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Last Lecture. Series East Duke Bidding Dr. Richard White Enworth Poetry Reading Tonight, 7:30. CJje Bufee Chronicle Tonight. 8 o'clock

Volume 63, Number 82 Durham, North C. Monday. May 6. 1"6S Committee Students to re-evaluate formed on their role in Edgemont

education A recant rise of tensions in Durham's The YMCA Community Concern Com­ in Edgemont or another poverty area impoverished Edgemont section has lead mittee is presently approaching the heads in Durham during the summer and is The new Educative Involvement Com­ Duke students, through the different of independent, fraternity, and freshman interested in working on arts and crafts mittee of the Student Union had its campus organizations in which they are houses, asking the living groups to share or organizing a newspaper that the first meeting last week to plan ways involved, to re-examine then- com­ in supplying the Community Center with children can help staff is urged to call of achieving its general goal, "finding mitment to that community. the equipment it "desperately" needs. Alex Newton at 2091. Those interested new approaches to education at Duke." While projects are being undertaken The reereational supplies are needed in participating in the "Living and Learn­ Since the committee is ne wthis year, to supply the Edgemont Community to entertain the poor children in Edge­ ing" project in Edgemont are asked it must come up with entirely new Center's greatest need—the need for mont. The living groups are being asked to contact Dean Carboni; applicants must structors and ideas. Rich Reisman, recreational equipment this sum­ to give funds they oan earmark for be accepted into this progrm. tihairman of the committee, said that mer—students in organizations from the specific equipment or give to buy the The Edgemont crises and the ensuing his group would "try to innovate new YMCA to the Inter-Fraternity Council supplies most needed. requests for financial 'aid from Duke .•programs so that students can become are examining their role, as "middle- university have led Duke students to 'real participants, not just spectators, class white students," to a poverty area AMONG THE NEEDS ARE: A attempt to "realize what's happeing, in an educational experience that goes of 1500 people, 60% black and 40% playground shelter mounted in concrete to find out what should be the real well beyond the classroom. For instance, ($500); two large, heavy-duty picnic goals, and to push for these goals." the Vigil has awakened the students tables ($59 eadt); a stone or brick The YMCA Community Action Com­ to some very relevant issues; we're THE EDGEMONT CRISIS, agitated grill ($35); a portable, sturdy ping pong mittee, in response to this demand, deriv­ to try to keep that spirit alive by the death of Martin Luther King, •table ($140); a "top priority request" . Wc'r, was revealed through the murder of ed several possible courses of action by d ; with i 5 Uke t pool lable (SJOO); jungle gym equipment it might take to aid the Edgemont com­ work with North Carolina a white youth in front of the community ($400); indoor body building equipment, munity. College, the faculty, other student groups, center, a death occuring when Duke including bar bells ($44); peg boards The first possibility was a boycott and anyone else who can help us increase students were embroiled in the Vigil. ($70), and wrestling mats, which can of stores Uiat discriminated against ithe educational opportunities at Duke." It is feared that the trial of the black be used for tumbling as well($60). blacks; Duke students also could be youth indicted for murder set for mid­ Pointing out that the Community THE COMMITTEE has .divided up encouraged to join a credit union that summer, may precipitate unrest among Center's facilities are not used by many into three subcommittees for more may be established in the community. blacks or whites, depending on whether children, because they have no way specialized work. The NOC Coordinating Students may be asked to draw up the accused is acquitted or sentenced. oi getting to the center, the Edgemont S-'b-committee, headed by Doug Hastings position papers on Edgemont, and Several incidents in which the car win­ workers are asking for funds to purchase (and Dan Gregorie, will work with North present these to the Durham city council dows of white and black workers serving either a school or micro-bus. Besides Carolina College in initiating exchanges and the city manager's office. Duke Edgemont have been smashed have pro­ regularly transporting children to the t>etween the two campuses, such as Slum dwellings in Edgemont organizations could invite Edgemont moted the fear that certain white .center, the bus could be used to take special seminars or a yearly Spring community members to speak before Recent crisis in poverty area has forced Duke students to evaluate resentfiC of the projects them on field trips, as well as doubling Symposium. This group will also be their meetings, paying them a n their role in helping that community of 1500. v operating in Edgemont. •as a truck for carrying supplies. concerned with lhe Vigil's relation to honorarium of 175. ithe campus. WSGA pledged last Tuesday night to raise $1000 to contribute to the Edge­ BANQUETS could be held at the The Extra-curricular Education Sub­ mont center. Each dormitory has been Chicken Basket, the black-run restaurant committee, headed by Rue! Walker, will Trustee action on Vigil demands given a quota amounting to about one that donated chicken suppers to the work with faculty, other Union com­ dollar per person, and is permitted to Vigil, and patronize other black mittees, and living groups to find new raise the funds in any way they wish. businesses. Students could also serve ways of using the educational resources Both tiie YW and YMCA have promised as contacts to public housing bureaus here on the Duke campus. This sub- to contribute funds of over $1000 each. and white churches, explaining to them eommitee's major goal is to bring the still awaited as deadline nears Along with the call for recreational the problems of Edgemotit. faculty and student body closer so that supplies needed for Hie summer, the Anyone who wishes to work on the borh can benefit from better com­ Vigil leaders are considering By ARAMINTA STONE Taylor Cole, provost and acting presi­ workers at the Edgemont Community commmittee as they explore these and munications outs&de the classroom. possibilities for resuming the Vigil on dent, speaking of the trustee ad­ Center have redefined the needs of the other possibilities are Invited to leave The Experiments in Education Sub­ Although Sunday, May 12, marks the the main quad if it should become ministration committee saidi "We have community and the future goals of the their name at the East Oampus Center. committee, hoaded by Neal Aronin, will end of the three week moratorium called by Vigil and strike leaders, announcement taken no final action except on the Center. A report entitled, "Edgemont The number is 2909. work with special groups sucii as the wage hike which was presented to the Community Center's Proposal for Sum­ Fund for Experimental Education, the of any final action on the four union "Things are still very much up in demands has not yet come from either Board as a recommendation and was mer Programming Needs," lists the iiUern a tional students, A r t d s t - i n - approved. I feel, however, that we are .the air," said Bob Creamer. "While faculty or trustee-administration com- we have great faith that the Board results of this realignment of goals and I'eisdente, and off-campus speakers to moving with dispatch." lists the prospects of expanded programs develop Ihese programs and make them of Trustees will take action as they have promised to do, we must be for the future. more available to students. These sub- The trustee-administration committee ALL OF THESE GROUPS are ap­ prepared if their solution is not satisfac­ In a section labelled, "Criteria for Freshmen committes are by no means limited met Friday afternoon with the faculty parently working with this week-away tory or in the event that they drag, Establishing Long-Range goals," the to the programs' mentioned; committee. Plans were formulated for in mind. their feet." Center pledges to expand its services •another meelirm on .'-in turd ay, May 11. for the three-month summer to include "We have heard nothing from the "special and creative new ways" of reflect on Dr. John Blackburn, head of the hoard since their statement two weeks working with the center's members year Attorney General Clark faculty committee, said that the Friday -around. The Edgemont woskere hope meeting was primarily for the purpose ago and wonder, although we have the greatest faith, if they've forgotten that that a strong summer program will of exchanging information." Concerning generate a successful winter one. the meeting planned for Saturday, we're still here. They must realize that University we're still serious," Creamer said. Plans for the summer program in­ will speak at Page Blackburn said that while he could not clude a night of movies, another for say with any certainty whether any and talent shows, .and periodic By DAVE BADGER By RICK DENNERLINE MR. CLARK Was a private attorney final decisions would come from it, he A MEETING of all those involved field trips, until 1961, when President Kennedy considered it of "major importance." in the Vigil will be held in 101 Union "All Souls CoJlege (Oxford) planned •Ramsey Clark, U.S. Attorney General, nominated him as Assistant Attorney Building at 9 p.m. Thursday. All those OTHER PROGRAMS OPERATING in better than it knew when it limited h'as rescheduled his addreiSs to Duke interested are urged 'to come and express Edgemont are asking for Duke students Hie number of its undergraduates to General. He became Deputy Attorney THE BLACKBURN COMMITTEE has students, and will speak Wednesday. General in 1965, and in 1967 Pros idem their views. to aid them. Anyone wishing to work four; four is exactly the right number Prior to his 7:30 P.M. appearance in prepared a number of proposals which for any college Which is really intent Johnson nominated him as Attorney it plans to release later in the week Page Auditorium, Clark will talk at General, on getting results." 3:30 in the Duke Law School. to be used as a basis for discussion •Although he holds controversial views with lhe trustee-administration com­ SO CONCLUDED Albert Jay Nock, The topic of Mr. Clark's address on such issues as wiretapping and is not known, but he is the Johnson mittee. in his Memoirs of a Superfluous Man, criminal confessions, Clark is thought who undoubtedly visualized thc ideal Administration's spokesman on big city of very highly by most police officials. crime and riots, and is currently involved Blackburn said that the proposals pro­ freshman, sophomore, junior, and seinor Mr. Clark "is more interested in vide for an employee organization and classes as composed of one member in the attempt to capture the murderer helping local law enforcement agencies of Dr. Martin Luther King. representation. He would i each. More realistically, in a university commented Quinn Tamm, head of the further. where elach class numbers more than Tae son of Thomas Clark, a former international Association of Police Supreme Court Justice, Olark was bora 1,200 students, those "results" which the Chiefs. school is "intent on getting" must in Dallas, Texas, in 1927. He attended During a speech in Kansas City, •••he University of Texas, where he receiv­ necessaily spring from methods af­ Missouri, Clark stated, "Public safety fecting each and every student, just ed his B.A. in 1949. He did his graduate is the first purpose of government. Police McLeod work at the University of Chicago and as in the college of four, and each are the first team in government charged student, as his class grows, will find in 1950 obtained his M.A. in American with responsibility for the safety of our . it increasingly difficult to voice personal citizens." asks funds sentiments which might in any way THE ATTORNEY GENERAL hopes influence the school's decision-making. At Duke University, one could scarce­ that -the federal government will lead By BRUCE WILEY Housing to •the way in research and training to ly claim that students directly influence strengthen local law enforcement." The Stef McLeod Appeal Fund, which school policy; in fact, t*he University began April 8 when McLeod was arrested probably has very slight conception of be discussed "Intense scientific research in all for violating the city's t'urfew, has raised student "opinion" — whether critical of areas of police and criminal justice ac­ about $300. It needs an additional $400 or favorable to time-worn institutions The new blue-ribbon committee ap­ tivity," Clark reiterated in the same to meet court costs and lawyer fees. or "policy" in general. The freshman pointed by Dr. Knight to study the speech, "is of the greatest importance." The fund depends on contributions class, which might be regarded 3B "least residential system is conducting an open from sympathetic students and faculty. knowledgable" or "least influential" at Clark stresses the importance of the meeting Et 7 p.m. on May 9 in 204 According to volunteers manning the a large university, has, here at Duke, safe streets and Crime Control Act—"the East Duke Building. booth on the main quad, faculty members reacted strongly—«nd at times heart of the national strategy against Any student, faculty member, and have responded more enthusiastically vociferously—to many conditions; lacking crime"—and the Law Enforcement administrator who has ideas for im­ than students. unity, however, it has failed to achieve provement of the University living Ass Stance Act is training police to significant recognition (with the ex­ system is encouraged to attend this modernize their methods of operation. lrfcLeod was arrested in the rear ception of the recenUy approved legisla­ meeting. The committee has been parking lot of the Men's Graduate Center tion governing freshman driving meeting steadily this spring, gathering Argues Clark: "It is certainly not on the first day of the strike of Duke's privileges). data about residential problems and tough to stick with the 19th Century non-'academie employees. He was acting Random polling and questioning of possible routes for improvement, and techniques so prevalent today, or to as a student picket coordinator on behelf members of lhe Class of '71 (an informal the members hope to get new ideas deal only with the surface symptoms of Local 77. polling reached approximately 4 to 5 and to encourage interest in the Universi­ of crime while neglecting its deeper per cent of combined Trinity and ty community by having the Thursday •roots. . ." After he had conferred with some Engineering male freshmen recently) discussion. of the pickets in front of the Center, reveals great concurrence in sen- THOUGH EVERY SEGMENT of Hie Particular emphasis is placed on h > turned right on Erwin Road and timenl—and frustration with the seeming University community that is concerned police-community relations, which Clark then entered the parking area. As he inability lo openly expound such views. with undergraduate affairs is calls, "the most difficult and important began to distribute picketing signs to Though rellocting concern on matters represented, the committee is not police issue of the next decades." demonstrators in the rear corner, he of both significance and insignificance, was arrested, it is reported. formally a . representative "body of Answering to charges that he is "soft" these views should not be proclaimed delegates from interested groups. Rather, on tew enforcement, Clark replies, "We McLeod proceeded under the assump­ representative of the whole freshman it is a study committee appointed to have neglected law enforcement for tion Unit he was in no danger of violating class, but rather as an incomplete in­ tuave ideas about thc problems of un­ decades. We cannot compensate for that the curfew because lhe University owns dication of what many a "typical" dergraduate life at Duke and their solu- now by excessive force or by mclhods the property on all four corners involved, freshman considers a "matter of con­ of police action that aTe incompatible and because thc Mayor's proclamation cern." More than likely the fresh-man Participant of lie-in The commiHee is composed of ten with what a free people would want 11,• i•!.ii11''11 complete freedom of move­ class is not unique in many of its students, seven members of the faculty for themselves, and America had better ment on both the Duke and the N.C. 50 people gather in Duke Gardens with exotic clothe? (Continued on Page 4) and six administnators. Dr. Howard face the fact." College campuses the Chronicle was told. music, to covort while city onlookers stare. is the chairman. TJhg IJultc Chronicle The arrogance of class

Editor's note: Tho following So'uihernism is as bad as anti- Who ,s more liberal? his May to lend his prestige to the well with Lyndon. So he's political analysis was written Ki'grmsm" It look lough- On the issue of lhe bariliy a man who flees timidly hy .lack Newfield for the minded socialist Irving Hewer war both McCarthy and Ken­ i-.r.ipe :-.'rilii'i-s. He iias spoken from power. He seeks it as Village Voice. As he notes later to remind the liberals lluil nedy joined the Senate at their rallies, attacked iheir !• i.L.erl.v as Kennedy, in the column, Newfield is an "in domestic policy. (Harry) dissenters in early 1966 long oppressors, helped raise fluids But, vou sav, at least he's ardent Kennerly supporter. Truman was, if anvihing. after Morse Gruening and and their leader C a e a r nu! evnical. Nonsense. The Stu­ slightly lo the left of Fulbright began the revolt on Chavez is running as a Ken­ denl 'volunteers who went up Whal candidult: for Presi­ Sevenson." the doves. On civil liberties nedy delegate even though few to Nea Hampshire to r dent, hack during the plague So, while folksy .southern Kennedy is supposed to be migrants are registered to vote Mcl'arlhy wore nol only told ol McCarthyism, drove the KL ..Hiver crusaded lor civil lhe residual McCarthyile but and Ihe growers lend lo eon- to gel a shave and a haircut "left-wingers" out of the rights ag a inst political last year HFK was one ol Iriiutted generously lo the par­ ihev were inst fueled not to, Center presents challenge Farmer-Labor Party, voted to machines, against niin'.oli.lies only two Senators to vote ty treasury. talk aluai! tbe war but about outlaw lhe Communist Party, and special interests, against against funding the Subversive and voted to cite dramatist crime and corniplion the af­ Activities Control Board; the Is Kennedy the candidate of But, if you persit, Kennedy The crisis in Edgemont has forces them to ask college students lo for contempt of fluent liberals went madly for Good McCarthy voled for the lhe machine? was i-olil and ruthless for presented Duke students with a new aid their programs financially. Giving Congress? Adlai's wit, wounded eyes and appropriation. It seyms clear that Hubert deciding to run when lie did. Bobby Kennedy? No. challenge. funds earmarked for recreation is one aij(i.e-;),jii;ies manner. And it Bui the most important dif­ Humphrey is tlie candidate of I am'ee it was a rotten and iaigeno. McCarthy, is for the same superficial ference between lhem are the the regular parly apparatus, Inilol way lo outer. 1 make Traditionally, the challenge has method of aiding the Edgemont Com­ What candidate for President reasons that they now love issues of race and poverty. not Kennedy. In fact, there no claims for Kennedy's moral been: if you are truly committed, give munity Center workers and members is so emotionally removed from McCarthy for his style, nol Kennedy is an urban man, is almost no place in the coun­ purity. He's an Irish pol. Bul the underclass that he has of your time io work with the poor to work with the poor, for the poor. for the substance of his McCarthy is a small town try where ihe machine is for Ihe way he announced seemed voled to exclude agricultural politics. They perceive him as Kennedy. In Indiana it is for lo me an example to slupidity, in the slums of Durham. Today, with man. Thc details arc boring The poor, partially because of their workers from minimum wage a literary rather than a hut there are a dozen senate Branigan. In Texas it is for spontaneous and unplanned: flocks of tutors and droves of individuals dearth of financial resources, are protection and has voted to political figure. That he writes voles where Kennedy showed Connally Mayor Daley? Drew hardly calculated or schem­ bent on cleansing the walls of thc Com­ reduce rent supplements irom poetry is more important to his passion against poverty Pearson reports he's for ing. politically crippled as well as $20 million to $12 million? Lhem than what Andrew Another point: many ol the munity Center, the pressing need is while McCarthy voted with the Humphrey. Even in New York economically deprived. This deprivation ? No. Eugene Kapkind lias justly called "his Senate leadership of Long and City, Moses Weinstein came same people who now insist not for personnel but for funds; these of power presenis another opportunity McCarthy. dre.irv senatorial record of Dirksen. But the real (Jf- mil nu- Johnson before he gave Kennedv had no right lo run funds are required to buy the recrea­ What candidate for President pei.lv sellouts ,io the oil and ference between them i ' Kennedy a perfunctory en­ were for Stevenson in 1960. for college students to aid the poverty- is so indifferent to the power gas industries. . . his cynical tional equipment needed to supply a reflected in much more subtle dorsement. The AFL-CIO? Even though John Kennedy stricken by studying such sections as of vested economic interests altitude to politics in general." ways than votes on obscure For Humphrey. Wall Street? had been first lo announce summer of activity to impoverished Edgemont, compiling positions papers, thai he has voted against cut­ Now I do not argu amendments buried in the For Humphrey. The South? and had faced the test of all ting the oil depletion children in Edgemont, who otherwise and petition local government structures there is not a compelB Congressional Quarterly. For Humphrey. Time and lhe primaries. Thc Stevenson allowance, and has voted to be made for supporting \e.vswoen.' Certainly not for partisans on Ihe second day would be forced to lace the boredom to grant the poor an audible voice in Kennedy for example has against Senator Joseph Clark's McCarthy. He is certainly- spent two years putting Kennedy. of ihe convention still shouted of the city streets. ruling the city. ethics reform amendments? more liberal than either together an experimental anti- In tact the professional tor their hero to announce. Charles Percy? No. Eugene Humphrey or Roekelr v ' Traditional sermons have counciled, slum project in Bedford- iHiliiicaus lor Kennedy turn out According to a Gallop Poll, Tutors and other workers will con­ McCarthy. on same issues he is far ahead Stuyvesant based on the notion to be a handful of pro- "So you have given of money, now What candidate for of Robert Kennedy — the puVis'ied in the April 28 New tinue to be needed, but the person most of Dlacks controlling ghetto in­ liberals. William F. Ryan and York Times, 41 per cent of give of yourself, the ultimate sacrifice." valuable to the Edgemont community draft amnesty for resisters, stitutions and blacks making Ben Rosenthal in New York, port of America's liberal arid the CIA. the military-security McCarthy's supporters prefer In the light of present needs, however, decisions. Why is former SNCC John Conyers in Ml as their se­ is he that can distinguish where his intellectual elite, from Kazin complex in general. chairman John Lewis working Philip Burton in . a different link of giving is needed. resources are most necessary, and can and Lowell to Simon and It is not my purpose hero Only two stale chairmen are cond choice, while only 31 per Garfunkel? on Kennedy's staff and why mt prefer Kennedy. This is The underlying challenge to Duke apply his talents — or funds — to those to make the positive case for in the primary did LBJ bury lor Kennedy. No major in­ ? No, Eugene Kennedv since my support for stitution supports Kennedy, the and students when evaluating their com­ needs. McCarthy i n Milwaukee's pabiie example of the growing McCarthy. his candidacy is well-known. black ghetto two to one? On which is why if he makes mitment to Edgemont is the call to "Sophisticated political action" re­ When was the last time the liather my purpose here is it he will be a free man an-i-Koiinedy phobia among white literary left was so the night Dr. King was while middle-class liberals, lt examine the crisis and see what needs quires a dedication to the community to explore tlie deep hatred of murdered why did Kennedy and he will have created hi? unified behind the nag of a Kennedy that is now so chic own bottom-up coalition in the would be the ultimate folly they can best satisfy. The notion that rush to the ghetto and it liberals out of spite helped served that may exclude the physical conventional politican? Not among liberal inte:lec!'.ials McCarthy to his hotel? process, white middle-class are always needed appearance of tlie college student in since the 1950, when Adlai since I fear this hate is becom­ nominate Humphrey, a man Stevenson mesmerized middle- Part of the answer Is McCarthy any less am- who would surely be judged to flood into poor black sectors intent that area for it is not he who is "seen" ing destructive of issues that admittedly is that many ghetto class liberals, while the iiaiiseend the personalities of a war criminal if the Viet­ on "helping the poverty-stricken" is no in Edgemont that helps the community authentic populist rebel of that homes have pictures ot* Robert it. Kennedy surely has been namese ever conducted •their both Kennedy and CMCarthy. Kennedy's brother framed on longer relevant: today, the need for unhappy time — E s t e s lusting to run for President owe. Xuremburg trials. most, but he, who by applying his Part of this hate is irrational their cracked and peeling for a long time. But so has members of the community to run their Kefauver — strolled around end cannot be debated. But Should McCarthy win the resources to the needs that require West End Avenue anonymous­ walls. But beyond that the McCarthy. They are both California primary I would own programs has been acknowledged. part of it I think is rooted •ghetto feels Kennedy is with them, whose actions are the most ly, lt is ;this same class syn­ in three popular myths. The .. ,. expect Kennedy to quit the drome now being repeated for them just as the backlashing ing in the same Democratic race and support McCarthy. However, their economic depravity welcomed. iir-st myth is that McCarthy white working class in Gary Eugene McCarthy. is more progressive in his Party whorehouse. Neither can And I would hope McCarthy It was Stevenson, remember, and Indianapolis feels Ken­ claim to be a virgin. and his movement would be thinking than Kennedy. The nedy is with the tghetto even who chose Alabama's segrega­ second is that Kennedy is the In 1960 McCarthy cam­ prepared to do lhe same thing. tionist John Sparkman as his paigned lo be nominated for The enemies are the men who candidate of the party if tney can't quite prove it. running mae in 1952. It was machine while McCarthy is the Vice-President. He came to the have burned Vietnam, who . Stevenson who endorsed thc This feeling about Kennedy in convention publicly committed have butchered the poverty Student government role people's candidate. And last the ghettoes will not be ir- Smith Act, Sevenson who re­ that Kennedy is abnormally io Lyndon Johnson and then program, who have slandered mained alaa: from the first t elevant next summer. lo give a boost to the "stop- and indicted dissenters, who atnl)i:iotis and cynical while While McCarthy has in­ What is the role of student govern­ forcement into the hands of the student • iii- -,.., .. • • JFK" forces he nominated have made lying, a casual in­ MeC.nMiy is a sort of explicably voted against bring­ ment within a university? judiciary. movement, assuring in 1956, philosopher-king selfless and Stevenson. In 1964 he cam­ strument of government. The while the m'aids walked to ing migrant form workers un­ paigned vigorously ;j be LBJ's enemy is Hubert Humphrey. This question is one that members On the basis of this fact of ASDU's indifferent to the crudities of der the minimum wage protec­ work in Montgomery, "On civil raw power. runtime male, l-'or months • of the legislature of the Associated lack of real power, there seems to be rights I am a moderate. Anti- tion, Kennedy has gone out o£ McCarthy intrigued lo go to mised '"no more .'' Students of Duke University have been a single alternative. In order to hope forced to ask themselves in hopes of for implementation of their proposals, fry Tom Campbell insuring a continued and more pro­ ASDU must be insured of significant ductive survival. Two answers im­ student support in order to convince mediately present themselves for con­ administration officials that their posi­ Social justice: the strength to dissent sideration. tion is indeed significant. The first is that student government Students must recognise the areas "No one, white or Negro, separate and unequal." —an for our racial and mouth support for racial policies would he potentically But meanwhile, back at Duke conduct itself as a full-fledged and limits of their power in order to is wholly free from an in­ The Commission's report equality while resisting efforts tlisaslrous for our democratic heritance of prejudice in feel­ goes on to predict: "To pursue in die hallowed halls of our to raise its taxes to further society, A superficial and un­ government analogous to a state be effective. In many areas of decision ing and in thinking as to racial our present course will involve eapitol building, our represen­ •that end. committed unity is far more legislature or the within the university, students have no questions. Mutual u n - the continuing polarization of tatives to the 90th Congress And the black poor remain dangerous than responsible Congress. Such a thesis, however, runs power other than what persuasive derstanding and s y m p athy the American community, and, have cut $27 mdlion out of stranded in the ghetto, becom­ and constructive dissent. between the races will be ultimately, the destruction of the Headstart program, cut ing year by year increasingly The time has come to -root into fundamental problems. power they can muster. This persuasive followed by harmony and co- basic democratic values. back ghetto health centers by frustrated and aliena­ out :he last vestiges of racial The first of these is that ASDU has power is dependent to a large extent i But these can come "The alternative is not blind another S27 million _ com­ ted toward the society that inequality. We cannot hesitate of massive student support. Obviously inily aller i lie disappearance repression or capitulation to munity action program's by |30 ally recognizes their without running the risk of no final power in the decision making million, and thc Neighborhood yet refuses to take being engulfed by the storm 1500 students encamped on the quad of prejudice. Thus the remedy lawlessness. It is the realiza­ process of the university. All that the is necessarily slow; and it is tion of common opportunities Youth Program by $30 million. action to overcome of hatred and violence that legislature can effectively do is to serves as singificant persuasive all the more important that for all within a single society Similar irresponsiveness has them. is brewing throughout our been shown at the state and present resolutions and press for the civic conscience of the "This alternative will require As the frequency and ccommunity shuoul be a commitment to national ac­ local levels. desperation of the riots in­ If we value our society, we ratification and implementation by the*- Again there are few issues which aroused. . . ." tion — compassionate massive And so the sprawling giant tensify, the incumbant politi­ must lind within ourselves the university administration or in some will bring 1500 students to the quad. It is now almost a half a and sustained, backed by the Ihat is America rumbles on cians plead for the nation to strenglh to dissent — as ;•. into another long, unify behind their policies — y and reaonably as cases the board of trustees. To permit any kind of productivity, century since this statement resources of the most powerful was made by a government and richest nation on this hot summer. Significant action polities that have no concrete possible, but as steadfastly as Apparently in the eyes of the students however, the legislature as a body must com mission investigating a earto. From every American from the governmental level existence and are based on our values merit. For it we this is as it should be. When the' be confident of favorable student opin­ I'll!) Chicago rao,. riot. Similar it will require new attitudes. is all but non-existent, and a philosophy of "fight the war dissent loud enough and long action from thc private sector and hope that whatever money enough, we oan hasten the ion. riots in 1935, 1943, 1965, 1966, new understanding, and, above segregated facilities bill came before 19G7, and already in 1968 have all, i ,v wi.l" is still too little and too late. is left over will temporarily day when our dissent becomes the student body last fall, many students This then is the second and most •-.''. the needed arousal The middle class sits secure­ pacify the blacks." support for an awakened socie­ who voted against its passage by ASDU feasible answer to the question of of civic conscience has not ly in its suburban siilit-levels Unification behind such ty that is truly just and free. occurred As a result, tlie 1967 voted not on the basis of their opinion ASDU's role. It must serve as a liason Com il on the race issue, but rather on their between the student body and the ad­ Disorders has been forced i opinion of ASDU's right to pass such ministration. In both areas it must use conclude that: "Our nation is a bill which would have put en­ moving toward two socieites, its persuasive power. one black, one white—, Education: the future of nursing

by Brian Nilson Editor's note: The following educated in a baccalaureate of these and many more third of a three part series system has knowledge outside branches of the profession, but by a student in Santa The lor of actual clinical nursing further education • also open Filomena, the nursing school background in the biological courses which enables her to to them. Although it is not honorary. This part deals with sciences is usually readily be an enlightened citizen and commonly known, nurses can Call them mechanical ants the need for increased viewed as relevant and an interesting person. obtain doctoral degrees at responsibility in the education necessary, but what about the The program at Duke is les in their lield, or consulting the State! "His workers to see that there was Of nurses. sociological and psychological? designed to be a base for they can go on to further voice ended op a crescendo. a State in the future The Perhaps their importance is further education and training in hospitals in a highly At this unexpected ending result of all this was that best exemplified with the fact specilization as well as a specialized part of nursing. i .and ; • that and. . "Tell me more about it, the there was a complete and - there was a great increase The profession of nursing that nurses deal with patients background for general nurs­ Nursing is striving to elevate all was good. The 21 Intellec­ in the areas left to capricious Wraws its basic body of as people, not just with their ing practice. Thc senior year thc standards of health care, tuals were gathered around the new heresy and what it stands barrassed silence. F i Hy for," growled Amte, cutting Amte rescued the meeting. choice, and, roost horrifying knowledge from many field pathology. These patients are in nursing provides students and education is the key. polished iridium table, pa­ of all, to irrational prejudice. and allied disciplines such as members of families as well with a taste of the kinds of Programs such as that offered tiently wailiog bis arrival. No. 18 short. "No. 2," he said softly, "I No. 4 spoke next, "The new believe we all agree on the "By letting the sector " psychology and as other groups with a variety specialised fields that they can by Duke are trying to produce Amte sat and looked around i this i the medicine, which in turn draw of cultures, religions and socio­ enler within the nurses who will be able to the table. i.iiy is totally alien to urgency and dangers involved the S; Hegelians' ancient and in this case, but that is no Workers found that only 5% from many others. Because economic classes. These are They are involved in public serve patients with all the This had been a good group of the previous totals could of expanding knowledge, people with many needs, social health, psychiatric arid ad- a li are available, both of Councilors, but in two weeks accepted way ol life. One of cause to completely loose con­ their basic premises is that trol of ourselves. Remember, do the work of the State. Much technology and specialization and pychologicai as well as ministrative nursing. technical and interpersonal, a new group would be chosen not all things are rational, in work was diverted into non- in all reas, the nursing pro­ physical. They live in com­ Throughout their studies they who are well-educated and at random from the Intellec­ 'Every emotion is a link in •fact, that there is often the chain of slavery' Now, necessary, wasteful aras and fession and .the education of munities with many attitudes, have also seen pediatrics, well-rounded men and women, tuals. This final meeting could not more than 75.22% of the nurses have been greatly af­ values, prejudices, major obstetric and medical-surgical and who can use their just be to announce l:ie suc­ . ing beyond logic. They No. 17, this Councd has so stress what they call the far not accounted for nearly sector's quota was fulfulled." fected with growth and ad­ health problems and enormous nursing. With a degree, they educational basis to advance cessful completion of the 39th "What was the psychological vancement. The necessity lot- social forces affecting them can enter immediatey into any further in health care. Coordinated World Plan. "need" for everyone lo have enough disruption to have the a singular, anti collective iden­ Plan fail by nearly 3%. What effect caused ... the meeting increased inowledge, skills and and their lives, forces which Any of the Council could tity, and they call for service else they have done?" droned on . . responsibility has presented play an essential part in the give the report, so for no to mie who is above even the challenges lor the education way they view themselves and : ir reason he chose No. State, which is complete •'We \ i that, "Well. Dave, this is the last Of nurses which today are adjust to tilings in both health Che ©ubi* Chronicle 18 to give the summation. nonsense lo this Council, Excellence," No. 17 replied. planet we have to check out being met on the bac­ and illness. No 18 stood and began: "Ex­ though we know that this is They have assumed control of before we head back home. calaureate, masters and doc­ cellence, by Whose rule is no reference to a usurper on sector 6-c and have been put­ What does the Log say about toral level. Nursing education at Duke made possible the fulfillment Spiegel." ting their theories into prac­ it?" Nursing has often been view­ is not geared toward patient of all lives in equality, ef­ tice, while faking the district "Hmmmm, Spiegel, in­ ed as purely a practice of care alone The new concept ficiency, freeiioni ami weatib. "Holy Myself." exclaimed reports. First they told the habited for 10 years by a plan­ technical skills. Nurses surely ol nursing which has evolved I must report that the 39th Amte, "utterly fantastic! Are workers that the State would ned community of 300 mining do use a wide varielv of skills. in this century sees nurses Plan has only been 97.202'; Lhey trying to put these ideas not force them to own directors, had to be abandoned some very technical, but . s being educated people with completed, adjusted to two into practice?" everything in common, soon weeks hence." due to a radiation storm. many, many more are covert ves outside the hospital set- "Their first specific in­ leading to greed and massive Though some 5 billion credits and cognitive. The |udgemenl • ng. The Duke nursing school Amte started, but said efficient, unequal, costly act self-aggrandizement among the worth ot three caste proto-life of what, how, when and by -.rives lo educate its students nothing, and No. Hi conlmued, was to put out, somehow, a Workers. After this ttiey mining equipment had to be whom, which underl.e mar.v toward more than just a life "It has come to the attention non-slale supported magazine steadily opened more and left, no one has seen fit to of the observable procedures, •>I servitude to the sick. of the Council that there is called -Iri-atioiiiii New-view* to more phases of the Workers challenge the radiation for instance, entail a great Thus, the curriculum pro­ a new inellieieul tendency further their ideas," said No. life to their own individual deal more than Just being able vides for university courses ,i i.,|i,i.i..,..i|i!ii. H.H,-:, i growing within the population. 7. choices, leading inexorably lo It seems to have been started "What's three caste proto- to carry out some technical ..utsii.le of nursing and the "In this journal," added No. multitudes of ugly differences life mining equipment kind of skill. Nursing education related biological and social hy some well-meaning but in wealth and status among 2. "they have suggested that nnvwav?" Hal cut in. can, therefore, no longer be It o f f e F-r.li, FUJI Workers should possess things them. Finally they propounded "Oh, you know, Hal, they purely tecltnienlh. urieiited. bul for muses t o have since been spreading il. exclusively and be able to do the perverted motto that 'right were those new "synthetic must present a firm mi.side interests by of- 1 among lhe Workers at every what they will with them, even makes might, and announced life" things. Everybody called ibcorelieal framework o n n ever-widening choice f SS^-S.'SB"?'*- -: •••Kmi?tii^Pi opportunity This heresey dctroy or sell them without that it would be up to the lhem mechanical ants." which can be added whatever Monday, May 6, The Uuke Chronicle Golfer shoots 67; News Track team takes Tennis team loses SPORTS By J. B. HOYLE also last week and dropped state championship baok-to-l»ack matches. After In a match between tbe soilering a 7-2 set-back al number one and two teams in Davidson thc team returned 1 LI, :OII encc the league- home to lake on Ihe rugged Felton puts stop to leading Wake Forest golf team South Carolina netters. nipped the Duke goners bv a 13-0 margin last 1 South Carolina — fresh from '. Led by Bob Stuart thc Duke a major victory over UNC team threw a real scare into — downed the Duke netters the Doac team that had won Devil's losing streak Hi straight matches going into 8-1. The lone Duke victory :he contest. came in ihe doubles matches Sophomore left-hander Carle as the Duke Number One team Felton halted thc Duke of Chuck Saaeke and Unite baseball team's five game los­ Although the match was won Mahler defeated Bobby Heald ing streak Saturday by hurling by Wake Forest, most of the and Larry Burham 6-4, 3-6, honors of the day went to Stuart who shot a course record tying round of 67, The The tennis team - now 10 ore from Larchmont and 5 for the season — has N.Y. had seven birdies and a make-up match here Tues­ three bogeys for his best score. day aftelrnoon with Clemson It was the best score on the before heading for College Duke course in the last two Atlantic Coast Conference iHShipfi Thursday Fri­ The Wake Forest team was day and Saturday. led by Johnny Harris who carded a 70. The well-known Hike distanceman ED STENBERG warmed up for next week's Jack Lewis (just back from first varsity season after three years of club status — stands iCC championship by taking both the one and two mile events winning the N o r t h - S o u t h % mers, Jeff Howser, John i Saturday's WTVD meet. Amateur tournament) fired a 3-6 with two games remaining on its rugged schedule. Duke had jumped off to a Brinker anil Charles Carter 73 for the Deacons, but was quick lead in the first inning was barely nosed out for first Senior Mike Williams who had for Duke. Stenberg finished in defeated by Duke freshmen Although the team's record is not particularly impressive as third-baseman Dave place by the UNC squad. won in both his sophomore 9:14.7 Rogers in 9:23 and Bob Goldman who had a 72. Johnson and centerfielder Tim In the next event, the mile and junior years made it three Graves in a 9:23.1 (a personal the team has captured strong years in a row by taking the The loss moved the Duke victories over F a i r 1 e i g h - Teer walked. Shortstop Larry run, defending meet one and career best lor Mike). 080 in 1:53.3. Duke soph Jim The meet ended with defen­ record to 6-3 overall and 4-2 Dickinson and Notre Dame in Davis's infield hi I and a throw­ two mile champion E d Dorsey copped fifth place with ••, ,:,.• ding ACC champion Clint in conference action. The recent weeks. Both of these ing error scored Duke's in­ a timeot 1:55.8. linksmen will meet Carolina teams come from schools with itial run. sophomore speed merchant Brown winning the pole vault at Chapel Hill next Tuesday strong lacrosse programs. Kenny Helms in tile last 100 In the nest event of the and the Blue Devils were slate and then entertains Virginia The second Duke run—which yards for a Duke victory. Sten- day one of the ACC's hottest champs. The most outstanding in the last home match of The team travels to Towson proved to be the wining tally iierg finished in a time of rivalries got a little hotter as performer trophy was awarded the season on Thursday. State for a game Monday and — came in the bottom of the 4:14.5. Duke frosh Phil Wilson UNC's Gary Iverson edged out joint lv to Ed Stenberg and sixth. First sacker Randy picked up 4tii place and some Jeff Howser for a win in then returns to Duke to close Blanchard singled, was Vince Matthes. its season Saturday, at 2 p.m crucial points with an excellent tlie 440 intermediate hurdles. The team now travels to sacrificed to second, and then time of 4:18.0. against Washington and Lee. FRANK RYAN—Scored twice scored on a single to right Previously in the meet Chapel Hill next weekend for in losing effort against Vir­ by Don Baglien. The versatile Jefl Howser Iverson had been beaten out the ACC championships. The ginia. easily won his specialty — for first in the long jump by Blue Devils — led by coaches In the opening contest of the 120 yard high hurdles — an inspired Pete Culver of Al Buehler and Jack Hall — There is more than Familiarity between the day. a Maryland outburst in a time of 13.9. Senior tri- Duke. Culver's jump of 23'8" hope to avenge dual-meet AUTHENTIC in the fourth proved to be cap-ain Craig l-'raser picked bettered his previous best lasses lo USC and UNC by all the Terps needed to take mi fifih place and another vital mark by 11 inches. In the 2nd to the seholarshp- Duke and George's Pizza Palace UNIVERSITY a 4-0 victory over the Dukes point with a time of 149. high jump Doug Jackson — another two-sport man — pick­ laden Maryland Terps. The game had been a Duke had no one entered WHAT? EXCELLENCE STLYES scoreless pitching duel between ed up fifth place with a height in the finals of the next event of 6'2". Duke's Steve Dennison and the — the 440, but track fans were Terp's Tom Bradley until the treated to an exhibition of To no one's surprise the Trustee big fourth. Maryland converted world class form, Vince Mat­ 220 was won by Vince Mat­ a walk, two doubles, two thews of Johnson C. Smith thews. Joe Johnson took se­ singles, and a throwing error ran av.av from the rest of the cond place to give Johnson YOU BET YOUR SWEET into their four-run victory Cheer­ field for a now meet record C. Smith a 1-2 finish in the margin. of 40.2. Matthews is a definite event. Matthew's time of 21.0 rumor LIFE IT'S DIFFERENT... Again in this game, Duke Olympic prospect and is con- tied his own meet record. had only four hits and left leaders ijv many track experts Duke's Chaarlie Carter took AND MOST ENJOYABLE! three men stranded on third to be the 2nd best quarter-man fourth. Ylilt Our Dining Room, Dolicotiiun or Gourmat Stora base. Dennison was the loser elected in the world. At this point in the meet untrue bringing his record to 3-3. with only three events left and BANKAMER1CARD The Johnson C. Smith team The Chronicle was informed In a game payed Friday also captured thc 100 yard Carolina and Duke neck and night, the Virginia Cavaliers In the elections held last neck in the point race it this past weekend that the Two Fine Stores week, the following were dash with Joe Johnson turning Board of Trustees had reached GOURMET CENTER oo-uu put on a late rally to de­ ihe century in a respectable became evident to all those Downtown & Northgate feat the Dukes by a 6-2 score. chosen as next year's 9.6. Football fans will note present thai Duke would have a new position on the status THE IVY ROOM RESTAURANT Shopping Canter cheerleaders: Susie Weber, Val to have a good showing in of Duke's non-academic Frank Ryan's hitting was the Blish, Sally Adams, Robin with interest Ihat fifth spot Coimopoiiran Room and Dalicotamn only big offensive threat that in the 100 went to Wake the two-mile to win the meet. employees, but apparently the the Devils could mount. Tile Anderson, Martha Fowlkes, report was just a "hopeful The big rightfielder singled in the Steve Lindberg, Bud Ris, Chip rore.st'.s Jack Dolbin. The Iron Duke distancemen When asked about the report, second and scored on a double Reed, Steve Kern, and Fred Meanwhile Duke's own two- responded in what had to be Dr. John Blackburn, a n Yoang Hen's Shop and an infield hit. In the Robertson. Four alternates siijri men Robin i;.-- the most thrilling performance associate professor in were also chosen: Joan Logan, Jim IX-arih were chalking up of the afternoon for thc Duke and chairman of points in the field events. Robin fans. Defending champion Ed the newly-organized faculty did his usual line job in the Stenberg ran off from the pack eor.imitlee on employee rela­ javelin placing 2nd behind after the first mile leaving tions said "t h e trustees iilrhvarr! Gill of St. Augustine. senior tri-captain Paul Rogers haven't informed the com­ Jim put the shot 48' 6 1-2" and frosh understudy Mike mittee on any final plans." to tanner 3rd place honors. Graves to battle it out with He also said that, as he Back on the track UNC's UNC's tough little True.tt understands it, the Trustees Goodwin and ECU's ex-Marine have not made any final Ken Voss (a 9:11 two-miler) decisions. for second and third place. He said .that "the faculty In a terrific show of stamina committee will meet with the Rogers and Graves left special Trustees Committee on Goodwin behind and fought off employee relations next Satur- Voss in the last quarter to sweep second and third places .; .• *• •: I ••' .. i.l .7 • .il arrive at something substan­ tial."

DO YOUR STUDIES INTERFERE WITH YOUR COLLEGE EDUCATION? To earn an undergraduate degree, the average student . . . STUDIES 4 years TAKES 40 courses READS 280 books or Olds Cutlass S 80,000,000 WORDS

Reading at 200 words per read faster and better. They minute, it will take you at don't skip or skim: they read r-s:; 115 :a,s (or 8000 hoursi every word. And they under- TheS'standsfor... lo read the required material stand more and remember I-.-, y -ne tne. At 600 wpm it more and enjoy more than takes 100 days (2500 hrs.); they did when they read as at 2CCC wm, 30 days (800 you do. But, no matter how hrs.) Of course, if you want slowly you read, if you don't best way to take tu read your assignments at least TRIPLE VOUR READ- Sporty twlce. i! will take a little ING SPEED with equal or longer better comprehension, READ- leave of vour The Lvelyn Wood READ- ING DYNAMICS will refund ING DYNAMICS | tuition. This we guaran- ta-,-(-ht over 400,000 people to tee. Suave faculties! Shouldn't you tind out more about it? You can, simply by coming to one of the on-campus presentations. We'll show you a film. Explain the course more fully. Furnish details about summer classes. Answer any ques­ tions you might have. You'll tc under no pressure to enroll. If you want to, fine, Shapely if you don't want to, fine. But do come. It could change

Monday. May 6 4:03 & 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. May 7 '30 p.m. Sassy Wednesday. May 8 7:30 p.m. Thursday. May 9 7:30 p.m. Building. Room 231 Swift Any questions? Please write or call (collect): Evelyn Wood READING DYNAMICS Savings Box 592, Greensboro, N. C. 27402 Dial 274-1571 or Mrs. Ruth Black Drive a youngmobile from Oldsmobile 7-D Towne House Apts. PIEDMONT AIRLINES Chapel Hill 942-7142 at your nearest Olds dealer. •_"'iu. The Duke Chronicle Monday, May 0, —Freshmen react to first year-

(Continued from Page 1| of the traditional locating of assistant government?" Most persons housemasters on each floor of freshman were sadly disappointed with ASDU views; that, however, must be left up dorms, but many were upset with role in the second semester, and to option-sampling in lhe other three housemasters who devoted too little time felt that it should either "get with classes to dotormine. As it stands, the to their houses and too much time to it" and "do something—anything—which housing situation, curriculum reform, hibernation-isolation (i.e., study in the the student body generally favors" or university facilities, and student govern­ Law Library). Some of those questioned else thoroughly "abandon ship and ment rank highest in freshman con- hoped that resident faculty members dissolve." Some students noted further (with reduced leaching loads! might that they had less of a conception of OF THOSE POLLED, roughly half someday replace the grad-student what the functions of freshman class were content wilh the housing system housemasters. The question of whether officers were than even of the "fleeting in its present status: freshman houses, maids should be "kept on" attracted figure and form of ASDU." independent cross-seetionals, and great interest, with just over half ol those interviewed proposing their im­ Outside of the above four categories, fraternities in mutual coexistence. Those many smaller topics were popular: a who advocated change were basically mediate elimination (janitors would Con­ tinue in their present capacities); others fair number (though by no means a A schoolday lunch at the A. B. Morris cafe in agreement that frais should be allowed majority) supported the replacement of argued in defense of the employment A better bet, perhaps, than the Dope Shop to budd houses off-campus (or on Cam­ thc two-semester year with the "tri­ pus Drivel for social fimelions, with opportunities which these positions pro- Duke's curriculum and proposed mester" program. One individual thought thc result that fraternity men would that the athletic department's "im­ intermix with Ireshmen and independents reform (whatever thc present status may be at this writing) attracted much com­ portation of jocks" was "ridiculous," in campus cross-sectional dormitories. as "Duke is not a professional arena, Center poses challenge A loud minority of freshmen called for ment: with rare exception, the majority favored the provisions outlined in the and any pulling in of absolute lunkheads "immediate elimination of fraternities deprives potential students who deserve and selective indopendtnts" on the recently released report of the Enolish leather,, Undergraduate Faculty council. to be admitted" of an "intellectual op­ grounds Ihat these are "the greatest portunity." Additional suggestions pro­ Hollow Rock String Band barrier to intellecual growth at Duke posed establishing a creative arts center Curriculum and faculty were oc­ University." Many persons saw the and an art gallery, "fairer" bills to The Duke Folk Festival ne. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION. casionally interrelated in a variety of dance until "Fiddler's Drunk tends to destroy the flavor D, S4.00. S6.50 From the com- renovation of independent houses before be issued by the Department of Housing opened up a whole new world areas of concern (notably dissatisfaction and the Fun's all Over." This that was originally in the i array ot ENGLISH LEATHER fra*ts as dCsrrii-mr-rMon directed at "phas­ Operations (which Currently list of traditional folk music to song, played fast in what must r with tlie Mathematics department and s toiletries. ing out" the Greeks—and most hoped "estimated damages"—-with emphasis most of the students at Duke, be an attempt to tire everyone Biological Sciences course in Biology but there was only one group to see renovation of fraternity sections believed to be on "estimated"), con­ oul, was used to indicate the The album shows this well. I, Some freshmen urged University con­ of performers there who con­ "in the near future." tinuous open-opens in male dormitories, end of the party. Everything These people seem to be tryng sideration of departments of journalism nected that world to the more "top-flight" entertainment is that simple, that direct. to squeeze as much of their and drama, (and several olhers proposed University. There are two things that Surprisingly, residents in freshman throughout the entire school year, spirit — both tn quality and improvement of the Religion The Hollow Rock String one can do with traditional quantity — into a permanent housers saw little call for renovation revocation of women's curfew regula­ Band — fiddle, guitar banjo department's "public relations"). music, and from my point of lorm. The group is breaking of [reshman dorms, preferring that this tions, "immediate halt" to "nerve-wnack- and mandolin — was that con­ view both are valid. One is "privilege" be •reserved for up- up because of the graduation ing" Chapel chimes, and creation of nection, and they repeatedly