The Daily Tar Heel
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Wednesday, January 8, 1975
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Staff photo by Alice Boyta
A hollow shell is all that remains of the Pines Restaurant after a fire destroyed the place during exam week.
Foushee found guilty of assault
Alderman to file
by Mike Home
Staff Writer
Carrboro Alderman Braxton D. Foushee
was found guilty over the break of assaulting
a minor at a UNC football game in Kenan
Stadium on Oct. 5.
District Court Judge C.C. Cates found
Foushee guilty of assaulting a minor and
resisting arrest. Cates found Foushee
Population topic
of new course
A new course. Population and Planning in
Contemporary Africa, will be offered this
semester by the African Afro-American
Studies Curriculum.
The course is titled African Studies 70:
African, Policy Studies and is open to juniors
andSerjOrs. M i .. .. I '
Issues to be explored include population
policy in development planning in African
states and African concern with population
growth.
The course is scheduled for Tuesdays at 2
4:30 p.m. Interested students may obtain
tickets during registration at the Afro
American Studies desk or contact Dr. Ann
Dunbar, 456 Hamilton Hall.
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EVERY TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Thursday 2 p.m.
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(Limit one keg
First 'come - First Served,
TRY OUT OUR PATIO
301 W. Franklin St.
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Th . Daily Tar Heel is published by the University ,
North Carolina Student Publications Board, daily,
except Sunday, exam periods, vacation, and
summer periods. No Sunday issue- The following
dates are to be the only Saturday issues: September:
14 October 5 & 19, and November 2, 16 & 23.
Offices are at the Student Union building, Univ. of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C 27514. Telephone
numbers: News, Sports 933-1011, 933-1012;:
Business. Circulation, Advertising 933-1163.
Subscription rates: $20.00 per year, $10.00 per
semester.
Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in
Chapel Hill, N.C.
The Campus Governing Council shall have powers
to determine the Student Activities Fee and to
appropriate all revenue derived from the Student
Activities Fee (1.1.1-4 of the Student Constitution).
The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the
typographical tone of all advertisements and to
revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not conslaer adjustments or
payments for any typographical errors or erroneous
insertion unless notice Is give to the Business; -v
Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement,
appears, or within one day of the receiving of tear
sheets or subscription of the paper. The Dally Tar
Heel will not be responsible for more than one,
incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to(
run several times- Notice for such correction must,
be given before the next Insertion.
Reynolds G. Bailey Business Mgr.
Elizabeth F. Bailey Adv. Manager ,
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2- IrfU
innocent of a third charge of disorderly
conduct.
Foushee said yesterday the case will be
appealed to the Orange County Superior
Court on Jan. 13.
Police Lt. Manley Dawson said he tried to
arrest Foushee after seeing him strike the
youth, 13-year-old Tony Farrington, on the
face and throw him to the ground.
Foushee denied striking Farrington. He
said he asked Dawson to eject the youth for
withholding the game money he owed
Foushee from selling soft drinks at a game
the previous week. Foushee has sold
concessions at UNC football games for the
past 18 years.
Dawson, refusing to eject the boy, said
Foushee stated if the police would not get rid
of the boy, then "I'm going to do it myself."
Dawson said he left when he saw Foushee
knock the boy to the ground and returned
with Lt. Robert Frick. Foushee asked the
officers to go with him to talk with assistant
athletic director Joseph Hilton. Dawson said
that as the three began leaving the stadium,
Foushee ran back into the stadium cursing
and waving his arms. " ' ?-
Dawson said four officers struggled to
subdue Foushee as he was taken to the police
station.
Foushee said a UNC regulation states that
if anyone steals from a concession stand he
should be ejected from the stadium. Dawson
and Frick said they had never heard of such a
regulation.
Bill Lovingood of the UNC athletic
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appeal
department denied yesterday that there is
such a written regulation.
"I think the whole thing was a
misunderstanding. I think the policeman
who was involved in the incident probably
wasn't as familiar with our procedures as
someone who has been working with us for
say 15 years," Lovingood said. '
Newsroom sets new brass
New personnel have filled several key
editorial positions on the Daily Tar Heel this
semester.
David Klinger has become news editor,
-Jeanie Hanna, assistant news editor, and Lu
Ann Jones and David Ennis, associate
editors.
Klinger, a 20-year-old junior from
Winston Salem, replaced Joel Brinkley
as news editor. Klinger's experience includes
two years as a DTH general assignment and
town beat reporter and a summer internship
and a "stringer" job with the Winston Salem
Journal in 1974. He is a journalism political
science major.
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tin
to tray 7 mew
The Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen
requested additional transportation
funds in December to purchase seven
new buses and to aid in covering the cost
of construction of a bus maintenance
and operations facility.
The funds, totalling S539J20, will be
requested in an amendment to the
original grant application to the Urban
Mass Transit Administration (UMTA).
Approval of the amendment by the
aldermen came only after it was
stipulated that UMTA receive
notification that the proposed garage
site on Plant Road was subject to
change.
Alderman Alice Welsh objected to the
$300,000 in additional funds which was
allocated for grading and preparation of
the garage site. She maintained that the
Plant Road site was selected hastily
when the town submitted plans to
UMTA.
However, Mayor Howard Lee and
Transportation Director John Pappas
pointed out the reduced gas
expenditures for buses driven to the
Plant Road site rather than a more
remote one.
In casting the only negative vote on
the amendment, Alderman Tommy
Gardner commented that the town
needs more transportation experience
before ordering the new buses.
Mayor Lee cited the town's
responsibility to provide a good transit
system for its citizens and said that even
the seven new buses might not be
adequate. The size of ridership on the
bus system has gone from zero to third
in the state in the past three months, Lee
said.
Brinkley and Kevin McCarthy, former
managing editor, will continue as
contributing writers for the paper. Brinkley
had been news editor since last May.
McCarthy has been with the DTH for three
years.
Tar Heel editor Greg Turosak will take
over as managing editor, in addition to his
other duties.
Jeanie Hanna, a senior journalism major
from Lake City, Fla., has worked for the tar
Heel advertising staff. She worked for the
Lake City Reporter in 1972 and for the
Associated Press on the last election night.'
She replaced senior Ted Mellnik as assistant
news editor.
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Alternate sites for the garage will be
submitted to the board by the town
manager at the earliest possible date.
In executive session later on Dec. 16
Mayor Lee appointed Aldermen Welsh,
Gardner and Shirley Marshall to serve
with him on a committee to meet with
the Amalgamated Transit Workers
Union early in 1975.
. Formation of the committee was
prompted after Lee met with Wilbur
Hobby, president of the N.C. AFL
CIO, local Transit Workers Union
representatives and three Chapel Hill
transit employees who asked that the
town officially recognize the Transit
ZBT house to hold
campus-wide 'Hora'
All-Campus "Hora," a campus-wide band
party, will welcome the spring semester
tonight beginning at 8:30 p.m.
The party, sponsored by Zeta Beta Tau
(ZBT) fraternity, will be held at the ZBT
house on Finley Golf Course Road. The
group has chartered a bus to bring students
who wish to attend from campus.
Buses will leave Chase Cafeteria starting
at 8:30 p.m. every half hour until 1:00 a.m.
Thursday.
Stops will be made at Teague Dorm, the
Scuttlebutt, Granville Towers, and Winston
Dorm to pick up students. The
buses will also furnish transportation back
Lu Ann Jones and David Ennis have
replaced Barbara Holtzman and Gary
Fulton on the editorial page. Holtzman will
continue as a staff writer.
Jones is a junior journalism major from
Corapeake, N.C. She has worked for the
past year-and-a-half as a DTH general
assignment and feature writer.
Ennis has worked a year and a half as a
general assignment and Student
Government reporter for the Daily Tar Heel,
and has been a summer intern for the Twin
City Sentinel in Winston-Salem. He is a
junior journalism student from Salisbury,
N.C.
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Workers Union.
The town was requested to sign a
working agreement with the union and
to initiate a "check-off system" for
workers in which they can sign a card to
join the union and have their dues
deducted from their paychecks monthly
and sent to the union.
The town can not legally sign any
contracts with the union or enter into
collective bargaining, Lee said. He
added that he wanted a no-strike clause
in any agreement with the union. He
cautioned all governmental
departments that they were not to
hinder the organization of the transit
union in any . manner.
to campus.
The bus ride, as well as beer while riding,
will be free. Beer w ill also be available at the
party for those who wish to purchase it.
This is the third year ZBT has had such a
party. Last year the party was called All
Campus Boogie; the year before. Spring
Spirits.
The Lonely Drifters Band from Raleigh
will provide music for the get together. Jeff
Sellers, in charge of planning the party.
described their music as "beach and rock and
roll."
He said over 2,000 students attended last
year's party and they expect 5,000 this year.
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