-st- fc'ip"'-' S's O f j t iy 7 M Y u '7 rf ' i? A A JPK - i t , cy 7 Weather TODAY-Fair, high, 75 chance of rain. Ten chance of rain by THURSDAY clo''- Volume 78, Nurr. r r f j . .. - s - j y:- f DETERMINATION That's one of the things things that this young way Bad goinj Tor Her necessary to go out into the hot sun and play when she went to the courts yesterday. (Staff tennis for hours on end. And that's one of the Photo by Mike McGowan) Forum Exaimimes Ojpem Mouse By Terry Cheek Staff Writer .Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson said Tuesday the open house policy for next year will be decided by the Board of Trustees if the recommendations of -the Administrative Board of Student Affairs (ABSA) are outside the limitations set by Clifton Daniel To Deliver ( UNC Graduation Address Clifton Daniel, associate editor of the New York Times, Vvill deliver the commencement address in UNC graduation exercises June 1 at 7 p.m. in Kenan Stadium. Daniel is a native of Zebulon and a graduate of the University. He was a London correspondent of the Times during World War II and has held managing editor and Faculty Club Decision Is Postponed The University Space Committee postponed its decision Monday on the future of the Faculty Club until next week, Steve Saunders, governor of Morehead Residence College, said Tuesday. Saunders, who has asked the University to turn the infrequently used facility over to the residence college, said the committee postponed the decision to see if it could find other facilities for Air Force ROTC. "The University says they have planned for two years to put AFROTC there when they left the building they are in now," he said. The old AFROTC building will be torn down in the summer or fall to make way for a social studies building, Saunders said. Saunders said the committee also postponed the decision because Women's Liberation has asked the committee to make the building into a day-care center for children of non-academic workers. Saunders said, "Female lib had a petition with more than 800 signatures, including many faculty members, which they had gathered in a matter of a few days." - 80; no percent n'' v- , . . 1 ! the trustees last year. Sitterson was speaking at this term's final meeting of the Consultative Forum. The forum is a 60-member board of students , faculty, alumni, administrators and trustees formed last October to provide a medium for consideration of important campus issues. The forum addressed itself to the problems of finding more money for financial aid associate editor posts on the Times. He was also an editorialist for The Daily Tar Heel. Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson announced Monday the plans for the University's 176th commencement program and alumni reunion activities which will begin Friday, May 30, and continue through the weekend. The baccalaureate sermon on Sunday, May 31, at 11 a.m. will be given by a 1940 alumnus of UNC the Rt. Rev. William J. Gordon, the Episcopal bishop of Alaska. The University's concert band will perform on the lawn near Davie Poplar at 4 p.m. Sunday, , and at 8 p.m. that evening there will be a musical concert in Hill Hall. Reunion classes will be those of 1920, '25, '30, '35, '40 and so on to 1960. The Old Students Club, including alumni out of Chapel Hill 50 years and longer, will hold a reunion and intiate members of the class of 1920, who will be Fraternity Begin Greek Week Approximately 350 Carolina social and business fraternity pledges participated in a community clean-up project Monday as a part of Greek Week. Steve Smith of Pi Lambda Phi and Jim Tarleton of Alpha Theta Omega, co-chairmen of Greek Week, said the project involved cleaning up five vacant lots in Chapel Hill. The idea of beautifying vacant lots came from the Chapel Hill Citizens' Advisory Committee. Smith said he hopes the project can be expanded so CHAPEL "1 to disadvantaged students, improving the academic atmosphere of the campus and providing a more hospitable living situation in University housing. Dean of Student Affairs CO. Cathey announced at the meeting Jthat he would deliver his recommendation on open house to Chancellor Sitterson today. Cathey is the chairman of ABSA. celebrating their golden reunion, into the Old Students Club. Harry H. Montgomery of Raleigh, president of the UNC Alumni Association, will preside at the alumni luncheon Monday at 12:30 p.m. The 1970-71 alumni president, W.J. Smith, Jr. of Charlotte, will be inducted into office. Chancellor Sitterson will preside at the Kenan Stadium graduation program June 1, and Gov. Robert Scott and Consolidated University President William C. Friday will aid the conferring of degrees. Charles M. Ingram, president of the senior class, will also speak. Graduating seniors may rent their caps and gowns at the Student Store for $6.70. Graduation invitations may be obtained from the Order of the Grail. Deadline for gown rentals for undergraduates is May 1. For graduate students, it is Friday. Pledges that each individual fraternity will sponsor its own clean-up campaign, rather than having only one a year. Other Greek Week activities include a parade and carnival Thursday. Each pledge class is competing for the title of "best pledge class." Points are gained for participating in raising money for the Ugly Man on Campus contest, the chariot race, grade averages, participation in the clean-up project, extra-curricular activities and participation at booths in the carnival. I in i it I ! M ! 78 Years Of HIU4 NORTH CAROLINA, o By AI Thomas Staff Writer A talk by an official of the Nixon administration and a 'trash-in" will highlight today's second round of "Earth Day" activities at UNC. Karl Klein, assistant secretary of the interior for water resources and pollution control, is scheduled to speak during an ecology workshop at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Klein, according to Paul Hebert, co-chairman of the two-day Environmental Teach-in here, is the Nixon administration's top official in the study of water pollution. Dr. Dan Okun, head of the department of environmental science, and Dr. Howard Odum, zoology professor, are The quality of student life was introduced by the student caucus of the forum. The students noted that in 1967 there were more students wanting University housing than University housing could accommodate. As of this spring, there are approximately 1,000 vacancies in campus housing. Student Body President Tommy Bello said there were three areas to be worked on in making University housing more attractive: physical improvements on the dormitories,, a move toward liberalization of the rules governing students and University experimentation in academic innovation. Professor Fred B. Wright of the math department said he would like someone to explain the "rationale" behind the University's policy of regulating students' lives within their own rooms. At this point the room became painfully quiet. After a very long pause, Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael stood and said, "If Tr 7 o LD THE COUNTRYSIDE can be a great place for a walk alone. DTH photographer Mike McGowan spotted this young lady walking along the top of a hill and pulled out a telephoto lens to get this shot. Editorial Freedom WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 8 ft " St f? hi H scheduled to join Klein in the workshop. The workshop is entitled "Ecology and the Administration of Water. Pollution." Fraternity and sorority members will converge on Polk Place this afternoon and unload thousands of non-returnable metal cans for the "trash-in." Hebert said the purpose of the trash-in is "to demonstrate the proliferation of the containers in the Chapel Hill area alone." The group with the most cans, according to Hebert, will receive a $50 prize. Other events today include no one else will answer it, I will." Miss Carmichael said she could "name at least 12 students" who had complained to her that open house allowed invasion of privacy. After elaborating somewhat on this point, she said, "There is probably some rationale for the system I don't know what it is." . ili 0 CP ji d) Navy Chief To OTC Graduation The Chief of Naval Operations will attend the NROTC graduation and commissioning ceremonies at UNC June 1. Admiral Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr., commander of naval forces in Vietnam, was recently named to the chief of operations post to replace Admiral Thomas Moo re r who will become chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff June 30. Moorer will succeed Gen. "1 1970 !" . . A the showing of films and slides in the Student Union, the operation of an ecology store in Polk Place and two more workshops, The ecology store is stocked with pesticide-free food wrapped in easily disposable materials. The two workshops, "Ecology and Industry" and "Ecology and the Politics of Today," will be held in Memorial Hall at 1 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. respectively. Earth Day activities began here Tuesday in conjunction with a nationwide Teach-in. The two -day event has reportedly turned - out thousands of students across the country to "help save tne environment." The turn-out here Tuesday, however, was encouraging only in regard to the ecology store, according to Hebert. "I feel today has been a trial run," Hebert said. "Thousands of students here have visited the ecology store, and this is very encouraging. "Tuesday's turnouts for the workshops and films have been disappointingly poor," he added. "We're hoping for greater participation today." Herbert said Earth Day here Earl Wheeler who is retiring. Adm. Zumwalt, 49, will be the youngest admiral to hold the post of highest ranking naval officer. Zumwalt was named an admiral in 1966. A native of Tulare, Calif., he is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. One of his sons, Jim, will be among the NROTC graduates in June. He is the first batallion adjutant in the UNC unit. ike It 1 j j f j Head Moreiiead (broveraor oays Ed. Note: The following article is the first in a series of profiles of the newly-elected residence college governors and their plans for the coming school year. By Steve Plaisance Staff Writer "Our primary Morehead is to goal in increase interaction among residents so that they will feel as though they belong to the entire college, rather than just a particular dorm," commented Morehead Residence College Governor Steve Saunders. Saunders, a freshman from Pensacola, Fla., is a National Merit scholar, presidential advisor for residence college affairs and currently participates in the UNC honors program. "The staff of Morehead is doing a tremendous job," said Saunders, "and they show a lot of enthusiasm for their jobs." Saunders characterized Morehead activities as an effort "to have something going on all the time." "Well have the Morehead Forum every Monday night a series of open discussions with " f i j ) h n n u K'fhli II 71 T! IfTIO)": Ji vLPjiii mi Liiuyiiii WOI would "hopefully create not only an awareness of environmental problems but start people working toward finding solutions." Gay lord Plugs Ai Convention By Dorothy Gray Special To Tne DTH "The U.S. should be prepared to allocate $25-30 billion a year to protect our environment, and soon this amount will have to be increased to $30-40 billion. "This can't be done while we continue to escalate the arms race and remain involved in Vietnam." So ended Senator Gaylord Nelson's keynote address to the Annual Conference of Sigma Delta Chi (SDX), the professional journalism fraternity, which met last weekend at the University of Maryland. Sen. Nelson (D.-Wisc.) is chairman of the Earth Day Teach-in programs now being held at high schools and colleges throughout the U.S. Also addressing the SDX Conference was Rep. Paul McCloskey Jr. (R.-Calif.), Nelson's co-chairman. "There is not a cubic foot of unpolluted air in the world," Sen. Nelson told the journalism professionals and students. Rep. McCloskey encouraged the journalists to do a little muckraking. "Don't be intimidated by the words of the vice president," said McCloskey, "and don't be afraid to pry and to ask the tough questions." "We live on a finite planet," said Nelson, "with a limited amount of resources." Nelson said the teach-in will not concern themselves with only the issue of survival, but of how we will survive. "The goal is not just a clean environment and unpolluted air, but decency, quality and mutual respect, without ghettos, hunger, poverty or war," Nelson said. McCloskey pointed out that the pollution problems ultimately come down to the community Sen. Nelson warned that the battle to restore a proper relationship between man and his environment will be an unceasing one and outlined an eight-point program needed to begin and (See Clean-up, page 6) Entire College9 X Steve Saunders key figures in the University," he explained. "Every Tuesday night is game night, and we're trying to plan hayrides, beer-blasts, camping trips, beach trips and a series of movies." In the academic areas, Saunders noted Morehead is not trying to stress "hard-core educational activities." "We're currently revising and expanding the quiz file and library. We also hope to offer a On The Inside Ihrpsr Pearson, a!I-American h'Toss pLryer. tills about his Fct-Tdcd February 231 893 Jof-LL-LLN-K ,'J s t He said the Columbia Broadcasting System (CES) would be on campus today filming the "trash-in" and other events. Nelson 2 Clean-UiD JL series of lectures by grad students about the problems of getting into and staying in graduate school," he said. A monthly , newspaper similar to the defunct "Morehead News" will be coming out in May, according to Saunders. It will feature news of the residence college and other related campus information. "I have been informed by the management of WCAR campus radio that we will be getting a hook-up with them within the next week or two," Saunders noted. The Morehead governor said the annual college "Sex Day" will be held this year the Thursday before Jubilee, April 30, and would be expanded to include movies im the evenings "and possibly swimming in the Navy pool behind the gym if we can get permission to use it." Saunders contends that th? residence college is a unifying force among students. "I think that a re:ildence college should offer a total community to dormitory residents, and that's what we're trying to do in Morehead."

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