if r 1 1 x ft 1 X ! If v ( vj y s jh on 79 Fars of Editorial Freedom Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Wednesday, April 28, 1971 Vol. 79, No. Founded February 23, 1B33 r--'- 1 v i- TL o OASIS rj u)Lj - -T ' ! f I r o y f-yXr- ' S - I - f V j Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson shakes hands with Dr. Lara Hoggard, director of the Carolina Choir which is in Florida this Carolina Concert tonight UNC News Bureau DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.-The Carolina Choir, "Honor Choral Group" of the entire southeast, received the accolades of the Music Educators National Conference (MENC) here Tuesday. The Choir, directed by Dr. Lara Hoggard, was selected by MENC "s to present the Grand Concert at the convention in Peabody Auditorium tonight. t took some doing on the part of ?t .-. it TODAY: cloudy and warmer with a chance of showers and thundershowers, high in the mid to upper 70Y with a 50 per cent chance of precipitation. Cool tonight with lows in the 40's. JHURSDAY: cool and cloudy with a 20 per cent chance of precipitation; high in the 70's. After intruder ed. by Glenn Brank Associate Editor Four Morrison dorm coeds, confronted by a male intruder early Sunday morning, were' told to call campus police when they phoned the Chapel Hill Police Department for aid. The incident came to light in a letter to The Daily Tar Heel received Tuesday afternoon. Copies were also sent to the Chapel Hill police and North Carolina Governor Bob Scott. The four coeds, who live in suite 638-41 of Morrison, reported a man first entered their room about 12:30 a.m. Charlotte Barker, who phoned the police, said a youth of medium build and height asked for a girl who did not live in the suite. maiM by Marc Shapiro Staff Writer A "small stage" will be a new concept of Jubilee '71 which will provide additional entertainment at the eight major concerts highlighting the weekend's activity. Located on an adjacent corner from fhe main stage, the small stage will provide entertainment ranging from cartoons to concerts featuring standouts at the Union Grove Fiddlers Convention. " Jubilee planners recently completed arrangements with the Schillings, a husband and wife duo who performed at 1 Ghoiir in Daytona Beach for MENC Hoggard and his 78 young musicians to raise the money needed in order to accept MENC's invitation to perform after being selected last fall from more than 130 musical groups in the southeast for the honor of appearing at the Daytona Beach convention. Southern Division President Edward H. Cleino said: "This invitation is the highest compliment which we can pay to any musical organization. The appearance of the Carolina Choir here reflects great credit to the state and the University of North Carolina, you may be sure." Accepting the invitation was one thing, but securing the funds to transport " two busloads of choir members and the assisting UNC Brass Ensemble, which is directed by John Harding, was another urgent matter. - Hoggard conferred with Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson to enlist the necessary support before the invitation expired. Some $5,000 was needed to take the UNC musicians to Florida and the inspired students teamed with their director, to. make sure they could present the Grand Concert. in room "I told him I was new and might not know her," Miss Barker said, "and told him he Could look her name up in our. phone book." - , All four girls agreed the intruder did not appear to be drunk, but did act irrationally. "He flipped through every page of the phone book looking for her name," Miss Barker said. The man left, Miss Barker continued, and returned to the suite about 1 :30. She and Ann Rosser, another girl in the suite, were talking when he entered the room without knocking. - ' "His pants were undone yet he acted very unconcerned," Miss Barker said. "I asked him to leave and he" walked out into the hall." She said he walked to another door and then removed his pants. Emily to sua Union Grove, to open the activities on the small stage at 6 p.m. Friday evening. Dr. Schilling gave up his work as a Ph.D. in physics in order to spend his time with what he loves-singing and composing ballads with his wife. Cartoons will complete the evenings 's festivities on the small stage at 12:30. Another group from Union Grove will open the entertainment Saturday afternoon at 12:30, when the Brushy Mountain Boys take the stage with their brand of "corn shucking, barn-raising music" This group of old timers features the renowned fiddler, 'Lost John.' The UNC Jazz Lab Band follows at Sit .4 week for a concert. With the pair are Lynn Burleson (I.).Tess West (center) and Jim Croom, president of the Choir. Appeals to alumni, administration, faculty and friends of the University brought response from several who have heard the Carolina Choir and know its reputation. A benefit Christmas Concert brought almost a fourth of the amount needed. Two very energetic members of the group, Tess West of Charlotte and Lynn Burleson fo Albemarle, both of whom are majoring in disciplines other than music, canvassed the merchants, of Chapel Hill for pledges in support of the tripV They" swelled the Choir's "kitty" with another $400. Also the Choir has participated in the fund-raising through the sale of a long-playing record of memorable performances. There was apprehension mixed with determination throughout, but the effort came to fruition when two buses carrying - the rejoicing Carolina Choir left the Chapel Hill campus ' Monday for the Daytona Beach convention. The UNC ensemble shared the Grand Concert with the University of Miami Symphony Orchestra, which was selected by MENC as the "Honor Instrumental Group" of the Southeast. Foster, one of the girls in the room, had been awakened and saw him walk in. "I sat up and picked up a pair of scissors," she said. "He walked out of the room without bothering me." Miss Barker then yelled at the intruder to leave and he did so. She and Miss Rosser phoned the operator and asked for the police. The dispatcher told, the girls the incident was "a matter for the campus police to handle," and gave them the campus phone number. He declined to call the number for them. T Miss Rosser said she" became "very upset" when the police did not assist them. Miss Barker said campus police were already at Morrison at the time of the call. They were responding to a similar eiroYHQle At 5:15 the attention turns to Shamrock, a soul group from Durham that was asked to appear at Jubilee after a well-received performance at Hinton James dormitory earlier this year. 3:15.xThis group is composed of 26 UNC students whose music runs the gamut of jazz. Midnight, will pass with Danny Potter on stage. Having received a musical education in classical, rock, blues and soul music, Potter has appeared on the folk club circuit with such standouts as Spanky and Our Gang and Joni Mitchell. Gene Nelson . Ctepdl Ji Mil ramsuur- by Woody Doster Staff Writer ' Robert Grady, chairman of the Student Legislature (SL) finance committee, denied Monday the existence of prejudice and racism in. SL as charged last week by a black administrator. v The charges were made last week by Hayden B. Renwick, assistant director of undergraduate admissions, who said the very success of the Committee for the Advancement of Minority and Disadvantaged Students (AMDS) in bringing black students to UNC was the reason SL refused to fund the program next year. "Mr. Renwick's charge of bias and prejudice is totally unfounded," Grady said. "SL appropriated $5,500 to the Black Student Movement and $1,720 to ' the Carolina Talent Search. These are both black organizations and the Carolina Talent Search is a" recruitment organization like AMDS." Renwick commented last week that "If the administration and the student body are seriously committed to the disadvantaged students in this state, there is no excuse for not funding the AMDS. ? "It's beyond my comprehension that they don't know how successful the program has been," he added. "It must be the very success of the program that made the finance committee of SL cut them out." ; Grady said Renwick should direct his criticism to the University, rather than to SL. , "I'm sure he was very disappointed the AMDS wasn't funded by the administration," Grady said, "and possibly he felt that as an employe of the University - he xouldn't criticize the administration." , y Noting Renwick's statement that he (Renwick) speaks to "about 2,000-3,000 students a year" about coming to the University, with "about 200" applying for admission, Grady questioned Renwick's effectiveness. "If Mr. Renwick could only get 10 per cent of the people he spoke to to apply to' the University then he ought to re-evaluate his programs," Grady said. Last year SL financed both the Carolina Talent Search and the AMDS, both of which recruit minority students to attend UNC. "This year we asked the . Carolina Talent Search and the AMDS to merge," Grady said. "However, they were unable oMce complaint from a coed on the seventh floor. The intruder was not apprehended. Police Chief William Blake, in response to the coeds' charges, said the incident was "not standard policy." He said the dispatcher bn duty at the time of the call apparently was not acquainted with departmental policy. "Our policy is to assist the campus police whenever a call comes in," Blake said. "Usually, the campus police can get there first' he continued, "but we may have a patrol car in the area. "If a call comes in, we can communicate the campus police by car radio while on the way," he concluded. v Blake did not identify the dispatcher, saying he was "off duty and out of town." Tl on o dffl provides backup on guitar and vocals. As on Friday night, cartoons will close out the day. Entertainment will get off with a bounce on Sunday at noon with an exhibition -by the UNC gymnastics team, followed at 12:30 by local talent, Chandigah, a- folk-rock group often compared to Sweetwater. With two UNC students in the group, Chandigah will have an album out in June. Bleacher seats for 600 will be available at the small stage with room on the ground for many more students. P an. (n say to come to any agreement satisfactory to both groups." Grady said there were so many organizations requesting funds that SL felt it could only afford one recruitment program. "We have the Student Government lawyer in the budget for $9,000, our audit this year will cost $6,000 and he have funded a number of other new programs," he said. Pre 7 UNC Seven UNC students and two other persons were arrested Monday night and Tuesday morning and charged with possession or possession and sale of narcotics, according to police. Chapel Hill Police Chief William Blake said search and arrest warrants were issued Monday. Seven policemen conducted a series of raids between 9 p.m. and 2 a.m. at the rooms of those arrested. The nine arrested were each placed -under $5,000 bond in Chapel Hill or Hillsborough jails. Several of them had been released on bond Tuesday afternoon. Blake said the arrests were "a pretty good raid" and he expects "one or two more arrests" before Jubilee this weekend. Those charged are: : Ron Springerr27-t)f Royal Park Kingman to speak Kingman Brewster Jr. president of Yale University, will deliver the Weil Lecture on American Citizenship today at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall auditorium. The public is invited. "The Student Vote-Challenge to Riskless Politics" is Brewster's topic, for the lecture, which is expected to attract a large audience of North Carolina people, including students and faculty of the University. Brewster, who has been recognized for positive and effective steps in coping with problems of. student unrest at Yale and who has won the support of Yale alumni, students and faculty, has spoken from time to time to nationwide audiences, advancing his ideas about the campus and public issues of the times. He has been overwhelmingly commended for his perspective and grasp of the principles involved. The -Weil Lecture is an annual speaking occasion, financed for over 50 years by the Weil family of Goldsboro, N.C. The Committee on Established eat etallee wm In addition to the major concerts and the entertainment on the small stage, Jubilee '71 will include an Astro-bounce, a slip and slide, balloons, soap bubbles, three large foam rubber piles and all kinds of food. The food will include service from Dairy Queen; burritos and tacos from Tijuana Fats; cotton candy, popcorn, hamburgers, hot dogs, pizzas, sandwiches, drinks, ice, both organic bread and freshly squeezed lemonade from Harmony Food Stores; and barbecues and boneless fried chicken from Gino's. Carolina Union President Richie Leonard hopes the activities will "keep as V rTJ 111 I He also believes recruitment is "a University function. "As long as SL continues to fund these groups, the administration will continue to feel that they don't have to," Grady said. Grady said he had nothing against the AMDS personally, and would like to see the Administration fund the program under the Student Aid Office. ad eeirs sMdeniL Apartments, student, possession of narcotics; Steven Olissi, 21, of Oak Terrace Apartments, student, sale and possession of narcotics; Charles M. Lollar, 20, of Royal Park, student, possession and sale of marijuana to a narcotics undercover agent; Thomas Patrick Heller, 20, of Oak Terrace, student, possession and sale of LSD; Bryan Thomas White, 16, of Hillsborough Road, student at Durham Technological Institute from Greensboro, sale of narcotics; William Alexander Dennison, 1 9, of 1 8 Davie Circle, student, sale of narcotics; Bryan Wilson Smithwick, 23, of 211 Hillsborough, musician, sale of narcotics to an undercover agent; Charles B. Straugnn, of 323 Teague, student from Durham, sale of marijuana, Brewster at o p.m Lectures, headed by Prof. Shepard Jones, arranges for the Weil Lecture on the campus. President Brewster is remaining in Chapel Hill for the lecture, after attending the semiannual meeting of the Association of American Universities, convening here, Apjil-26-28. Kingman Brewster many people as possible involved at all times." His successor, Chuck Patrizia, agress. "Jubilee is more than eight concerts, it's people getting together and having a lot of fun -doing the kind of things they like to do on a sunny day," said Patrizia. Leonard reminds students that to attend they must pick up a ticket at the Union Information Desk unless they are the date of another student. Tickets can be picked up through April 30, but Leonard warned that if students continue to put it off until the last day it could create long and bothersome lines.