by Marc Shapiro.. '.---'' --. - ' Staff VMter More than 20,000 people are expected to be in attendance tonight after the gates are opened for Jubilee 71 at 6 p.ra. at Navy Field Festivities will begin immediately on the small stage, a new idea for entertainment which will be provided during breaks between the major concerts. The Schillings, a husband and wife duo from the Union Grove Fiddler's Convention, will perform their brand of country ballads. ' . One hour later, at 7 p.m., Chuck Berry will take the main stage for the first big concert. He will be followed at 9 p.m.lby Spirit. Cowboy closes out the big concerts at 1 1 p.m. The first night's activities will close at 12:30 a.m. with Roadrunner cartoons on the small stage. . . Gates open at noon on Saturday and again the entertainment will be opened on the small stage with another Union Grove group, the Brushy Mountain Boys. Other smal stage performers on Saturday will be the UNC Jazz Lab Band at 3:15 p.m., soul group Shamrock at 5:15, and folk singer Danny Potter at midnight. . Action on the main stage will be provided by Muddy Waters at 2 p.m.; J. Gefls Band at 4 p.m., Alex Taylor at 7 p.m.,and highlighting the evening will be the Allman Brothers at 9 pjsi On Z.r v, the gites 'xcD. open at noon featuring on the irrrA zizzz tf 2 UNC gyrnrics team. Chandh, a folk-rock Crcvp, v. U r-rfcrn &t 12:33. ' Felt: il r Ten v.-l clozz cl Jul2:z on the main In addition to tie cinic, students rr.ay entertain themselves with " body paints, balloons, soa? tub t lis and a various artaent of rides, aa of which wl be provided. " Gates -will U closed at 2 aia. on both Friday and Saturday rights and-all blankets must be removed by this time. No tlnksts mzy be put down prior to the opening of the gates on any day nor may any blankets be staked down. ' . - - ;:; Materials .such 'as glass, plastics, metal, ice chests and food will not be allowed on the field. Carolina Union officials cite .'possible health hazards and tfce impossibility of completely r removing these residues from the field as the reasons. , ; " " Students will be allowed to bring in blankets, thermoses, unbreakable plastic drink containers and musical instruments. A variety bf foods and refreshments will be on sale for the whole three-day period in concession stands operated by local food businesses. A health care and first aid tent will be available on Navy Field during all . of Jubilee to treat any kind of medical problems. - V The tent, to be staffed by a nurse, intern and resident at au tines, is an extension of the emergency room of Memorial Hospital and under the sponsorship of each alcr.g with t-e Stuient Infirmary, the Student Health Action Committee and Switchboard. Dr. !dike Newman and Dr. Mack Lipkin have been put in charts of this completely voluntary project. Lipkins hopes the - tent Will provide ''the type of services the patients want at a convenient location. lipMn further noted the tent will be equipped to handle i problems ranging from drugs to contraception to bodily injuries to sunburn. "Anything that anybody wants as long as it's reasonable." LipMn said. - The tent will also provide medical counseling concerning the draft for anyone who wants it, doing any feasible examinations and making referrals and follow-ups. ? In addition to the treatment, the tent will also provide information on medical topics including drugs, sex methods and venereal disease. Dr. Lipkin cites his personal involvement in the tent as stemming from his feeling that the project represents what he Lopes the field of medicine to become in the future, a service cumins to the patient, providing education and information in t idition to treatment. - Today is the last c;porf.:r.ity for students to pick up their tickets. No one wl be admitted without a ticket. Each ticket wZl admit one student and his or her date. ID's mist accompany each ticket when presented and are r.sressary to otMin 3 ticket from the Union Information Desk. Any pei sons wishing to leave the field and return on the same day must obtain a re-entry pass. Tickets not be accepted for re-entry. Re-entry passes can be' obtained at the gates." ubuee to cay FRIDAY 6 p jh. 6:15 p.m. 6-7 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p jn. 11 p.rn. 12:30 a.m. 2 a.m. Gates open The SchHHnss (small stre) Balloons, bubbles, fence paintin. surprises, etc. Chuck Berry Spirit Cowboy Cartoons (small sta-e) Closing '.v ......... " ' W.' j f r in It y i f n ! c , 1 J? i Vol. 79, No. 50 79 Years of Editorial Freedom Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Friday, April 30, 1971 Founded February 23, 1893 n i i n r L ab- V o . IT iKTlErroii ts in a few tnteoiTto afternoon while perched In a window of Murphey Hall. Not a bad place to cram for that test coming up ma few minutes. (Stall pnoio oy Lesu? iwu T1 O T1 by Doug Hall Staff Writer .,. A bill was introduced to the General Assembly, in Raleigh Thursday .aimed at "nrnhibitins UNC from requiring students to pay for subscriptions to The Daily Tar ' Heel through their student activities fees.' State Sen. Julian Allsbrook, D-Halif ax, who introduced the bill, said he felt students should have a choice concerning 'whether they buy the paper "since they ' 'don't, have control over what is published in it ' The specific story which motivated Allsbrook to draft the bill appeared April 23 in The Tar Heel, he said. It discussed the activities and problems of homosexuals in Chapel Hill , and was 9 I J. Xa by Evans Witt Staff Writer , Student body President Joe Stallings and President of the Graduate and Professional Students Federation (GPSF) HValter Baggett Thursday expressed, divergent views as to whether an amendment of the Student Constitution .and action by Student Legislature is necessary for the separation of graduate. Students from undergraduate students. Stallings and Baggett voiced their "opposing views in a meeting called by Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson to discuss 'the establishment of the GPSF. The' meeting had been called by 'Sitterson early last week but had not sbeen held due to a" dispute over the Attendance of Student Government lawyer John Brooks. Present at the meeting Thursday were 'Brooks and Richard Robinson, an assistant to Consolidated University 'President William C. Friday, representing '.the legal interests of the Administration. Also present at the "meeting were Stallings, Baggett, Chancellor Sitterson, Assistant to the Chancellor Dr. Claiborne - Jones and Dean of Student Affairs CO. Cathey. According to Sitterson, the purpose of the meeting was to be an informational one and not an argumentative one. Jones referred to a letter the Chancellor sent8 to SG and GPSF announcing the provisional recognition of the.group this spring. - , . The letter v said recognition of the GPSF as a formal graduate student -government would take place next fall, since there was v apparently little disagreement between the two bodies as to the establishment of a formal graduate 'student government. v . Sitterson commented he was puzzled : by the present situation. "I'm just puzzled at the developments," he said. "I was under the impression that we were proceeding along agreed-upon steps. ; . Dean Cathey then presented a summary of actions on the GPSF up to the point of. the meeting. He pointed out various moves made both by members of the Graduate Student Association (GSA) and the Graduate Student Coordinating Committee, the two immediate predecessors of the GPSF, and by the present Student Government. Cathey mentioned the action of the SL in March of 1970 appropriating money to the GSA to organize a graduate student government! He concluded with the observation that the progress toward the formal recognition has not been as harmonious "as was anticipated in the Budget Act of 4970."; . . V;; v.-: ..-.'.'V. Stallings emphasized repeatedly the change to the dual student government system should involve actions by SL and approval - of constitutional amendments "' v--" - T accompanied by a picture of two homosexuals embracing. . "I have been considering the bill since about two years ago when some students came to me and complained about articles in The Daily Tar Heel," Allsbrook ? said, finally, when the picture ; ana story appeared, something had to be done about it. - ."I thought it was as rank of pornography as the public should be, subjected to. It is not the type of material that should appear in a paper, and I don't think the students should be subjected to it." ! Allsbrook said that students who disapprove of such articles "certainly should not be forced to pay for it." "I was very much surprised that n O - by the entire student body authorizing 'the change. Baggett said one of the graduate students currently in the SL introduced the amendments necessary for the move in December but no action was ever taken on them. . ' Jones brought up an essential .question-whether the constitutional amendments would - pass SL by the required margin and whether the student body as a whole would approve them. In discussions on the graduate student - government earlier in the year, Dean Cathey and Jones indicated they, felt there had been no substantive differences between the undergraduate and graduate , viewpoints. something of that sort would appear in the paper," he said. Allsbrook, president of the IJNC student body in 1924, and a renter of the Order of the Grail and the Qxlzx of the Golden Fleece, added: -: : "i c n't t'.ink it reflects well upon the -newsp: ci or the. university in general." ' Rep. Julian Fenner, D-Nash., said Thursday he has been planning legislation similar to that introduced by Allsbrook. ' He and Allsbrook will, combine their efforts to pass the legislation. . , . h William C. Friday, president of the Consolidated University, said Tuesday he has asked for a copy of the '.bill and wEl study the bill further before making a statement. s Harry Bryan, editor of The Daily Tar Heel, said Thursday he did not feel the feature on homosexuality was pornographic. , ; "I had final say over whether or not the article was to be printed," he said, "and I saw absolutely nothing objectionable in it. ; "Homosexuality is an issue that has been growing across the country. We had found that there are many homosexuals on this campus and decided that we could not ignore the issue. "Everything on ; the page was completely factual. Nothing was blown out of proportion. y "I also disagree with Sens. Allsbrook s ideas concerning the funding of The Daily i. Tar Heel. The Student Activity Fee is a tax students voted to have placed on themselves in 1959 to go to student organizations. And the State Legislature should not interfere. "The Committee for a Free Press instituted a student body referendumja year asking the same question Sen. Allsbrook is asking, and students voted the bill down by a 4-1 margin. "I hope to meet with both Sen. Allsbrook and Rep. Fenner in an effort to solve the present question. I am sure the matter can be solved equitably." Allsbrook said he feels he has a "great deal" of support for the bill in the Senate, but he did not speculate on the chances of its passing. Fenner said he is not opposed to college newspapers but his "only concern is for the students who are forced to pay for the newspaper when they may not want what is in it." Fenner said the Tar Heel issue with the story and picture about the homosexuals is "pretty disturbing to the people over here. . "I dont know why sometimes you have to get into areas which are disturbing to older people," he added. "I don't think things like that are necessary. I don't believe that pornography and filth should be published even though I believe in the Fenner said he first considered introducing a bill about the Tar Heel's funds after constituents complained to him about stories in the newspaper. He admitted that he has not seen any recent issues of The Daily Tar Heel except for the one with the controversial "Insight Page" on homosexuals. Undergraduate students at UNC pay an $18 per year student activities fee, from which The Daily Tar Heel receives about $2 for publication. The remaining two-thirds of The Tar Heel's funds come from advertising. TODAY: considerable cloudiness with a chance of rain today and tonight; high in the lower 70 with a 50 per cent chance of precipitation; low tonight in the middle 40's with a 30 per cent chance of rain. SATURDAY: clearing and cool with highs in the upper 60's. r Stallings says of meeting o i (TIT Ti 1S1IIj)Lc) 9 Tl ' n WO) by Jessica Hanchar Staff Writer Joe Stallings. president of the student hbody4 termed the meeting with ' Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson Thursday "morning "amiable" but stressed that the ' question of graduate student recognition "must still be solved. "in my opinion, the graduate student government has not been officially. recognized," he said. "Before specific problems can be solved, this question of 1 recognition must be solved." ' He explained that recognition through the standard procedures may be obtained ' by one of two ways set up in the Student K Constitution, Student amendment Legislature may make an to the Constituution by a vnfe with a majority of the student body also voting for it or 10 per cent of the student body may petition for a referendum on an amendment with two thirds of the student body then approving the amendment. . "To bypass either of these processes is undermine the integrity of Student (SO oh campus." Stallings Not eoina through the established channels is absurd. He continued. "Regardless of what the student body or Student Legislature (SL) votes, they can't presuppose an action of the established channels in the determining process." to Government remarked. Stallings feels that if a graduate student government is approved there must be an accounting of student activities fees to know how much graduate students are paying and how much they should be allocated. "Accounting of both' graduate and , undergraduate fees is necessary whether Student Legislature continues to allocate money to a new graduate student government or they receive funds directly from the University." he said. The meeting with the Administration and graduate student representatives. Stallings pointed out. was meant to define rather than resolve areas ot conflict. Former DTH editor Tom Gooding (I.) answers -a question posed to him by his defense attorney. Steve Edelstem r.) Gooding was released by the jud-e after the jury cou.J not "reach a decision on a verdict." See story, paSe 7. (Staff photo by John Gellman)

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