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it! I i MRC Meets Music Scl 1 ? I t ill! The Men's Residence Council will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in the Carolina Union. o. , . " N.C u t: of 4 . . . ? . n fa rr":;tc fr'fmUv Mo-ndav. 77 lYnrs o Editorial Freedom ft Volume 77. Number SS CHAPEl HILL NORTH CARC UtlDAY JANUARY 13. 1970 v Lji i! ! i ! I i Vli . ii 1 r jx " -s f V V V J) I Maiiagemeiii iLlamse Snag's i ' ! Job ClaificailicD!i Talks - i ! ! . y '"",.j-'"i""i"':'' ' ' . , 1 ' w " " - V 5 - ' . ' ' - . ' -' t Somewhere Faculty To Air Dissatisfaction Bv JIM FEATHERS DTI I Staff Writer An open hearing on problems of faculty organization has been scheduled by the Faculty Committee on University Government today at 4 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge, 4th floor Dey Hall. All faculty members wishing to "express themselves about such matters as the efficacy of Faculty Council, General Faculty, the College Faculties, Administrative Boards and interfaces between them, are invited," Committee Chairman , John B. Graham said. Three faculty members Dr. John Heintz, professor of political science; Dr. Paul T.D. Brandes, head of the Speech Department; and Dr. Joseph S. UN Leader To Highlight African Colloquium Here The president of the United Nations General Assembly will speak on the UNC campus in March, culminating a five-week African Colloquium sponsored by the Union Current Affairs Committee, the Carolina Forum and the International Student Center. The Honorable Angie Brooks, a diplomat and political leader of Liberia, will speak March 9 at 8 p.m. in Memorial Auditorium. There will be no admission charge. The colloquium begins Feb. 10 with a series of panel discussions devoted to comtemporary African themes. "Tribalism" is slated as the opening topic. Panel members will include William Levine of the Political Science Department and anthropology instructor Robert Daniels. Other discussion topics will deal with the role of the Peace Corps in Africa, the development of African economics and military influences on African politics. Jeff Hilliker, president of . ..'.'""".".". Building A S I 1 'r Students Shouted And Ferrell, of the Institute of Government are on the agenda to speak today. Heintz plans to discuss the faculty-administrative process at the University posing questions on faculty representation and selection procedure. He also plans to explore other related matters such as the roll of junior faculty. Brandes, disturbed that small departments often have no voice on Faculty Council, plans to propose rotation of some delegates -or another solution to meet this problem. Ferrell has two matters to discuss. First, he plans to endorse a proposal for a University constitutional convention to outline relationships among administration, faculty, the International Student Center, stressed the need for many interested students in the diccussion groups. African students will be present to provide insight into the current affairs of the Dark Continent, according to Hilliker. i Mi Angie Brooks 4 v I mm noviuaii 7T C Cyf-r-ir j;. " DT1I Staff Writer Officials of the American ... : : .. U -- M ! I FederaUon of State, County D Til Ph o to by Steve Adams Somewhere Snowballs Were Thrown. students, trustees and employees in the six parts of the Greater University. Secondly, he wants to raise the question as to whether or not the general faculty, as opposed to the Faculty Council, can make policy on WO By GLENN BRANK DTH Staff Writer An apartment fire which left a North School Lane duplex in ruins and injured a resident has been attributed to a defective heater, according to Chief Everett Lloyd of the Chapel Hill Fire Department. Fred Barbee, the injured resident, was placed in a special care unit of Memorial Hospital late Friday night. Officials listed his condition as "good" Monday afternoon. Barbee is suffering from second degree burns. Asked about Saturday's fire at the Zeta Psi fraternity house, Chief Lloyd reported that the blaze is now believed to have begun in the hood over the kitchen stove. The fire, which spread through the walls Frat H onor Court own 3 Three students have been found guilty in student courts recently. In the first case two students were charged by their professor of cheating on part of a Chemistry 61 exam. According to court chairman Bob Manekin the usual penalty for cheating suspension or indefinite probation was lessened to probation until the fall semester's end because the students' professor recommended leniency. According to Manekin the professor said the cheating was u - " ""' I... .:j . - IT I ,,,. - L"":- - , j 5 I 1 SiMl rfr-.(1), ins various issues and if so, by . what procedures. He said no consensus on the propriety of the faculty acting as a whole was reached fcsl j spring when the faculty acted - during the workers' strike. 1 This is the first hearing by the Faculty Committee. Others Fires 9 of the house to the third floor, caused damage estimated at "roughly two or three thousand dollars," according to Lloyd. , No further progress has been made in the investigation of a blaze which gutted the Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity house Christmas night, house president Bob Wilson reported Monday. "The fire was not caused by wiring and definitely not by the furnace," Wilson said. He added the possibility of spontaneous combustion has -not been ruled out, nor has the chance that an arsonist may be responsible. Wilson added rebuilding plans for the fraternity look promising. He listed insurance premiums, alumni donations and contributions from the national fraternity as sources anas ecisions very minimal and the large hall in Venable where the test was administered made it almost impossible for students not to see other students' papers. Manekin said the court considered these remarks in handing down the mild sentence. In another case the men's court suspended a student on a charge of assaulting another student in front of "Howell Hall. Manekin said the two had been at odds for some time, but the victim had made an effort to avoid the other. According to Manekin the victim was called to meet the other student for some conference, and during the meeting he was slugged by the offender. Manekin said the offender was on probation for a past honor code offense, and this led the court to suspend him for the additional campus code violation. WW Few Refrigerator Permits Student Government will continue lo rent refrigerators until Thursday as originally scheduled although the Dean of Men's office has only a few permits left. Students may sign up for the refrigerators in the office of the Student Government from 1:00 through 5:00 p.m., and they must pay the $18 rental charge at that time. Rick Margerison, who is Mrs. Elizabeth Brooks, chief spokesman for the USC food workers, indicated Monday that the workers would "wait until Thursday night and see what happens" in the current job classification dispute between SAGA and the workers' union representatives. "They just haven't come to an agreement over the job classifications and descriptions," Mrs. Brooks said. She stated representatives from that SAGA and the union will meet on Thursday night to discuss the "management rights" clause of the contract. SAGA director here Ted Young has argued in the past that the clause is needed in order for management to run To ft are subsequently planned to further explore the faculty structure and determine whether it should be revised or not. Faculty wishing to be heard at future dates are asked to contact Dr. Graham in the Department of Pathology. 77 a ne Possibly Arson for construction funds. Whether Phi Kappa Sigma will use their old lot or move to a new location has not yet been decided, Wilson said. He ,cited Finley Golf Course as one The Trees, The Snow icbanese Cabinet By United Press International The Lebanese Cabinet met in emergency session in Beirut Monday night to discuss the threat of a new crisis over Arab guerrilla charges that Lebanon had broken the Cairo agreement on commando activities in the frontier areas bordering on Israel. handling the sales, commented Monday that over 150 refrigerators have been rented thus far. He said many students who have received permits still have not signed up for a refrigerator. The walnut-colored, two cubic-foot refrigerators will be delivered on Wednesday afternoon, February 4. Margerison said the exact times of the deliveries will be Municipal Employees (AFSCME) have contended that such a clause would defeat the purpose of job classification and description. Mrs. Brooks said SAGA vice-president in charge of personnel James Westbrook and Jesse Eppes, an official of AFSCME, will head the opposing sides in the Thursday meeting. Mrs. Brooks further commented on a rumor which had been started among the workers that a strike was eminent for either Monday or Tuesday. In discounting this, she added that the SAGA management had picked up the rumor and were "really upset" about it. 'Negotiations on the reclassification issue have been held almost continuously for the past week with few results. It was reported that Carl Shapiro, regional director of AFSCME, threatened in a meeting of the union and management representatives last Thursday to annul the con tract , thereby allowing the workers to go back to strike. "Well, concerned contract," as far as I'm we don't have a Shapiro reportedly possible alternate location. W7ilson concluded, "We plan to build a model house along the lines of an apartment complex; something really innovative in fraternity living." j. . ? j Pending Arab Israeli warplanes returned to the attack against the Arab slates after a three-day lull, pounding Egyptian military targets along the northern sector of the Suez Canal cease-fire line for 30 minutes. A spokesman in Tel Aviv said all of the planes returned Left To Rent announced later. Dormitories for which permits are still available are Carr. with three left; Craige, with 29; Ehringhaus, with six; James, with 23; Spencer, with ten: and Winston, with one. The Student Legislature approved the refrigerator rental contract last Thursday night with an independent company. University Products Corporation. Young would not "reveal whether or not he p!anrsed to drop manages clause from the contract before or during the negotiations, stating that he had to "protect" his bargaining position at the forthcoming negotiations. When questioned about the on rrn rm mo lo i am Men Navy Commander Allen Bean, lunar module pilot for the Apollo flight, will speak on campus Wednesday, Jan. 38. Bean, the fourth human to set foot on the moon, will present a live commentary for Apollo 12 film footage in a moon program m Memorial invited to Hall. The public is attend. Bean's visit to UNC, sponsored by Morehead Planetarium, is through the courtesy of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The planetarium has urged school groups to attend Bean's presentation. A planetarium program, at regular admission rates for the school groups, will be coupled with Bean's presentation. Bean will also conduct a news conference, to which all media are invited, at 11 a.m. in the North Gallery of the planetarium. Selected as an astronaut in October, 1963, Bean was command pilot of the back-up crew for the Gemini 10 earth-orbit mission and has And Other Things Discusses Threat Guerrilla Crisis safely. There were diplomatic moves, also. Lord Caradon, Britain's chief United Nations representative, flew to New York from London to initiate a new Big Four power peace campaign in the Middle East. Sources said Caradon was under instruction to push for the revival of peace probes by Gunnar Jarring, U.N. special emissary to the Middle East in view of the failure of the big powers to come up with any acceptable solution. A dispatch from Beirut said the 16-member Lebanese Cabinet met to review the situation in the southern border area, where Israeli reprisal attacks have wrought havoc in front line villages, and the guerrilla presence in the country. or lark U trrof the new contract. Mr. Brooks was va-ae and would nuke no definite statcrr.' She ir.dicatt-d that s:r.e process had bern rruu! .ind that working conditions had improved somewhat, b'.it that the workers would refrain from making any statements until after the Thursday met tin-!. Walker wv irrr Alan L. Bean been crew a member of the ground for several NASA space flights. Bean trained for 16 hours at the planetarium here in preparation for the Apollo 12 flight and for his duties with the Gemini 10 flight. A native of Wheeler, Tex., he graduated from the University of Texas in 1955. DTI! Photo br Steve Adams The meeting was called after Arab guerrilla organizations, including Al Fatah, issued a joint statement warning Lebanese authorities that alleged violation of the Nov. 3 Cairo agreement would renew the Lebanese guerrilla crisis. The agreement, ttrms of which were never publicaly disclosed, ended a seer.-month long crisis over guerrilla activities in Lebanon, climaxed by two weeks of fighting which left more than 150 persons dead. The guerrilla statement issued in Amman, Jordan. Saturday night accused Lebanese authorities of restisting the movement of the commandos and Vcymg to undermine their unity by allowing some than others. more frtvdom I 1 i t : y h I ( i ir rr
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 13, 1970, edition 1
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