Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 7, 1969, edition 1 / Page 1
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Berkley Sociologist Prof. John A. Clausen, of the University of California at Berkeley, visiting professor in the UNC Sociology Department, will speak on "Physical Development, Personality, and Social Context" Thursday night at 8 o'clock in Howell Hall. Volume 76, Number 157 rf MRC Interviews Interviews will be held for vacancies existing in Men's District IV (Chapel Hill east of Columbia, not in university housing, frats, and apartments) and Men's District X (Craige). Interested persons should sin up for interviews in Suite B of the SG Offices of the Union. TI1T 77 Years of F.tViUritil Freedom fa ( HAPI L HILL. NORTH C AROLINA KBXESDAY. .MAY 7. 11)69 Founded Febmarv 23. Granviv mm mm J'f Equal Treats ' - In RFC System By STEVE PLAISANCE DTH Staff Writer "The time has come for the University to examine its residence college program and to start treating Granville like a Residence College," said Governor of Granville Residence College Mike Padrick. The dispute between the administration and Granville student leaders came about when the administration cut next year's quota of freshman men for Granville by 55. "We'll have to turn away about 100 applicants because of the quota cut," noted Padrick. Padrick said the problem lies in the administration's "lack of recognition for Granville as a residence college, equal to all of the others. "There can be no compromise in the rights of this residence college," he said. The basis of the problem, according to Padrick, is that people do not want to live in the South Campus "factories." "Let the administration improve those (South Campus) dorms first, before they impose restrictions on Granville," he said. 'They (the administration) are killing the concepts the students have worked so hard for when they put these restrictive quotas on us." "If we get a cut in freshmen, it will hurt our plans for making Granville South co-educational next year," said George Doyle, speaker of the Granville Senate. "Project Hinton's failure indicates that people don't want to live on South Campus," said Jay Strong, Men's Residence Council (MRC) representative for Granville. "The administration may go so far as to restrict sophomores with an average below 2.0 to living on campus," he said. As for Granville's proposed disaffiliation with the Residence College Federation (RFC), Padrick, Doyle and Strong were in agreement. "Disaffiliation is extremely probable, if not certain," said Padrick. "It would have to come about through a referendum of the residents of Granville. "I see no reason why we should not disaffiliate," said Strong. "Nobody wants to pull out, but it's about the only thing left for us to do." Doyle, again referring to the administration's "lack of consideration" for the feelings of Granville residents, said: "There is no reason in my mind for discriminating against Granville. "We are talking with Dean Cathy and Joseph Eagles, and we're trying to avoid disaffiliation, but there seems to be no other way for us to go. "Disaffiliation means not only disaffiliating with the RCF, but also the Women's and Men's Residence Councils," added Doyle. t . ... J. z ctf 1 t vt 1 : 0 v Howard Lee Elected. i Chapel Hill Mayor ,, J- a ' 5 - I '- - ! .-mhr - j - Local Boy Scouts joined the effort to clean up the Kenan Stadium field Tuesday; after three days usual dismay . of cluttering during Jubilee left administration officials with thehv Jubilee Aftermath Equat To Problem Of Plannim The aftermath of Jubilee is almost as much of a problem as the planning that went into the weekend. Since Saturday maintenance men have been working in Kenan Stadium to clean the place up. Involved in the clean-up are the field itself, bleachers, and rest rooms. The field presents the biggest problem, because each "pop-top" tab and piece of glass must be removed so that football players will not tear themselves to shreds. - Originally men from the University's Physical Plant were, charged with the responsibility of cleaning up the mess. According to Union Director Howard Henry, "tons" of debris were removed from the field and bleachers. Monday it became evident that more work had to be done on the field. Henry, remembering an old camp trick, called on the services of a local Boy Scout troop. Bv AL THOMAS DTH Staff Writer Howard Lee is Chapel Hill's first black mayor-elect. At press time Tuesday night Lee led Roland Giduz 2400 to 2003 with 92 per cent of the vote counted. It was the largest turnout for a local election in Chapel Hill history. In the ' face for Board of Aldermen," Man Prothro, George Coxhead, and Ross ' Scroggs won. seats. The winner of the ; fourth seat was undecided but Joe Nassif held a slighf lead over Steve Bernholz; . Lee made his victory speech it 9:30 p.m. at St. Joseph's Church on Rosemary St. "We neeVJost confidence, Lee said,"fnat we could win. We were ' as clean and relevant as we could be during the campaign and will now focus our attention on the needs of Chapel HilL" Lee said that there are many problems and a lot of work ahead and that the real campaign is just beginning. The new, mayor-elect joked, "I understand thrt with 62 per cent of the vote in, the Chapel Hill Weekly printed its front page. They -.'ere now. trying to re-doit."" About 30 minutes earlier Giduz went to Lee's i MAYOR HOWARD LEE way. Giduz opened an early lead carrying the Country Club precinct. His lead slowly diminished until, with 34 per cent of the total vote in, Lee took a 1071 to 982 lead. Lee was never behind again. Lee continued to increase his lead until, with 90 per cent this struggle is evident in the high vote totals. In the aldermen race, two liberals and two "establishment" candidates won. Prothro and Bernholz supported Lee. Scroggs and Coxhead supported Roland Giduz. Crawling on all fours, 35 Boy Scouts' headquarters to acknowledge scoured the field Tuesday afternoon, " ' defeat and congratulate him nicking un tabs, class and a strav earrimi give my sine 1 G I ' J . " V ere - A turn ; n 4 Vic it V' :. ; Z3?r'V ; ; . back into sharje for or two. ,, Football Coach Bill Dooley remarked that until this weekend he "had had no idea of what Jubilee is really like." congratulations to Mr. Lee, Giduz said. "I trust that this victory will be transferred into effective progress for Chapel Hill." The race was close all the WRC " Petition Shows ' Girls Favor Handbook of the vote in, he had a 54 per Prothro is the only incumbent cent total. Lee showed strength in every precinct except the Country Club. Glenwood went for Lee 379 to 501; East Franklin (Giduz's home precinct) went for Lee narrowly, with the totals 444 to 438, Estes Hills went for Giduz 413 to 373. The voter turnout was the highest in Chapel Hill's history for a local election with almost 4,8Q0 vpters going .tQ the, pols Tuesday. Campaigns for mayor and aldermen were the most hotly contested in recent history and winner. Terms for aldermen are for four years except for Nassif who will nave a two-year term. The two-year term is the remainder of Giduz's term. Giduz resigned Monday. Election returns for the Chapel Hill School Board were still incomplete at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, but with over 90 per centot the vote in, Marvin Silver, Samuel Holton, Everett Billingsley and Norman Weatherly hold leads over the other five candidates. Workers are getting the Forest Theater productions in the final weeks of school. shape upcoming stage Former Peruvian President Speaks On Latin America . .Fernando Belaunde Terry, deposed last October as president ofPeru by a military coup, will deliver a public address entitled i4The Future of Latin America" Thursday evening at 8:30 in Gerrard Hall. Belaunde will visit the campus for two days and will meet informally with students and talk with professors in the Latin American Studies program. The visit is being sponsored by the Project of the Americas (PRAM) and the International Student Center (ISC). The former president, son of an ex-premier and an architect by profession, served as president of Peru from 1963 to 1968, embarking on a progressive developmental effort during his tenure. Belaunde has served as a professor at the Harvard University of Design and has lectured , around the country since his - exile. He spoke at Duke University last month. A close 11-13 vote at Monday night's Woman's Residence Council (WRC) meeting decided that the proposed orientation handbook, to be reintroduced in Student Legislature Thursday, will include women's rules. Results of a campus-wide petition were partially in and showed 91 of the girls polled in favor of having a handbook and 9 opposed. Representative Jud Friedman said the handbook was more likely to be approved by Legislature if the rules were not included. Heather Ness, assistant to the Dean of Women, told the council they should "ask for what you want, not for what you think you can get." Carroll Rountree, head of the AWS Ways and Means Committee, introduced a resolution strongly supporting "the . extension of the University bus service" to seven days per week, operating until women's closing hours. The resolution passed unanimously. A new executive committee, consisting of committee heads of the Association of Women Students, was also announced at the meeting. The chairmen include: Hutchison, Institutions; Gaye Battle, Council Relations; Ann Edenfield, Status of Womens and Carroll Roundtree, Ways and Means. Libba McCall was appointed parlimentarian. Offices yet to be filled include three committee chairmanships and the summer chairman of WRC. Mrs. Ness told representatives at the meeting that there are "practical and legal reasons" for fire drills. She cited insurance requirements and the danger of a real fire. When asked about the lack of fire drills in boys' residence halls, Mrs. Ness told the council that mens' buildings have no alarm systems. She called this a "shortcoming." Scholarship Fund Near $5,000 Goal i Visiting History Prof Discusses Middle East A Hunter University history professor who has just returned from Israel will speak to the newly-organized local chapter of the American Academic Association for Peace in the Middle East tonight at Duke. Professor Irwin Polishook will speak at 8:30 p.m. in Room 201 of the East Duke Building. Polishook has just returned from a fact-finding mission sponsored by the AAAPME in Israel and the occupied areas. Polishook talked with both Arab and Israeli residents and military representatives while in the Middle East to assess current developments and (AAAPME) Lapkin of department. tonight on his findings. The local chapter of the AAAPME was formed last month by a small group of Duke and UNC faculty members, according to David the economics All interested persons are mviiea to anena the first meeting tonight. Earl Siegel of the School of Public Health and Bernard Greenberg of the biostatistics department are two other UNC faculty members working with the AAAPME. The determination of frontiers, the resettlement of the Arab refugees, and projects for the economic development of the entire region will be areas of consideration for the "The Senior Class Scholarship Fund needs $500 in contributions to reach the $5,000 goal," Senior Class President Charlie Farris ' said Tuesday. "We are pressing everyone now to get the two-and-a-half month drive over the top, so the senior class gift can be given before school ends." Farris said he hoped "to announce within a week the goal has been reached." Nearly $4,500 has been collected to date from the following: $1,000 pledge each from the Order of the Grail, Student Legislature, and senior class funds; $1,500 from dorms, residence colleges and individuals. Granville Towers leads the dorms' contributions with $150 from its senate and $250 from different floors. Other residence college contributors are King, $25, and Morehead, $50. Some contributions are not in yet, but Farris f ls they will not fill the whole $500 needed for the minimum among of the scholarship. Those contributions not yet counted are the Campus Chest, seniors who have not given a dollar yet and some of the dorms and residence colleges. The scholarship will 'be payed for by the interest of the S 5, 000 "and will be administered by the Student Aid Office to a needy student. Concerning other senior class business, Farris said any questions about any part of graduation would be gladly answered by the class officers. Contributions to the scholarship fund should be sent to: 1969 Scholarship Fund, P.O. Box 1080, Chapel Hill, N.C. peace prospects. He will report newly-formed group. .Beta Indmcts Record. M4 tm-M Vau, . nil (.j o I- j J I 1 1 1 1 f ' f i2 132 A record number of 132 UNC students were initiated into Phi Beta Kappa, the nation's highest scholastic honorary fraternity, in special ceremonies Tuesday evening. Initiations were held in Carroll Hall auditorium and a banquet followed in Chase Cafeteria. Joseph C. Eagles Jr., vice chancellor for business and finance at UNC, addressed the group. Prof. Claude S. George Jr., associate dean of the School of Business Administration is faculty adviser for Phi Beta Kappa. A total of 81 of the new initiates are North Carolina residents. Their hometowns and names are as follows: Avheilltf-Joel Chandler Walz, Brevard -Russell Maxwvll Armentrout and Thomas Kugene Ramsey Jr.. burlington-Thomas Edward Murray and Carolyn (White Walker, Candler -Teresa Rebecca Warren. Cary -Don Allen Chamblee. - Chapel Hill-Mrs. tleanor Jean Bent. Mrs. Kamona Paula Clark Payne, and Mrs. Gail I'oe Indirturth, Charlotte-William Aubrey f ederal Jr.. Willian Benjamin Hawfield Jr. and John H. llutchinion Jr., Cleveland-Jerry Ray Lverhardt. Clinton-George Wallace McLean, Clyde -John Lawrence Bramlett. Conover - Darwin t'ugene Cline. and Shelia Ann Herman, Cullowhee John Boyce Bennett Jr., Danbury- Janet Anne Moorefield. Durham -Harold Morrison Barber. Steven Michael Sharpo. Donna Marie Sorgi and Lindian Joseph Swaim Jr., Kden-ied Wayne Allen. . L d e it t o n W i 1 1 i a m Keith Rollins. Laetteville-Kenneth Hope Bynum, Douglas Steven Dibbtrt. Lorraine Brooks Mclamb and Martha Lou Woo ten. Gastonia-Robert Hoyt Butler. Richard Wayne "Margerison and Morris Mitchell Waldrop Jr., Greensboro-Steven Moore Adair. Terrance Lee II o u g li and William Ricky Lambeth. Greenville-Thomas Adrian Patterson, Griffon- I rank Libert Davis 111, Henderson ville- WiUiam Seward Karrell Jr., Stephen Richard Searcv and Paul Purvis Ward Jr. Hickory -John Charles Smith and Robert Sperry Tracy. High Point -Donald George Arnold and I ra 11c is Lynn Curlee, High Shoals- James Steve Buff, K e r 11 e r s v i 1 1 e -Philip L u g e n e Ashbum, Kinston Charles Britton Beasley and Nola Grady Jeniiing. Laurinburg-Mark Shipp Johnson, Leasburg - Larry Neal Briggs. Lexington Harold Vernon C ran ford. John Gregg Hardy, Randall Blake Michael and Michael David Zimmerman, Lumbert on - Donald Rav I uller Jr. Mcbanc -John Clayton Long, Murphy - Thomas J Read Patterson. Mountain -Charles Williford Jr. Michael Jordan, New Bern- Davi Oxford-Flora Lee Tavlor, Pilot Samuel Lulk. i :.,-,,... c- 1 h n s a m u e I Raleigh-Llizabeth Cary Ambler Larob" r hornpson Cobb, Martha Crawlev Oliver. Mark Varren Schafer, John Wade Shaw and Stephen Wayne Smith, Robersomille-Georee Spencer McRont Jr and Mrs. Jeannie Ross Price. Roxboro-John Vesle Lunsford. Salisbury -Richard Wayne Hendren. Shelbv -Hubert Allen Lane. Spencer William Henry Bingham Jr., Satesville-James Sidney Hunter and James" Sherman Owens. Weldon -Haywood Day Cochrane Jr. and Luther Parks Cochrane, Williamston -Samuel Johnston Manning- Wilmineton-I.rnest franklin Be ale Jr David Thomas Douthwaite and Micheie 1 rancme McKennev, Wilson Robert "art Lee. Winston-Sale'm Victoria Amy Durana and Sidney Thomas Moser. The 4K out-of-state initiates are: Alabama- David Bullineton Clark oT Tuscaloosa. Honda "arbara Ann Snider of Clearwater: Karen Jane i''1'" of ;uf Breeze; and Michael David KaU Orlando. Georgia -Joseph William Dorn. More nee Louise Larnsworth, Phyllis Ann tkndel e.tya Le Perkins of Atlanta: and hrantis Burns Kelly of Macon. Illinois - Randy Sue Lllis of mansion and Roger William Arhart of Palatine. , . Marvlaiid-Wilbur Wmer Webster W 01 Uultimure: and Robert Bruce Ochsman, Deborah Sue Sugar and Margaret Lllen Sugg of Silver Spring. Massachusetts Fredrick Harris Crcr of Boston: and Mrs. Bonnie L.lise Lrickson of Litchburg. Missouri1 Harold George Grasmick of Lee's Summit. New Jersev'- Virginia Lee Schw artz of Plain field: John Robert Hoffman of Princeton; and Barbara tvelvn Barrett of Short Hills. New York - l.mily Anne Carev of Ithaca; Chen I Lynne Arnold of PittsTord; and John Donald Browning of Sea Cliff. Ohio Kuthrvn Anne C aswall of Cleveland. Pennsylvania Vircinia Anne Pitt of Newtown Square: and Walter Werner Schell of Pottstown. Tennessee-Daid WiLson Crisman of Chattanooga. Texas-John Hlison Kelly of Beaumount and Sally Dunbar Bland of Dallas. South Carolina- Thomas Little Robinson of Chester: Julie Horney of Florence: Jane I arte Furman of Greenville; and Sieffan Charles Brown of Laurens. Virginia-Sharon Llaine Davis and Diane Uizabeth Strickland of Alexandria: Steven Jay Agresta of Anuandale: Nancv Louise Gra son and Uizabeth Adair Obenshain of Blacksburg. Kathy Leigh Clark of Danville; Mrs. Sandra Held Wagoner of Norfold: Thomas Osborne Stair of Richmond: Fva Carolyn Arlington and Paul Dewitt Jr. of Virginia Beach: and Antoma Anne Tulor Murray of Winchester. Washington-Mrs. Susan Jeneen Brown Kvo of Seattle. West Virginia James Idward Murphy Jr. of Oak Hill. District of Columbia Mrs. Patricia Rutledge Hillow of Washington. 1 i r . ter . r , tn::i."i;r"; F r -. : : I ..... i - z li 3 n gii 1: J - j i 4 L "inr;.nci "r-T- - 1 'jaaLi.-:c3-:ct j ( il ITT"., n l.,,. w,"-3 '12 2 y-- .4 1- -'-- - ?. Vrf .nW ..mmk "Ugl ' " 'Z"!" ' m&, . I - Ik JL , I.J V. . i 1 1 i ; . 4 m;r ; ;tm-m. , - .m M ; -r - It's Time For Spring Geaning Again.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 7, 1969, edition 1
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