Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 15, 1970, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Tuesday, September 15. 1Q7n THE DAILY TAR HEEL Working Behind The Scenes Pjc Five v or AM President f Advil .Bello by Lou Bonds Six presidential advisors work with Student Body President Tom bSo assisting him , such areas as residence colleges, state affairs, judicial affairs publication and general student welfare' Steve Saunders, Judy Hippler, Joe Stalhngs Butch Rooks, George Butler and Carl Stauver are the student advisors to Bello. In their advisory capacity, each student plays a part in the decisions and actions of the executive branch of government. Police Chief Blake Terms Drug Situation Serious by Karen Jurgensen Staff Writer Drug use is a serious, growing problem in Chape! Hill, according to Police Chief W. D. Blake. As proof, Blake cited two deaths here caused by overdoses in the last year. To cope with the situation, Blake and his force are concentrating on pushers rather than users. There are not enough detectives to search out users, he said. To date no user or addict has been indicted. Instead Chief Blake said, he prefers to refer users to doctors or mental health clinics. Ten users have been sent to institutions in the last year. Since July, 1969, Blake said, there have been 1 1 4 drug arrests, nearly all for pushing. Many of these cases are pending. Penalties for drug sale range from ten years to $1,000 and a suspended sentence. The two who died from overdoses last year were James Lewis Rossman, 26 and Andy Julian, 23. Julian died of an -eather-like bands circle this little Crushed Ewe with its gently shaped silhouette . and set-in sleeves. Two metd! clips close the front above and below the inset front belt. Plain or Quilted Lining Size 6-16 ET7C0 less 20 Discount For Limited Time Only 'ova t!ji - - t 504 W. Franklin Saunders serves as Bello residence college advisor and is governor of Morehead Residence College. "My main job is to act as a liason between Tommy and the Residence College Federation," Saunders said. "I also help him with such matters as visitation and general conditions of residence life." Saunders said the main direction of his office this year is implimentation of the "New College" proposal. The "New College" proposal, Saunders said, calls for "a complete, relevant, living-learning experience in one dorm." overdose of heroin and Rossman died of an overdose of speed. The police policy directly affects the University policy because, as Associate Dean of Student Affairs James O. Cansler explained, all enrolled students brought before civil court on drug charges are subsequently brought before the Faculty Administration Student Judicial Board for a hearing. Cansler said although Student Government has no specific policy on drug use, the University does. This policy says transfer or possession of all drugs except those under valid prescription is prohibited. Violations include drug possession on campus, trafficking on and off campus and, depending on purpose, possession off campus. "We are forced to say that possession itself is a violation if for no other reason than the fact that it is a felony. We try of course to concentrate on pushers," Cansler stated. Last year the campus board held four hearings on possible drug violations. Asked about punishment of the four, Cansler said they received "probation and various other penalties." Since all campus hearings are postponed until the civil case is tried, 12 more hearings involving students are pending. Tae University will seek in every way Workers Graduate UNC News Bureau Eighteen former maids, clerks and cafeteria workers graduated in August from an intensive seven-month program which prepared them for employment as laboratory assistants. All eighteen have been placed, in jobs at the University. The laboratory assistants program was begun at the UNC School of Medicine last February in an effort to retrain displaced Univeristy cafeteria workers and to fill the skilled manpower gap which exists in North Carolina. LEATHER MOCCASIN The l ' : VYTyTl (A HD 1 CAROLINA V( A 55 UVJ VJziW liv I Although the proposal has been postponed for lack of funds. Saunders said, "we are hoping to have New College by the 1972-73 year"." Judy Hippler, a senior coed, advises Bello on internal affairs in close association with the sfate affairs advi-or. Miss Hippler listed her main duties as dealing with students and publicizing Student Government affairs. "Our main objective this fall is to get more people involved in Student Government thereby making it more legitimate and more extensive," she said. "I believe Student Government has been viewed apathetically by students in possible to encourage drug users to seek medical help, Cansler stated. However, when definite evidence exists, Cansler said, it will be transmitted to law enforcement officials. There are no University officials or campus policemen engaged in drug investigation. However, frequently there are individual student informers as well as local and SBI undercover agents. The undercover agents concentrate on purchasing from a person and then arresting him. A four-man detective force from the Chapel Hill police department spends much of its time on drugs, said Blake. A county-city cooperative effort is being considered to ease their load. Two full-time narcotics agents would be on the county-side squad. One reason for the county-wide squad, Blake said, is that- pushers selling in Chapel Hill frequently live and store drugs outside the town police's jurisdictional area, which extends five miles outside the town limits. Town authorities have approved the squad, which is awaiting approval and funds from the fedeial government. The proposed squad . is unique, said Blake, because it involves the cooperation of two towns, Chapel Hill and Carrboro, and Orange County. Funded by the Babcock Foundation, the Medical School, the University and the U. S. Labor Department's New Careers program, the graduates studied both academic and technical courses. Everything from arithmetic to chemistry, and cleaning glassware and labeling samples to centrifuging and operating technical equipment like the spectophotometer and auto analyzer was included in the training. The instruction and job training that participants received was all voluntary and included over 112 UNC Medical School faculty members and staff. YACHTING SHOES An old favorite of sailors! Cool, breathable, hand crafted elk tanned cowhide, dries soft. Easy on, easy off! ' Moccasin com fort, barefoot flexibility. Hub the past." she said. "We are trying to find ways tor students to work constructively within Student Government." Junior Joe Sta'Iir.g5 termed his position as Beilo"s "special assistant. ..trouble-shooting specific areas of volatile nature and general interest." "This year I wuM be working towards coordinating student effort m the community," Stalimgs said. "We also are trying to reorganize the office of the Dean of Student Affairs o that more student participation will be included." Butch Rooks handles state affairs by working with state legislators. University Trustees and administrative officials to gather their opinions on student issues. Karl Stauber will be working on consumer protection this year. His job is to act as a "watchdog" over consumer services and serve as coordinator in Student Government efforts for a student cooperative and transportation system. George Butler will be replacing John McDowell as judicial affairs advisor this year. McDowell is now student attorney general. Butler will be concerned with student protests, legal matters and the Disruptions Polk . Butler said he would also head up a committee to investigate a students' accusations against the University with regard to regulation of student conduct. Music School Opens Course A new course on the music of Bach and Handel is being offered by the Department of Music for non-majors this semester. Some of the works studied will be the oratorios MESSIAH and SAMSON, the opera A LCI N A, and the WATER MUSIC by Handel, and the great organ compositions, instrumental concertos and sonatas, and the ST. MATTHEW PASSION by J. S. Bach. The course is open to any student who has taken a music course at U.N.C. or at another university, and to other students having some musical background with the permission of the instructor, Miss Jane Bowers. It is the first of a series to be offered by the Department of Music to non-majors under the number 89. The course will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2 p.m. in room 213 in Hill Hall. For further information, see Miss Bowers in room G, Hill Hall. Rancl JMouse JJuffrf MONDAY thru FRIDAY 12:00-2 00 p.m. 2 meats, vegetables, dessert & beverage S1.75 plus tax K mile north of town on Boole 86 WWHI Y0U1 CAN ic f in J.I: I I J i'i kr.. hit h H i J I 1 it i i r! in. -r r, MP ; j I r I M ? i f t I it If if 1 1 The New Greenlaw Building 2 New Buildings Open OnCampus Dominating the skyline of central campus this year are two new buildings representing over S5.5 million in construction costs. One of the two, a nine-story chemistry building, is scheduled to be completed early next summer. The S4.3 million structure will contain 75,000 square feet, about the same as the old chemistry building, Venable Hall. It has not been officially named. According to acting Chemistry Department Chairman Dr. Royce Murray, the new building will be used exclusively for graduate research and will contain only laboratories, conference rooms and some faculty offices. Venable Hall will remain the site of all classroom instruction and undergraduate laboratory work. The Greenlaw building, the other new structure, will triple the classroom space Charles Rose Elected Aleoiei President UNC New Bureau Fayetteville attorney Charles G. Rose, Jr., a member of the University's class of 1933 and a former editor of the Daily Tar Heel, has been chosen president-elect of the UNC General Alumni Association. Rose, a director of the association, will succeed W.J. Smith, Jr. of Charlotte in formal installation ceremonies next spring. Other officers elected by more than 13,000 members in a recent mail balloting will assume their duties immediately. They are: Horace E. Stacy, Jr. (Class of '50), Lumberton, vice-president; L.P. McLendon, Jr. (Class of '42), Greensboro and Wade M. Smith (Class of '60), Raleigh, directors-at-large; and John H. Tandy (Class of '48), Winston-Salem, Alumni Association o B) j'UO B) d ncLr BE 1 1 M inME 6 NOW VOTE DENCCMMC ; QD) r U1U S Sl for the University's largest department, the English Department. It is a tue-sforv building with an area of 55.000 square feet and is constructed so that four more stories can be added. The Greenlaw building pun i Jos classroom seats for over 700 students. There are 21 classrooms and seminar rooms on the first three floors, a 190-seat classroom on the first floor and a 122-seat classroom on the fourth. The large corner rooms on the fifth floor wilt provide space for a depart mental library and a faculty seminar lounge. In addition, the Greenlaw building houses 109 faculty offices and 12 administration and secretarial offices. A bridge at the second level connects the new building with Bingham Hall, which houses the Speech Department and more English classrooms. representative on the University Athletic Council. Rose graduated from UNC in 1933, studied law in Chapel Hill until 1935 and then began practice in his hometown of Fayetteville. He has been solicitor and judge of the recorder's court there, rnayoi (1947-1949), a member of the city and county school boards and for 10 vears a member of the State Board ot Education. Rose was president of the UNC l.jw School Alumni Association in 1964-196 5 and represented Cumberland County in the State Legislature in 1 969. Rose will continue as a member of the Association Board and become president at the Annual Alumni Luncheon in Chapel Hill on May 31, 1971. He was chosen in a close election with the other nominee, Richard A. Urquhart of Raleigh, a member of the Class of 1939, iriHIINGS
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 15, 1970, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75