Love
by Pam Phillips
W Writer
n the UNC campus can claim - members
of what ,s considered to be the top
debate duo in the country
The reason for this ment lies in the
w.nnmg of two decisive tournaments in
ine past two weeks.
By winning the American Classic
Tournament sponsored by the University
of Ccorg,a and the Peachtree Invitational
at hmory University in Atlanta, McGuire
m, l f V haVC automatically
qual.f.ed for the annual national
tournament. They are the first UNC team
ever to quaIjfy
tournament.
Volume 78, Number 49
j.. f M;n lik-p. vesterdav could DromDt some to say, "Hey man, Franklin
Street is closed." Not so. People came to look at books at the Intimate and to read
the magazines at Jeffs. It was a good time to look at the stereos in Troy's window
Clergy
by Doug Hall
Staff Writer
A group of protestant ministers and
rabbis have formed a new counseling
service to assist women and their families
in dealing with problem pregnancies.
The Clergy Consultation Service on
Problem Pregnancies, a statewide
organization ' formed in early October,
will provide assistance in obtaining
contraceptives and legal therapeutic
abortions and advice on such alternatives
as keeping the child or placing it up for
adoption.
Originated by 21 North Carolina
De Gau
United Press International
COLOMBEY-LES-DEUX-EGLISES
Gen. Charles De Gaulle, who devoted his
life to restoring the glory of France, was
laid out Tuesday in his military uniform
in the parlor of his country home where
he died of a heart attack Monday night
while playing solitaire.
De Gaulle, who would have been 5U
on Nov. 22, left precise instructions that
he wanted his funeral to be "extremely
simple" with "no music, no fanfare no
bell-ringing, no speech, neither m the
church nor elsewhere."
The simple funeral, to be conducted
bv the village priest, Father Claude
Jaughey, was scheduled for Thursday in
the village church here.
But the government set a parallel
memorial ceremony in majestic Notre
Dame Cathedral in Pans, and world
leaders announced they would attend.
President Nixon, whose country was
1dTid,
At hmory the team competed agami
132 learns. At the American Classic
Tournament, they were one of the top
seven teams invited. In this tournament,
which Loveland described as
"High-powered." the two emerged with a
4-2 record, with losses only to Oberim
and Dartmouth. Their record now stands
at 36-4.
Joe Loveland started debating at High
Point Centra! High School in his
sophomore sear. He says that he was
looking around for something to get
interested in and, "I just enjoyed talking,
and talking to people about different
things."
The finishing touches to formulating
his debate stvie were added at a debate
workshop at Northwestern University
n-pl Ut-STX,,
-8 0:1 78 Years Of Edito-.al Freedom
urtapel Hill, North Carolina, Wednesday, November 11, 1970
'
Form PregmaiiicyGroep
clergymen, the service will operate
through a statewide telephone answering
service at 919-967-5333. Women calling
the number .will be given the name and
telephone number of a rabbi or minister
near the caller, and will be invited to
make an appointment for a personal
consultation.
The clergymen assisting in the program
are from Asheville, Chapel Hill, Charlotte,
Durham, Greensboro, Greenville and
Raleigh.
i
The Rev. James D. Riddle, pastor of
Community Church of Chapel Hill and
spokesman for the group, said some
clergymen have been counseling women
Est
frequently defied and criticized by De
Gaulle while he was French President,
announced he would go to Paris for the
ceremony.
Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin also
will attend the Paris rites, French
government sources said. White House
sources said Nixon does not plan to meet
with Kosygin.
De Gaulle died Monday night at 7:30,
according to De Gaulle's son-in-law, Gen.
Alain de Boussieu, while dealing himself
cards for a game of solitaire. He had been
working on the fifth volume of a
six-volume set of memoires he had
planned, and was waiting for the evening
news on television.
"General De Gaulle is dead. France is a
widow," said president Georges
Pompidou in a special telecast
announcing the death to France .
De Gaulle was the last survivor of the
great World War II allied leaders. Only
Chiang Kai-shek survives.
lie
cGuire:
between his junior and senior ear m
high sJu!. There he receded vthat he
termed a-. Im first experience with
top-flight national com pen lion.
Loveland feels that an important a:d
to any debater is the ability to cover a lot
of cround and to cover it qusckh .
At Ashesille High. Joe McGuire
received his first formal debate training.
Like his partner. Loveland. he too was
the president of the National Forensic
League chapter in his high school. Both
are Morehead scholars at the L'niversit .
McGuire and Loveland consider one ol
the toughest teams they base debated to
be UCLA. At the MIT tournament, in the
semifinal match, the team debated the
negative of wage and price controls as
applied to migrant workers. As Loveland
Jr
: - J
X "... ''I ' ? ..
1 1 H H n r.
Mm
and examine the handwriting on the wall by the NCNB construction site. But the
people in cars just drove on through without stopping to experience some of the
charm and beauty of Franklin Street late at night. (Staff photo by John Gellman)
and their families on an informal basis for
the last year.
He said the purpose of the service is
not to encourage abortions but to offer
compassion and to increase the freedom
of women with problem pregnancies.
"Some women may want to have the
baby but may be unable to do so for
economic reasons," he said. "In such
instances, we may be able to put women
in touch with an adoption agency or a
home for unwed mothers.
"In other cases," he said, "a woman
may be eligible for a legal therapeutic
abortion, but not aware of the fact and
not familiar with the necessary
procedures."
Charles De Gaulle
Mort
-1 m n I, - .. - - - - A
Champion
remembered.. "We pem about two hour
m the
Harvard nnrarv
Fn
dav
mht
researching migrant workers. By Sj::Jj
we felt ready to meet them." The match
was won by LNC.3-2.
One of the least enjoyable aspects of
debating is tle time necessary for
research. This summer. Loveland arid
McGuire put in eight hours a day for one
month preparing their debate files. Also,
the amount of time spent in travel and in
keeping the files up to date adds up.
Loveland estimates that thev spend two
hours a day on debating even when they
are not at tournaments.
The researching is a necessary' part of
debating. If it is not done, "you will
never win much." savs Lovelands.
The team was composed when only
ff
Ml -A
t morTTvTi
Founded February 23, 1893
Riddle said the tragedy is that such
women "are seeling out back-alley
butchers and others who charge
exorbitant fees" when they could be
cared for by licensed physicians in this
state under the law.
"We hope that we will be able to give
women the names of physicians in their
own communities who will perform the
operation and thus protect the women
from illegal, dangerous or expensive
abortionists," he said.
The North Carolina abortion law
passed in 1967 made abortions legal
"when there is substantial risk that
continuance of the pregnancy would
threaten the life or gravely impair the
health of the mother."
But the effect of the law has been
minimal, according to a study made
recently by the Department of
Biostatistics at UNC.
Riddle said his group has been formed
because women today "are forced by
ignorance, misinformation and
desperation into courses of action that
require humane concern on the parts of
religious leaders and others in society."
State Rep. Arthur Jones, who
authored the 1967 law, has said that the
"benefits" of the law have been
negligible almost nil.
Dr. Jaroslav Hulka, associate director
of the North Carolina Population Center
and an authority on therapeutic
abortions, has estimated that criminal
abortions exceed legal ones 100 to 1.
If the state abortion law, wnicn is
presently being challenged in federal
court, were declared unconstitutional, it
would not eliminate the need for a
counseling service, Riddle said.
'There would continue to be large
numbers of women, especially poor
women, who would not be aware of the
-alternatives open to them," he said.
Riddle added, "We are just scratching
the surface. We. and the hospitals have
only fulfilled a small part of the need."
Debaiors
loai varsity debaters returned th ear.
So far the drvbion of labor lu wxnked
out well, and McGuwe consider Loveland
to he a mce cuy to travel wi"h."
Their division of Labor was described
by Dr. James Pence to be that -Loveland
is the tvpe of debater that How- his
opponent out of the rooom. He Sisi h;
points forcefully -one. two. ihree-and
somewhat overwhelms the competition."
He considers McGuire on the other
hand to be as equally cmp and to the
point but his manner suggests alet's think
it over together approach. He's the
persuader, the one who draws the
opponent over to our side."
Both debaters think the team is a
balanced one and that they complement
each other.
ataoealasinni 1
MMeas
Says
by Karen Jurgensen
Staff Writer
'There is at work in the Middle East
today an important nationalist force, a
strong feeling, a special sense of national
identity, a historic political
phenomenon," said a former ambassador
to Jordan speaking at UNC Monday
night.
Harrison Symmes, speaking in Carroll
Hall before a sparse audience, said the
"nationalistic force" has had in the past
and "will continue to have a significant
role in determining whether international
peace and stability can be achieved in the
Middle East."
Symmes spoke on "Palestinianism:
The Idea and the Reality." The speech
was presented under the auspices of the
Carolina Forum and its chairman, Peter
Brown.
"This nationalistic force must . be
understood and reckoned with by
policy-makers, and interested observers if
they "hope to- make wise policy
judgments. The force is Palestinianism,"
Symmes said.
Concerning United States policy,
Symmes said the government "has made
it clear that although the Palestinians
. themselves speak with many voices, we
recognize that a lasting peace in the
Middle East must meet legitimate
concerns of a consensus of the
Palestinians."
He said the United States must
"describe and better understand
Palestinianism before we can prescribe
policy."
The policy statement, he said,' is
restrained and properly so, "because
there are decided limits on what the
United States or any other outside state
can do about Palestinianism."
Symmes illustrated the limits with
xam Schedule
I The time of the examination may not
I schedule. Quizzes are not to be given in
1971.
All 9:00 AuM. classes on MWF
: All 3:00 P.M. classes on MWF,
: . Phil 21, Econ 61, Busi 71,73
: All 1 1 :00 A.M. classes on TTH
j All 1 0:00 A.M. classes on MWF
i All 9:30 A.M. classes on TTH
AH 8:00 A.M. classes on MWF
: All 2:00 P.M. classes on TTH
j All 1 1 :00 A.M. classes on MWF
: All 1 :00 PaM. classes on MWF
: All 12:30 P.M. classes on TTH
: All 8:00 A.M. classes on TTH
AH 5:00 P.M. classes on MWF, Poli 41
: All 1 2:00 Noon classes on MWF
I All 3:30 P.M. classes on TTH, Phys 24
: All 2:00 P-M. classes on MWF
: All 4:00 P.M. classes on MWF, Busi 1 50
All Fren, Germ, Span, & Russ 1 ,23 & 4
All 5:00 P.M. classes on TTH,
Sections I & 3 of Econ 3 1
. UoAiilrA for
insirucioia icuciiiui; nun - .
students in these classes to report to them any conflict with any other examination
not later than December 1 1. In case of a conflict, the regularly scheduled exam w.ll g
take precedence over the common exam. (Common exams are indicated by an
asterisk.)
Raymond E. Strong, Director ijj
Office of Records and Registration jg
Both hofc the recent wins wtU hi'p
csv trcpctu to the INC debate. The
leant r-i now snuH conrposed of about a
dozen member, and the budget is tight
enough ft prolubit H?sps to any
ttntrtur.ter.t jut for the sake ol" the trip.
Actually , according to w,c two. very little
tsme is pent in s?ght-eeng. every spare
moment k utiheJ for updating notes and
preparing debates ai tournaments.
In the distant future both plan to
attend law school and eventually be
lawyers. McGuire ha jokingly asserted
that Loveland one dav run as
president, or at least enter politics.
Closer m s?ght are the national finals
and debating next year. The two plan to
continue their partnership barring any
"unforseen hazard -an act of God. black
magic, fate or low grades."
It Foirce
yminnie
historical background information on the
Palestinian situation.
Today Symmes said, "it is estimated
there are two-and-a-half-million
Palestinian Arabs dispersed throughout
the Arab states and Israel, but
concentrated in Jordan and on the
Israeli-occupied West Bank of Jordan."
Previously, he said, the Arab reaction
had been that the land of Palestine was
theirs and that the foundation by the
Zionists of a Jewish national home in this
area could only be at their expense.
Symmes said, 'Today, although many
Arabs accept the fact of Israel's existence,
they strongly suspect and fear what they
consider Zionist expansionist
aspirations."
The falseness in Palestinianism today,
said Symmes, "comes out clearly in the
sensationalist claims and exaggerated
activities of the Palestine Fedayeen
movements.
"The fedayeen organizations are
disunited and lacking in coherence. The
fedayeen do not by any means speak for
most Palestinians.
The Palestinians, Symmes said, also
lack an effective political or doctrinal
consensus or a workable means of
expressing their will and aspirations. They
have no government of their own either
in their own land or in exile.
Symmes suggested possible solutions
such as a real choice between repatriation
and resettlement, land (a symbol with
deep cultural overtones), separate
political status, their own political and
social institutions.
"Perhaps in the crucible of the series
of tragic episodes during the past year, a
Palestinian consensus may
finally develop a consensus on which
the Palestinians speak for themselves-a
consensus that is nonviolent and that
effectively engages legitimate Palestinian
aspirations in a just and lasting
Arab-Israeli political settlement,"
Symmes concluded.
v.
be changed after it has been fixed in the g
this semester on or after Thursday, Jan. 7, q
Mon.
Mon.
Jan. 18
Jan. 18
8:30 A.M.
2:00 P.M.
ft
Tues.
Tues.
Wed.
Wed.
Thurs.
Thurs.
Fri.
Fri.
Sat.
Sat.
Mon.
Mon.
Tues.
Tues.
Jan. 19
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Jan. 25
8:30 A.M.
2:00 P.M.
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2:00 P.M.
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8:30 A.M.
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2:00 PM.
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common examinations shall request the g