2 The Daily Tar Heel Monday, February 14, 1972 Addresses youth colli 'use the system - " -- " H f m: .... s &) --J;V I J Gov. Bob Scott shakes hands with members of the NAACP following his Saturday morning address to the black group's two-day voter information conference. Scott told the audience that young people must "work within the system." (Staff Photo by Johnny Lindahl) iCamioiis Activities Calendar INTERESTED IN BEING A SHADOW for a visiting personality in the Carolina Symposium? Deliver your name, address and phone number to the Union Information Desk. State your reasons for wanting to shadow the person you choose. Also list second and third choices. A list of people needing shadows will be on the Symposium office door, room 268A in Suite A of the Union. Please place this information in an envelope addressed to the Carolina Symposium, co Scheduling Committee. Deadline: Feb. 18. "TWIN OAKS: A Commune with a Future" with Sara Elder will be presented today in the Great Hall. Sponsored by the Current Affairs Committee. "MODERNISM AND MANNER in the Art of the 1960's" is Yale University lecturer Edward F. Fry's topic today at 3 p.m. in Ackland 115. YOUNG DEMOCRATS CLUB college convention and ski weekend in Boone Feb. 18 and 19. Interested? Contact Geoffrey Mitchell at 933 6153. Rides will be provided and rooms have been reserved. Students may also stay at Appalachian State University. No registration fee. GRADUATE ROMANCE ASSOCIATION meets today at 4 p.m. Lounge. ". in the Dey Hall Faculty DURHAM CHAPEL HILL SOLO PARENTS CLUB meets today at the Holiday Inn on Chapel Hill Street in Durham. Prospective members are invited. AFROTC offers free ground instruction on flying beginning today. The class will meet 23 p.m. on MWF at Lenoir Hall. For further information contact AFROTC HQ Lenoir Hall or Jim Greenawalt at 9294382. ANDRAS R. HAMORI of Princeton University will speak on "The Poet as Hero and Ritual Clown" today at 8 p.m. in a public lecture held at Dey Hall Faculty Lounge. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE COLLEGE ORGANIZATION will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation Chapel tonight. Everyone is welcome. CONSERVATIVE SOCIETY will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union to discuss late 19th Century British Conservatives. "WHAT IS THE MEANING OF INCENTIVES?" is the topic of Dr. Vincent LoLordo and Peter Everett tonight at the Monday evening discussion series sponsored by the Carolina Population Center. Held at the Newman Center at 7:30 p.m., the series is open to the Univeristy community. NC PIRG Urgent Meeting of all PIRG workers tonight at 7:30 in 108 Bingham Hall. UNC PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM presents Dr. R.I Ritchie of Oak Ridge National Laboratory Wednesday at 4 p.m. in 265 Phillips Hall. His topic will be "Surface Plasmons in Solids." MAYA ANGELOU, author of "I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings" will speak at 8 p.m. in B.N. Duke Auditorium on "Black Literature: From the Beginning to the Beginning." There will also be a coffee hour for her today at 1 p.m. in the Alfonso Elder Student Union. YM YWCA ELECTIONS will be held February 22. If you are interested in seeking an office, come by room 102 in the Y Building to sign up for an interview and fill out an application. JAPANESE KARATE INSTRUCTION by a black belt instructor begins Thursday at the Tin Can across from Woollen Gym at 7 p.m. For information call 9331615 and ask for Ogie. COLLOQUIUM ON SUMMER JOBS: Sign up this week in 211 Gardner Hall to attend one of the following meetings: Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. (Pre-career); Wednesday at 3:30 (Camps-Parks-Resorts); Thursday at 3:30 (Social Work, Teaching, Health); all meetings will be held in 209 Gardner Hall. HATHA YOGA: Classes begin Tuesday. Sign up with the Recreation Dept. of Chapel Hill, basement of Municipal Building. 967-2268. Elise Miller, devotee of Swami Satchidananda instructs. For further information call Elise at 929-6536. FOUND: Brown German Shepherd, 2 'ft 3 months old. Collar and dog tags on it. Found in Carrboro. 602 N. Greensboro St. LOST: Black folder with sheet music. Beckey anytime at 933-6158. Call FOUND: A bacteriology 968-0822. black spiral notebook with and pharmacy notes. Call FOUND: A change purse with key chain with name "Tom" on it. Found in Davie Circle Area. Call 968-1783. FOUND: A 1968 Uniontown Area High School ring with the initials HMM. Claim at the Union Information Desk. LOST: Classnotes and clipboard. Lost last Monday afternoon in hospital parking lot. If found, call Terry at 967-7282 and I'll give you something for your troubles. LOST: Green Wallet. Between the Fetzer Field and the Tin Can. Call Phillip Hatch at 9332424. Reward. LOST: 10-month-old grey and black striped tabby cat. Vicinity of Pritchard and Church streets. Answers to name "Tushy." Reward. Call 967-5845 after 3 p.m. LOST: One leather pack filled with my geology books and notes. Left in Davie Hall classroom. $15 reward. Please call Mac Poteat at 942-3683. LOST: Pair of men's sunglasses and a man's black folding umbrella. In the vicinity of Franklin Street. Reward. Call 942-5369. LOST: Saint Bernard puppy about five months old in vicinity of Memorial Hospital. Call 942-3665 after 6 p.m. Ask for Richard Gitlson. LOST: Watch, gold ladies' watch lost Monday night at Teague Dorm. Whitmaumer watch. Reward offered. 933-8176. LOST: A pair of octagonal wire-rimmed glasses in black case. Call Melinda at 933-5032 or 929-4972. LOST: Gold 10-speed Triumph bicycle was stolen from in front of Kenan Dorm. Would the person who took it please return it. No questions asked. Reward. I need it back desperately. LOST: Blue checkbook containing identification cards: driver's license and student ID. Return to 177 Greenway Park or call 9297358. No questions asked. LOST: Girl's navy blue scarf. Tasseled ends with red and yellow dots. Call 9335334. MY HANDS ARE COLD. Please return: green and orange matching scarf and mitten set; left under a desk in Peabody Hall. Call 967-4857. AQUARIUS, JAN. 20-FEB. 18. 1 1972 Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., Milwaukee and other great cities. If you're an Aq you've probably already found Sehiiiz f.lalf liquor. Aquarius, you're anything but traditional. You're often a wild dreamer, and always an independent thinker. That's why you get along so well with Schlitz Malt Liquor, Taurus the Bull. Schlitz Malt Liquor is the unique drink that stands apart with a bold taste all its own. And that's what you respect. You know you can be lost for days in your idealistic dreams of the future. And when you join the earth-bound, you continue to seek originality and surprise. Like bchlitz Malt Liquor, Taurus the Bull. Nobody makes malt liquor like Schlitz. Nobody. 4 ClfSSllJ by Lou Bonds Asbjcute Editor Governor Bob Scott told an NAACP youth conference here Saturday that young people must work within the political system to make it better. Scott's speech was part of a two-day program on youth participation in the political process. About 500 students arrived on campus Friday for the conference. "Politics is simply a force that powers the machinery that provides for those needs and aspirations of the people." Scott said. "By our involvement and ballots we determine the shape of that force." Scott urged young people to renew their support of the basic processes controlling public affairs. "It would be .folly to throw up our hands and write our problems off as insoluble," he said. "The best course, the only feasible course, is to work within the system." Scott said young people have gained a louder voice in politics through newly-granted voting rights and modern times, but some youths have become disenchanted with the political system. "L would not detract one whit from the idealism that motivates such disillusionment," he said. "But I do submit that, for all our weaknesses and shortcomings, we have the right idea." Scott was one of three conference speakers. Hargrove "Skipper" Bowles, Democratic candidate for governor, and Clarence Mitchell, director of the NAACP Washington bureau, spoke Friday. Students at the conference came from North Carolina high schools, community colleges and junior high schools. They met with state officials and political at informal workshop sessions. Kelly Alexander. Jr., youth conference director, said the program's purpose was to give young people some ideas on getting into the political structure. "Nobody has gotten this large a group of youths together and confronted them with as many politicians." Alexander said. "I thir.l started to learn how to d;t: between the candidates." In answer to a program quest;c most students said they re registered to vote, would p voter registration drives and 'o the Democratic Par!) . Few students listed a candidate for governor, but ma: they supported Shirley Ch:h. ;rr.. McGovern and Julian Bond as pres; candidates. , O Tf -n i 1 if -nw OBB CFlMCl.es raf f ic committee by Susan Spence Staff hYitcr Student Transportation Commissioner Bailey Cobb Friday became the second member of the University Traffic and Safety Committee to speak out against its policies. Student Government representative Robert Wilson earlier last week contested the administration's handling of a proposal to build two multi-level parking garages on campus. Tl XT M ore head College mar decentralize by Kathy Koch Staff Waiter Morehead Residence College is in the midst of drafting a revision of their present constitution as a panacea for what ails the college. Cobb Dormitory Senator Thea Howard introduced a bill at Senate meeting last week calling for a decentralization of the college in a manner similar to the action taken by Scott College earlier. Morehead Governor Jim Wellons said the action is an answer to the changing needs of the residents. "Individual dorms are more active now, and they want more money," he said. "This measure will strip the college down to the bare essentials, maintaining our representation in RCF, the use of the Cobb cellar by the college, and the use of the college's office equipment." According to the bill, the residence college will receive 50 cents from each member instead of the S2 received now. The money would be appropriated for office maintenance and telephone usage. Representation in the senate would be changed to two from each of the five men's dorms (Aycock, Everett, Graham, Lewis and Stacey), including the dorm president and either vice president or social chairman. In addition, Cobb would send six representatives-at-Iarge to compensate for the difference in the male and female population of the college. The proposal, which described the prestBfcIoiehead framework as -outmoded and unviable, passed by an 180 vote with one abstention. One of the main points of discussion was the usage of the Cobb cellar. Walter Holt, senator from Aycock, said, "We have to take into account that any other organization could petition to use the cellar. Without a residence college the Cellar would go back to the University." Allen Reep, governor from newly-decentralized Scott Residence College, spoke to the senators and answered questions about how Scott is handling restructuring. The bill has been sent to a presidential committee for rewriting to be introduced to the senate next week. If approved by the senate the following week, it will be put to a student referendum 15 days later. Cobb denounced the policv o: sc.:.-.--. which the Traffic and Safety Comm.::.'. has maintained, saying "Thev h nothing to hide." "As representatives of the students. . should be able to talk to them about the:: complaints and what they would see done in the way of transportation." he said. Cobb also questioned whether there any need for the committee at a!!. "The meetings are supposed to be .-. forum for discussion between lacultv students, but it is really rather farcie.-.: because nobody knows what thev -talking about," he said. He also thinks members should be re to come in and present argument. : r their position. However, Cobb said th. had no knowledge beforehand of v. h..: was to be discussed. "We are given t short a notice before the meetings to : able to do any research, or to prepare anything which would 3dd to the meeting," Cobb said. As Cobb said he understood it, WiS :. wrote to Chancellor N. Ferebee Tavh r. who then wrote to Allen Waters, UNC director of operations and engineering, and told him to hold the Tuesday meeting. If the meeting had not been called, the proposals probably would have gone-through without the committee's knowledge, Cobb said. The discussion at the meeting centered around the proposal to build the two multi-level parking decks, one to be located in the Bell Tower Parking Lot and the other south of Manning Drive. "There was only one proposal for the two garages presented to the committee. We did not get to see any others." He agreed with Wilson that the committee only served a "rubber stamp." "I'm sure Mr. Waters and Chancellor Taylor want what is best for the University," Cobb said. "If they are no aware of how the 19,000 students and faculty members feel, it could be a bit A a hindrance to them in reaching s decision. The University is the people They are inseparable and hopefully will continue to be so." JP p-nrpi Boo COUNTERCULTURE AND THE VISION OF GOD By Robert Johnson UNC Director of Wesley Foundation LOGOS BOOKSTORE Upstairs-Over NC Cafeteria 55 4:30-7:00 lACCHAE Entrance back of the Zoom DAILY SPECIALS ONLY S.97 Mon. BAKED CHICKEN wBercy Sauce Tues. ROAST BEEF Wed.-CHOPPED SIRLOIN wSpanish Sauce Thurs.-BEEF ON BUN Fri. ROAST BEEF served w2 veg. & bread THE SAME WITH TOSSED SALAD & CHOICE OF DRESSING THE DUKE UNIVERSITY MAJOR ATTRACTIONS COMMITTEE AND THE ASSOCIATION OF AFRICAN STUDENTS PRESENTS lite Mm Hips WITH SPECIAL GUEST HOT, BUTTERED, SOUL SUNDAY FEB 20. 7:30 P.M. DUKE INDOOR STADIUM TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT THE RECORD BAR