2 The Daily Tar Heel Friday, November 14, 1375
Alpha Chi Omega discussing colonization
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Is it music? . . . Overcast skies and an occasional drizzle didn't stop five graduate
assistants in the music department from performing "Car Bibbe," a composition for
a conductor and four cars, in the Hill Hall parking lot Wednesday.
Conducted by crash helmeted David Boelzner, the composition, written by
American avant garde composer Al Hansen, featured Craig Lister on Volvo, Andre
Barbera on Rambler, Gloria Fernandez on Pinto and Ross Ellison on AMC
Ambassador.
Engine revving, horn honking, door slamming and window wiping governed by
the laws of chance were all included in Car Bibbe, which was recomposed and
scored for use and discussion in Music 21 and 41 classes. "The question we ask our
classes is," conductor Boelzner said, "Is it music?"
Customers agree . . . After employees of He's Not Here recently stopped two
gays from dancing in the bar, the Carolina Gay Association (CGA) officially
boycotted the establishment for alleged infringements of gay rights.
But, according to He's Not Here Manager Tim Ferguson, the boycott has not
affected the bar's business at all. "The majority of our customers agreed with our
actions," Ferguson said, adding that "any extreme overt behavior would have been
handled in the same way."
Ferguson also said he has no fear of legal repercussions. "One of our owners is a
lawyer, and the lawyers we've contacted said they (the CGA) have no case."
Watergate witness . . . The daughter of the executive director of the U.S.
Attorney General's Office during the Watergate affair, Melanie Modlin, remembers
the Watergate experience as a time characterized by "intrigue, with a cloak and
dagger atmosphere."
The junior from Alexandria, Va., who also served as a Congressional intern
during the Ervin committee hearings, said there was a reluctance to discuss
Watergate within' her family.
She said her parents, "hardline Republicans," knew John Mitchell well and
believed in his integrity. "There was whispering in the family way back in
September," Modlin said, "but there was a lot of hush, hush. You were just
wondering when something was going to hit the news."
Modlin, who said that Haldeman and Erlichman "ought to win Oscars for their
performances during the hearings," added that the most amazing feature of the
hearings was Sam Ervin. "Despite the bright lights and smoky room, Ervin always
gave the impression that he was in complete control."
Time warp ... In December, music professor Roger Hannay will begin work on
his third symphony, "The Great American Novel," which he calls "a musical time
warp old music in an entirely new framework.
"The emphasis will be on a series of quotations and musical allusions to earlier
American music from colonial times to the present," he said, adding that the
symphony will be in four movements for orchestra, chorus and electronic tape.
While European symphonic composers have generally overshadowed their
American counterparts, Hannay says there have been "an impressive number of
American symphonic composers whose works have been completely forgotten."
No pity . . . Simply being able to live in a dormitory has made college life much
more -valuable, handicapped student Ginger Massey said Thursday." But "after
lauding ihe. University's recent physical, plant alterations which make the campus
accessible to the handicapped, Massey said handicapped students still must face the
barriers of misconception.
"Handicapped people are persons first, and handicapped second. They are not
basically different when it comes to being a human being," says Massey, who is
pursuing two masters degrees in education. The problems of handicapped students
must be understood, not pitied, she said.
While Massey is the only handicapped student living in a dormitory, she said she
fears an eventual segregation of the handicapped into Ruffin and Grimes, dorms
which are the only dormitories equipped for handicapped students.
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by Laura Seism
Staff Writer
UNCs tenth sorority is now being
established, as three national officers of
Alpha Chi Omega sorority meet with
University officials this week, Alpha Chi
National Collegiate Vice-president Ms.
David N. Miley said Thursday.
The officials are discussing plans for
the sorority's colonization, the process
by which a sorority gains its first
members and establishes itself on a new
campus.
Alpha Chi Omega, often called Alpha
Chi, accepted the University's invitation
to colonize here Oct. 30 after its
SCAU
by Dwight Ferguson
Staff Writer
The Student Consumer Action Union
(SCAU) will make an effort to build support
among North Carolina Congressmen for a
bill to establish a Consumer Protection
Agency, SCAU Chairperson Kathy Moore
said Thursday.
The bill was passed 208-199 by the House
last Thursday, climaxing a five-year battle
among interest groups.
President Ford has threatened to veto the '
bill if it passes Congress, and SCAU had
requested an interview with him to discuss
the bill when he comes to North Carolina
this weekend, Moore said. But the request
was denied.
Ford will be in Durham to speak at North
Carolina Central University on the 50th
anniversary of its founding.
SCAU will contact members of the C.C.
H ouse delegation to urge them to vote for an
override of the expected veto, Moore said.
Sanford Gottlieb to lecture
on federal budget priorities
Sanford Gottlieb, vice chairperson of the
Coalition on National Priorities and
Military Policy, will visit Chapel Hill Nov.
16-18 to give several lectures'and a talk on
"Federal Budget Priorities Military or
Human Services."
Gottlieb is executive director of SANE, an
international peace organization. SANE,
founded in 1957, has worked for
disarmament agreements, reductions in the v
defense budget and the peaceful settlement
of international disputes.
In recent years the organization has
worked to overcome the newer of the
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have seen our new. modern, unpdated home, we believe you'll agree it was worth
waiting for. We extend a cordial invitation to our many friends and patrons to visit us
soon, and be assured, only the location has changed, the staff and cuisine is stilt the
same.
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Crossword Puzzler
ACROSS
Dine
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Possessive
pronoun
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A state (abbr.f
Frightened
Vessels
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17 Man's nick
name 19 Approaches
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pagoda
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being
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27 African
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29 Uncooked
30 Urge on
31 Challenges
33 Scarf
35 Moccasins
36 Afternoon
party
38 River duck
40 Insect
41 Compact
43 Music: as
written
44 Cyprinoid fish
45 Grumbles
47 Exists
48 Consecrate
50 Occupant
52 Communists
53 Sharp pain
DOWN
1 Groups of
ships
2 French
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Distr. by
representatives visited the campus last
spring and this fall. Miley said the
national sorority had been interested in
UNC as a chapter site for 10 years.
Alpha Chi Omega's colonization will
begin officially in February or March of
1976, depending on the spring informal
rush plans of Panhellenic Council.
Three or four national officers will be
here then to interview prospective
members, Miley said. Informal rush
parties will be held for girls who express
an interest in starting a sorority to
Panhellenic Adviser Marianne
Hitchcock.
"We see a (sorority) colony as an
opportunity for a collegian to have a
to build support
SCAU may also pass out leaflets asking
people to write L.H. Fountain,
Congressman for this district, she said.
Fountain, who voted against the bill,
argued on the House floor that passing the
bill would create another expensive and
needless bureaucracy. According to the
Congressional Record, he said, "The
establishment of the Agency for Consumer
Protection will only add to this (the cost of
government to taxpayers)."
Though no definite plans have been made,
Moore said SCAU may work with the N.C.
Consumer's Council in lobbying for an
override of Ford's expected veto.
Council member Paul Verkuil, a UNC
assistant law professor, said the council will
"encourage our representatives to override
the veto."
He added that the voting record of the
N.C. Congressional delegation on the bill is
poor.
military-industrial complex and to secure
better treatment of Soviet dissidents. In 1973
SANE was named to the White House
Enemies List. r
- An active Washington lobbyist, Gottlieb,
has appeared on radio and television shows
throughout the U.S. as a lecturer and a
participant in panel discussions.
In addition, he has contributed to The
New York Times, Saturday Review and
other publications.
Gottlieb will arrive in Chapel Hill from a
SANE-sponsored conference on "The Arms
Race and the Economic Crises."
Foods
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Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
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leadership role early in the life of her
sorority,' Miley said. "It's a chance for
her to help her sorority form its own
tradition."
Miley said she could not predict how
many members the sorority would start
out with, but said this fall's rush figures
indicate that there is enough interest to
sustain a tenth sorority here.
Approximately 650 women participated
in fall rush, Panhellenic Council
President Robin Levina said.
Several women have said they were
interested in starting a tenth sorority
since rush. Existing sororities also see a
need for another sorority house, she
said.
among Congressmen
The only members of the N.C. delegation
to vote for the bill were Sen. Robert Morgan
and Congressmen Stephen Neil of the fifth
district and Richardson Preyer of the sixth
district.
SCAU and the consumer council are not
the only backers of the bill. Ralph Nader has
considered its passage his top priority and
has urged consumers to rally citizen power to
override any veto.
The consumer agency bill passed the
House with two major amendments. One
amendment will legislate the Consumer
UNC minority law students
to hold recruitment program
A program to attract more minority
students to North Carolina law schools will
be held Saturday, Nov. 15, at the UNC
School of Law.
The program, sponsored by the Minority
Law Students Association in cooperation
with the Student Bar Association, has as its
goal the recruitment of college level Blacks
and Indians who are interested in attending
North Carolina law schools.
Panel discussions . with law school
administrators and small group question
and answer sessions will highlight the
workshop. Through these sessions the
student will be given information on law
school financial aid, admissions policies and
UFW boycott goes on
despite historic victory
by Miriam Feldman
Staff Writer x
Although the California farmworkers
won a historic victory last June when the
Agricultural Labor Relations Board was
created, the boycott of non-union grapes and
lettuce still goes on.
"People who supported the boycott for
years and years and years don't know what
to do now," Kathy MacBeth, a member of
Chapel Hill Friends of the United Farm
Workers, said recently. "Should they buy
grapes or not?"
Although the grape and lettuce boycott
was successful in helping farmworkers win
the right to hold elections and choose their
own union, the boycott will continue until
union contracts are signed with the growers,
MacBeth said.
Aside from boycotting non-union lettuce
and grapes, the UFW urges people to
boycott wines made from non-union grapes.
The wines are: Gallo, Paisano, Thunderbird,
Spanada, Boone's Farm, Ripple, Andre and
Wolfe and Son.
Although Chapel Hill is a long way from
California, MacBeth said local citizens
should support the boycott of the western
farmworkers since "we eat the food that the
farmworkers produce every day.
"We are every day taking a stand by what
we eat," she added.
The union elections are seen as a major
victory for Cesar Chavez and the United
Farm Workers (UFW) union because, for
the first time with the help of the labor
relations board, the farmworkers have won
the right to collective bargaining with the
growers, she said.
But MacBeth said many elections are
being contested now, and once farmworkers
express their preference for a union, there is
no guarantee the growers will sign a contract
with that union.
The latest union election reports show that
the UFW has won 83 ranch elections, and the
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off the DTHisd rate if you pay within 10 days after your
has run. This Is in addition to other discounts you may
The Panhellenic Council has pledged
the support of the existing sororities for
the new one, Levina said. This could
mean the use of existing sorority houses
for rush parties, she explained.
Originally a music-oriented sorority,
Alpha Chi Omega is now a general
membership sorority, that supports
MacDowell Colony, a resident
community for artists in Petersborough,
N. H., the National Easter Seal Society
and the Cystic Fibrosis Association.
The sorority was first established in
1885 at DePauw University in Indiana.
The newest chapter was installed at
Georgia Institute of Technology in
February 1975.
Protection Agency out of existence in seven
years unless Congress specifically votes to
continue it.
Another amendment will consolidate in
the agency functions that are now dealt with
by various other federal agencies.
Rep. Paul McCloskey, R-Calif., who
proposed this amendment', said, "I've waited
for five years here in the House to cut out
some of the bureaucracy we've created over
the past 199 years."
This amendment is alleged to save
taxpayers $10 million a year.
various legal careers.
Assistance in law school choice and
application will also be given.
Those invited to attend the workshop
include UNC law professor Charles Daye;
Pinckney Moses, a Fayetteville public
defender; Betty Jo Hunt, of the Indian
Commission; Carol Taylor, of Durham
Legal Aid; Frank Bullock, a Durham
attorney; and the Honorable George Green.
The program will begin at 8 a.m.
Saturday, in the Law School. A buffet style
dinner for all participants will conclude the
program v. -
All interested students'are ufgedtcfaTtend
and participate in the" program. ''SZZ',
rival labor group, the Teamsters U nion, won
72, MacBeth said. Elections are still being
held.
The UFW boycott was organized in the
sixties by Cesar Chavez and the U nited Farm
Workers union to gain decent working
conditions and the right of workers to select
a union of their choice. In April 1970, the
boycott was stopped because contracts were
signed between growers and the UFW.
But the contracts expired in 1973, and
many growers signed with the Teamsters
Union. Charging the Teamsters with having
contracts favorable to the growers, the UFW
then organized another boycott. Although
this boycott resulted in the establishment of
the labor relations board, few contracts have
been signed with the UFW.
Chavez, an advocate of non-violence,
relied on the boycott as a means of coercing
growers into recognizing farmworkers'
rights. He said the Teamsters Union used
violent means to break the farmworkers'
movements.
"The boycott is the only thing that's gotten
a damned thing for the farmworkers,"
MacBeth said.
She explained that strikes were broken
easily because many workers, especially
illegal aliens, could be hired to replace the
farmworkers in the unskilled field work
during a strike.
Another reason to support the boycott,
MacBeth said, is that contracts negotiated
by farmworkers include stricter controls on
pesticide use in the fields.
The teamsters contracts have left the
pesticide issue up to the state, and the state is
often lax in regulating pesticide use.
MacBeth said.
Mark Keppler, president of the Chapel
Hill Friends of the UFW, said that even
when the farmworkers are fully organized in
California, farmers in the rest of the country
will still be unorganized. "It's just a start out
in California," Keppler said.
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