dormitory, and helped them in their struggle to keep it last year. "If necessary, we'll take turns as maids so they don't have to pay any and cut costs that way." Director of Housing James Wadsworth said Wednesday that the girls win be given priority in their room reserva tions for next year, and it might be possible to keep them an togehter in Cobb Dormitory, if they so desire. But Miss Porter insists that staying together isn't the point behind wanting to keep Smith. "It's just that we haven't been consulted, and it's like being evicted," she said. The Smith girls will not be put into Alexander because Alexander win house only graduate women. By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Taking dexedrine will not help anyone to study, Dr. Joseph DeWalt of the Student Infirmary said in Wednesday's panel . meeting on "Drugs in Our Society." DeWalt said moderate doses of dexedrine wiH keep the stu dent awake and help him as long as the task he is perform ing does not require accuracy or much thought "It's good for long, boring tasks," said DeWalt Heavy doses of the drug will not allow higher performance but wUl decrease the effects of the drug, DeWalt said, adding dejEedrine is only effective for "five to seven hours at the most. DeWalt, one of three speakers at the discussion on stimulant drug's, condemned the use of dexerdrine and other amphetamines by stu dents. "Amphetamines are dangerous," said DeWalt. "A servere overdose can lead to paranoia which can lead to homicide -or suicide. Cerebral hemorrhages can result from doese as small as 5 mffligrams." The size of an average dose of dexedrine is five miligrams. milligrams. "Amphetamine is one of the most abused drugs because it is readily available and it is cheap," said DeWalt - Speaking with DeWalt were Dr. C. J. Cavallito of the School of Pharmacy and Dr. Harry Smith, a Presbyterian chaplain. Smith said drug abuse makes a person less than human. "The inability to function as a person is the mark of drug abuse," said Smith. "It's a denial of humanness to 'freak out' with drugs. Abuse keeps a person from relating maturely with other people." Cavallito stressed that the drugs of the amphetamine group did not cause a physical dependance, but could cause a psychic dependence. Cavallito, who has taken am phetamines while ex perimenting with them for federal projects, said there is an individual variation in toleration to the drugs to such an extent that one person's prescription may harm another. Amphetamines act to raise (Continued on Pare 6) Little Chance Seen For Nurses9 Dorm Prof Shows Paintings An exhibition of paintings by UNC art professor Robert Ramard will be on display coUeee for thwmph November 15 at the pro vino- nf itc um Vrfahl Clovd-Umon Building at Nortn uaroiiiia owic wu.v.- ty in Raleigh. ' A noted sculptor, Barnard was educated at the University here as weU as at several col leges in England. station. SL's finance committee is expected to pass the bill out of committee Tuesday and present it before the body a week from tonight By DONNA REDTSNIDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Take-over of Nurse's Dorm is inevitable, Dean of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey told a nursing student Tuesday. Ruth Kam merlin, a jiinior nursing student, went to Dean Cathey to ask his support in the Nurses' "Save our Dorm" campaign. "It looks like we're going to lose our dorm anyway, but he told me he would not initiate any movement to push us out," she said. ."The hospital and medical center complex here is a 30 million dollar project, and there is no more room to ex pand except our way." Neither Dean Cathey nor Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael will make the final decision when the girls will be moved. "A number of persons from the hospital administration, the medical school and the' University will be involved in making that decision," said Cathey. Dean Cathey is sympathetic and he really does not want to put the Nurses in the new 1,000 girl dorm, Miss Kam merlin said. "But what we're up against is the great cost of operating the temporary trailors behind the dorm." (These trailors now house the overlfow of hospital ad ministration offices.) Also the University cannot C O. Cathey Hake-over is inevitable maintain the cost of converting men's dorms' and a coed residence college is not prac tical, Cathey said. Dean Carmichael and a special committee are survey ing women's high rise dorms in surrounding campuses. Their survey will be finished by Christmas and the girls in Nurses' Dorm should learn then when they can expect to move. Both architect and land for the new dorm have been con tracted. The high-rise building win go up in what is now Mor rison Residence parking lot.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 2, 1967, edition 1
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