Graduation events planned
for weekend of May 1 5
Monday, April 25, 1983The Daily Tar Heel3
By BETH WALTERS
' SUfT Writer
As exam time and warm weather sneak
up on UNC, seniors are counting down to
May 15, when the 1983 graduation cere
monies will take place.
"Graduation will not be just the formal
ceremony on Sunday," said Senior Class
President Scott Phillips. "There are a lot
of other activities which will lead up to
graduation."
One of these is the annual Last Lecture
Series, which will be held at 8 p.m. Tues
day in 106 Carroll Hall. Seniors have in
vited several professors to come and give
their views on how the year has gone at
UNC, Phillips said. All students are in
vited to the lecture.
"It's usually very entertaining," Phillips
said. "The professors do not really lecture,
but give advice based on what they have
experienced during the year."
Events are also scheduled for gradua
tion weekend, Phillips said. On May 14,
NBC news anchorman Roger Mudd will
speak on "The State of the University" at
10 a.m. in Memorial Hall. All students are
welcome to attend, Phillips said.
The highlight of the weekend, of course,
will be the graduation ceremony May 15
The" ceremonies begin at 10:30 a.m. in
Kenan Stadium.
"Only in the case of very, very incle
ment weather will it be moved to Car
michael Auditorium," Phillips said. "It
almost has to be lightning right there on
concert
the field for it to be moved."
Graduating students will line up outside
the stadium on the side next to Teague
dorm, Phillips said. They will form
separate lines according to the type of
degree they are receiving and, after enter
ing the stadium, will sit on the side of the.
stadium next to the Health Services
buildings, he said.
The featured speaker at graduation this
year is James Leutze, chairman of the
UNC Curriculum of Peace, War and De
fense and professor of history. After
remarks by Leutze and senior class of
ficers, the degrees will be conferred. UNC
President William C. Friday will then
speak, and the ceremony will end with the
singing of "Hark The Sound," Phillips
said.
Immediately following graduation,
there will be a reception given by UNC
Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III
on the lawn between Wilson and South
Building.
For seniors who still need caps and
gowns, the Student Stores is selling them at
a cost of $2 for a cap and $10.50 for both
cap and gown, Phillips said;
The DepartmenT oT University Housing
is offering rooms in Hinton James Resi
dence Hall for any or all of the three nights
of graduation weekend. Double and single
rooms are available, and housing will be
guaranteed for all reservations received by
Sunday. Reservation forms may be picked
up at the Hinton James area director's office'
From page 1
drug paraphernalia, Heyts said. North Carolina
Memorial Hospital reported no injuries connected with
the concert.
This year's concert had to work with stricter limita
tions, Wright said.
"Last year's concert had fewer overall problems -because
the concert had 30 (percent) to 40 percent more
.money to work with," she said. "There were no crowd
size limitations nor cooler restrictions. Most of all, it
was 80 degrees and dear."
Hughes said he hoped problems with this year's con
cert would not affect plans for future concerts. "I
would hope that Student Government and the Universi
ty administration wouldn't prohibit us from having a
concert next year because of this year.-
"All our past spring concerts have sold 3,500 tickets
on concert day, and none of them had ever been rained
out," Hughes added. "A lot of factors were beyond
our control."
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Students in attendance were generally satisfied with
the concert. "Rain or shine, this concert was fine," said
Elizabeth Early, a freshman from East Carolina Univer
sity. "I was dandn' in the aisle with a great big smile. I
had to skip classes and a term paper to come to this
concert. I'm really glad I came ... I'm surprised others
didn't"
UNC senior Sharon Boyd said last year's concert was
better because there were fewer restrictions. "Last year
the ushers couldn't control the crowd because they were
watching the concert themselves," she said. "So in
stead, they end up punishing the students. We can't get
drunk anymore."
Some non-UNC students were surprised to find an
alcohol ban upon arriving at the concert. "I brought a
cooler to the concert, but they wouldn't let me take it
in," said senior Joy Cox from Meredith College. "I had
to take it all the way back to the car."
Physicians discuss
aan
gero
war
By SUSAN SULLIVAN
Staff Writer
"The risk of nuclear war over the next two decades
is approximately 50 percent," said Dr. Judith Lipton,
one of the speakers at the "Biomedical Consequences
of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War" symposium,
sponsored by the Physicians for Social Responsibility.
The symposium, a series of eight lectures about
nuclear war and the arms race, was held all day Satur
day in Memorial Hall and was attended by about 500
people.
Lipton spoke on what Americans can do to stop a
nuclear war, and she emphasized involvement in
nuclear freeze organizations and other groups that can
influence our government to take arms reduction
steps.
The long-range effects of a nuclear war are
devastating, said Dr. Gordon Thompson, who spoke
on the ecological consequences of nuclear war.
Forest fires, ignited by the heat of the explosions
from up to 10 miles away, would burn for months,
Thompson said. A combination of nuclear fallout, ash
and other particles would blanket the sky.
Thompson said that in the event of a nuclear war,
the collapse of civilization in the Northern Hemisphere
would be almost certain. In the Southern Hemisphere,
which has only 10 percent of the world's population,
civilization would survive, Thompson said.
He quoted a Swedish study of the results from a
hypothetical nuclear war in which 5,000 megatons of
nuclear force was used. The war was placed in the
summer of 1985, and the study predicted that in
Europe alone, 750 million people would die im
mediately and 340 million would be injured, Thomp
son said.
Dr. Victor Sidel spoke on the "Effect of the Arms
Race on Health and Health Care." Sidel said in
creased defense spending has reduced civilian produc
tivity, increased unemployment, and increased the
average length of unemployment.
Sidel advocated an immediate freeze on nuclear
weapons, and an increase in health care spending A
freeze on nuclear weapons research, production, and
deployment would save only $6 billion in the first year,
but in 10 years, the savings would exceed $200 billion,
according to Sidel.
Dr. Robert J. Lifton spoke on the psychological ef
fects of the arms race and the specter of nuclear war.
"Never has there been a greater and more significant,
wave of revulsion against nuclear war," said Lifton.
For the past 40 years there has been a psychic "numb
ing" of the mind against nuclear war, with people re
fusing to think about it. But there is a growing "strug-.
gle to break out of that numbing, a primal struggle of ,
the mind," Lifton said.
He said we are now engaged in "a struggle to ima
gine the real." For too long we have been under the il
lusion of a limited, controllable nuclear war. "The
simple physics of the weapons makes it impossible to
exert control," Lifton said.
Herbert Scoville Jr., president of the Arms Control
Association and former analyst for the CIA, said "our
national security policies don't have any rationality.
We are making the outbreak of a nuclear war more
and more likelv." Scoville said both the 1 imteH !tatpc
and the Soviet Union are procuring weapons that
make war more likely, such as first strike weapons.
Multiple warhead weapons, MIRVs, are the most
dangerous of recently developed weapons, Scoville
said, because these weapons can destroy many ICBMs
with one launch, but they must be fired first and must
strike ICBMs while they are still on the ground. This
makes it an advantage to fire first, and this increases
the likelihood of a nuclear war, Scoville said.
"I don't find this a prescription for security,", he
said.
According to a newsletter published by the Physi
cians for Social Responsibility, a 20-year-old Depart
ment of Defense study determined 400 nuclear war
heads to be the minimum number of nuclear weapons
necessary to deter the Soviets from launching an at
tack. The United States has 10,000 nuclear weapons
today, the newsletter stated. .T
Thomas Halsted, director of Physicians for Social
Responsibility from 1981 to 1982, proposed four steps
to be taken to reverse the arms race. "First, there must
be a freeze in production, testing and deployment of
nuclear weapons in every way possible," Halsted said.
Halsted said the second step was to immediately
ratify the SALT II treaty and any other arms reduction
treaties being negotiated.
The third step is to adopt a "no first use" position
for nuclear weapons. Halsted said the current policy of
the United States is the first use of nuclear weapons if
the United States was losing a conventional war.
The final step, according to Halsted, is to honor all
existing treaties. .
D YOU
HERPES AN
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How to protect yourself, prevent and control Oral Herpes,
Genital Herpes and Shingles through nutrition. The no-drug
way to control Herpes.
By William Carroll Odom
Manuscript drafts now available in the undergrad library.
More copies available on request. Book to be published in
early May.
Author available for group or individual discussions upon
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Ordered by.
HERPES & YOU (book order form)
. Ship to: (use only if applicable)
(name)
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mail-order form
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$125
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Wholesale discounts on volume orders will be quoted on request
Add any applicable state sales tax (don't forget)
Make checks payable to: HICA Publications :
Mail to: HICA, P.O. Box 1248, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514
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