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The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday; April 14, 1971 Coed. 0 27 students imtiatea by Pam Phillips Staff Writer Projected plans to make Hinton James a coed dormitory are progressing according to schedule, James sources say. Charlie Miller, governor of James Residence College, said Tuesday dorm spirit was extremely favorable towards the project- He termed the proceedings as "si'"- 'antastic." f said the James Advisory Board and members of the residence college were working to help give the girls "all the comforts of North Campus." The advisory board has been meeting weekly "to provide an extremely well-balanced social program" for the girls. Miller also credited "a lot of people who are working actively to make this come off.' Other than minor structural changes, Miller forsees no great difficulties in the move and hopes to "iron out any problems before next fall." ' , Mark Evens, former co-chairman of the Residence College Federation (RCF), said "I think it will be a success." - Evens hopes there will be more freshmen girls assigned to the dorm than any other class. Evens expressed displeasure that three floors will not be coed. He thinks there should be as close to a 50-50 ratio as possible and hopes to see the situation corrected in the future. "Evens said there is a lack of enthusiasm among residents of Winston for moving out to South Campus, mainly because of the distance. Winston Dorm will be converted into a men's dormitory next year forcing the relocation of space for women. Evens also feels more girls could be induced to live on South Campus if the bus ! ' system were made free or an alternative was provided so each student would not have to pay every time he boarded a bus. G He has suggested this method could be . accomplished by additional student funding. Steve Saunders, RCF chairman, feels the plans are "a step in the right direction." 'There will be some girls who will not want to live there but that always happened to men, too," Saunders commented. On the change of Winston into a men's dorm, Saunders indicated there was a possibility of forming a new residence college consisting of Connor and Joyner, both girls dorms, and YVinsion and Alexander, men's dorms. Because of the ratio and the closeness of the dorms, some residents have expressed interest in joining for residence college activities, he said. Saunders, who will be living in Winston next year, stated there will be no definite steps taken in the considered formation of a new residence college until next fall when the freshmen arrive. He said he hoped to help in the merger. n by Society of Janus Tl Til! ? On nisiiniceMOir (mmiimto aire 'pee to stad nates Students interested in serving on the Chancellor's Advisory Committees are asked to sign up for interviews this week at the Carolina Union Information Desk. Interviews will be held next week. The committees are composed of students, faculty and administration. 'This is an excellent opportunity to serve with faculty and administration on University committees and to influence University decisions," Cam West, special assistant to Student Body President Joe Stallings, said Monday. "I hope to see a great number of students sign up for interviews." The committees with student openings are Space Committee, Administrative Board of Student Affairs, Buildings and Grounds, Traffic and Safety, Committee on Scholarships and Student Aid, 'Ugly Men collecting cash by Sue English Staff Writer Anyone noticing weird or grotesque-looking characters wandering around campus this week should dismiss it as a part of the Campus Chest Ugly Man on Campus (UMOC) contest, which began Monday and will continue until next Monday at 5 p.m. The object of the contest is to raise money for charity in a fun, competitive manner. Sororities, fraternities and residence colleges will participate in the "Beauty and the Beast" contest, with sororities Lee to open headquarters Chapel Hill Mayor Howard Lee will officially open his re-election campaign headquarters at the Masonic Lodge on East Franklin Street with ribbon cutting ceremonies at 6 p.m. today. Open house will be held at the headquarters from 6 to 8 p.m. The headquarters will be open Mpnday through Friday from 3 to 7 p.m. and on Saturdays from 1 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. Crossword Puzzle sponsoring the "beauties" and fraternities and residence colleges backing the "beasts." Ugly man representatives dress and make themselves up in a grotesque manner, and adopt nicknames such as last year's "Sweat Hog" and "Scody Rhody." Sororities and fraternities elected their representatives. Competition was held in the residence colleges last week; during which each floor of the college chose one ugly man, who competed with Cthose of the other floors in the collection of money to see who the final representative of the dorm would be. '.. . ''.'- The . three divisions of the residence colleges are high rise, low rise, and independent. Fraternities are divided into large and small houses. : In order to reduce the competition between fraternities, a ceiling has been set for this year. Every large fraternity that collects $400 will receive a f trophy. The ceiling will be set on a comparative basis for the small fraternities. wResidence ? colleges, fraternities and sororities "'$$1 all collect JUnoneyon, campus rid downtown.5" Only the" residence "colleges will be" allowed to solicit in the dorms, and only fraternities and sororities will collect - from apartments and residential areas. I i v Everyone soliciting for Campus Chest has been given an authorization card which permits them to solicit in the name of Campus Chest. David Putnam, Alpha Phi Omega (APO) member and chairman of the drive, said charity fliers will be distributed explaining where the donations will go. Money from the drive will 'go to the following organizations: UNC Student Bar Foundation; Student Health Action Committee; North Carolina Heart Association; Foreign Student Emergency Fund; Chapel Hill Halfway House; Victory Village Day Care Center; Murdoch-O'Berry Center; Carolina Opportunity Fund; and YMCA-YWCA of UNC. UMOC trophies will be given at the end of the Campus Chest activities to the organization in each division that collects the most money. There will be one trophy for the sororities, one for each of the three divisions of residence colleges, and one for each of the fraternities that reaches j the established ceiling. Cliff Moone, publicity chairman for Campus Chest, is anticipating a large amount of participation in the UMOC contest. Last year's contest netted approximately $6,000. ACROSS 1 Flower 6 Worthless matter (slang) 11 Wig 12 Harbinger 14 Peer Gynt's mother 15 Consumed 17 Chinese pagoda 18 Symbol for niton 19 Careful reading 21 Initials of 26th President 22 Gaze with desire 24 Note of scale 25 Unlock 27 Dine 28 Preposition 29 Frog 30 Flowing 33 Mix 34 Exist 35 Comparative ending 37 Part of church 38 Preposition 39 Broom 41 A state (abbr.) 42 Stronger 45 College degree (abbr.) 46 Possessive pronoun ' 48 Exterior 49 Wager 50 Expel from country , 52 Hesitates 54 Arrows 55 Acrobatic feat DOWN 1 Pounding instrument 2 Exist , 3 Greek letter 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 13 16 19 20 23 26 28 29 31 Form of trapshooting Period of time The ones here Rockfish Prefix: not Stroke Puffed up Sudden, sharp pain Mend with . cotton Person who advocates change Little pies More daft (slang) Kilns Boy attendants Faroe Islands whirlwind Note of scale Railroad (abbr.) Answer to Yesterday's T'JZzle ElAlRf fflSjARi 1VI JC Ei E TT ALiTi S&.ZS CA R G AIL N I PlllSlAlP STJA EN E T M A TlSl"! ETjA I LpRjA I D R fxr E A Mi jG In a E Pi . IS T A JeM TO PTR QJD ;,j ER a a l E A lR n iLt Jcarli jhilO is JI N D elcl N A TN eTdm rE TIE AM I nr nIeI SIEl WATER BEDS King Size $33.98 . Guaranteed 967-5104 After 6 32 33 36 37 38 39 40 Pronoun . Treated ', . maliciously . Man's name Dry. Tipsters (slang) Brimless cap Small rugs 43 Civil injury 44 Spreads for . drying 47 Resort 49 Baker's product 51 Conjunction 53 Greek letter jV.yWiV.vwlv.vw.v.v.,.v.y r.y.y.y ...;. The Dally Tar Keel is"lublished by the & :X University of North Carolina Student : Publications Board, daily except Sunday, ix examination periods, vacations and x i X; summer periods. x; ix": Offices are at the Student Union $ X building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27S14. Telephone X: numoers: incws. sports jw-iwui:.-. Business, circulation, v. Advertising 933-1163. $ 10-.00 per year; 1 ' 2 3 4 5 Hi 6 7 3 9 10 ii : 13 m ,9 " " " 20 n 37 " " 38 ""39 "" 40 41 " g iT" 43 44 " """" 4"" 46 47 48 "" " " 49 " m54 1 11 m55 1 I 1 T" Subscription rates: $5.00 per semester. Second class postage paid at U. S. Post x Office in Chapel Hill, N. C. xj The Student Legislature shall have'x powers to determine the Student Activities fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the Student X: Activities fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student: Constitution). The budgetary -X appropriation for the 1970-71 academic X year is $2S,292.50 for undergraduates and $4,647.50 for graduates as the subscription rate for the student bodyX- ft 1 A A lur cturlont haH fill ' enrollment figures). X ''. :X The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to X regulate the typographical tone of all X advertisements and to revise . or turn I away copy it consider objectionable. : ?i T!?f pafyTar Heel will not consider?: adjustments or payments for anyv'. :X advertisement involving major X typographical errors or erroneous X X insertion unless notice is given to the: X: Business Manager within (1 Lone dav'X af.tAr! tne advertisement appears, or :X :X within one day of the receiving of tear :X X sheets, of subscription of the paper. The X; Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible X: X; for more than one incorrect insertion of X- an advertisement scheduled to run :x several times. Notices for such correction nist be.s.yen before 8- tion to a 0 mm aaaaakaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa a a a a a "---aaaaaaaaa aja a a a a - a) Diatr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. is '"" 3 J 7H!5 LETTER mai (NO tOAff ) U3ELL. I 6QZS5 I DON'T IMAGINE RlSHT ) rr, V I- H30 RBZ&YB) A II (MlMW&D j r- THAT BUNIMS Vp'J (AHEM J A V y&WH5ti&$m. UoU H00 fEELy YZ" tl AMP BJ2A6EW BAKRETT fflJ WCATDLET U-vfT- THEiR LETTER y " J imagination, rrjr ARE ( wanAN rr was me dancin1 S sSmf excuse I'LL SAY V TKAT FIRST ATTRACTED r 1?t ZXCUGZf SFWERu K1 If7 7 j J2JL A j ' -fe - f University Day Planning, Committee on Teaching and Curriculum, Committee for Established Lectures, Facilities Use, Calendar, Student Stores Committee and Status of Minorities and Disadvantaged Committee on University Priorities, and the Committee on University Residential Life (CURL). Student Government will also be conducting interviews next week. Students interested in working with the student co-op, a proposal initiated by Joe Stallings, student body president, to obtain items at lower prices than the Student Stores charges, are asked to sign up for interviews. The State Affairs Committee, chaired by Lacy Presnell, will be conducting interviews next week also. The Judicial Affairs Committee has been created to work with the Student Government lawyer. Interested students are encouraged to sign up for this committee. Sign-ups for all the committees will continue through this week at the Union desk. Interviews will be held Monday from 1:30 to 4 p.m., Tuesday from 3:45 to 5 p.m. and Thursday from 3:45 to 5 p.m. Twenty-seven students and 10 honorary members were initiated into the Society of Janus carry Tuesday morning- The new members were tapped at the annual spring banquet last week. Beginning around 1 a.m., they were met at various locations around campus and Chapel Kill and taken to the Temple of Janus for initiation. The annual Spring banquet to honor new members was held Tuesday night. The Society of Janus is a secret honorary society composed of students, faculty and administrative officials who have demonstrated outstanding leadership and service to residential college life at the University. The new members are: Kelly Miller Alexander, a graduate student from Charlotte, who is assistant to the Office of Student Affairs for Black relations; Elmer Liston Bishop, III, a law student from Asheville, who is college master of Scott Residence College; Fenna Johanna Boone, senior, Huntersville, president of Spencer and co-chairman of the Women's Forum; Steven Edward Brooks, senior, SDer City, past governor of Scott Residence College; Walter Etheridge Daniels, freshman, Manteo, new governor of Granville Residence College; Anthony Michael Daur, graduate, Port Chester, N.Y., vice-president of Craige Graduate Center; Warren Arthur Galke,. graduate, Hicksville, N.Y., treasurer of Craige Graduate Center; Terry Randolph Garner, law student, Newport, college master of Morrison Residence College; Charles P. Gaylor, HI, senior, Goldsboro, student legislature and floor president of Granville; Sandra Annette Greene, senior, Charlotte, president of Mclver; Joseph Williamson Grier, sophomore, Charlotte, new governor of Morrison and past It. governor; Felix Thomas Holt, freshman, Bethesda, Md., academic It. governor of James; Donys Kaye Meltzclaw, senior, Penrose, resident advisor of Morrison; Lawrence Lewis Hooper, Jr., freshman. Ruxton, Md., student legislature and house officer in James; Laura Beth IsJey, sophomore, Snithfkld, social It. governor of Granville; Ronald William Jones, senior, Raleigh, resident advisor in Granville; Jerry Paul Koontz, senior, Kannapolis, speaker of James Senate, WCAR Board of Directors; Sharon Lynn McDonald, senior, Thomasville, president of Parker; Kenneth Wayne Parsons, law student, Sayville, N.Y., college master of Ehringhaus; Texie Louise Peary, sophomore, Roxboro, women's chairman of Morrison. William Allen Reep, junior, Gleu Alpine, governor of Scott Residence College; James Theodore Rice, Jr., junior, Dovingtown, Pa., academic affairs in Project Hinton; Stephen Carter Saunders, sophomore, Pensacola, Fla., new chairman of the Residence College Federation (RCF) and past governor of Morehead; Frances Elizabeth Shipp, graduate student, Memphis, Term., secretary and floor representative in Craige; Robert Alexander Slade, senior, Portsmouth, Va.. resident advisor for Granville; Robert Reid Wilson, sophomore, Charlotte, past ; governor of Morrison; Kenneth Wayne Woodard, senior, Conway, resident advisor in James. . Honorary members are: Raymond J. Brown, director of building and grounds at Granville; Katherine Kennedy Carmichael, dean of women; Delores B. Carver, Coordinator of Women's Housing; Dr. Takey Crist, obstetrician-gynecologist, Health Education Clinic; Celeste Leffingwell, Residence Director in Spencer; Dr. Elizabeth S. Nathans, faculty fellow in Scott College; Jane Leone Poller, asst. director of Residence Life; J. Carlyle Sitterson, chancellor of the University; Charles M. and Pam Slade, James Residence college master and his wife; Dr. Weldon E. Thornton, faculty member of the Committee on University Residential Life. lr ore; einit Tl n The Carolina Opportunity Fund (COF) presented the Student Aid Office with a check for $1,675 Monday to fund more undergraduate scholarships. William Geer, director of Student Aid, said the initial grants will go to disadvantaged - students who have small financial emergencies, keeping . with a request from COF that the funds be made available immediately. 'The Student Aid Office is delighted to have this additional source for student needs," Geer said. The check, signed by Joe' Stallings and Bob Slaughter, was accompanied by a note saying an additional . $2,100 is expected to be given by the Order of the Grail from roller derby receipts which the ,COF and Grail co-sponsored,. - :-.r: The Carolina Opportunity- Fund, which set a goal of $100,000 in the fall for student scholarships, sponsored a talent show and the roller derby and has accepted contributions from students and student groups. Stallings said the main efforts have ' been concentrated on groundwork for a . . , student cooperative which he hopes to begin in the fall. A percentage of Jhe V co-op's profits, Stallings said, will go toward undergraduate scholarships. Z2Ln n n n vn WUL, W II II o 1 II n . L-a uu 1(7 A. (p V- , l.,nnl.l ..,.J U UU LI rT n rprTv (7r n n n yt nn LFUU is rp nn I zi UU p F) UU U U UU UiJ Cii U UUU UUU U LJ . lJ jl! Lj j Ll d)LLjU U lliii u LJ ; i f nn nn Li III. J Li LI LJ LIU n L j Tr? q nn p r) in? u u 3 - i! i 5 : 1 ci nu a r I'M J V if .
April 14, 1971, edition 1
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