CCF MEETS
The Carolina Christian
Fellowship will meet tonight in
the main lounge of James to
discuss the "Resurrection of
Jesus Christ." RefreshmenY i.
will be served.
O
OHKSHOP
All If
A workshop of train in in
the
thea:r viill te conduced in
the Union, roor-s 202-20-1
today between 2:30 and 5 p.m.
All incited to attend. Fcr
information, call 923-1855.
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Volume 78, Number 2
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 18. 1970
Founded Feb rue rv 23. 1893
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'iuuims In VP Race
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DTH Cartoonist Bob Glenn, Business Manager Bob
Wilson and little friend stand in one of the longest lines
Scoii Wam&s
'Environment
By MARK PERRYMAN
DTH Staff Writer
Gov. Robert Scott called
North Carolinians to a
state-wide awareness of
environmental issues in a
Carolina Symposium address
Tuesday.
Prof. Abel Wolman of Johns
Hopkins University, also in a
Symposium speech Tuesday,
outlined a world overview of
these issues.
" Environment is the
password to the 70's," Scott
emphasized. "We speak of law
and justice in our slums, but a
need just as great is law and
justice in our environment.
"Modern man has succeeded
in degrading his environment at
a frightening pace."
Gov. Scott reviewed steps
North Carolina is currently
taking to preserve a healthy
environment.
H
xaim
The Office of Records and Registration released the following
examination schedule for spring semester, 1970:
AH 10:00 A.M. classes on MWF-Mon.-May 18-8: 30 AM.
All 11:00 A.M. classes on TTh Mon May 182:00 P.M.
All 4:00 P.M. classes on MWF, Busi 150, 158, Phys
2 5-Tues.-May 19-8:30 A.M.
All 9: 30 A.M. classes on TTh Tues. May 19-2:00 P.M.
All 8:00 A.M. classes on MWF-Wed -May 20-8:30 A.M.
All 2:00 P.M. classes on TTh Wed. May 202:00 P.M.
All 9:00 A.M. classes on MWF Thurs. May 21-8:30 A.M.
All 3: 30 P.M. classes on TTh-Thurs.-May 21-2:00 P.M.
All 12: 30 P.M. classes on TTh-Fri.-May 22-8: 30 A.M.
All 11:00 A.M. classes on MWF-Fri.-May 22-2:00 P.M.
All 1:00 P.M. classes on MWF Sat. May 23-8: 30 A.M.
All 5:00 P.M. classes on TTh, Phil 21-Sat.-May 23-2:00 P.M.
V
All 2:00 P.M. classes on MWF, Econ 70 Mon May 25-8:30
A.M.-
All 12:00 Noon classes on MWF, Poli 41 Mon May 252:00
P.M.
All Fren, Germ, Span, & Russ 1, 2, 3, & 4-Tues.-May 26-8:30
A.M.
All 8:00 A.M. classes on TTh-Tues-May 26-2:00 P.M.
All 3:00 P.M. classes on MWF, Busi 71, 73, Econ
61-Wed.-May 27-8:30 A.M.
All 5:00 P.M. classes on MWF and all classes not otherwise
provided for in this schedule Wed May 272:00 P.M.
The office release stated that the time of an examination may
not be changed after it has been fixed in the schedule.
Instructors of courses scheduled for common examinations
shall request students report to them any conflicts between a
scheduled and a common sense exam not later than April 24.
Scheduled examinations shall take precedence over common
exams.
No quizzes or tests shall be administered on or after Thursday,
May 7, according to the release.
I
V
Scott cited preservation of
marine resources, forests,
parks, mineral resources and
wildlife as only part of the
state effort. He also
enumerated ways the state is
handling air and water
pollution, controlling
pesticides and disposing of
garbage. -
Specifically, Scott noted the
state's first standards and
regulations for air quality
control which have been
developed and are expected to
become effective July 1.
"What will be one of the
first public school curricula on
environment in the nation is
planned for North Carolina,"
the governor explained.
During his present term as
governor, Scott established a
North Carolina Environmental
Commission.
Dr. Wolman is Professor
Emeritus in Sanitation
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DTH Staff Photo by Cliff Kolovson
in Y-Court to vote Tuesday. Bryan Cumming, candidate
for DTH editor, is at far right.
Awareness
Key To '70s'
Engineering at Johns Hopkins
and has served as president of
the American. Water Works
Association and the American
Public Health Association.
He cited the present alarm
of approaching disaster as just
another evidence that man has
always been a pessimistic
animal, ready to give up too
early.
He stressed, however, the
necessity of tackling current
environmental problems with
the optimistic view that
improvement is a possibility.
Wolman described current
birth control efforts as
insufficient in dealing with a
huge population growth.
Female Lib Demands
21 Policy
By JESSICA HANCHAR
DTH Staff Writer
UNC Female liberation is
demanding changes in policies
and regulations it feels are
necessary to insure equality
and justice for students in the
vUniversity community.
- A list of 21 demands was
presented to Chancellor J.
Carlyle Sitterson last week for
his comments and suggestions.
Top of the list of demands
is a revision of admissions
policies. Female Liberation
said that although women are
51 percent of the population,
yet they represent only 15
percent of the present
freshman class. Chancellor
Sitterson, according to a
spokesman for Female Lib.,
defended the policy as not
being discriminatory. He
pointed out the University is
admitting 800 freshman
students and 700 transfer
women for the fall semester.
They will then make 43
percent of the UNC student
body. According to Sitterson,
the state University structure
needs to be considered. This
sometimes means channeling
some students to
UNC-Greensboro.
According to Sitterson, the
policy of assigning quotas to
women in degree programs
such as Fine Arts, Pharmacy
and Liberal Arts was to insure
that enough women are
enrolled. Female Liberation
contends the policy restricts
women rather than protects
them.
The Chancellor rejected a
proposal to eliminate the term
"sex" from students
permanent records. Women
i
In result, land is becoming
premium he said. "Wilderness
areas are so appealing to so
many people we have a parking
problem even in these
f wilderness areas."
AAUW Meets
The Chapel Hill branch of
the American Association of
University Women will meet
Thursday at 8 p.m. in the
Community Church, Mason
Farm and Purefoy roads.
Officers will be elected and
a budget for 1970-71 will be
drawn up.
Revisions
students feel the ' word is
discriminating when used in
job applications. They pointed
out the term "race" has been
removed from student records.
The women's group also
asked that campus recruitment
privileges be denied to
companies which discriminates
against women. Sitterson said
the University follows a policy
of allowing on campus only
recruiters who state they are
equal opportunity employers.
Female Liberation also
demanded faculty
d iscrimination be abolished
and the appointment of
women faculty members with a
contemporary female
consciousness. Sitterson said he
had no control over such
appointments.
Chancellor Sitterson said he
would try to change the
discriminatory policies in
married student housing,
according to representatives for
the group. Housing is available
to couples only when the
husband is a student.
The demand that
differential room rents for
women be abolished has been
sent to the Committee on
University Residential Life for
action.
The Chancellor will send a
memorandum to the Physical
Education Department
suggesting that a self-defense
course be added to the
curriculum, said the
representatives.
Female Liberation will meet
with Chancellor Sitterson
Monday, April 6, to discuss the
recommendations and find
what action, if any, have been
taken.
DTH
By HARRY BRYAN
DTH Managing Editor
Tommy Bello, independent
candidate, appeared to be well
on his way to a first ballot
victory Tuesday night in the
race for student body
president.
With around 60 per cent of
the votes in, Bello had 1,950
votes out of 3,840 counted at
that time. The count was
unofficial.
.Doe Charges Tar
By TERRY CHEEK
DTH Staff Writer
International representatives
of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employees union Emmett Doe
said Monday the role of
University Registrar J.R.
Gaskin has been
misrepresented in print.
"Mr. Gaskin does not have
the power to meaningfully
affect the lives of
non-academic workers and can
not change the archaic attitude
the University has manifested
toward them," declared Doe."
"As long as Mr. Gaskin
permits himself to be used as a
'buffer' for UNC, there can be
no meaningful relationship
between us."
According to Doe, the Daily
Tar Heel has misrepresented his
complaint against Gaskin. "I
have never used the example as
Fagg Had Hash, LSD,
Laboratory Tests Show
By GERRY COHEN
DTH Staff Writer
Preliminary laboratory tests
have indicated hashish and
LSD were, among those
compounds allegedly
confiscated from student body
presidential candidate Gary
Fagg, according to Chapel Hill
Police Chief W.D. Blake.
Fagg, a junior from High
Point, was arrested by Chapel
Hill police early Monday
morning, and is currently being
held in Orange County jail in
Hillsborough. He has not yet
posted the $10,000 bail which
was set.
Blake said Fagg has been
charged with one count of
possession and sale of hashish
and an additional count of
possession and sale of LSD.
Blake said other "piils,
powders, chemicals and
candies" were also confiscated
from Fagg's room in Hinton
James dormitory. He said
laboratory tests are being run
on all the drugs, but said a final
analysis might not be
concluded for as long as three
weeks. He refused to speculate
about the contents of the pills.
Fagg is scheduled to enter a
plea to both charges March
3 Promoted
Three University of North
Carolina faculty promotions
were announced today by
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson
following approval of
Consolidated University
President William C. Friday
and the Board of Trustees.
Two were in the School of
Public Health. Dana E.A.
Quade and Pranab Kumar Sen
were promoted to full
professor.
Eva Carolyn Boyd of the
Medical School was promoted
from instructor to assistant
professor.
Editor Relturms Are La&e
Alan Hirsch, Student Party
candidate was in second place
with 869 votes. University
Party candidate Guil Waddell
third with 705, Conservative
Party candidate Gary Fagg
fourth with 198, and
independent candidate Tim
Daughtry fifth with 118.
Tuesday's vote was one of
the largest in years at UNC.
The total campuswide vote
ranged between 7,000 and
8,000.
Misrepresentation
implied in last Wednesday's Tar
Heel that the placing of 45
workers was a negative act of
UNC," he said. "We had
understood that UNC would
place all of the 62 workers sent
to them in meaningful jobs on
campus."
"The cartoon in the
Thursday DTH left me raw,"
Doe commented. "The
cartoonist missed the point
completely. It isn't the workers
ship that is sinking, but the
hopes of UNC that they will be
able to continue the
colonization of black people
and the exploitation of
non-academic workers."
Doe indicated there was still
opportunity for Gaskin to
participate . in the struggle of
the workers. "If Mr. Gaskin is
truly a man of good will, we
would ask him to re-evaluate
his role. Tokenism is a useless
gesture. UNC's tokenism has
25th, when he must appear for
arraignment in Ch2pel Hill
District Court.
If probable cause is then
found by District Judge Harry
Horton against any of the
seven persons arrested Monday
morning, they will be turned
over to Superior Court for
further action.
All evidence will be turned
over to a grand jury for action.
If the jury votes a bill of
indictment, a trial may then
begin.
Chief Blake said
investigations into drug sales in
the Chapel Hill area are still
continuing.
He said, "WTe are trying to
put our efforts into detecting
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His aiiflience wasn't . . .
Bill Blue of the UP and Bill
Russo of the SP were running
neck and neck in , the early
ballots in the vice-presidential
election.
Blue was leading at 10:30
with approximately 2,150
votes. Russo was second with
1.490, and Conservative Party
candidate Phil Rast had 565.
In the race for student body
secretary Ann Rothe of the SP
was leading Sherry Yates of the
UP by a slim margin.
.rie el
been Mr. Gaskin and his
efforts. Should he realize how
the University has been using
him, and would like to assist in
a meaningful way, we would
welcome him," added Doe.
Gaskin commented that
Doe has misunderstood and
miscontrued the Registrar's
role.
"My role is helping the
non-academic workers was a
special assignment from the
Chancellor which began last
November and ended on
February 15," Gaskin stated.
Gaskin said he has given the
power to place the laid-off
workers in any campus
positions that become
available. He noted there has
been a "freeze" on hiring since '
Jast November to facilitate the
placing of workers. "The
contention that the special
assignment carried no power is
a historical fallacy," Gaskin
added.
those who sell hard drugs.
Much of the marijuana that is
discovered is a result of arrests
for other drugs."
"We try to remove the
pushers and suppliers," he
added. "It's the only thing we
can do."
Blake said he did not know
if the recent spate of drug
arrests had in any way reduced
the amount of drugs being sold
in the Chapel Hill area.
According to Blake, it is a
felony to possess more than
one gram of hashish or sell any
type of narcotic drug. A felony
is usually punishable by a
maximum sentence in excess of
a year in prison.
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Votes for editor of the
Daily Tar Heel had not even
bofun to be counted when the
DTH went to press, but
numerous parties felt that the
referendum had been defeated.
The count of votes in the
Daily Tar Heel referendum
were also scheduled laic.
In the early ballots Bello
had carried every district but
one. Men's District X (Craige
Dorm), which Wadde'l carried
with HO voles. Bello had only
38 in that district.
However, Bello did carry
eight of the nine districts
reporting in the early count.
He took I63 votes in MDIil.
207 in MDVII and 16 1 in
Women's District VL
Of the three women's
districts reporting, Bello easily
had 760 per cent of the vote.
In the vice-presidential race
Blue had carried six districts
and Russo three in the early
ballot, but the voting was close
in most districts.
Rast was not strong in any
of the first nine districts
reporting.
Blue had his biggest victory
margin in Men's District VII.
He took 212 votes to 119 for
Russo and 35 for Rast.
Blue carried Women's
District VI with 150 votes to
Russo 's 67 and Rast's 16.
Tuesday's vote was over
twice as large as last year's
ballot, and a few problems
occurred because of the huge
turnout.
Complaints were received
over the long lines and poll
tenders running out of ballots
in a few districts.
The candidates for editor of
the DTH were Douglas
Campbell, Bryan Cumming,
Steve Enfield-Dennis Benfield,
Tom Gooding, Bobby Nowell
and Andy Schorr-Rusty Carter.
Complaints
Registered
Over Voting
A shortage of ballots caused
by exhorbitant polls turnout in
Tuesday's election precipitated
several complaints against
election laws, according to
Elections Board Chairman
Margo Fletcher.
Two such complaints were
registered at the Daily Tar Heel
office by Dennis Beckow and
Sam Griffin, graduate students
in geography, who said they
experienced trouble in voting.
According to Miss Fletcher,
the voting turnout was "two or
three times what was was to be
expected from elections over
the past two years."
Miss Fletcher said she had
received some complaints and
had given directions for lodging
official complaints to the
Student Supreme Court.
On the Issue of too few
ballots, Miss Fletcher
commented, "The problem
arises from present election
laws which are archaic and
badly need revamping."
Beckow said he was
instructed to go the Student
Union polls station if he
desired to vote on the
remaining two ballots.
"Since I was registered with
one station," Beckow said, "I
preferred not to split my
voting at another."
Another complaint lodged
by Griffin concerned the lack
of organization at the polls.
Griffin said he also
experienced trouble with the
lack of ballots, but deckled to
return later.
Griffin added that although
he had voted on all the ballots,
he was filing a joint complaint
with Beckow to the Supreme
Court.
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