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78 Years Of Editorial Freedom
Volume 78. Number V
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA. SUNDAY. APRIL 5. 1970
Founded February 23, 1 893
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MRS. EDWARD MCGEE and her daughter, Jessica,
stand outside their Victory Village home. They are
members of one of the families to be evicted by the
administration. (Photo by John Gellman)
Campus News Briefs
Jubilee Planning Meeting Set
All prospective guides for Project Uplift's April 11 campus
tour for high school juniors are to meet in Gerrard Hall at 7 p.m.-
Tuesday.
Jim Hornstein, spokesman for the Committee for the
Advancement of Minority and Disadvantaged Students, said the
meeting is mandatory.
Failure to attend will result
vital information will be given to
Young Republicans To Hear East
The. Young, Republican Club of UNC will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. in room 08 Peabody Hall.
Dr. John P. East, a former candidate for Congress and North
Carolina secretary of state, will speak. He is a professor of
political science at East Carolina University.
Nominations for next year's officers will be received at the
meeting. All students are invited to attend.
emaie
By Collen EdgeU
Staff Writer
The Female Liberation rally
will be held Monday even
though Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sitterson will not meet with
the group as members had
earlier planned.
The rally will be held at
noon in the Pit, ABC-TV will
be on hand for the program
which will include a skit and
two speakers.
In a March 25 letter,
Assistant to the Chancellor
Claiborne Jones informed
members of Female Liberation
Lily
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in replacement, he said, because
guides at this meeting.
iLiiberation
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that the Chancellor would not
meet with them Monday but
added the Chancellor has
agreed to look into six of the
21 submitted demands.
Jones listed four officials
the group might bring their
demands to, stating, "The
Chancellor feels that it would
be more effective and
expeditious for you to confer
with those persons named
rather than requesting another
conference with him."
Female Lib members
decided Thursday to send
representatives to meet with
those officials who include: Dr.
Raymond Dawson, dean of the
(Staff Photo by Steve Adams)
Carolina's lacrosse team suffered its first loss of the season
Saturday, an 11-4 setback to Virginia. The Tar Heel golfers
knocked off Wayne State 21-0 on Friday. Details of these
events will be published in Tuesday's DTH.
FOIH
Parking
0D&B6S
JL
uaings
By Lana Starnes
Copy Editor
Twelve families living ir
University -owned housing uniti
in Victory Village received
eviction notices Saturday
informing them they must
move by June 7 to make room
for a new parking lot.
Joseph C. Eagles, vice
chancellor in charge of finance,
said Saturday the evictions
stemmed from the erection ol
three new buildings in the
medical complex scheduled foi
the fall.
He said two parking lots in
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necessitating more parking
sPa- t ... . . . . ,
The families involved voiced
concern about relocation,
Although the notices stated
that the families will have
priority until April 30 to
relocation in another unit,
there is no assurance that
housing costs will remain the
same.
David
Landry, a UNC
graduate student, said he could
not afford a more expensive
apartment and did not know
what he and his family would
do. Landry moved into Victory
Village three months ago and
has barely had time to unpack,
he said.'
it
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aally
.Monday
College of Arts and
Dr. James Gaskin,
Sciences;
registrar;
and Joseph M. Galloway,
director of placement service.
Dr. Dawson will be
contacted about self-defense
and role of women courses, Dr.
Gaskin concerning
undergraduate women
admission policies and
Galloway about placement
service facilities being barred to
companies until they
demonstrate they are equal
opportunity employers.
The demand concerning sex
discrimination in granting
fellowships and scholarships
will be changed .
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BOXES AND DRUMS are the occupants of houses that
once provided homes for student families. This picture
was taken through a window of one of those nouses.
(Photo by John Gellman)
Mrs. Carroll Carrozza, wife
of a UNC graduate student, said
none of the families know what
to do or whom to contact.
"If the University tells us to
move, there's nothing else we
can do. It seems as though
we're at the mercy of
everybody," she said.
Mrs. Carrozza said the lease
states that in this situation the .
University will attempt to
relocate families involved but
does not guarantee that rental
- rates will be the same.
Mrs. Sterling Pruett said her
main complaint was the
eviction date. Her husband will
finish graduate school this
summer. The Pruetts and their
two children have lived in
Victory Village for three and a
half years.
Mrs. Jeanne Connor, wife of
a UNC graduate student and
mother of three children, was
upset because the notice stated
that three-bedroom units will
not be available. She said it was
imperative that her family have
such a unit.
"Although these look worse -than
other housing units they
have certain advantages. We
have a first floor living area,
front and back doors and a
backyard. It gives us certain
mobility that the children,
need," Mrs. Connor said.
She added she hoped the
University planned to tear
down the units right away,
complaining that when units
were abandoned to make room
for the Red Brick Research ;
Building they were left standing .
for over a year before being
torn down.
Mrs. Kemi Aseyemi, wife of
a Nigerian student, said she
hoped they could find a place
as cheap. Her husband is on an
Afro-American scholarship and
they have a new baby and
simply can't afford anything,
else, she said.
Schoeubirun Criticizes Nixon Vietnam
By Bob Chapman
Staff writer f
World news commentator
David Schoenbrun sharply
criticized President Nixon's
foreign policy and urged the
immediate U.S. withdrawal
from Vietnam in the keynote
address for International Week.
Schoenbrun told the
audience of nearly 500 that
although he is "not a pacifist,"
he opposes American
involvement on moral and
intellectual basis. The
award-winning CBS news
correspondent spoke in Hill
Hall. .Friday night on "Nixon's
New Foreign Policy."
Presently a senior lecturer at
Columbia University,
Schoenbrun has worked in
every news media and is the
author of "Vietnam: How We
Go In, How We Can Get Out."
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According to the residents,
the notices came as a surprise
not only to them but to the
physical plant as well. Three
weeks ago the apartments were
painted and the students were
given grass seeds to sow their
lawns.
James E. Wadsworth,
director of the University
housing, said the students
should come and see him as
soon as possible. He promised
the University would do its best
to relocate them. Wadsworth
also cited a similiar letter that
was sent to 80 people in 1967.
All 80 were relocated.
Each family will be given a
chance to have another place
although rates may not be the
same, Eagles said.
Contraception
Seminar Set
Where can contracep
tives be obtained in Chapel
Hill? To what 5 degree are
contraceptives effective?
What are the alternatives
for women to having
babies?
These and many more
questions will be discussed
Monday at 7 p.m. in the
basement of Granville
South in a seminar
sponsored by ECOS for
Female Liberation.
A movie on population
control, "Beyond
Conception," is the first
part of the program. Next
the seminar will divide
into three discussion
groups. Each group will be
led in discussion by a
medical doctor, a Female
Liberation member and an
ecology student.
Denouncing such labels as
"hawk" and "dove,"
Schoenbrun said he believes in
seeking the good of humanity
over nationalism. He said that
after being a war
correspondent of 14 wars, he
considers a man more
courageous if he refuses to
fight an unjust war.
Schoenbrun said he fought
in Woiid War IL a war he
considered just because Hitler
was an aggressor and the
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.
"But your government has
no kind of rational basis for
going to war," he said.
He said Nixon was one of
the first to urge American
involvement in Vietnam as
early as 1954 when speakmto
newsmen, bi President
Eisenhower discuraged the
action. He noted that Nixon
made his comments at the time
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Some of the
Victory Village
cannot find
lVJlMv 1
12 recently evicted families in
may have to separate if they
equally
accomodations.
The students involved are concerned because
other housing is more expensive and most can't
afford it. Red Brick apartments were mentioned
in particular as one area that the students could
not afford.
David Landry, a UNC graduate student, said
many of the families, especially those with
children, could not afford to pay higher monthly
rents and it was possible that many would have
to separate.
The student residents pointed out that there
are eight housing units now being used for
storage that could be used by students. The units
are identical to the ones the students are now
living in.
ittersoii Lands
70 Carolina
By Mike Parnell
Staff Writer
University Chancellor J.
Carlyle Sitterson released a
statement last week
congratulating students and
faculty for the 1970 Carolina
Symposium and expressing
hope students will participate
in the Environmental Teach-in
this month.
Sitterson said, in selecting
the theme "Man and
Environment," students and
faculty "shoved both
imagination and awareness of
one of society's greatest needs,
I-Week Features
Afro Dinner Today
An African dinner and an
address by a UNC art history
professor top today's
International Teek schedule.
The African dinner,
prepared by African students
here, will be served at 6 p. m. at
the Wesley Foundation.
"Art as it Reflects World
Views" will be art history
Professor John Dixon's topic at
8 pjn. coffee house session in
the south lounge of the Student
Union. Slides will complement
the speech.
Two flicks,
"Orient Occident: Aspects of
an Exhibition" and "Buddhism,
Man and Nature" will be shown
following Dixon's address. Folk
singing and a Spanish organ
presentation are also scheduled.
Today's activities will begin
of the French defeat at Dien
Bien Phu, where Schoenbrun
was the only American there as
a CBC correspondent.
Schoenbrun said the
"so-called nrvv plan" of Nixon
is not new at all.
Ke denounced former
President Harry Truman's
policy of total intervention and
urged a new internationalism.
"America is a mighty
nation," said Schoenbrun, "but
there is one thing that America
cannot do, and that is
everything."
Noting that historically
there is no North Vietnam and
South Vietnam but instead one
country, the former
commentator said South
Vietnam is an invention of the
U.S. State Department.
According to the Geneva
accord of 1954 he said, the
demilitarized zone (DMZ) was '
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71
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housing
the preservation of an
environment for the future of
man."
The 1970 Carolina
Symposium was held March
15-19 to discuss environmental
problems man will face in the
future and ways to conquer
them.
"The large and enthusiastic
attendance" for the "excellent
programs and speakers" was an
indication of the success of the
symposium, said Sitterson.
Featured speakers during
the symposium were Sen.
Edmund . Muskie (D.-Me.),
at 2:30 p.m. with a cricket
match at Fetzer Field.
Volleyball is scheduled for 3
pjn. in Woolen Gym.
Monday's highlight will be a
Chinese film, "The East is
Red," to be shown at 8 p.m. in
Memorial Hall. The flick,
produced in Red China, depicts
the Chinese government's
conception of the people's
revolution.
Remaining I Week activities
include Far Eastern; European
and Indian dinners; flicks on
India and Greece; coffee house
sessions with UNC political
science professors; badminton, j
basketball and volleyball; and t
two fiicks on current world I
affairs.
Tickets for all activities are
available at the Student Union
9
to have been a temporary
demarcation zone until 1956
when elections were to have
been held in the country.
There was no such election,
Schoenbrun said, because the
other side, meaning Ho Chi
Minn, should have won. He
termed the situation a "Cook
County syndrome in world
affairs."
During the 1968 election,
Schoenbrun said, Nixon had a
secret plan for getting out of
Vietnam: Vietnamization. The
lecturer said there is nothing
new about hiring mercenaries
to fight a war and added that it
is not workable even if it were
desirable.
Nixon also said that he
would withdraw ground
troops, the speaker said.
Schoenbrun's theory
how to leave is "on ships'"
on
Symposium
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Mrs. Jeanne Connor, wife of a UNO graduate
student, said there was no chance that her
family would split. She said she was sun- her
husband would pull out of school rather than
have them separated. Her husband is presently on
a grant at the University.
Mrs. Carroll Carrozza, w ife of a UNC graduate
student and mother of two children, said if other
housing could not be found the possibility exists
that she and her children may have to move back
to Pennsylvania.
The families involved wid in a letter addressed
to the Daily Tar Heel that "this action by the
University indicates a singular lack of interest in
an active University role in the provision of low
rent housing for married students."
Joseph C. Eagles, vice chancellor in charge of
finance, said Saturday the University will
attempt to relocate the families in other housing.
Teach-in,
former Secretary' of the
Interior Stewart Udall and N.C.
Governor Robert Scott.
The Environmental Teach-in
will be held nationally April 21
and 22.
"There will be numerous
opportunities in classes and in
informal discussions in
colloquia to give our attention
to this matter of important
concern to us all," read the
statement.
Sitterson
"Regardless of
views among
also said,
differences of
us on other
matters, I am confident that all
of us are of one mind in our
desire to preserve an
environment that will be
conducive to a high quality of
living for future generations."
The teach-in activities on
this campus will be sponsored
by ECOS.
v
L
J. Carlyle Sitterson
David Schoenbrun