March IS, 1009 Page 8 Tuesday, iSS:;:::: O I : 0 o cot rooB i; THE DAILY TAR HEEL v Raleigh (UPI)-Gov. Bob Scott said yesterday he doesn't like delays in any important matters and that's why he stepped into the University, of North Carolina student-cafeteria worker crisis. He said that was also the reason he recommended the Board of Higher Education start planning now for another state-supported medical school which he indicated last Thursday should be built at East Carolina University. In a wide-ranging news conference, the governor also said he might ask the state to give financial support to research in a freeze-drying process for tobacco which is being developed at North Carolina State University. Scott said he stepped into the UNC cafeteria crisis at Chapel Hill two weeks ago because the administration wasn't moving fast enough to suit him. "I have been in touch with members of the administration constantly," he said. 'There always seemed ,',vyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy.f. yyyyyyyyy.&' to be some delay and some excuse for putting off. As I said, a 24-hour later situation and then another 24 hours and then another 24 hours. And the situation began to deteriorate. "It was obvious it was going to get worse if we did not go a lead and take some action. Consequently, I told the administration I felt there just had to be the opening of the ckfeteria because to me this was just outright interference v ith the normal operation at the University." Scott ordered the State Highway Patrol onto the campus to reopen Lenoir Hall dining hall which the administration had closed for one day because of a fight. The disturbance broke out when student sympathizers with cafeteria workers on strike had been slowing down the food line." The governor also said he ordered Manning Hall, near the dinine halL closed because "we had information the students had weapons in there. We didn't know what they ..----.---v-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.?.T.: SpSfT8 m ?T in boxes-" Members of the Black nL.P ThlT?1 had USed lhe building a meeting Si JZ f UCd a list of dends to e administration and backed the cafeteria workers strike M ThTL":" " Slat,d fr d-olition sSn, Sco t Sd The governor said a sawed-off shotgun was seen in the building along with sticks which he said could ud as weapons in 'close combat." He further said some wolkeS uHdingmP abUt thG Prfanit emanating fron , The students left the building before the Highway Patrol was simply throwing out an idea." He said "1 think we need to look .at this way down the road. I said I believed the Board of Higher Education should look at this " -v. m Im mursaay night speech, Scott told 11 VmVm! Levy In Race MoFelieads To Bo A newsmen yesterday. 'There is a lot of crawling to do before we can actually implement this." He said he believed it would be the mid-1980's before the program could become a reality. "What 1 want to get across is let's not wait. Let's not delay," said the governor. Scott said he believed a freeze drying process for tobacco . under research by North Carolina State University Professor William Johnson would have a significant effect on the flue-cured tobacco industry. Scott said he was giving thought to asking the state to support such research. "I am prepared to call for funds to support research along these lines," he said. He said he believed the new process might reduce the demand for tobacco, but he felt at the same time the prices paid for leaf might rise. For President (Continued from ?age 1) vice-president; he is the number one expert on state afTairs on the campus." Levy announced that he would issue a position paper on state affairs today. "It is very important that the student body elect . Lipstick marks, hair dye stains and coffee rings on bath room walls, floors and coun tertops surfaced with ceramic tile are easily removed with soapless detergent. someone capable of strong leadership who will deal effectively with these problems," Levy said. Morehead Fellowships are being extended to the Graduate School of Business Administration. Tkvo two-year fellowships valiied at $5,000 each $5,000 each will be offered in the Masters in Business Administration Program in the UNC School of Business starting this fall. The announcement was made yesterday by Hugh G. Chatham of Elkin, chairman of the Board of Trustees of the John ! Motley Morehead Press Law Prof. Adams Jean Of J-School Named I GAS 30.9 & 33 9 J I WA5H and WAXt,0 . I DAY GAS & R0B0 WASH 17 A By CHARLA HABER DTH Staff Writer Dr. John B. Adams has been named to succeed Wayne A. Danielson as dean of the UNC School of Journalism. Adams' appointment will become effective July 1 when Danielson resigns to assume his i 1 J C 1.1. tsn.fvv t : t w 1 5r r f iita v 4-1 new position as neaa oi tne agency, mm t ouivc m me University of Texas School of Association for Education in Coibmunication. Journalism, wnere he is A snecialist in Dress law and presently a member of the - ... .. CKp Hills 203 W. Franklin St. vJWnH Jnn Crowd PIZZA Qrtry Out or Eat In 1 rAtarlnf, Ftmoas Opn Mon.rThur. 1 1 A.M. 'til 1 2 . P.M. . .FridGr.; and .'Saturday 11 A.MT'tH. 1 A.M. Sunday 4 P.M. 'til 11 P.M. Order by . Phon for Fatter Sendee Parlum Chapel IB3 KS-SM ' Allow Approximately 20 Minutes IT 4 international communications, Adims joined the UNC faculty as an associate professor in 1958. He is 48 years old. He served as European sales ma lager for a New Jersey glass conpany after World War II am entered the University of California at Berkeley at the age; of 31. He graduated with a Phj Beta Kappa key in two years and went on to earn his master's degree in journalism and a Ph.D. in mass communication at the University of Wisconsin. After serving as' a reporter and copy editor for the Wisconsin y State Journal, Aclams began his teaching career at Michigan State University and then came to UNC. He is presently serving on tie American Council on Education for Journalism, the national journalism accrediting executive committee, chairman of the committee on teaching standards and past head of the international communication division. Adams is also a member of the executive board of the International Association for Mall Communication Research, the editorial board of International Communication Bulletin, and served as the UNC liaison representative with the U.S. Information Agency. In addition, he has published 45 articles and reviews in U.S. and foreign journals and has presented 15 papers v at professional meetings. A native of Millville, N.J., Adams is married to the former Polly-Betts Goslin of. Wildwood, N.J., and has twp children: Mark 6, and Jane 4 Foundation. The trustees voted to offer the new fellowships following a recent meeting here; alter a record number of 107; new undergraduate Morehead Scholars had been seWtprf Since 1965, nine Moreheadi Fellowships have been awarded? annually to students in the Schools of Law and Medicin and in the Graduate School. t4- : e i interviews lor cne new graduate MBA Fellowships wil be held the morning of Apr! 12 in the Morehead Builriin The two fellowships are worth $2,500 each per year, plus tuition and fees. Dr. Maurice Lee, dean of the School of Business Administration, was present at the announcement of the new scholarship program and expressed his gratitude that the Morehead Foundation trustees had decided to extend the Morehead program to the Graduate School of Business. Dean Lee stated that candidates for the new fellowships will be selected from a study of all applications now on hand for admission to the MBA Program this fall. Vi'i',. tL 1 - -v i r : ; r-t A I Vv- - u if ! if Ni . r f, : 8 . V :-v I m t j, -m Jf ft Hi. Staff JSC Foreign Bunting is pressed for two Begins Recruiting Soon Student Counselors Photo by Tom Schnabel By ANDY SCHORR Special To the DTH Do you have the awareness u. e Duke Blacks WiU Stay Until End Of Semester DURHAM (UPI)-Black students at Duke University said yesterday they have decided to postpone withdrawing from the school at least i until the end of the current semester. The decision delayed announced plans for the Malcolm X Liberation University which had been scheduled to open here yesterday. About 25 students said of last the black week thev faculty members and two students is scheduled for Wednesday. "We didn't want people to think we were running out," Hopkins said. Under the pickets and protests policy, adopted by the university last summer, the students could be suspended from the university. The university news bureau said the hearing will be conducted similar to a civil court trial. The accused students will be Wash, wet, soak, hunt, squint, wash, soak, wet, cry a little. Contact lenses were de signed to be a convenience. And lthey are up to a point. They're conve-.ient enouah to wear. once you get used to them, but, until recently, vou had to use two or more different lens solu- Itions to properly prepare and maintain contacts. You needed two or three differ ent bottles, lens cases, and you went through more than enough daily rituals to make evon the most steadfast indi viduals consider dropping out. But now caring for your con nacis can De as convenient i wearing them. Now there's Len- sine, from the makers of Murine. Lensine is the one lens solution designed forcomplete contact lens care . . . preparina. cleans ing, and soaking. . Just a drop or two of Len sine before you insert your lens pre pares it for your eye. Lensine makes your contacts, which are made of modern plastics, compatible with your eye. How? Len sine is an "isotonic" so lution. That means it's made to blend with the eye's natural fluids. So a simple drop or two coats the lens, forming a sort of comfort zone around it. Cleaning your con tacts with Lensine fights bacteria and foreign de posits that build up dur ing the course of the day. And for overnight soak ing, Lensine provides a handy contact canister on were withdrawing immediately represented by Charlotte but a spokesman. Charles Attorney Julius Chambers. M cut outjfor contact ' sporB? J I the bottom of every bottle. Soak ing your contacts in Lensine be tween wearing periods assures you of proper lens hygiene. Improper storage between wearings permits the growth of bacteria on your lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and, in some cases, it can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine. Lensine is sterile, self- sanitizing, and antiseptic. Let your contacts be the con venience they were designed to De. ine name or tne game is Lensine. Lensine. made by the Murine Company, Inc. Hopkins, said their plans were changed "because we decided the university would be benefiting more from our leaving than we would be." Hopkins said another factor in the decision was the upcoming hearings scheduled by the University for students charged with seizure of the Duke Administration Building reo. in. lwenty-ax black students have been formally charged by the university with violation of the university's pickets and protest policy. A hearing by a board of three' While the black students remained enrolled at Duke, the Malcolm X Liberation School will open in Durham on a part-time basis, Hopkins said. The school was to have opened yesterday in the Durham Foundation for Community Development Center. Hopkins said the school, which will offer courses in Afro-American history and culture, will open with night classes sometime during the first part of April after the Duke University spring break. and sensitivity to be a foreign student orientation counselor? These are two of the basic qualities that Larry McBermett, next fall's foreign student orientation chairman, says he is looking for. "Students who come to this university from other countries need to know about the basics of everyday American life. They come aslung questions that some of us have never thought about ourselves." McBennett, a sophomore from Fayetteville, believes a foreign student orientation counselor should be aware of the characteristics of American life and be able to help foreign students understand these characteristics and adjust to them. "We can't take for granted that foreign students know everything about living in America before they get here," McBennett said. "A counselor may have to explain to a newcomer to the U.S. how and where to have clothes cleaned, for instance, or give an idea of how much different things cost." The chairman explained that counselors should be people wrho are "involved." "They should possess a genuine desire for international relations and understanding." People selected as counselors will be asked to return to school next fall during the orientation period to assist the incoming foreign students with moving in with schedules and courses and helping them to understand the way of life here and answer any questions about the new environment. McBennett urged that students interview for positions as foreign student counselors. "Counselors can have a great effect on the foreign student's initial impression of Carolina and possibly of the U.S. Also it can be a great experience for a counselor to get to know students who come from other nations, more than likely from completely different cultures." 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