U:iC Library Soriais Dspt Box 870 Kessing P(op9l Hlll, II. C. Kessing Pool will open Mon day. Hour of operation will be 3-5, Monday thru Friday, 2-6 Saturdays and 2-5 Sundays. TO 1 o T mm Con fain rr j Stsdects are nmizded tJut no container willbe allawed on FeUer Field darisg tie Jubilee festivities. 76 Years of EdiUirid Freed on Volume 75, Number 159 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA. SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1963 Fcimded February 23, 1S33 lTL II if i ScCDTLD .Bus M By TODD COHEN DTII Staff Writer Two buses will begin operat ing at 7:22 a.m. Monday bet ween Chase Cafeteria and Wil son Library. The coaches, chartered for two weeks, will make stops at each of the two locations every eight minutes until 1:20 pjn. each day, Monday through Friday. (A schedule and map of the route and stops appear Will Leave Every Eight Minute below. At 1:20 pjn. each day, when the buses conclude their runs, they will leave for Raleigh. Students may travel by bus to Raleigh those times for fifty cents.) The experimental bus plan, under consideration for the past school year, reached its final stages Thursday night with Student Legislatures ap proval of $750 to fund two buses for one week. A.S. Waters, Chairman of the University's Traffic and Safety Committee earlier of fered an additional $750 to the Student Transportation Com mittee, which had planned the system. This contribution would be enough to fund two buses for additional week. The idea for the exerimental terest in the idea and informa tion concerning the operation of buses such as routes, stops, and schedules. When Waters learned of the committee's plan and its suc cess in contacting a bus com pany, he offered it the addi tional money. His feeling was that the system should be given time system was conceived last fall, "after the novelty" wore off Bus Schedule Fare: Raleigh. South Campus Bus System Effective May WO; May 13-17 10 cents on campus (one way 50 cents to Bus leaving Chase for Wilson Library by Bill Darrah, then governor of HintcchJames Residence College. Along with a group of in terested South Campus gover nors and others, Darrah con tacted five bus lines in an attempt to charter a bus for South Campus. The committee was unable to determine student interest in the plan. McMurray said the crux of the experiment is that the buses be self -liquidating. The committee thus planned to change passengers a small fee and also to solicit advertise ment from Chapel Hill mer chants. The committee calculated to find a bus company which that thirty students per ride 7:22 8:52 10:22 '11:52 7-30 9:00 10:30 12:00 7:37 9:07 10:37 12:07 7.45 9:15 10:45 12:15 752 9:22 10:52 12:22 9:30 12:30 8:00 9:37 11:00 12:37 8:07 9:45 11:07 12:45 8:15 9:52 11:15 12:52 8:22 10:00 11:22 1:00 8:37 10:07 11:37 1:07 8:45 10:15 11:43 1:15 Bus leaving Wilson Library for Chase 7:30 9:00 10:30 12:00 7:37 9:07 10:37 '12:07 7:45 9:15 10:45 12:15 7:52 9:22 10:52 12:22 8:00 9:30 11:00 12:30 8:07 9:37 11:07 12:37 8:15 9:45 11:15 12:45 8:22 9:52 11:22 12:52 8:30 10:00 11:30 1:00 837 10:07 11:37 1:07 8:45 10:15 11:43 - . 1M5 8:52 10:22 11:52 would charter city coaches (two doors) until it com municated with the City Coach lines of North Carolina. Robert Deaton, general .Manager of the City Lines of fered to charter the committee two buses for a five day week at a cost of $750. According to John McMur ray, who worked on the com mittee, the. buses would operate as part of an experi ment to determine student in- at ten cents a passenger would finance the project. The committee presented a' bill before legislature last April asking that $750 be ap propriated for the operation of me buses for onw week. The bill passed unanimously, but was found to be constitu tional due to a technical mistake. A new bill was written and passed favorably out of SL Thursday night. Prior to that meeting, Student Body Presi dent Ken Day established by executive order a Student Transportation Commission "for the purpose of conducting experiments to explore the need and feasibility of a cam pus transportation system." McMurray and Darrah traveled to Raleigh Friday to consult with a representative from the City Lines and to prepare a schedule for the buses. The buses are two of the newest city transport coaches made, according to McMurray. Each is a two-door, $34,000. air-conditioned vehicle with a standing room capacity of 100 passengers. McMurray said the main purpose of the two week ex periment is to determine whether enough students will ride the buses to finance the project. He urges students to support the system if they would like to see a similar long-range prgoram. Should the system prove to be self-liquidating, McMurray said the Commission would work during the summer in an effort to continue the opera tion of (he buses next fall. CAMPUS HOSPITAL SOUTH u ocx :.r T. v- I n 1 "VICTD2 ODUM. "VtUUAte. ! LD TK TVO "m Ov yfTs-fl T! TT TzTK TvT O. jtJ JJ u s pica; ilji vac in tcusuioui On South Campus Bus Route Uee Buses leave for Library at 1:20 p.m. Raleigh from Ch'ase and Wilson By TODD COHEN A DTH Staff Writer : 'They are trying to get a - perspective intone' problems xr on college campuses in an ef fort to apply them to UNC." Charles Jeffress, National Student Association co ordinator for UNC spoke Friday of the UNC delegation participating the NSA regional Tanner, Salgo Awards Given Six Profs Momomd Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitter son presented cash awards to six outstanding professors Friday. Kenan Professor of Psy chology Harold G McCurdy, English Professor Forrest G Read, Professor Joel J Schwartz of the political science faculty, and Professor John W. Dixon of the religion and art faculties were named winners of the annual Tanner Awards for excellence in un dergraduate teaching. Kenan Professor of English Dougald MacMillan was nam ed winner of the seventh an- Speaker Competition Announced The Wiliie P. Mangum Medal will be presented to the senior student who is the best speaker among the graduating class. Competition for the award will be held Monday, May 6 at 7:30 p.m. in the Di-Phi senate chambers on the third floor of New West. Any senior who wishes to compete should type a copy of his speech on double-space lines and submit it to the Dean of Men's Office prior to the date of the competi tion. The speeches may be on any subject. The annual medal award is given by Mrs. Sally Turner in honor of her late brother. The metal itself is given to the Dean of 'Men's office and the Chancellor presents the award in his office. Former winners of the an nual medal include Charles Kuralt (1955), Fred Weaver, assistant to President Friday, (1937) and Congressman L.H. Fountain (1934). Everyone is welcome to at tend the competition, Di-Phi President Tony Lentz announced. nual Thomas Jefferson Award, and Professor Harry 1C Russell of the English faculty received the third annual Nicolas Salgo Award for dist inguished instruction of juniors and seniors. McCurdy, a native of Salisbury, is a specialist in psychology of personality and the history of psychology. He received his PhD from Duke, where he graduated magna cum laude with highest honors in Greek. Read from Buffalo, N.Y. was organizer of the weekly Poetry Forums. He holds degrees from Prince, Buffalo, and Cor nell, and is a member of Phi nell. and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He is currently teaching modern and Elizabe than literature, Shakespeare, Milton, and modern poetry. Schwartz is an authority of Soviety politics and the Rus sian people. He graduated from Harvard magna cum laude and received his MA diana. He also received a Russian Area Certificate cum laude and is a former Ford Founda tion Fellow He served as advisor to the Carolina Sympo sium. Dixon, a native of Richmond, Va, is a graduate of Emory conference being held in Charlotte, which today moved into its second and final day. The UNC delegation wiil meet ' today with contingents ? from colleges throughout the North Carolina, South Carolina. Virginia region in a series of five seminars which began Friday night. According to Jeffress the se minars are designed to inform participants on the reasons for campus problems and how to deal with them. The seminars include the topics of Student Legal Rights, Student Activism, the Inter views Technique, the Racial Situation and Utilization of the NSA. Jeffress feels the discussions will result in no concrete solu tions of problems but that informative sessions will best benefit the member schools. He said the seminar on inter viewing techniques might bring quick results at UNC in the form of orientation interviews, training groups, Jeffress said. A panel discussion was con ducted Friday rright by a group " of Duke students who talked about the causes and results of the Duke boycutt. At a business meeting this afternoon, the members will elect new officers and decide whether or not to hire a full time staff member for the region, Jeffress said. The purpose of the full-time member would be to visit the colleges in the region in an attempt to assist them in mat ters of NSA services, educa tional reform, student adtivism and student stress, Jeffress ex plained. The co-ordinator "would in form students on each campus of what is hapening elsewhere and would offer help to that particular school. jeffress said the idea for MRC Calls For 'Unity' In Attaining RC Goals By MARY BURCH DTH Staff Writer "In the coming year the MRC will try to ormg more unity to the system," said MRC President Leonard Tubbs in defining the system's goals, goaps. "We will emphasize the academic aspect of the living and learning experience of the Residence College system," Tubbs said. Tubbs pointed to the pro blems in the present system and set forth the proposals of the MRC for dealing with them,. THE ROLE OF SENATOR is an ambigurous role in the dual role of the senator and decide whether to separate the roles or more clearly'defirie th rolls to eliminate some of the conflict. ''Conflict will always exist in the dual role of senator," Tubbs daid, "but it is almost impossible to find someone who is willing to assume the disciplinarian responsibility. know more of what's going on in the college than the - governor," he noted." "I think we should take advantage of their additional knowledge and maturity." A MRC BOOKLET will be put out next year for the freshmen and incoming stu dents which will define the residence college system and We will probably keep the dual its goals for the student role, but more clearly defne each role to make the job at least operative." TOURS FOR THE GOVER NORS are planning among the colleges to acquaint the senators with their role and the role of the residence exp and Henry and studied at the experimental college inter- views, auu me xeauersuip development program. Buck Goldstein, one of UNC's regional officers will lead that seminar, discussing a method of getting to know oneself better through inter views. A similar technique is employed in sensitivity MRC Finds Three Guilty In Trials University of Bristol m England. He received his PhD from the University of Chicago He is currently work ing with theory of criticism and Christianity and art. MacMillan, a native of Wa shington, N.C., has served as chairman of the English Department. He is a specialist in 17th and 18th century English literature He received his three degrees from' UNC. Russell from Lumberton is a graduate of Davidson College and holds Master's and doc torate degrees from UNC. He is a specialist in the English novel and 20th century English and American fiction. He received a Tanner Award I960. out. A Senator is faced with the dual roles of representative and disciplinarian which often conflict. It is difficult for the new position was conceived senator to effectively com at the southern conference of implicate with the students if the NSA on educationol reform be must police them as welL held last February. The MRC will evaluate the Classes Resumed At Torn Columbia NEW YORK (UPI) Violence-scarred Columbia Uni versity, described as "deeply wounded'' by an administra tion official, cautiously resum ed some classroom schedules Friday but attendance was cut by a continuing student-faculty strike. in No Containers At Festivities The 17,500-student campus has been virtually paralyzed since the administration call ed in police Tuesday to seize more than 700 rebel students By NANCY STANCLL DTH Staff Writer Students bringing bottles, coolers, cans or other types of containers to the Jubilee concerts in Fetzer Field will be asked to leave them at the gate, according to Howard Henry. Henry, director of Graham Memorial, said each of the keep it clear of hazardous trash." stated Henry. Graham Memorial, however, is encouraging concert goers to use the stands if they wish to bring box lunches and paper cups are allowed in the arena. Fetzer Field was selected as the site for this year's Jubilee concerts because it will Three students were tried in two separate cases involving destruction of residence hall property in the May 2 session of the MRC Court. In the first case involving two students, the first student was accused of being involved in a water fight in Teague on March 1. The student en tered a plea of guilty; the court's verdict was guilty and the sentence was a court re primand. . The second party in the first rkliYI f fltl CIYI case was accused of being in- J Iti tXXWJ t V volved in a water fight and Lambda Chis To Support present system, Tubbs pointed lege in the system. MRC Court Chairman bam rauiK wui ne instrumental in this area of the program. THE MRC WILL TRY to unify the residence college by encouraging iater-coUege com munication in programs and social activities. The establishment of North and South Campus District Courts is proposed for next year to deal with the overload of cases on the present court and to deal with the "par ticular" infractions of the two areas of campus. "Cases are backed up for four or five weeks now because of the number of cases, "Tubbs said. 'Ther2 are many cases which should be tried in a district court such as cases involving a berr can or water bag being thrown off the tenth floor of one of the high rise dorms. Such cases are particular to South campus and should be tried there. Dividing the court would in addition add to Use effectiveness of the court system." THE PLANS FOR the MRC will include the college masters in the programs, Tubbs said. The inclusion of the masters will provide a vital mutual link between the residence college system and the Dean of Men's office. "The college masters often four gates would be checked provide more room for the closely for students bearing students, according to He- "hazardous trash." nry. Henry emphasized the dif- The first chice r be 1968 ficulties involved in clearing concerts was Kenan Stadium, the Jubilee anM r but the Blue and White Foot- sucn as poptops, . chicken bones, and bits of broken bot tles. "Since Fetzer Field is used primarily for athletic activities, it is necessary to ball game is scheduled there for tomorrow afternoon Polk Place, used last year for Jubilee, could not ac comodate the turnout of people. destroying residence hall pr operty when he threw a knife at a bulletin board. He entered a plea of guilty; the court rendered a verdict of guilty and sentenced the student with an off icial reprimand. The second case involved a single student who was accus ed of destroying residence hall property in James in mid March when he threw a knife at a bathroom door. The stu dent entered a plea of guilty. The verdict of the court was guilty and the sentence was one semester residence hall conduct probation. Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity has chosen the Arthritis Foun dation as its long-term service project to be supported by borthers and pledges. President Dave Pultz of the Gamma-Nu local chapter an nounced the fraternity will sponsor several projects to aid the Foundation in its public education and fund-raising pro gram. Lambda Chi, after unani mously approving the service project named Bob Hunter chapter chairman of service projects. who had occupied five univer sity buildings. In the course of arrests on trespassing charges, some 143 persons were in jured, giving rise to charges of police brutality. University Vice President David B. Truman said there were "clearly some break downs" in planning the police raid but he did not know who was to blame. He said the po lice action had "clearly got ten out of band" and reports of violence were "too exten sive and to persuasive" not to believe them. "Columbia is wounded, deep ly wounded, but it is going to be strong again," he said. The racial and anti-war pro tests which began April 22 spread until the university was virtually closed down by the. end of the week. The Law School was one of the university's colleges which resumed classes Friday. Dean William C. Warren said be tween one-half and two-thirds of the students had showed. He said no faculty members were out because of the strike. Classes were described as normal at Teachers College, the School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, the Graduate School of Journalism and a few other university units, but the School of General Studies and Colum bia College remained closed. An administration spokesman said there was some hope of a return to normalcy next Monday. The booklet will define in addition the senator's role and the duties of the Dean of Men's office to acquaint the student with the vast operation of the university. "Unity is most essential; we need the- cooperation of everyone in the system. We will prove the system and break down its hierachy to effectively benefit the indivi dual student" Service Frat To Sponsor Open House The eighteenth annual University Open House spon sored by Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity has been scheduled for May 12. Planned activities include a university-wide open hours, departmental tours and ex hibits, speakers, a law concert in McCorkle Place and the Naval Awards Ceremony and Review in Polk Palce. One of the most popular aspects according to Chair man Worth Baldwin, will be the opening of men's residence hall rooms to parents and vistors. "This year's program will be more informal than pre viously in an effort to attract people in the area to a diver sity of campus events," he said. Students are urged to invite their parents since invitations will not be issued. Jubilee Schedule Saturday, May 4 3 p.m. Neil Diamond and Jr.' and the All-Stars Fetzer Field. 7:30, Nancy Wilson. Fetzer Field. After concert, Soul. Limited Tin Can. 6 8, 10 The Art of Love Carroll. Sunday May 5 2 p.m. Spanky and Our Gang. Fetzer Field 6, 9, La Dolce Vita, CarrclL

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