Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 5, 1970, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Y: by Greg Lloyd Staff Writer Chapel Hill's YW-YMCA doesn't have a swimming pool or a gym, but it does serve as a "crossroads between campus and community" and, in the words of YMCA President Whit Bodman, "establishes links where students can work with local and national communities." The YW-YMCA is presently holding a fund-raising campaign. YWCA President, Pat Wood said, "We are asking people who believe in what the""Y" is doing on campus to help support us." She pointed out that since the 'Y' is an independent organization, it is supported by contributions and money-raising projects. The Y' is asking students to join-to V V E T by Bill Pope Staff Writer A resolution supporting the retention of C. Wilson Anderson, dean of the School of Social Work, will be introduced at tonight's Student Legislature meeting. Tom Currin, chairman of the SL Ways and Means Committee, will introduce the resolution on behalf of students in the Department of Social Work. Anderson was reportedly informed last June by University Provost J.C. Morrow that he would not be recommended to a econd five-year term as dean. Morrow says he has made no recommendation as yet to the chancellor but Anderson says he was informed verbally by Morrow that he would not be recommended for reappointment. Two graduate students in the Social Work department, Lewis and Mary Hammer, met with the Ways and Means Committee Wednesday to discuss the resolution, which was approved unanimously by the committee. The resolution asks that SL "deplore the use of purely political considerations by the administration in this matter to the obvious detriment of the practice of academic freedom." The resolution requests an "immediate and public adjudication of the status of Dean Anderson whereby the administration may show just and proper cause for its actions." According to the resolution, "the real issue is whether a university dean can exercise academic freedom without unjust restraint." Student Body President Tom Bello supports the resolution saying, "I feel that the Student Legislature should express its dismay at the reported handling of the Anderson recommendation." 1 In a prepared statement Wednesday, Bello said, "I share the sentiments already expressed by many students and faculty in the School of Social Work. Such an arbitrary manner of hiring and firing of World Affairs Institute Topic About 25 to 30 UNC students are expected to attend the 17th annual World Affairs Institute at Greensboro College Nov. 14-15, according to Bill Blue, student body vice president. The Greensboro Junior Chamber ot Commerce, which is sponsoring the open forum concerning BlacksYellow World Polarization: Problems of Peace and Development, will pay expenses of three UNC delegates, Blue said. To attend the conference, said Blue, interested students r should call the Student Government offices at Suite C of the Carolina Union. About 500 delegates are expected to attend, he said. . Blue said cost of attending , the conference will be S3 per student for registration and $2 per night for lodging. On Back depend by Lana S tames Staff Writer A slate of independent candidates for freshmen class offices filed their petitions Tuesday to qualify for the Nov. 17 elencndidates are: President, Foster Ockerman; vice Pc?ttJl7 secretary. Barbara Wright, treasurer, Larry Ford and social secretary, Stephanie Bolick. frnm Ockerman, a freshman from Lexington, Kentucky, said the candidates velverd projects and ideas they pe to institute if elected He discussed several points of their platform. The candidates propose the formation Crossroads Between Campus, Community to support it financially. Many volunteer projects concerned with pressing campus and community problems are heme worked on wiihin ihr YWCA. Two of the more important projects involve helping the mentally handicapped people in the Murdoch Center and Umstead Hospital, both located in Butner, NX. The Murdoch Center welcomes volunteers to work with mentally retarded children in such areas as speech therapy, group guidance, physical therapy and child psychiatry. According to Chris Richmond, co-director of the Murdoch Committee along with Kevin Dungey, volunteers at Murdoch are obligated to work once a week for a semester. it 0 D deans, not for their administrative ability but for their political beliefs, speaks very poorly for the reality of a free university." Bello said it is "discouraging" that more faculty members and students have not voiced their concern over the implications of the decision not to retain Anderson. The resolution says Anderson "was informed by the Provost that the reason for his lack of recommendation was the political embarassment to the University caused by the employment of Howard Fuller and the attempted employment of Howard Lee." Fuller, head of Malcolm X University in Greensboro, taught one semester in the Social Work department in the spring of 1968, but resigned at the end of the semester after a controversy with the University Board of Trustees. Lee, mayor of Chapel Hill, was offered a job with the department in the fall of 1969, but withdrew himself for consideration of the job after encountering opposition from administrators and trustees for allegedly hinting that N.C. Gov. Robert Scott was a bigot. The University regularly assesses the performance of department heads at the beginning of their fifth year to determine whether they should be reappointed for a second five-year term. Glenn Brank Staff Writer Jane Fonda, the controversial film star charged in Cleveland Tuesday for assault and smuggling, will speak to UNC's Political Science 95-A class this week. Miss Fonda, an outspoken activist in various anti-war and female liberation movements, will deliver an address, on "The Sexual Revolution" Friday in Memorial Hall at 1 p.m. Her visit was confirmed Wednesday afternoon by Donna Brummitt, spokesman for The Appalachian, Appalachian State University student newspaper. Miss Brummitt reported Miss Fonda's agents confirmed her North Carolina speaking engagements Wednesday morning. Miss Fonda has appearances scheduled at ASU Thursday night and Ft.-Bragg Friday night. It was unknown whether Miss Fonda would keep her engagement here after the incident at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport. She was detained by police for possession of 105 vials of capsules in her luggage. She allegedly struck a policeman during the arrest. U.S. Commissioner Clifford E. Bruce released Miss Fonda on personal bond pending a hearing. He stipulated that she - could not leave the country and must inform the court of her whereabouts. Mark Lane, Boston attorney who wrote "Rush to Judgement," represented the actress. He said the charges resulted from Miss Fonda's college tours to speak Pass J Frosh F rf a Freshmen Senate composed ot representatives from separate freshmen districts based on apportionment. Described by Ockerman as an advisory council of sorts, the senate would work closely with the class in organizing projects. "Being a class of some 4,000 students, we need some means of obtaining ideas and feed-back from members of the class," Ockerman said. An analysis of the 1970 Freshman Orientation is advocated by the candidates. They maintain that by means of a poll of at least half of the freshman class, the effectiveness of the program could be properly analyzed. "It is ridiculous not to have some "rM 1 4.-.-! arc p -'-' "-mjii-r.. rui the ; J.-r: ? re!.:rc Richmond cxrUir.tJ. lhtre i- vn.u; -..TiMv in olunteer work that .ao. w ho is interest e d added. :ould help he Present ly mere are ih:.Ul J volunteers at Murdoch. Ri.hmor.J pointed out, and many of them come back to work another semester and sometimes another year. The Umstead Committee, headed h Tom McHugh. is made up of volunteers who work on a one-to-one basis with patients a! the John Umstead Psychiatric Hospital. The volunteers' most important contribution is providing for the patients a needed link with the "outside world Volume 78, Number 44 i f II r- A petition and some discussion are what Bob Levy and Richard Solomon have to offer to students who pass by their booth in front of the undergraduate library. The against the war in Vietnam. "Because of this she -is harrassed by the authorities," he said. "Her arrest was an act of terror, an act of violence.. .this is the Nixon-Agnew terror." Miss Fonda's appearance in Political Science 95-A is part of that course's ?3iT .-iTT,'-..' rf jl lUDDOtV ' V 3 $y& ll ''HfV Iif ir "Jr. ll.alll 1 U' vim r-t m. i iff n n' 1 1 ii j V ins i,..U ' 1 .HIIlHi "1 ' - W l 1 H v 1 1 ll ... - - -' When residents ot tverett Dorm saw a physical was tied around it so that it could be pulled down plant bulldozer heading for one of their trees, they (right). Their protests were in vain, however, as the showed their dissatisfaction by standing between bulldozer backed up and the tree came down the tree and the bulldozer (above). As the students (bottom). (Staff photos by John Gellman) voiced inerr pieas oi ciemency ior inc no - For feed-back on a program of such extensive size. I think that the . orientation committee would like to know what they're doing wrong and how the program can be improved," Ockerman added. The independent candidates also favor self-determination of visitation hours by individual housing units. According to Ockerman, the candidates feel that the plan proposed by the Consultative Committee is discriminatory and impractical. The plan is similiar to the one in effect at the University, oi Tennessee. (Three groupings of dormitories: no visitation, limited visitation and 24-hour, seven-day visitation). Y "&- K A jiv ha j Memrui Hospital comtr.-.ifve. headed by Annette Ad.Ovk. Volunteer m th project are a.ed in many d;t!'erent capacities m the ever-expanding North Carolina Memorial Hospital, from pediatric to emergency room n hosp-jt dity shop. The ma:n t;:nJ-ra:ir.g project in the Y" is the annual Intern itional Handicraft Bazaar, held Dec. 5. and t in the Y" building inJ Gerrard Hat;. Crat'H Iron around the .scrld are sold along with North Carolina crafts. Oiher important projects include tutoring public school students from elementary through high school. Sumus Committee which prints local poetry". Excelsior Committee which prints the YW-YMCA newletter and the Young World Development (YWD) Committee 78 Years Of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, -1 I ' :-!! t I j 'tntS&i&l J J ft i1-""' J j 4 ';. t ' ' "--s. J , ! j?- .-i.?- 5 i - - i.' . . 1 j - -- " ; ' 'ta. 1 S- "- "r .-v " --.-- s. petition, which protests the treatment ot Soviet Jewry, is to be sent to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin. (Staff photo by John Gellman) "policy of presenting controversial speakers with controversial ideas," said graduate student organizer Skip McGaughey. Speaking invitations have been extended to Gov. Bob Scott, State Bureau of Investigation Director Charles 1 ,U-J- T f k-1 f , main Ockerman also discussed the Consumer Protection Service (CPS). He said the candidates would like to muster as much support as possible for the service and feel it is an organization that can greatly help the student body. "We are willing to help organize and work for price surveys, telephone polls, etc., sponsored by the CPS," Ockerman said. All of the candidates are concerned about getting freshmen involved in campus activities. Already acknoledged as the largest freshman class in history, the candidates say they would like to see the class also labeled as one of the most active. r,eijs'T . Mi-.11 r Km t . :. "s. r I ll 4 s .j i- f 4 1 s Office w men f k epvcu:? wh the co m rn u n i 1 . Vounj World D e v e i o p m e n ? Committee, headed by Dors Inca'T. Richard Darr and Scott M or can. wa formed to deal with the pro-Hem of hunger in North Carohna and Chape? Hill. A pcvr man's uppcr. a Lst. j community involvement survey and a Wa!k Agamst Hunger u;il highlight ?ho year's projects. Besides student involvement tn the community. YWD also does research or, international events. There are two uh research-student erouns-orv on the Middle East and one on South Africa The goal of the Y this vear is to set a;! of these seemingly independent committees together so that people will think of the Y as a whole. Bodmin Editorial Freedi Thursday, Novembe .rlere Dunn, South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond, Students for a Democratic Society leader Tom Hayden, Chapel Hill Mayor Howard Lee, Malcolm X Univeristy organizer Howard Fuller and Congressman Nick Garifianakis. McGaughey has received no replies a' y?t. V-. K O . 1 li J 07 -jzzzsz "lira yTT . fi t - . - X"'a. i rJ, t& ii . A v; .." if, ! ill r r cxptiirvd. ""Th:s woiiKI he important for t!eve?op:r.: r-ew uum ar-d new direct ions iff . 1 . V Si'. Ne.:r W student are mvoUvd in the "V" tins car an! they spend an average of ? 5 to .0 hour a week on their c. nrrutree. M:ss ttoov! commented. -The "V made r.w T.:ore aware of mm.sr.;f proMer.iv" tte added. As an example, she cited the ta-ct that jut by some on the Wj;k Aejinf Hunecr he could oe the ditfereiwe in housing from ore season of Ilia pel SMI to another. And fl at ss the purpose of the VU-YMCA to make student more aw ate -!' problem in Caribofo and Ch-pcl I hit and fo provide a structure through wlush student can turn their solution Jo fhoe proMems into pernio action. Founded February 23, 1893 iectioe Oetcome nn bet Four North Carolina journalists will discuss the outcome of this week's elections tonight in Howell Hall at 8:00 p.m. The public in invited. Ed Yoder, associate editor of the Greensboro Daily News; Perry Morgan, , editor of the Charlotte News; Joe Doster of the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel and Paul Jablow of the Charlotte Observer will be on the panel. Richard Hatch, public affairs program director for University television, will moderate the discussion. The journalists will examine the election results from both descriptive and analytical perspectives. Evaluation of the extent and impact of student involvement in the election will also be a focal point of the discussion. Each speaker will give a TO-minute presentation, followed by general discussion. The panel will then receive questions from the audience. The panel is being sponsored jointly by the Carolina Forum, the School of Journalism and the College of Arts and Sciences. It is the sixth presentation of the "Students and Politics-the Elections of 1970" program. This special electicn-year forum was organized to bring politically knowledgeable speakers to campus both before and after the November elections. Future speakers include William F. Buckley, noted conservative columnist, who is scheduled to speak Dec. 9. . ' v, 7 I . . ..- l & v 1 r
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1970, edition 1
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