!I
Tuesday. Fetxuary 13. 1373
The DjJy Tar HH
Students invited
.Bug discission tomifflalt
5
Chape! Hill Mayor Howard Lee and
Lee Corum, student member of the
Transportation Commission, will meet
with interested students tonight at -) in
room 217 of the Student Union, to
discuss the Feb. 20 town bus referendum.
The purpose of the meeting, according
to Corum, is to discuss the referendum
and the impact of the transportation
system on the University, and to organize
an informational campaign.
Corum emphasized that "the
community transportation service should
not be confused with the present parking
discussions," and he urged students to
support the referendum at the polls on
Feb. 20.
As the booklet describing the
referendum states, "On Feb. 20. I-J73.
Chapel Hill voters will decide whether
No bars or cells
in unusual prison
by Tad Stewart
Staff Writer
Sanford prison, officially known as
Sanford Advancement Center, is not the
old "bird-man of Alcatraz" institutional
type of penetentiary. There are no cells,
no bars, no armed guards and no fences.
But the threat of going to a place with
these facilities keeps the men there.
Sanford is only one of the several
prisons that Dr. Paul Brandes and his
Speech 95 class at UNC have selected in
their study of communication
breakdowns in prisons.
The inmates, whose crimes range from
drug offenses to murder, have spent some
time in high security prisons, but upon
showing signs of rehabilitation, were sent
to the minimum security center.
The center is more like a camp than a
prison. The inmates are referred to as
"residents" and the guards as
"counselors." ' "':
"You still know you're in prison, but
you just don't feel it as much," said one
resident, who was convicted of murder
and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Dr. Brandes and his students have
abandoned the traditional classroom and
have devised a six-week intensive course
so that prisons can improve
communications and relationships
between prisoners and administrators.
They feel from past study that a better
understanding of the channels of
communications would reduce a build-up
of tension that could possibly result, at
the extreme, in a crisis like that in Attica,
N.Y., in 1971.
The students visit prisons and conduct
meetings with the administrators and the
inmates. They are responsible for the
outcome of the meetings and feel the
prisoners need them.
According to Dr. Brandes, if a student
can't make it one night, all the inmates
ask, "Where's so and so tonight?"
During the meetings, the students find
out the prisoners' interpretations of the
channels of communication in the prison
and construct charts outlining these
channels.
Using the charts, the students can
pinpoint the breakdowns and then meet
with the administrators and inmates to
work out the problems.
"1 feel like I'm really doing
something," said one student.
"This is the most worthwhile course
I've ever had," added another.
The students have found that white
and black inmates have difficulty
communicating with each other orally.
The course will - hopefully improve
communication between inmates and
administrators, and among the inmates
themselves.
So far the visits have been pilot
programs to develop a student study of
communication. In the past four years
Dr. Brandes and selected students have
worked at Polk Youth Center, Umstead
Youth Center and Sanford Advancement
Center.
Application has been made for a grant
to evaluate these pilot programs
objectively in order to determine whether
the program could be applied generally to
a prison system.
$ AmiBtJm 942-954
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1
6
11
13
14
15
17
18
20
21
22
Stalks
Passageway
Occupant
Thing done
Man's
nickname
Father and
mother
A state
(abbr.)
Paid
notices
Peels
Insect
New York
baseball
team
24 Temporary
bed
25 Difficult
26 Depends on
28 Dines
Part of
camera
Narrow
opening
Winter
vehicle
Overflows
34 Quarrel
35 Also
Clan
Goddess of
healing
Yell
Expire
Indefinite
article
Blemished
45 Sun god
46 One's
profession
Inclines
Remain erect
Rent
29
30
31
32
36
38
39
41
,42
43
3 Printer's
measure
4 Chart
5 Break
suddenly
6 Performs
7 Possessive
pronoun
8 Spanish for
"yes"
9 Those
defeated
10 Finished
12 Delineates .
13 Dillseed
16 God of love
19 Pertaining to
the stars
21 Fought hard
23 Rain and
hail
25 Calls
27 A state
(abbr.)
28 Man's name
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
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30 Pours forth
31 Kind of piano
32 Chimney
carbon
33 Steeples
34 Junctures
35 God of
thunder
37 Plague
39 Hurried
40 Narrate
43 Transgress
44 Female
deer
47 Symbol for
tantalum
49 Parent
(colloq.)
48
50
51
DOWN
1 Vapor
2 Hay spreader
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7i 12 v 13
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22 ' 23 III 24 3 25
iZZ"! II
38 39 -0 41 -J"
H 1 I 1 Md" 1 1 11
C'lupcl Hill will establish and operate a
S440.000 community bus system."
The proposed system would provide
low cost transportation for the town,
campus, major apartment complexes, and
shopping centers.
The proposed bus system will operate
three types of schedules: day-time,
peak-hour and evening.
Using a combination of 20-passenger
and standard 40-passenger buses, the
program would help "preserve the visual
environment and undercut the need for
expansive road programs in Chapel Hill,"
Corum noted.
The final proposal is the result of a
long period of planning and controversy.
The Carrboro Board of Aldermen meet
tonight to consider the question of
holding a referendum on the proposed
bus system in Carrboro.
The parking discussions will continue
with the aim of developing, according to
Corum, "a system that will be fair to all
the students, will serve the University,
and will complement the town
transportation program."
Fringe parking lots have been proposed
in connection with the bus system,
allowing persons to park easily outside
the congested Central Business District
and then to commute in by bus.
t '""' 'li s
Why oh why?
Riding in the back of a pick-up truck might be refreshing in in Chapel Hill after a snow fall? When will they ever pass a
the middle of summer when it is 95 degrees in the shade. But dog's bill of rights? (Staff photo by Tad Stewart)
Why are student wages lower?
by Robert Ely
Feature Writer
Wiretap is a reader service of the Daily Tar Heel. If
you have questions or problems concerning the
University community, call 933-1012, write Wiretap in
care of the DTH or drop your questions by the office.
Questions answered in print will be selected on the basis
of general in terest.
Why are student's wages less even though they may
perform the same job as that of a full-time employee?
After talking with people in the Student Aid Office
and the Personnel Office, it became apparent that there
is really no clear-cut reason why students are often paid
less than full-time employees.
Part of the problem might be understood if one
realizes the advantages a centralized personnel office
offers to employees.
Jack i H.. Gunnel Is. .University Personnel director,
explained there are three broad classifications of
University employees: E.P.A. (professors are in this
category, among others), staff and student.
The Personnel Office maintains a classification system
DwffrixrXP
:v fit
office, then all students who mop floors anywhere in the
University would receive the same wage.
Another reason for any discrimination might be that
labor supply exceeds the demand. (Everybody has a
theory.) Students are a ready labor supply and if one
floor mopper gets ticked off and quits, he can be
replaced with little trouble.
of all jobs which are in the staff category. (Forget about
E.P.A. positions in regard to this question.)
Okay, so what does this mean? It means that the
salary fits the job, not the individual. For example,
typist H's receive a salary within a pre-determined range.
If the Zoo Department needs a typist, then Personnel
provides it with an individual who meets the established
qualifications. The salary, already set by the Personnel
Office, is paid by the Zoo Department.
Students, however, have no such centralized off ice. A
student who mops floors in the Art Department may
receive a wage much less than a student who does the
same thing at the library. If there were a centralized
The Chapel Hill Film Friends advertised five extra
films for ticketholders. Have they been selected? When
will they be shown?
The first has already been shown. The four remaining
are 'Ten Days That Shook the World," "Nosferatu,"
"Gervaise" and a program of shorts including "Night and
Fog."
The next showing is March 2 and will probably be
'Ten Days That Shook the World." This is, however,
subject to change. The next showing after that will be
March 23. The two remaining will be shown sometime in
April. '
Films are shown at 11:30 Friday nigMs in Gardner
Hall. They are announced two weeks ahead of time,
according to Scott Langley, DTH film critic.
UYS A GREAT
LUNCH
BREAKFAST
DINNER
Every Day 1 1 :00 AM To 1 0:00 PM At The Dairy Bar
Choice SPECIAL with two vegetables and roll
OR
Chopped steak with tossed green salad,
french fries and butter roll
AND
For the weight watchers great Lacto
Yogurt any flavor for only $.33
Remember 99 fat free
(across from Silent Sam)
SATISFY YOUR SWEET TOOTH...
VISIT Ye Olde Sweet Shoppe
W VIS
We have the candy and
Natural Food YOU'VE been
Wanting!
TRY THE FRUIT ROLLS!
THEY'RE GOOD TOO...
stucSent stohes
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