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Prison official cites lack of funds
Women's prison lacks needed programs
by Laura Seism
Staff Writer
The Women's Correctional Unit in
Raleigh lacks needed inmate rehabilitation
programs because the General Assembly has
failed to appropriate money for them.
Prisons Deputy Director W. C. Kautzky said
Wednesday.
"We ought to have the programs, but there
is no clear directive from the legislature (for
Pharmacy school dean
dies of heart disease
Dean of the School of Pharmacy Seymour
Blaug died Wednesday following a heart
attack.
Blaug. 5 1, was in Atlanta speaking to
doctors at Grady Memorial Hospital as part
of the Ciba Pharmaceuticals Medical
Horizons Program.
A memorial service sponsored by students
of the pharmacy school will be held at 2 p.m.
Friday in 1 1 1 Beard Hall. Also, memorial
services for friends and faculty members will
be held at 2 p.m. Dec. 3 in Memorial Hall.
Funeral and burial services will be in Council
Bluffs. Iowa.
The family has requested donations to the
North Carolina Pharmaceutical Research
Foundation in lieu of flowers.
"He was a tremendous guy. liked by
students and faculty alike," LeRoy Werley,
assistant dean of the pharmacy school, said.
Chancellor N. Ferebee Taylor said Blaug
"made major contributions to our School of
Pharmacy during the 1 5 months he served as
dean. He will be sorely missed."
Before becoming dean in August 1974,
Blaug was a professor of pharmaceutics at
the University of Iowa.
Mr. and
Red Bull
take great pride in
announcing
of an a
m
to their LUNCHEON MENU.
3
Name SANDWICHES OF ALL KINDS
i.e., Rueben Ham Corned-Beef on
Rye Grilled Cheese Turkey
Date of Birth: MONDAY, NOV. 24, 1975
Place of Birth: RED BULL STEAK PUB
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the programs)," Kautzky said. He added that
no laws state clearly that an inmate has a
right to rehabilitative programs.
"There is no real recognition that
rehabilitation is even a viable concept in this
state." le said, noting 43 per cent of released
prisoners in North Carolina return to prison.
Kautzky said the General Assembly
always cuts the Department of Corrections'
budget first, and the department can not
improve programs without money. The
A native of New York City, he received his
B.S. and M.S. degrees from the Columbia
University College of Pharmacy. He
received his Ph.D. from the University, of
Iowa, where he joined the faculty in 1955.
"Dean Blaug's passing is a great loss to
pharmacy in North Carolina," W.J. Smith,,
executive director of the N.C. Pharmacy
Association said, "fn the short space of time
we were privileged to know and work with
him. we recognized that his humanitarian
approach to health problems and
opportunities would ultimately result in the
deliverance of better health care in North
Carolina."
A specialist in drug stability and
absorption, Blaug held U.S. patents for
some of his discoveries. He won the Abbot
Award in 1 969 for his contribution to the
literature of hospital pharmacy.
Blaug is survived by his wife Babette and
four daughters. Carla. Suzanne, Amy and
Elizabeth, all of Chapel Hill; his mother.
Rose Blaug of Mamoroneck, N.Y.; and two
sisters, Marie Weiss of New York City and
Natalie Fifichelli of Mamoroneck, N.Y.
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GET kaoSS THE
I FEEL SOXM FOf? THE
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UP THE HARSH TITLE OF
MASTER FOR THE MORE
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TENDER ONE OF FRIEND ?
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General Assembly must reorder its
priorities, he said.
But Brooke Whiting, chairperson of
Action for Forgotten Women, a women's
prison reform lobbying group, said her
group's investigations of inmate grievances
at the women's prison in Raleigh found a
smaller budget there than at other state
prisons. The small budget is a major cause of
problems at the prison.
As an example, Whitting said, money was
allocated for a full-time physician at Polk
Youth Center, a correctional facility for
minors, but the women's prison received no
such allocation, she said.
Also, more men than women are involved
in rehabilitation programs. Whiting said.
For example, only 1 7 women at the women's
facility are on work release, while over 400
men are in the program at the all-male
Central Prison. Only 54 of the 472 women
inmates are on study release, she said.
However, Fred Morrison, Inmate
Grievance Committee chairperson, said
there are more men in Central Prison than in
the women's facility.
Demonstrations this summer at the
women's prison were the result of inadequate
medical care, poor working conditions in the
prison laundry and an arbitrary system of
ranking inmates.
While some of these grievances have been
corrected. Whiting and Lewis Turner, a
former inmate, said deplorable conditions
still exist at the prison.
In one instance, doctor and nurse
volunteers trying to give medical help at the
women's prison were refused admission,
Turner said. Also, women are forced to
unload 1 50-pound barrels from trucks, and a
72-year-old woman has been forced to work
in the laundry. Turner said.
Kautzky said he was unaware of these
incidents.
A biracial committee set up by Gov. James
Holshouser to study allegations arising from
the prison demonstrations found no
substance in the grievances, Kautzky said.
th v f
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I
HOURS:
Lunch:
11:30 a.m. -2:30 a.m.
Supper:
5-10 p.m. Mon-Thurs.
4:30-until Fri & Sat.
I OFFERED H!A A ?
OF UATER,ANP HE
PRANK THE WHOLE THING.'
THB
..MY LOVER,
MY WEE.. MORE!
MY FRI EN P. MORS!
NO MORE THERESA
CRACKED PEWTER
TANKARDS? SH0RTA6B
j ANYWAY...
( ice oiees )
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Campus
Today's Activities
Help plan a Channukah celebration on campu. A planning
meeting will be held at 5:30 p.m. at the HiHe4. Everyone
interested is invited.
The final YM-YWCA Potluck Dinner Oiacuulon meeting
for this semester will be held today at the home of Dr. and
Mrs. tarry Kessler. The discussion leader will be Dr. Gerald
Unks. who will speak on 'How Can We Improve Our Public
Schools?" Any and all students and faculty are invited to
attend. Check by the Y office for more Information.
The Carrboro Community Coalition will meet at 8 p.m. at
the home of Charles Jeffress, 143 Hanna St. last house on
the left). All students are welcome.
There will be two meetings of the Baptist Student Ministry
tonight. Both the Graduate Fellowship and the Summer
Missions groups will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Battle House,
203 Battle Lane.
Upcoming Events
The Veterans Club will have a party at 6 p.m. Saturday at
the Villages Apts. club house. Cookout, beer and music all
furnished. All Veterans Club members and any Interested
veterans are invited. Come by Veterans Office, Hanes Hail for
information.
The Orange County Track Club will sponsor an Open
Cross Country Race at Flnley Golf Course on Saturday.
There will be a two-mile race at 1 0:30 a.m. and a six-mile race
at 1 1. Registration will be at 1 0 a.m. (no fee). All are welcome
to participate.
The pledge class of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority will sponsor
a spaghetti dinner at 5:30, 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the
sorority house (411 Rosemary St.). Tickets are $2 when
bought from any pledge class member, and $2.25 at the door.
A bake sale will be held afterward.
The Wesley Foundation will have a special Thanksgiving
service at 11 a.m. Sunday. The Rev. Manuel D. Wortman will
conduct the special service.
r
A PARTY, Saturday, Nov. 22 at 6
p.m, Villages Apts. clubhouse for
al Veterans Club members and
those interested.
FOR INFO, come bay Veterans
Office in Hanes Hall, and leave
name, if possible.
BEER HAMBURGERS
SNACKS provided
"CHANGE" HAS COME!
The new album from
Spanky & Our Gang.
On Epic Records
f J . ' v
GOOD BOOKS MAKE GREAT GIFTS
BOOKS MAKE GREAT GIFTS
MAKE GREAT GIFTS GOOD
GREAT GIFTS GOOD BOOKS
GIFTS GOOD BOOKS MAKE
GOOD BOOKS MAKE GREAT
GOOD BOOKS MAKE GREAT GIFTS
There's no puzzle to it! Good
Books make great gifts, and,
in North Carolina, good
books flock thickest at
Open 'til 10-7 days a week - in
University Mall and Downtown
Chapel Hill
GOOD BOOKS MAKE GREAT GIFTS
BOOKS MAKE GREAT GIFTS
MAKE GREAT GIFTS GOOD
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2
Th oaiiu Tar Hei ta nublished bv the University of.
North Carolina Media Board; dally except Sunday,
exam periods, vacations, and summer sessions. The '
following dates are to be the only Saturday issues:
Sept. 6, 20; Oct 1, 8; Nov. 11, 25.
Offices are at the Student Union Building, University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514.
Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-0245, 933:
0246; Business, Circulation, Advertising 93
1163.
Subscription rates: $25 per year, $12.50 per
semester.
Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office In
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514.
The Campus Governing Council shall have powers
to determine the Sfudent Activities Fee and to
appropriate all revenue derived from the Student
Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution).
The Dally Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate th
typographical tone of all advertisements and to
revise or turn away copy It considers objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not consider adjustments or
payments for any typographical errors or erroneous
Insertion unless notice Is given to the Business
Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement
appears, within (1) day I the receiving o! the tear
shf its or subscription o the paper. The DaUy Tar
Heel wilt 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 Advertising Mgr. .
Friday,
Calendar
The Seventh Annual UNC Art Auction wilt be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday in the Great Hall In the Union. Sponsored by the
Student Art League, the work will be on view starting at 1"
o'clock.
The Student Academic Reform Committee will meet at 7
p.m. Sunday In Suite C of the Union.
The noted church historian Dr. Martin E. Marry, from the
University of Chicago Divinity School, wiB present the
Wesley lectures at 8 p.m. Sunday and at 10 a.m. Monday at
the Wesley Foundation. He wilt speak on "The Religious Side
of a More Perfect Union: The One and the Many."
Items of Interest
Participate in Kundalini Yoga (meditation, breathing and
postures) on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays in Room
206 of the Union, 8:30-10:30 p.m. Wear loose, comfortable
clothing. The latest offering of Caroiyceum.
Anyone Interested in applying for a Media Board position
please pick up an application at the Union Desk before the
holiday. John Hanford. at 968-9068, will answer any
! questions on what the position Involves.
Anyone wishing to work with the Appalachian section of
the International Handicrafts Bazaar is asked to please sign
up at the Y.
Any persons interested In being the director of the 1976
Freshman Camp should sign up for an Interview today in
Room 102 of the Y.
A seminar in Romanian Language, Literature and Folklore,
ROMN 371. will be offered in the spring semester although it
Lively
Biographies
at Human
Prices
THE OLD BOOK CORNER
137 A East Rosemary Street
Opposite Town Parking Lots
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514
Ever dreamed you
could
PI V?
ji
CAS!I
Come fly with us at Franklin County
Sport Parachute Center, Louisburg.
N.C. Training 10 a.m. every day
except Monday. You must be 18 to
train. $40 includes all training,
equipment and first jump. Group rates
of $35 per person for your own group
of 5 or more.
located halfway
between Franklinton
and Louisburg
on Highway 56.
919
496-9223
MON-FRI
O DINNER DAILY
I
4a
M- ffllMP
SZE SHU AN O CANTONESE
O MANDARIN
IMPORTED BEERS & WINES ABC PERMIT
2701 Hillsborough Rd.
DURHAM - 286-2444
ge. t W -
1 mmmm. I
r.-'.v Sportswear
I I'jB' J worth tracking
down . . .
There's nothing more comfortable than a cable crew. And
there's not a better selection in town than at The Hub Ltd.
Over a dozen rich shades to choose from in Shetland wools
and washable orlons, too. Match the sweater with a pair of
subtle plaid D-ring slacks by Barry. Pure wool. Then track
down the "Dirty Bucks" shoes. Soft sand buck uppers and,
crepe soles. Scotch guard treated, too. All at The Hub Ltd
... downtown Chapel Hill.
103 E. FRANKLIN ST., CHAPEL HILL; CRABTREE VALLEY MALL RALEIGH
SHOP MON.-SAT. 9 TIL 6 SHOP MON.-SAT. 10 TIL 9:30
November 21, 1975 The Daily Tar Heel 3
was eft o'l the course schedule. Interested students should
contact Prof. AygusUn Maissen at 933-2042.
Studenis supporting the classroom smoking bars: Faeutfy
council meet at 4 p m, today In Hemiiton Hart Auditorium to
vote on the smoking ban resolution. Your presence and
opinions are needed at this meeting to show student support
Entertainment of ail kinds is needed lor the intemattonat
Sszaar Coffeehouse. M you can perform in some capacity or
know someone who can. cat! 929-8824 or leave your nam
with the secretary at the Campus Y.
y-.
71 .4Sf: iizmmsi s aSS F :
a jT i f iff m a m a ;
f j' student Uj
(! , spring break " '
cruises
Flavia llt
4-night cruise i
March 8-12, 1976
Bolero
7-night luxury cruise
March 6-13, 1976
Call
Continental
Travel Agency
967-2251
the
intimate
trip
i ...
-Hit'
I
L
vL7Jiil liX H 1 11 11 L HI. H
P NEW MENU -OVER 100 DISHES YOU
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T5frrTft,at
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y
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