Saturday, March 2, 1968
Pass-5 -'
To
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THE DAILY TAR H
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Among
Fifteen students from UXC
represent the student body
next week at the annual
.meeting of the State Student
legislature at the Sir Walter
Hotel in Raleigh. ." V .
Of the 30 colleges that are
sending delegates to the
meeting, UNC's is expected to .Bagley,
uc me largest.
The president of the SSL this
year is a UNC student, Charlie
Mercer of Laurinburg.
these speakers will
be State Senator Robert
Morgan, past Speaker, of the
House of SSL: Mayor. Travis
Private phones are. being in
stalled in Connor Dorm . and
1 are expected to be in operation
by March 11, according to 0. S.
Hunt, Assistant Plant
Tomlinson of Raleigh: LL.Goy. Manager.
Bob Scott,", candidate for. Connor residents petitioned
Governor of North Carolina; '.earlier -.in the year for the
Rep. Jim Gardner and bmiin phones and will be billed $3 per
a '.vmsionoaiem : person or $18 per room each
businessman who is running semester, according to Mrs.
fortheU.S. Congiess. Graham Ramsey. Housemoth-
The new exchange is planned
to eventually get the whole
campus under one exchange
and to relieve the central of
fice, he added.
It will not be in operation for
at least a year, he indicated.
m
essy
The impossible clutter of any construction site
is mirrored in this shot of the new student
union complex. The only really meaningful
question, though, is whether or not ue new
union will be finished by the time students
return to school next falL
Campus News Briefs
'Royster Talks
W
31
vprmont C. Rovster will
deliver the Weil Lecture at the
University of North Carolina
here at 8 p.m., Wednesday in
Hill Music Hall.
Royster, editor of the Wall
Street Journal, will speak on
"Liberty and Responsibility: A
Delicate Balance."
The Weil Lecgure series on
American Citizenship was
established in 1915 by the
families of Sol and Henry Weil
of Goldsboro. William Howard
Taft delivered the first lec
tures. A group of distinguished
world citizens have followed
him, including Charles Beard,.
William Allen White, Harold J.
Laski, Felix Frankfurter,
Henry Wallace, Mark van
Doren, Barnaby Keeney, M.
Gavin, Carlos P. Romulo,
Christian Herter, Zechanah
Chafee, Robert A. Taft,
Eleanor Roosefelt, Richard B.
Tawney, Charle Malik.
Vermont Royster is a native
North Carolinian, a Phi Beta
Kappa graduate of the
University of North Carolina in
the class of 1935, winner of the
Pulitzer Prize for editorial :
writing, former president of
the American Society of
Newspaper Editors, and hs
been a staff writer for the Wall
Street Journal since 1936, and
has been editor for the past ten
years.
Companies Recruiting
Interviews Planned
The following companies will
recruit on campus during the
week of March 4-8, 1968:
Monday, March 4 Texaco,
Incorporated; Sinclair Refining
Company; Caterpillar Tractor
Company; Chemical Abstracts
Service; Nationwide Insurance
Company; Defense Supply
Agency Headquarters (Sum
mer jobs available); Com
merce Union Bank; Virginia
Wesleyan College.
Tuesday, March 5 :
Equitable Trust Company
( Summer jobs available ; ;
Humble Oil & Refining Com
pany; Free Library of
Philadelphia; Philip Morris,
Incorporated (Summer jobs
available); Wachovia Bank &
Trust Company;- Burlington
Industries, Incorporated.
. Wednesday, March 6
Queens Borough Public
Library; Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company; McGraw
Hill Book Company; U.S.
General Accounting Office;
Sauter. Laboratories,
Manhattan Bank; Time,
Incorporated, Humble Oil &
Refining Company; Wachovia
Bank and Trust Company.
(Summer jobs available)
Thursday, March 7 Carna
tion Company; City of Detroit;
Administration;- State-Planters
Bank of Commerce & Trusts
(Summer jobs available) ;
Pennsylvania Railroad ; Sauter
Lab oratories, Incorporated
(Summer jobs available);
Nassau Community College;
Brant Lake Camp. ,
Friday March 8 The
Kroger Company; Maryland
National Bank (Summer jobs
available); Carnation Com
pany; Security Life & Trust
Company (Summer jobs
available); Jordan Marsh
Florida; Scott Paper Company.
Apr 10, 11. ULYSSES
JOURNEY. A CBS Special,
this film traces the wanderings
of the Odyssey from Troy to
Ancient Greece, and attempts
to identify places - of legend ;
' with actual locations.
Students desiring interviews
w ith v the f company
representatives should go to
the Placement Service. 211
Gardner Hall.
"We expect this to be the
largest meeting ever," said
Mercer. "At least 3 0 0
delegates will attend the four
day session." ' ;
Each delegation comes to the
session with a bill ready to
present to the SSL House of
Representatives and Senate.
This year a bill which calls
for the establishment of two
new regional medical centers 1
in Greenville and Cullowhee is
to be submitted by UNC.
The bills are discussed and
possibly adopted. y , ,
At the end of the session the
bills are drawn up and copies
are given to the State General
Assembly with the hope that
they may serve as suggestions
for future action.
According to Mercer, several
important speakers are going
to attend the SSL for informal
talks and informative
sessions. -
Last year UNC won awards
for the best delegation from a
large school, the best bill, and
the best debator in the
House.
This year's delegates from
UNC are Mike Zimmerman,
Lexington; Steve Tanger and
Dick Levy, Greensboro; Diane
Ellis, Holly Springs; John
Williford, Pinetops; Harry Dif-
er of Connor. Installation fees
were paid by the University.
Wiring of Connor was begun
last summer when the dorm
was converted from mens to a
women's residence hall and
was completed recently.
The new numbers will begin
operating from the phone ex
change on Rosemary Street,
but will later be transferred to
tne new exenange wnicn is
r
CI
E"S C'"1
n
ri rrr
fendal, High Point; Tom Webb,: pianned for South Campus, ac-
. Albermarle; Tom Benton
Roanoke Rapids Lacy Reaves,
Raleigh; ; Danny Davis,
"Goldsboro; Steve Yelverton,
Fremont; Barbara Hall,
Athens, Ohio; and Susan Scrip
ture, Bridgeville, Pa.
Alternates are Dan Killian;
Cullowhee; John McMurray,
Asheville; Robert - H u n t e r ,
Greensboro ; Peter Powell,
Clinton; Carl Younger and
Marcia Whicker, Winston
Salem; Chase Saunders,
Charlotte; George Hearn;
Raleigh; Robert E. Wilson,
Wilmington; and Charles Jef
fress, Richmond, Va. v
cording to Hunt.
One Vino Gclato
(ITALIAN DESSERT)
and Coffee FREE with
purchase of any meal
and this coupon.
The
Gondola
157 E. Rosemary
11:33-11:33 Mon.-Sat
5-9 Sunday
VM-
Kawasaki 175 cc light touring
cycle, rotary valve autolube
single. $350. Shop manual.
Allen Moore, 232 Wilson Hall
(Zoology) or call 942-678S even
ings before midnight i
IT,
3
Peace Corps: 7 Years Old
Gov. Dan Moore has pro
claimed the month of March as
Peace Corps Month in North
Carolina. During this month
the Peace Corps celebrates its
seventh year of existence, hav
ing been established in March
of 1961 under President Ken
nedy. Today there are over 30,000
Volunteers who have served or
are now serving in 57 countries
around the world. The state of
North Carolina has produced a
total of 329 which makes it one
of the top-producing states in
the South.
In conjunction with Peace
Corps Month in the state there
will be thirty recruiters
visiting 24 colleges and
universities, most oi thorn dur
ing the week of March 11-15.
A number of senior staff of
ficials from Washington, D. C.
will be assisting in the
recruiting effort, including C.
Payne Lucas, Director of
Africa Region; Walter Car-
rington, Deputy Director of
Africa; Ray Holland, Director
of Recruiting; and Howard
Dodson, Deputy Director of
Recruiting. They will be speak
ing to Peace Corps seminars
that have been set up on
selected campuses in - the
Triangle Area as. well as
Greensboro. '
In an attempt to establish a
more permanent presence of
Peace Corps 'on these cam
puses and a better working
relationship with their, ad
ministration, a suo-regional of
fice has been opened up in
Chapel Hill. ,
It is under the direction of
Galen Hull, Doughtry Long,
and Marianne Hodges, and is
located in the Wesley Foun
dation, 214 Pittsboro Street,
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. They
will be assisting with the
seminars, arranging lectures,
showing films, and counseling
anyone interested in applying
to the Peace Corps.
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