Thursday, November 11, 1971
Woman asks student help
-1
ocialist bids for presidency
The Daily Tar Heel
9 VnV .TLrV s.h irSk"V
by Mary Ellis Gibson
Staff Writer
Linda Jenness, Socialist Workers Party
(SWI'j- candidate for president in the
l'72 elections, appealed for increased
upport from a broad spectrum of voters
as she brought her campaign to Chapel
Hill Wednesday.
Mrs. Jenness. v. ho has run for the posts
of mayor of Atlanta and governor of
Famed local restaurant
sells
out
A ( ha pel Hill tradition ended Tuesday
"I he Goody Shop, a landmark
r-rJaurant on Franklin Street in
downtown f'hapel Hi!!, closed after
bii-.i n-.-v, 'I ue-.ddy.
Sper- Dorton locked the doors of the
! : fried eating place for the last time,
endir.'j a tradition which has lasted almost
2C. v.irs in Cfiapel Hill and since ')3 m
I'm , are.i.
GPSF to complain
about Boiling iplaces
h. i Phillips
Sujj Writer
I iic ' .!., ':! ;le and Professional
-indents I .dciatio.i (GP.SI-) will lodge an
official complaint concerning the
abolition of all graduate student polling
places in its senate meeting at H p.m.
today in the Student Union.
Jim Becker, presiding officer of the
Gl'SI Senate, said "Recent action by
Student legislature has abolished the
''raige dorm polling place, thus
iflectivek disenfranchising the only-
n - c a tn p u s
graduate
student
constituency."
Becker added that off-campus graduate
students are already effectively
disenfranchised of their vote.
A solution to this problem would be
polling places in the Law School, School
of Public Health, Medical School, School
of I -'ducat ion. School of Business
Administration and other large graduate
departments, he said.
"It appears that the undergraduates
don't want the graduate and professional
students voting in their elections," said
Becker, a graduate student in history.
GPSL plans to petition Student
l egislature for an all-campus referendum
974 TODAY
4:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Beef Chunks on Bun
w 2 veqs. and bread
THE BACCHAE
entrance behind the Zoom
self service
97t
MAJOR ATTRACT I ONSC, X W
COMMITTEEXf-N y30
PRESENTS rsV25
y (wZw NOV. 20
Ay QV cIajP DUKE UNIV.
indoor
STADIUM
TICKETS:
$3, $3.50, $4
S TICKETS NOW ON SALE
AT THE RECORD BAR
Georgia on the SWp ticket. was slated to
address the Young Socialist Workers
Alliance on campus Wednesday right.
An anti-war activist and supporter of
the feminist movement. Mrs. Jennets
expects support in the election from
young voters, blacks. GIs. feminists,
prisoners and members of the labor
movement.
"We're certainly not limiting our
appeal to youth or to the black
to drugstore
A drugstore, a branch of the Cleveland.
Ohio-based Revco system, will open m
the goody shop location sometime later
this year.
Dorton said he would like to continue
the tradition elsewhere.
"I'm only retiring from this building,"
he said. "I'd like to continue to be a part
of Chapel Hill in some capacity."
Looking back on the years at the
restaurant, Dorton expressed his
appreciation to the alumni, sports figures
oi the question of a separate graduate
student government.
The referendum would cover four
major issues: the authority of Student
Government over graduate students:
undergraduate control of graduate
students' fees; undergraduate control of
the graduate students' judicial system:
and representation on student
administrative boards such as the
Publications Board, Carolina Union
Activities Board and the Audit Board.
Becker said the Publications Board was
the only administrative group with a
graduate student member.
eat Dook'
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity will accept
additional float entries for the Nov. 19
"Beat Dook" parade until Monday,
according to Monte Richardson,
spokesman for the organizing committee.
The fraternity is sponsoring the parade
and the queen contest, Nov. 19.
Richardson said residence colleges may
enter floats and that several fraternities
97t
C7
'B
she said in an interview
prior to her scheduled speech.
Mrs. Jerress and her bla.k SW? v-;e
presidential candidate Andrew Pulley wU
appear cn the 1972 N.C. ball
OT
She said the SWP candidates plan to
file for office in 33 states and to bring
suit against nine states for undemo.ratic
election laws.
Mrs. Jenness said the war in Southeast
and others who made the shop a favorite
gathering place.
"I've got a lot of good memories," he
said. "Fortunately the Goody Shop has
had the world's best customers-the
students, faculty, townspeople, all the
athletes and coaches who have frequented
the place and all those loyal alumni who
made the Goody Shop a regular stop on
their trips back."
The Goody Shop tradition in Chapel
Hill began in 1948.
The restaurant opened the day
Carolina stomped Texas on the gridiron,
beginning the long connection between
the eating place and Carolina sports.
The original owners of the Chapel Hill
Goody Shop were Spero Dorton's father
Pete and his two brothers-in-law.
The ownership of the shop changed in
1952 when Spero Dorton took over. His
father still remained active in the
business.
The real Goody Shop tradition began
in Durham in 1913 when two of Pete
Dorton's uncles opened a Goody Shop on
Main Street in Durham, next to the old
Parrish Theater.
Pete Dorton came from Greece that
year and became a partner in the
operation in 1916.
The Goody Shop in Durham moved
twice before it closed in 1947.
There was another attempt to open a
Goody Shop in Chapel Hill in the late
1930s by Pete Dorton. The restaurant,
located roughly across the street from the
present location only lasted a few years
before folding.
But now the Goody Shop has served its
last Saturday crowd of football fans.
floats
and sororities have already decided to
participate.
The parade will begin at Carmichael
Auditorium, move up Raleigh Street and
continute along Franklin Street. Then the
parade will turn down past the Carolina
Inn and continue back to Carmichael.
Sororities will choose candidates for
the queen contest. The queen will be
chosen at a party that night.
B.:...J!-"' ' !- 1
Thursday Nig hi
November 7,
Back from their
Whirwind Tour of
New York
CatBird
CAT'S CRADLE
behind the Burger Chef
on Rosemary Street
Asia is her jr. miry concern and
supported a plat f em of total withdrawal.
Mrs. Jenness said the S'P also
supports the feminist move ent
including abolition of all aborticn law s.
The party supports the Nov 20
demonstrations m Washington and Los
Angeles for liberalized abortion laws.
Mrs. Jenness expects support to come
from the labor movement as well as from
f e minists .
"I am against the wage freeze. she
said. "It is the most dramatic attack on
working people's standard of Iiv.r.g m 25
years.
"If Nixon is serious about ending
inflation, he must first end the war as it's
the overriding caue of inflation.' Mrs.
Jenness said.
She proposed a policy placing a freeze
on profits, dividends and prices, but not
on wages.
Mrs. Jenness called for black control of
the black community. Unlimited funds
from state and federal governments
should be poured into the black
community through agencies controlled
by blacks, she said.
"Blacks want busing, and 1 support
them, because the schools m their
communities are much inferior." she said.
She added that the long-run solution to
the problem is raising the level of the
schools in the black community b
increased funding.
"Blacks care very much about the
education of their children." she said.
Mrs. Jenness said the N.C. ballot
requirement of 20.000 signatures is much
too high.
"Although 1 support a completely
open ballot, we can and will meet this
requirement," the candidate said.
No final decision
illsboFough joiay
The apparent decision by W'hittaker
Knitting Mills not to locate a SI. 67
million dyeing and finishing plant near
Hillsborough is not final according to
company officials.
Whittaker Mills had reportedly started
looking for other locations for the new
plant after the Board of County
Commissioners voted Nov. 4 against
allocating $67,000 for sewer lines to the
plant.
However, a company spokesman said
Monday they were still "very interested
in coming to Orange County."
At the board meeting, James
Yarborough, who is to manage the plant,
and Steve Stroud, from the company that
will build the plant, acted as
representatives of Whittaker Mills.
Both Stroud and Yarborough
expressed doubts about the company
locating in Hillsborough.
"We want to clarify what the county's
stand is before talking about a sewer
line," Stroud said. "We want to feel 100
percent welcome. If there is dissension we
should possibly look at other areas where
we would be welcome.
"Whittaker Mills does not want to
create a problem," he added. "We feel
;:::;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:::::::;::i;:::;:;:::;:::;:::;:::::::::::;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
CamBiis
The Panhellenic Council and the
Inter-Fraternity Council will present a program
explaining the Greek system to freshmen and
other interested students at 7 p.m. tonight in
the East Granville lounge.
There will be a meeting of the Triangle Club
Group of the Sierra Club today at Dryfus
Auditorium in the Research Triangle Park.
Margaret Nygard will speak on the preservation
of the Eno River. A hike along the Eno River
will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday. All those
interested are invited to attend.
The UNC Football Club hosts Duke in a
memorial game for the late Dr. Raymond
Magus Saturday at 1:30 p.m. on Navy Fieid.
Qirls interested in bowling, playing pocket
billiards or ping pong may be able to represent
UNC in the Annual Regional Recreation
Tournament to be held Fed. 10-12 in
Blacksburg, Va. For more information, call
933-1157, or come by Suite A of the Union.
UNC Outing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight
in the Union to discuss trips to Outer Banks,
Linville Gorge and New Hampshire. Initial rock
climbing instruction will also be held.
The YM-YVVCA's Walk Against Hunger
Committee is presenting a representative of the
American Friends Service Committee to talk
about agricultural development tonight at 8:30
in the Friends Meeting House across from the
Institute of Government. Ed Duckies, who has
worked with agricultural development in
Mexico since the early "40s, will present an
informal discussion. The Walk Against Hunger
annually gives money for projects such as these
and all interested students are urged to attend.
Dr. Francis Steele will speak on "Jesus Christ
Insane, liar or God?" tonight at 8 p.m. m
Gerrard Hail, sponsored by the Campus Crusade
for Christ and FOCUS.
Tickets will be on sale today, 12:30-5 p.m.,
in the Union for the Kiwanis Pancake Day to be
held Saturday at the Methodist Church, ah the
pancakes and sausage you can eat for SI.
There will be a meeting of the UNC Polo
Club Friday at 8 p.m. Hopefully there will be a
Cowboy Polo this weekend.
A.K. Psi car wash and wax will be held
Saturday. 9 a.m. 5 p.m. at Estes S anoco Car
Cafe Center.
The free flicks for this weekend are: "Two
Daughters," Thursday; "Grapes of wrath."
Friday: "Sweet Charity." Saturday ; "Diary of a
Mad Housewife." Super Sunday.
An introductory course in Latin American
histDry will be taught net semester at 10 V.vr
by Prs. J.S. Tulchin and R.I.. Secmatr.
Hist-r-ry 4 7 will use debates, nuest sr-eaers a-d
simulations. The course is open to everyone.
GPSF Senate meeting (CSl tomoht at S
p.m. in the U'-iO". All crjduJte students arc
ir.vited.
Mil
if-'
.
This student enjoys the fading light of
r-trce"i pirlipr Pirfi Htv -ic u. intfr wiriil
Kolovson)
made
like mu:k- people are against locating the
plant here. I hat being the case. v.e have
been actively looking for other
locations."
Opposition to the plant concerned the
volume of liquid the proposed plant
would discharge.
County Board Chairman Harvey
Bennet said he opposed the location of
the Whittaker mill or any other "wet
industry" in the Hillsborough area.
Bennett cited a report from Dr. Arthur
Cooper, assistant secretary for resource
management in the State Department of
Natural and Lconomic Resources.
Cooper's report said. "Our assessment
of available water resources strongly
suggests that Hillsborough industrial
development in the future not include the
further addition of wet industry after the
arrival of Whittaker."
The report also recommended
Whittaker be limited to 250,000 gallons
of discharge per day until Hillsborough's
enlarged sewer treatment plant is
approved by the State Department of
Natural and Economic Resources.
At the board meeting Monday, Orange
County and Whittaker Mills began
negotiations on the amount each would
activities
Voter registration continues today at the
Chapel Hill Municipal Building on North
Columbia St., 9 a.m. 9 p.m.
The UN Seminar trip organiiat ional meeting
will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. m the Union.
I had a bicycle accident Friday in front of
the Ramshead Parking lot. If you are the gu
who was driving the car or can help me contact
him, call Mike, 933-8283. as soon as possible.
Freshman Council Group II will meet tonight
at 10 p.m. in the Frank Porter Graham lounge.
Homer Rice of the ath'atic department will be
the discussion leader.
Anyone interested in working as a salesman
for the International Bazaar sign up in the Y
office as soon as possible. The Bazaar will be
held Dec. 3-5.
Howard Zinn, cf Boston University, will
speak on "The Role of the Historian in
Contemporary Society" Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Presbyterian Student Center on Henderson St.
The public is invited.
Representatives of Drew University School
of Theology, Duke Divinity School and Wesley
Theological School will be available Friday, 10
a.m. noon at the Wesley Foandation. Call
942-2152 for appointment.
Dinmg out? Friday evening buffet at the
Wesley Foundation gives atmosphere,
conversation and good meal. Ma-e your
reservation by noon today. 942-2152.
AH those people who participated m the
Joyce Kilmer Forest protest weekend:
rememper the affidavits for the proposed
wilderness area must be sent to Ted Snyder by
Monday.
Bella Abiug, Co'-gresswomai from
Manhattan's 19th district, will speak to' .s' t at
8 p.m. m the Great Hall.
Anyone interested in working as a DJ or
news reporter for WCAR con-act Glen-. Gravt:,
3- P.".. 942-1706.
The Craige grad center Coffeehouse will
feature live entertainment. Friday. the
imperial Jazz Band" will perform and "Santa"
will play Saturday. Ail grad students are
welcome.
Course description booklets are avaiiab'e to
history majors in the office, Saunders Hall.
Non-majors may consult the booklet at the
office or at the undergraduate library reserve
desk .
The institute of Policy Sciences and P-r, :
Af'airs will sr'.nsor a coiioauium b Prof.
Albert Reiss today in P oom 22t', Per.-s
Library, at Du-e. The topic mH be -Models for
the Reform of the Administration of Justice."
FOUND reroie kitten, black with white,
wf-arirvi collar. University Oardens. CaM
n42-70e 7.
'v'c" . -' -
tv.:- Wr-?C -v-d cf :-ir. , "-o-- . ,
1 ,X'-o-,o--f-.-fAt.vWv-C: . - ..
day by studying in McCorkle Place Su:w
U1V tri f hint'l Mill (Stat! Pllotil P I il
et iriaii
pay for constructing the r..vJ..!
line.
Bennett, who voted aga::: ?h.- :
being located at Hillsboroi.g.'". .
said' "Hillsborough is 100 p -
you and this board is three-tilth- :
I was opposed to a wet mdustrv . r. '
Whittaker Mills. Ihe consent-
town and board in for a and I':'. 1 . '
y ou 1 00 percent ."
1 1 , r i . k u m . . . , i .... i i.
fhc Whittaker plant met town fm.'ir
for a desirable industry and maintain,
the area had to provide emph.v mer.t i
its citizens.
1 he plant would ernpl.-v up t- 1
workers in the initial phase :
operation.
Bill Weatherspoon. a state i:: '
development representative. rep.Tte.i
the board that Chapel Hill Al.lerm - '
Wallace, president of the
v unseivaiion v ounv.ii. a ppai v
approved the location of WhittaVc
Orange County.
"He saw no problem suppi
Whittaker as long as all p.r'
understood the very careful language
Dr. Cooper's statement." Wealher-p
said. "He said he was glad to .e
noaru neing conservative jh inis man-
calendar
FOUND: Ten-speed bike. cin b
lock. Call 933-4831.
FOUND: Men's ten-spvied 'i'Al
933 5359.
FOUND:
929-5142.
Man's
water
Will the person who took b i . i
from Woollen Gym pia-,- return i? u,
Otherwise, I have to pay l.
ased. Bob James.
LOjT: Demm jacket at T u ' I '. '
933-C157.
LOST: ID and athletic piss d? C1--:
ID no. 239-70-33f.G. Return to P.O
Chapel Mm, N.C.
LOST: Go'd w ire-r immed 'j'a-.ses t
Scuttlebutt and Beard Hat. Ca ! '.-,
Reward.
LOST: Creme colored poce'O'
undergrad hbrary. Can 93 3-4., -J 9. R e V.
LOST: Dundas plaid head v.''
Deborah Ingram, 9,,-5333. Regard.
LOST: Brown wallet near U'i'i. C:
Vogei. 960-3297. or return to 1 O'd ,t .
LOST: white gold ladies' Buova - j":
two diaOr.dS on vettirvj. Ca-I i i
Re ard.
LOST: Brown nylon t,elt !j i ,j--r"
concert. Turn in to Union des.
LOST: Tan leather 09-t go..
933315.
LOST: BliCk checkOOOk and brown
between ve'.jti.e a'd Aery. Ci 1 j -933-2976.
Reward.
The Campus Calendar is a er.
provided ry Ihe Daily lar M..n.
through Friday. Students, tac
members and administrators
encouragi-jd to use the calendar to k-t
readers know what '.our coup h d
on campus.
To place an item in the calendar or 1
and found, one needs only to rmg it
the DIM office in the Student I'mon
get an item in the next dav paper
must be brought to the office bv n
To get an item in Monday" paper it m
be brought to the office b. 1 n
Friday.
There is no charge for either calen
or lost and found items.