THE TAR HEEL
Thursday, June 18, 1970
De
f Women's
Robinson: Too Early
To Note Violati
umee ixestructure
OilS
Page Two
o
(Continued from page one)
(Continued from page one)
will be with orientation, rush
and sororities.
Sources close to the
administration said that the
move putting Cansler in the
associate dean of student
affairs job was intended to
groom him for eventually
taking over dean of student
affairs when Dean CO. Cathey
retires.
But at least one high
administrative source said there
Visitation
(Continued from page one)
of Carr held house meetings
and adopted the visitation
agreement.
Dean of Women Catherine
Carmichael said Wednesday
that no women's dormitories
would have visitation this
weekend.
"It is my impression, since
there are girls here from 16 to
60, that most of the houses
will not be interested in
visitation in this summer heat,"
noted Dean Carmichael.
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are no plans for any line of
succession now.
The explanation for the new
office was that Dean Cathey
now has 13 separate
organizations under his direct
control and could not devote
any time to these if he were to
handle the reorganization of
the administration himself.
The money for the new
positions is coming this year
from discretionary funds. Next
year funds appropriated by the
state will finance the positions.
We'll Swing Bats
r
To Bust Pushers
figure) approximately 250,000
are in New York alone.
In North Carolina, no
conclusive survey has rendered
an answer to the severity of the
drug problem in the black
community, but observations
and experiences show that drug
addiction has gotten a "shot in
the arm" here recently.
One Baptist church in
Harlem, headed by the Rev.
Oberia D. Dempsey, has hung a
warning poster outside their
door reading:
LAST WARNING TO
ALL DOPE PEDDLERS AND
GANSTERS
B 1 a c k W h i t e-Puertorican
Get Out of Harlem and
N.Y. City
we are going to return
Harlem back into the hands of
decent people.
To I n
DqlA s
UrovQtt. QvrT
)
DEAN CARMICHAEL
(Continued from page one)
In Durham and Raleigh,
black radio stations WSRC and
WLLE constantly run public
service announcements
describing the hard world of a
junkie. The rap usually ends by
saying, "If you have watched a
friend suffer from dope, call in
the name of his supplier to the
local authorities. Your name
will never be used. HELP A
JUNKIE BUST A PUSHER!"
"Your Own Thing Theater"
in Durham has also been the
scene of a community
education program on drugs.
According to Howard Fuller,
director of Malcolm X
University in Durham, "The
use of dope must be stopped if
we are to go about the business
of black liberation."
Some community groups in
New York believe that
breaking the physical need for
LcttE- -
Ego
idoa ft A
such persons that they would
not be prosecuted for violation
of the policy.
For those persons not
responding to the first letter,
the . second letter warned:
"Under these circumstances
(having not responded to the
first letter), we must assume
that you intend to not
disqualify your original
declaration that you personally
engaged in conduct to violate
the Trustee's disruptions
policy."
heroin plus providing strong
psychological alternatives will
help cure addicts.
Another possibility is the
use of methadone. Although
addicitive, it is suppose to
allow a person to function on a
job and in other functions.
However, many fear that this
will create a fight to control
addiction rather than eliminate
it.
In New York City last year
224 teenagers died from
overdoses or heroin-related
infections. More than 40 have
already died this year.
A Washington, D.C. white
woman, who has a 23-year-old
son hooked on heroin, revealed
that there are 1,200 white
youths registered as addicts in
her county.
Some young dope fighters
show no mercy for the pusher.
To them they are not going to
be allowed to stand around
street comers setting a bad
example for their younger
brothers and sisters. "For
everyone we find, well use a
bat to break their arms and legs
, which transports the business,"
they say.
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The letter closed with the
following warning: "If you do
not respond, appropriate
administrative action will be
taken."
When asked about the
nature of the "appropriate
administrative action",
Robinson said the nature and
degree of the action has yet to
be determined.
"The closing statement was
used in order to give people an
incentive to reply in some form
to the letter," he explained.
Although the letter clearly
states that students engaging in
peaceful protest would not be
prosecuted, Robinson was
unsure about the fates of those
who ran through buildings
disrupting classes
"I can't say anything about
such cases until all the replys
are in and the extent of
disruption determined," he
noted. "It's too early to make
any sort of statement about
who will or will not be charged
in such instances."
Dean of Student Affairs
CO. Cathey was questioned
about the letter and responses
Tuesday, but declined
comment
Robinson told the Tar Heel
Wednesday that further
comments on the investigations
should come from the
administration here "because
they are conducting the
investigation, and we. merely
receive the results of their
findings and determine
probable cause for
prosecution."
In contrast, Dean- Cathey
said Tuesday that official
statements about the
investigation should come from
the office of the Consolidated
University, because of
President William Friday's past
statements to the press about
the issue.
"We probably won't have
any further information about
the investigation until after the
June 26 deadline for responses
to the second letter,".
Robinson concluded.
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