Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 3, 1976, edition 1 / Page 3
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Campus Calendar 1 S5 Today's Activities Tha Sailing Team will meet at 7 p.m. In Room 205 of the Union. Regatta schedule for the semester wtlt be discussed and sign-ups will be held for all Interested skippers and crew. There will be a meeting of students interested m establishing a curriculum In PopulationEcology at 7 p.m. in 4S2 Hamilton Hall. Everyone welcome. All Freshman Area Coordinators for Contact 7S wHI meet at 7:30 p.m. In Room 205 of the Union. Students for Fred Harris will meet at S p.m. In the South Gallery Meeting Room of the Union. Plans for a voter registration drive and statewide meeting will be discussed. Register to vote today, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., 2 p.m. to S p.m.. Chapel Hill Muncipal BuRding, North Columbia Street Deadline for presidential primary is March 23. A special meeting of the Campus Governing Council will be held at 7:30 in Room 207 of the Union for appointment of elections board chairperson, academic proposals, et al. The Medics. Technology Club will meet at 7 p.m. In Room 215 of the Union. Elections will be held. All members and interested persons please attend. The movie ZULU will be shown at 8 p.m. in Carroll Hall. Admission tree. Sponsored by the Curriculum in Peace, War and Defense. Chapel Hill ECOS Nuclear Power committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. In Room 206 of the Union. This will be a planning meeting to introduce newcomers to the technology and hazards of the nuclear Industry and decide on a focus for the semester. For further information, contact Debbie Hurwltt at 933-5833. from the wires of United Press International BURG AW Nine men and a woman convicted of charges stemming from racial disorders at Wilmington in 197 1 surrendered at the Pender County Courthouse Monday to begin serving their prison terms. A small crowd of perhaps 30 supporters and family members accompanied the so called "Wilmington 10" to the courthouse where they were convicted in June, 1972, on charges of burning a grocery store and conspiracy to assault firemen. The Rev. Ben Chavis, a black activist who was sentenced to 29 to 34 years in prison as leader of the group, described the ten as "innocent victims" of "political persecution." "We will continue our struggle behind bars," Chavis said. The ten, nine black men and one white woman, were taken to Raleigh, accompanied by two U.S. marshals as well as state authorities. The men will serve their sentences at Central Prison and the woman, Ann Sjj'eppard,' at ,'the. North Carolina 1 ' a fZ Governor discloses patronage power by Ted Goldman Staff Writer Gov. James Holshouser publicly acknowledged for the first time Saturday a shift in federal patronage appointments power from Sen. Jesse Helms' office to his own. Holshouser made his remarks at a press conference during the annual Piedmont (high school) Journalism workshop in Greensboro. The patronage issue first surfaced last Thursday in the Greensboro Daily News, when Helms was quoted in an interview as saying that federal patronage had been taken away from him and given to Holshouser and Gene Anderson, an aide to Holshouser. Usually, this power reverts to the governor only when there is no member of the Presidents's political party in a state's congressional delegation. In all cases, however, the President has final appointment power. Usually, only when there is no member of thePresident's party in state's congressional delegation, does the patronage right revert to the governor or other senior party member. Helms cited the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee (ASCS) nominations as a specific example in which his traditional patronage powers had been undermined, according to the Daily News report. Although both Holshouser and Helms Crab lice infest eventhe nicest people 5 -IS it ! l it ,i Uiu Special comb included Without a prescription at Drug Stores - L w I m I i - J ' lliUk3 lULJa nn bUUil3l Mm ECKANKAR, The Path of Total Awaronaaa, praaanta "ECKANKA3: a Way of Ufa." 2S-minut Km about tha ECKAWKAR movement ami Ra laaoan at 7:30 p.m. in Room 202 of tha Union. Dr. James K. McBumey, professor emejttus and former dean. Northwestern Unhrersrty School of Speech, wtt! speak on "Vistas, New and Old, in Group Dynamics" at 2 p.m. In Room 106 Bingham Hall. Dr. McBumey will apeak on "A Perspective on the Discipline of Speech Communication from 1915 to 1975" at 5:15 p.m. fat the private dining room at the K AW Cafeteria, University Malt. Everyone Is welcome to attend mese lectures. Alpha EpsNon Delta, pre-med and pre-dent honor society, will meet at 7 p.m. In 103 BerryhlH Hall The program win discuss Tay-Sachs disease. Everyone Interested In foining shoulud come to this Introductory meeting. A WRC meeting will take place at 7:30 p.m. in Room 209 of the Union. Surveys will be discussed. Please attend! The Contact 75 Special Projects committee wHI meet at 4:30 In the Frank Porter Graham Lounge. Upcoming Events The Freshman Committee for Orientation will meet at 4.30 p.m. on Wednesday In Room 204 of the Union. A required UNC Ice Hockey team meeting will be held at 8 p.m. on Wednesday In Room 205 of the Union. Students for Jim Hunt will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Room 217 of the Union. Everyone interested In the campaign la urged to attend. Call Bill Pittman for further Information at 967-3453. Dr. Wayne Watson fo Shaw University will speak on "Oral Tradition and the Afro-American" at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday in the Upendo Lounge at Chase Cafeteria. Fred Chappell, award-winning author of the recently published River and five other books of fiction and poetry, will give a public reading from his fiction at 8 p.m. on Thursday in 223 Greenlaw Hall. The free films "Childbirth tor the Joy of It" and "Nutrition In Pregnancy" will be shown at 8 p.m. on Thursday In the Agricultural building at the comer of King and Court Streets in Hillsborough. They are sponsored by the Triangle Bradley Childbirth Association. Please call 732-4481 for information. Wilmington 10 surrender to begin serving terms Correctional Center for Women. Vietnam forfeited U.S. aid WASHINGTON North Vietnam wiped out the possibility of American reconstruction aid by starting up the war again after the signing of the Paris peace accords, Presidential Press Secretary Ron Nessen said Monday. Nessen said the mood of Congress and Hanoi's violations of the 1973 peace accords doomed any possibility of sending postwar aid to the Southeast Asia nation. "Therefore the whole question became moot," said Nessen. Four congressmen who recently returned from Hanoi said North Vietnamese leaders claim President Nixon in a January, 1973 memo to North Vietnamese Premier Pham Van Dong promised the United States would extend $3.25 billion in aid. , Nessen did not confirm or deny the existence of the memo. He told a White House briefing that it is not diplomatic submitted a list of five ASCS board members to Ford, only Holshouser's nominees were selected. Holshouser said that the President ought to be able to have apointees that support his viewpoint, adding that Helms is doing every thing he can to see that Ford does not win the Republican nomination. Clint Fuller, executive assistant to Helms said, "It's upsetting to have to get together with the other North Carolina Republican congressmen and make up a list of qualified board members and the find out that you have to call them back up and tell them no." Fuller noted that Helms said he was not going "to get his nose of of joint" over this. VILLAGE OPTICIAN: CONTACT LENSES fitted polishad cleaned SUNGLASSES prescription non-prescription PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED LENSES DUPLICATED Monday-Friday 9:00-5:30 Saturday 9:00-1:00 With T-Shirting. The do-it-yourself book that shows you how to make your T-shirt uniquely you. By tie dyeing, fabric painting, marker pen art, silk-screening you name it, and do it. You and your T-shirt will never be the same. Paperback, $4.95 at bookstores. RTIC IP tSiiiiii liuij A Do-lt-Yourself Guide to It on Your Chest by Charles Piatt HAWTHORN BOOKS 260 Madison Avenue New York, N.Y. 10016 Scottish dancing wta be laugh! at 730 on Thursday, Feb. 5 In the PI Lambda Phi house on Fraternity Court Confused by the new system of caucuses and conventions? Hear R explained and learn how you can become a delegate to a DoomocraSc convention at 730 pjn. on Feb. 5 at the Community Church, (on the N bus fete) UNC la welcoming Its tonth aorortryf Alpha CN Omega mm be meeting wtth Interested women from Feb. to 1 1. Contact the Panheflercd Office, Suite A, Box 24, o4 the Union for furfrer details. Items of Interest The CGC has Initiated a system to allow any student government organization to co-eponeor speakers on campus. If you have a speaker In mind or are simply Interested in this new servcle, please contact either Doug Mark ham from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Tuesdays or Brad Lamb from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Fridays In Suite C of the Union. The International Center Is now accepting names of people who would like to work on the orientation committee which will plan the fall 1976 orientation for next year's foreign students. Sign up in the International Center, Bynum Halt ' AH organizations interested In receiving student lees please pick up forms in Suite C of the Union. Deadline is March 1. Anyone who would like to help write a Bicycle Pamphlet or who has. Information that should be Included In this pamphlet please call SCAU at 933-8313 or come by Suite B In the Union. Do you want to be Involved in a person's educational development? Are you Interested in helping people? Join the Upward Bound tutoring program. Call 933-12811282 or come by 201 Vance Hall. Petitions for the Feb. 25 General Election may be obtained from the secretary in Suite C and must be filed by Feb. 11. Anyone who likes to cook, plan, organize or simply mingle ' with foreign and American students win be welcomed to help with the international dinners that the Association of International Students Is sponsoring. Call 933-5661 from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and leave your name, address and phone number. The UNC women's Soccer Club will practice Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 4 p.m. on the intramural fields by Carmichael Gym. practice to make public messages between governments. Patty's fiance to testify SAN FRANCISCO The fiance Patricia Hearst ridiculed and scorned will testify at her bank robbery trial her defense attorney said Monday. Steven Weed, whom Miss Hearst called a "sexist pig" and a "clown" while she was underground with the Symbionese ! iberation Army, will be called to tell about the last time he saw her during her kidnaping two years ago Wednesday. "If the government doesn't call him, I will," said chief defense counsel F. Lee Bailey. "He will be my number one witness." After Miss Hearst rejected Weed, whom she had planned to marry before the kidnaping, she professed her love for SLA member Willie Wolfe, who was killed in a shootout with police, and admitted she was living with another man, Steven Soliah, at the time of her arrest last September. Helms has often said that for every five people he appoints, he makes 500 enemies who don't get the job, Fuller added. Phillip Belt, area manager for the U.S. Civil Service Commission, said there were probably only "a couple of thousand jobs" nationwide that relied on federal patronage, adding that the number in North Carolina is extremely small. Belt said he saw "no reason for any basic change " in the present patronage system, explaining that it has the strength of a strong competitive career system, and yet, there are enough clearly labelled executive positions to be filled by the present state or federal executive so that he doesn't lose control. 1200 frames to choose from John C. Southern, Optician 121 E. Franklin St. I 942.3254 Hx to tha Varsity Thaatra Getting aa n if : UJ I -X Report suggests code, race relations changes by Mary Anne Rhyne Staff Writer A special committee of student faculty administrator conference issued recommendations for improvement in the Honor Code and race relations Monday. The suggestions released by the conference's planning committee in a 13 page printed report grew out of a conference held Nov. 21-23 at Camp New Hope. Copies of the report are being given to conference participants and will be made available to the public at a time and place to be announced today. One of the major issues discussed by the conference was the Honor Code. The group suggested eliminating the Honor Code rule requiring students to turn in observed cheaters. The report calls the practice "an unrealistic and counter-productive rule.'" Student Body President Bill Bates said that the rule and the entire Honor Code w ill be discussed by the Campus Governing Council Rules and Judiciary Committee at its next meeting. Race relations was another major discussion topic at the conference. Recommendations in this area include a "gauging of the nature of black related course content in the various departments", the feasibility of creating a Kenan TONIGHT AT THE CRADLE SOUTHWING Cat's Cradle - Behind Tijuana Fats - Rosemary St. SR-50A $67.50 SR'SIA 99.95 SR-52 $299. 95 1 PRoammE with opjiohal PRINTER. AVAILABLE SOON KW. ALL ACCESSORIES 30 V REPLACEMENT Texas Instruments electronic calculator s SHIPPED FREE N. C. CUSTOMERS ABO f, SALES TAX. tMKE CO. cusracRs aoo 4 tax. send checks, h. o. OR CO 0. (SI. 50 CO D. fEE) Surveyor Supply Company P. 0. BOX 999 104 W. CHAWM STREET APEX. NORTH CAROLINA 27502 (919) 362-7000 Mow Siuueei It Is! o ll(SK)U0OB(g S j bid) m la CIioosg f Ragtime Milk Chocolate Assortment in the 14 oz. size Other boxes from 590 to $2.25 TH6AN5UER !5 5IX! $es, if you was 10 MZ IN WITH F0PS5ZTIT, asm wiP awe! I'm BSA31& TDH5LP N0TMWIN6 J rurrurPF IN UfTH P16 ON ANYONE.' i v m ii j JnHREEl) Tuesday, professorship for a black historian and the establishment of a human relations course. The conference also suggested forming a committee to meet regularly to discuss racial problems. It would consist of students and faculty of both races. Bates said this is "close to being set up-" too. A black-white committee has been established and is preparing to begin meeting weekly. A third area of emphasis was academic reform, academic advising, departmental curricula, faculty-student discussions, establishment of a Teaching-Learning Center and a four-course load with varying course credit. Bates said that a faculty lounge and more student faculty mixers are already under discussion and could possibly be realized this semester. He also said "I am enthusiastic that most of what we discussed will become a reality." Bates said the report has some faults but they "can be taken care of in future conferences." Dean of Student Affairs Donald A. Boulton said the conference produced "the kind of ideas so we can have action here." With this as the conference's goal, he said the success was beyond what he had expected. 'Both Bates and Boulton expressed hopes for a future conference as a means of better communication between students, faculty and administrators. rstudent SPRING LAST WE Et to sign on aboard Ship sails March 8-12, 1976 GAU accomodations close Friday 4 night cruise Freeport, Miami taxes & tips Call: CONTINENTAL TRAVEL AGENCYQC7 OOCi NCNB Plaza "uCU I 9 I ID -, i rv n i - nliiiiriiiikN Foni t iiess spj 63t eliicIhts: f Ragtime Milk Chocolates Assorted White, Red, Lavender 14 oz. Satin decorated Box $550 each H0U C0NTKAP1CTEP ME, CHUCK! HUJMAPE A FOOL OUT OF ME IN FRONT Of THE WHOLE CLASS.' 5!X'UJAS THE ANSbUEK... I HAP SAH' 'THREE' WHY NOT?. TMSANj YOU FOLKS BOTH CLYPB, T OKAYOKAYJAKB ITBAS-I FA- LIZ5 THSSBTHIN6S TAKB TM.. EACH QONimiT R3QHT? Weil, IF.. TOPtSOJSS IT I'M NOT Qr M0VMOM! en, fjf . r. iftfff February 3, 1378 The Dally Tar Heel 3 i" Vcrlcy's -. 'Men's Shop 77C Terry Cloth Bathrobes M i JAM.. . . . - . 5 jwiorauroY oporx uoau i Basque Berets Oxford Button-Down Shirts in Stripes or Solids ' Large Selection Imported Pipes and Tobaccos 144 E. Franklin-Downtown CHAPEL HILL 942-2S73 M BEADWORKSli The largest selection of beads in the j Carolina. j Clay, antique, h amber, shell, bone n . glass, wood. Sti' &. seed. q 0 Q k o ! 5 For jewelry, weaving, macrame, f and your own creations. Come in and make a beautiful pair of earrings for under a dollar!!;! 456 West. KranVlin St.. f H Open 10-6 l! in rear of Harmony Foods Mon-Sat BREAK Cruise: the Ts Miami, Nassau, $21 3 including (per person) --- O O f : I 1 ) Milu & Dark Chocolate .A i MMM THEY WORK! 1 1 ()'7(& 4f 9.. I 3 -r A, J .... i p $ 0 50 Assortment. 12 oz. HornratpH heart hr decorated heart box. .11 re WX0HS H0) DON'T LIKE AE, TO DO H03t CHUCK 7 GOOP.NOiO FUASS6ET OUT-I'VE wok, m 6!Z YOU MY NUMBSZ... IFmFS'SANY syT GGTT065T PPSSS5P.. 7 tP I I 1 1 ' 'I' 11 ?
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 3, 1976, edition 1
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