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7? lrji 0 Editorial Freedom
Volume 78. Number 6
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CARCLIMA. SUNDAY. MARCH 1. 1970
Fcwicd February 23. IS 93
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Wuycik Over Denton For Two At Line
ay Care Service Allows
D
.More Time For Marrieds
By PAxM PURYEAR
DTH Staff Writer
If you're a married working
student with children, you
have a problem; Victory
Villagers have a solution.
The Victory Village Day
Care Center provides
year-round kindergarten for
married students' children, ages
two to six, five days a week for
$55 a month. It is located on
Mason Farm Road close within
the Village area.
Several things about the
center are unique.
For example, the center
participates in a free N.C.
Memorial Hospital program in
which a trained clinical
psychologist comes once a
week to discuss any problems.
If the teachers notice any
potential trouble in a child, the
parents are offered the option
of sending him to a special
pre-school for the mildly
distrubed.
Center director Mrs. Mary
Bridgers noted, "We have used
this facility very effectively."
She added that for the staff
members, "Just being able to
talk to a specialist helps."
"One of the advantages of
the Chapel Hill area is the
variety of people available to
work with the center,"
according to Mrs. Bridgers. She
tries to attract local people
who are talented in dance, art,
music and anything else the
children will enjoy. Sometimes
By BOB CHAPMAN
DTH Staff Writer
Several student groups,
faculty and administration are
sponsoring a five-day drug
symposium in March. Designed
to increase student
understanding of drugs, the
symposium will include films,
lecturers and . informal
discussions.
Mike Padrick, a member of
the symposium committee,
said the symposium will begin
March 8 and continue through
March 12. "The purpose of the
symposium," Padrick said, "is
to start people talking and
thinkins about drugs."
A film, "World of
Weed," will open
the
these are the parents
themselves.
In addition; the center's
children include natives of
Turkey, Nepal, and Holland.
Foreign students and faculty
often live in the village and
send their children to school
there.
This offers another unique
chance. The school has a day
for "Children of the World"
featuring foreign visitors in
native dress. Teachers have
available the workshop and
materials offered by the three
day care associations of which
the center is a member.
The center is licensed by the
N.C. Association of Licensed
Day Care Centers, the
Southern Association for the
Care of Children Under Six and
the N.C. Kindergarten
Association. ,The center also
takes advantage of the free
workshops, on any subject
requested, given by the State
Department of Social Sciences.
Mrs. Bridgers has hatched
Easter chickens' raised rabbits
and cared for various mice,
fish, birds and gerbils.at the
center. She arranges at least 20
field trips a year. The children
visit the airport, bakery, farm,
radio station, the campus
buildings "where Daddy goes
to school" and "anywhere
they'll let us come," she said.
The center exists and lives
because of the married
students. Village residents,
some of them teachers in the
center, have first priority. But
ymposiem
symposium at 3 p.m. Sunday
in Great Hall of the Union. The
film traces the historical
development of marijuana
from ancient China. Included
will be discussion on medical
studies ' of the plant and
legislation concerning its use.
Another film, "From Pot to
Psycheadelics," concerns social
and moral aspects of the drug
users. Included will be
comments by Timothy Leary
in San Francisco and a look at
the drug scene in Greenwich
Village.
Sam Anglin, drug addict for
14 years, will conduct a lecture
at 8 p.m. in Great Hall. Anglin
eorres from Paytop Village, a
withdrawal center in New York
City, and he is currently
helping with Phoenix House in
the center is open to children
of faculty and married students
living elsewhere.
Lack of space, however, is
one thing that keeps the center
fro m serving more married
students. Licensed for 63, the
Center now enrolls 59. To take
more, it would need a larger
building.
The center also operates on
a rather restricted budget. It
receives heat and utilities from
the University, and will soon
be maintained by the Physical
Plant. However, it receives no
government subsidy of any
kind.
One big expense is the play
equipment, specially made to
be safe and sturdy. A set of
hollow play blocks purchased
two years ago cost $350.
One of the most immediate
needs, Mrs. Bridgers said, is for
high school and college
students, especially young
men, to play with the children
and supervise group recreation.
According to Mrs. Bridgers,
some of the parents of the
center's children are divorced.
The boys would greatly benefit
from the attention of young
men.
She added that last year the
Alpha Phi Omega service
fraternity gave money for new
equipment and the Phi Delta
Theta social fraternity cleaned
and painted the center.
Any individual or group
interested in serving at the
center should contact Mrs.
Bridgers at 929-2662.
O
New York, a city-wide effort
to rehabilitate drug users. He
also works closely with parents
of drug users.
"You Can't Grow a Green
Plant in a Closet," a film
dealing with marijuana, will be
shown Monday at 3 and 7 p.m.
in Great Hall. Top drug experts
will answer questions
concerning use of the drug.
A coffee hour with informal
discussion will follow in Great
Hall.
A filmed debate will
highlight the symposium
Tuesday. "Lettvin Versus
Leary," a debate between
Jerome Lettvin and Timothy
Leary, will show both sides of
the drug question. The film
wi'l beshowa at 3 and 7 p.m. in
Great Hall.
Cold Shooting Frustrates
Victory Bid At Durham
By ART CHANSKY
DTH Sports Editor
DURHAM-Carolina relived
a season of frustration here
yesterday by cramming every
ounce of previous poor
shooting into 40 minutes of
anguish at the Duke Indoor
Stadium.
When it was over, only pride
and a refusal to quit kept the
score close as Duke took a
91-83 victory amidst 8800 very
psyched onlookers.
The Blue Devil win was the
third consecutive happy finale
over UNC dating back to 1968
and gave Bucky Waters a 17-7
record in his first regular
season at Duke.
The game was simply
another renewal of a bitter
basketball rivalry as both teams
were locked into opposing
brackets for the upcoming
Atlantic Coast Conference
Tournament long before
yesterday.
The Blue Devils finished 8-6
for fourth place in the ACC,
with UNC hoping for a second
place tie, pending the outcome
of last night's N.C. State-South
Carolina game. The Tar Heels
closed the scheduled campaign
at 18-7, 9-5 in ACC play.
Carolina could not buy a
basket. It was that simple.
The Tar Heels watched a
slim 29-28 lead evaporate over
the final seven minutes of the
first half when Duke went on a
19-4 scoring rampage that
carried the Blue Devils to a
47-33 halftime advantage.
- Whsjn intermission finally
came, Carolina had
experienced its worst shooting
half of the season, making only
11 of 37 attempts for a
horrible 19.7 percentage.
Duke opened in a typical
zone defense but chose to
collapse on Charlie Scott at
every possible instance. As a
result, Scott took five first half
shots, made one and had eight
points at the break.
The strategy worked well
for Duke, as the other four Tar
Yates Bill Would Allow
Jury In Student Courts
By GERRY COHEN
DTH Staff Writer
A proposal to allow trial by
jury in student courtsTias been
introduced fn Student
legislature by Legislator Gene
Yates.
The resolution, calling for a
referendum to amend the
constitution would allow any
student the right to ask for a
trial by jury.
The jury would be selected
at random from persons living
under the jurisdiction of the
court.
At present, members of the
Honor Court and Mens
Residence Council Court are
At 8 p.m. Tuesday, a panel
discussion, "Tell It like It Is,"
will feature Dr. Paul Fiddleman
and Dr. Clifford Reifler, both
of the UNC faculty; members
of "Switchboard," a group
concerned with the drug
problem in the United States;
and UNC students.
A film will be shown
Wednesday at 3 and 7 p.m. in
Gerrard Hall. "Children of
Sjnanon" is an experimental
film which is incorporated in
the "Genesis" series. Members
of Synanon, an organization
which tries to rehabilitate drug
addicts, will conduct an
informal discussion session
which includes a coffee hour.
Members of Synanon will
hold more discussions on drugs
and will show a film on opiates
at 3 p.m. Thursday in Gerrard
-Begins
Heel players who were being
constantly shuffled by Dean
Smith could not find the
range, either.
Meanwhile, Duke built a
commanding lead by shooting
a sizzling 61 per cent from the
floor and 95.8 (that's right)
from the foul line.
It wasn't until two minutes
were left in the first half that
guard Ray Kuhlmeier missed a
free throw, dropping the
Dukes who were the worst
conference foul shooting team
before yesterday to an
imperfect 23 or 24 from the
charity stripe.
The brunt of the Blue Devil
scoring and rebounding load in
the first half was carried by
forward Larry Saunders, who
was let with the early burden
when Randy Denton picked up
three quick fouls.
Saunders had 11 points and
seven rebounds in the opening
20 minutes that had the Indoor
Stadium crowd in turmoil.
Carolina has made a habit
out of second half comebacks,
however, and yesterday was to
be no exception.
But the Tar Heels could not
muster too much of an
improved shooting
percentage both from the.'
floor line and it cost
them an important tournament
tuneup victory.
Five points by Dave
Chadwick and three by Scott
sliced the Devil lead to six and
silenced the crowd over the
first three minutes of the
second half.
Despite the comeback,
though, the writing was visible
as Lee Dedmon picked up his
third and fourth personals
early and Scott tallied his
fourth with 14 minutes to
play.
The foul trouble kept
Carolina from playing that real
pressure defense, and Duke was
able to control the action until
end.
After the Blue Devils had
re-increased their margin to 13,
the Tar Heels made their most
elected.
In a case where a student
asked for a jury trial, three
regular honor court members
would .serve as judges. They
would set the penalty if the
jury came in with a verdict of
guilty. The judges would also
decide what evidence could be
heard.
The proposal also divides
MRC Courts to serve in the
residence colleges, rather than
campus wide as at present.
Refusal to serve as a juror
would be an honor code
offense. The maximum penalty
would be a semester's
Mm
o
Hall.
Dr. Helen Nowlis,
commentator, author and
researcher, will speak on
opiates and other drug use in
Gerrard Hall at 7 p.m.
Thursday.
"Legality and Drug Use," a
panel discussion with Dr.
Donald Harris and Dr. Myron
Liptzin of the University, Dr.
Barry Winston, an attorney of
law in Chapel Hill, and others
will complete the symposium.
The panel discussion will be
followed by a coffee hour and
informal discussion.
During the five days of the
symposium, free literature
concerning drugs will be
available in the lobby of the
Student Union.
serious run at the money and
appeared headed for another
one of those finishes.
Seven consecutive points by
Dedmon, Chadwick, Scott and
Jim Dehny left Duke leading
by only four, at 57-53, with
over 12 minutes to go.
But then entered much
improved forward Don
Blackman, and the Dukes
reeled of eight straight for a
11-point lead.
Carolina, shooting terribly
but scrapping for every
rebound, couldn't get closer
than eight for the next nine
minutes as Duke went to a
deliberate, hold-the-ball
offense.
When Scott fouled out just
under the four minute mark,
the handkerchiefs went up, the
crowd went wild and Carolina
appeared through.
But great coaching,
tenacious defense and savage
board play kept the Tar Heels
alive until just over a minute
remained.
With Dennis Wuycik
battling relentlessly underneath
and Delany shooting well while
playing aggressive defense,
Carolina pulled within five
aith 1:12 left and then six
with 40 seconds showing.
Following the first occasion,
Dedmon blocked a pass that
landed in Blackman's arms.
Then Wuycik stole a pass and
threw it away to foil the
second bid.
It was that kind of an
afternoon.
The Tar Heels shot an
unbelieyably poor 28 for 83 v
(33.7 per cent), while Duke
had as many field goals but
took only 45 shots for a 62.2
percentage.
Wuycik was the high scorer
with 23 points and 12
rebounds in another gallant
effort for the superb
sophomore. Scott had 17,
Dedmon 13 and Delany 12.
It all went for naught,
though, as frustration engulfed
the visitors dressing room at
the Indoor Stadium for the
third season in a row.
probation.
Yates said trial by jury
should be given a chance to see
if it will work.
The bill would be effective
only during the 1970-1971
school year, and the
Legislature could cancel the
plan early if it did not work,
added Yates.
It must receive a 23 vote in
the Legislature in order to pass.
' " t v
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"V.
Fogler
I 'Pitcher'
A poetry reading Monday
night will celebrate the
publication of the first volume
of the Pitcher Pamphlet Poetry
Series, sponsored by the
English department and
published by YMCA press.
Mrs. Judith Soucek will
deliver & reading from her
collection, "A New Cold,"
which is just off the press. Five
other Pitcher Pamphlet writers
whose collections are as yet
unpublished will also read from
their works at the 8 p.m.
program in Wesley Foundation.
Mrs. Soucek and the
others Susan Bullington, Kep
Ward, Jim Wann, David
Rigsbee and Kent Hedman are
University students who, with
the aid of publishing grants
awarded by the English
department, will see their
works on sale not only on the
UNC campus and in Chapel
Hill bookstores but across the
country by the end of the
spring semester.
Their poetry will become
available to student purchasers
at two to three-week intervals
throughout the term at $1 per
volume of the series.
The Publishing grants were
announced earlier this semester
by Charles Wright of the
creative writing division of the
English Department. From
approximatly 30 manuscripts
originally submitted for
consideration the five
so on -to -be -published works
were chosen, according to
WarcL The authoress of "A
i
fi
Debuts
Lidit Everywhere But Duke Indoor
a
,
"3
I -3
Slows Devil
Poetry I
Monda
New Cold" is a "bustling,
bubbly" mother of two
children who has published
poetry in the "Southern Poetry
Review."
Susan Bullington is
described by her partner-poet
Ward as a 4redhead,
bead-freak" who has done an
extensive amount of traveling
from her hometown of
Charlotte.
Ward may be remembered
as the first freshman to start on
a varsity team during this first
year at UNC, 67-68.
However, from an
outstanding performance in
soccer he turned to an equally
exceptional one in writing
poetry. Withing the last year
and a half, more than 25 of his
poems have been published.
The Bullington-Ward
volume, "Juggling," second in
the Pitcher Poetry Pamphlet
Series, is scheduled to appear
March 20.
Fourth student poet of the
series Is Jim Wann, a bearded
guitar player from Lookout
Mt., Tenn. who hopes to recive
a Stanford Writing Fellowship
in the near future.
David Rigsbee, fifth in the
series, is a former Morehead
Scholar who has been writing
poetry ever since he was in
high school.
Poet Kent Hedman boasts a
list of accomplishments from
Morehead Scholar and Phi Beta
Kappa to Rotarian Schobr to
the University of Exeter in
England.
DTI! 5:-7 Fhoto by Woody CLrk
Stadium
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