Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 23, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
tf-TKC. Library B mxC&Wervative ? ' WeatherOXZ xctl Offices in Graham Memorial SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Servicf Legislature Okays Polaroid For Daily Student Legislature, in a spec ial session Thursday night, approv ed a $144.92 appropriation request to buy The Daily Tar Heel a Pol aroid Land camera. Four other bills like the camera measure carried from last spring, were put aside without a vote. They are as follows: 1. A bill to recognize Parlance magazine as an official publica tion of UNC and to provide $1,800 for four of its issues was sent back to Finance Committee for fur ther study. 2 A resolution advocating the withdrawal of the Yackety Yack from the Student Government bud get for 1961-62 was withdrawn pending rewording. New Research Against Cancer To Begin Here Dr. Margaret C. Swanton, asso ciate professor in the department of pathology, has announcd a new program in cancer research, utilizing exfoliative cytology. . The Exfoliative Cytology Train ing Program, to be conducted under the auspices of the School of Medicine and the U.S. Public Health Service, has a grant from the U.S. Government. Exfoliative cytology is a new method for the detection of cancer in jft'pmqn. Its advantage is that4t allows' early :' detection, diagnosis, 1 and treatment. Dr. Swanton announced that young women will be hired to work in the program. They must have completed at least 2 years of col lege, with 12 semester (18 quar ter) hours in biological sciences. She added that all successful ap plicants for this program will re ceive a one-year , training program in exfoliative cytology, while re ceiving a stipend of $200 to $225 a month. Dr. Swanton is receiving appli cations now. She noted that this is an excellent opportunity for stu dent wives and UNC graduates. Language Building 55 Pet. Done Time is running out for side walk engineers. The William M. Dey foreign languages building, located near the Louis R. Wilson Library is 55 complete and progress is good, according to the Univer sity engineer's office. Expected completion date is currently set at May 8, 1962. Plans are to open the building for the first session of summer school . 1962 as reported in the capital improvements report. The $7,50,000 building, a part of the 136M962 capital improve ments will alleviate the cramped and crowded conditions' in the existing facilities. There will also be more room for gradu ate courses. Four Floors High Standing four floors high, the building will be totally air-conditioned. It will contain 32 class rooms, 59 offices and 8 language laboratories. These 103 rooms will have a total square footage of 53,690, according to a spokes man for the University engineer's department. The language laboratories will feature a recording room and a control room. Architects for Dey Hall are McMinnv Norfleet and Wicker ol Wisstoa-Salem. : ' Camera Tar Heel 3. A bill to appropriate $145 to buy the Student Government office a typewriter, was tabled . . . , . Amendment Approval 4. A bill which would offer for student body approval a constitu tional amendment providing for the election of the head : cheer leader by the other cheerleaders rather than in popular campus election was postponed . until next week's session. Six new bills were placed before the body which : committees will begin hearings on this week. Jud icial Committee will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Graham Memorial. One of the proposed measures is a request for $225 to buy records for Carrier C urrent, the campus radio hookup. The bill notes that membership in the RCA Victor Classical Club and the Columbia Popular Record Club would en title the station to a minimum of 300 long play recordings in the coming year. Seven Submitted Names of seven students were submitted to the body for consid eriation to appointjments to SG committees. Legislators will vote on the candidates next week. They are Walter Dellinger, chairman of the Last Lecture Committee; Hen rietta Brown, Pat Ellis and Benny Carlan to the Woman's Attorney General's staff; Dave Bland to the Academic Affanrs Committee; Brownee Lee to the Campus Affairs Board; Clyde Benton to the Attor ney General's Staff. - Bill Straughn, chairman of the National Students Assn. at UNC delivered a report on past activi ties and plans for NSA, in accord ance with the policy of having groups which use student appro priations rnake regular reports., to the Legislature. : ' Kage Nails AF Cadets Lt. Col. Gordon D. Kage, pro fessor of Air Science, greeted AFROTC cadets in Carroll Hall Thursday. The cadets assembled for their first leadership laboratory of the year, were challenged to uphold the caliber of - the Air Force by being good officers themselves. "Everything that is worth work ing for is not easy," the colonel said. "Look around you, one of six of you will receive a commission in the Air Force." In stating the purpose of the AFROTC, he told cadets that the purpose of the unit is to develop leadership quality. e r i -ff - ' 1 t ' -ft J"- ' : : '- ft' " -i. H S i; : CARPENTER AT WORK- Here is a workman finishing the last stages of the new langauge build ing. He is building the wooden cinlis for the con WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By United Press International Congolese Attack Town ELISABETHVILLE, The Congo (UPI) Hunger-crazed Balubu tribesmen shouting and screaming for food poured into Elisabeth ville Friday and attacked a grocery. They were beaten off by Katangese police armed with batons. v , ' - The Central Congolese government issued a commique in Leopold ville Friday saying it had informed Sture Linner, United Nations Civil ian chief in the Congo, it was duty bound to end by "its, own means" the secession of Katanga Province. There, were reports some govern ment leaders were demanding an invasion of Katanga. . ' : Reports reached this frightened city that tribesmen had killed two whites, slashed two others with their panga bush knives and kidnapped a white girl. White civilians were fleeing outside the city. Moves To Adjourn , ; WASHINGTON (UPDCongress pushed ahead with its adjournment plans Friday after its leaders assured President Kennedy they could reconvene within 24 hours in case the international situation worsens. The House and Senate hoped to quit for the year Saturday night provided tney could get together on a foreign aid spending bill and resolve several less troublesome matters. The House originally voted $3,657,000,000 for foreign aid and the Senate $3,196,000,000. . , A House-Senate conference committee was charged with compromis ing the differences but its members had trouble calling a meeting. They scheduled a bargaining session but it was cancelled at the request of House conferees who said they thought Senate members should be given a chance to clean up some other business first. OAS Seizes TV - ' f ALGIERS (UPI) France's secret army organization OAS seized Control of Algiers's television station for the second consecutive nitht Friday night and touched off a series of noisy demonstrations against President Charles de Gaulle. ' ' A series of bomb explosions rocked Algiers and other major cities in Algeria Thursday night and Sunday following the first television pirating Thursday night. Authorities said at least seven persons" were killed and 37 injured in outbreaks of anti-government terrorism. Rusk Calls For Appointee c - UNITED NATIONS N. Y. (UPI ) Secretary of State Dean Rusk urged Friday that the General Assembly immediately appoint "an out standing world leader',' as interim U.N. administrator to replace Dag Hammarskjold.- ; - ' i :- - Rusk, in a New York speech to the foregin Press Association, thus publicly threw U. S. support behind the drive of ajv informal committee of 13 non-committed powers to solve, the crisis caused by Hammar skjold's death in an African air crash late last Sunday. Union Leaders Meet DETROIT (UPIWLocal union leaders met in daylong sessions here Friday in a new United Auto workers' effort to clean up local strikes against General Motors but some indicated they would not , easily be pacified. . "They're trying to take away now things they gave us years ago; they're not going to do it," said John M. iMcCarrell, president of the rebellious UAW Local 544 at General Motors' West Mifflin, Pa., stamping plant. r ' : There still were 26 GM plants that had not reached local contract settlements with the union despite agreement on national contract terms. JFK Signs Peace Corps WASHINGTON (UPI President Kennedy Friday signed bills that made the Peace Corps permanent, expanded the program for changing salt water to fresh and granted federal help to the states in figWing juvenile delinquency. They were among 22 new laws put on the books by the President before he left the capital to spend the weekend at Hyannis Port, Mass., deliver an important UjN. speech in New York Monday and then take a week's vacation at Newport, R. I. ...... 57 , ' - . i ' i o.. ! i crete beams if he's caught concrete! - $ 1L . Lihft ,' vOan Rusk that support the building. Looks as his legs between the board, and the IN PLACE OF OLD 111 Hall To A.dd New ComiDlete For -- r 8 "r f -t i U ' I ' I IvzmmAm.: w.l t-mi-; If. 17 r" lt r'r!'f ' I I IJM I I I I I 1 I . v trL ,w . . n'-J- -j i,5.,.' Ill' J (I I l !M::r-'tvi v lfcmm, f J f f If L ;' - 3 ' v-. , - - LJ LI I if r v ' ' , x - ' ' i -, . y . ; y:.;7H;O y-c: :: . ':r:vx::o::i.:: : ,r, . -r. . : . : : : :: ; yfe-:..:-s::-:-:vros-A: :: : : : yyy yy.y. : ::x . fx.. I 1 s . " ' ' " - ' r? - . I .. l PLAYED OUT Hill X the Naval building which has served as an annex to' Hill Hall until this year, will no' longer house the sounds of music. A wreck ing crew is now busy playing a symphony on its IE ast Germain US By JOSEPH B. FLEMING BERLIN (UPI) The East Ger man communists detained two American soldiers for six hours Thursday near Potsdam. . It was the- first case of communist inter ference with allied autobahn traf fic since start of the latest crisis Aug. 13. The U. S. Berlin garrison flew a three-man military police guard Friday to the isolated West Ber- l i n conclave of Stemstuecken which retired Gen. Lucius D. Clay visited - m a surprise helicopter flight Thursday. The three M.P.s immediately began patrolling the 3,000-foot barbed wire barrier the communists erected around the enclave, isolated in the Soviet zone. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev messaged a left-wing labor conference meeting in East Berlin that the West is threaten ing a war over Berlin that "would mean an atomic world catas trophe." Enlarge Forces The communists disclosed they are incorporating their 50,000-man border police into the regular army, bringing its strength. to an estimated 135.000. to 150,000 men, all well-trained and heavily armed. New State lans Bond Issue Campaign P A nuhlie rrieetirs next Tuesday night will kick oii the State Af fairs Committee's bond issue cam paign. ' Committee Co-chairmen Tom White and Larry McDevitt an nounced yesterday that a meet ing for interested students wouia be held next Tuesday in 111 Mur phey Hall at 7:30 p.m. Thp committee's campaign for passage of the November bond is win h pvnlainp.d at the meet ing, and students may then apply for county and district chairman ships. White explained the Committee's approach for the campaign; one we're for the whole bond issue; two we are very concerned with the part of the bond issue con cerned with the Consolidated, uni versity; and three our primary The communists : also reported that -such "provocations" as American television star Jack Paar's recent appearance had brought the removal of East Ber liners living along the border of this divided city. Despite the new moves to seal the border, 14 more East Ger mans escaped to West Berlin Thursday night and Friday. The two American soldiers -held by the Communists were identi fied as Pfc. Lawrence D. Edgar of San Bruno, Calif., and Pfc. Roc co F. Tomanio of Dunbury, Conn. They were held for six hours until a Soviet officer arrived on the scene. An Army spokesman said" the two soldiers, wearing civilian clothes were stopped near Pots dam, 13 miles from here, "forced out of their privately owned ve hicle bearing U.S. forces license plates" and taken to a police sta tion. 0 Watson Issues Protest After their release they com pleted their journey to their duty station at the West German bor der checkpoint at Holmstedt, 110 miles from Berlin. Maj. Gen. Al bert Watson II, U.S. commandant in Berlin, protested to Soviet Com- Affairs Committee concern is with the requests for Carolina, which include the mcney for a new student union-undergraduate library." Help Committee The county and district chair men will help the Committee gen erate public interest in the bond issue, and specifically, the UNC portion of the issue. Chairmen will work through Parent-Teacher As sociations, school personnel, news paper editors, radio-tv personnel, and civic clubs. Of the $5,832,000 UNC portion of the issue, $1,622,000 is requested for the student union-undergraduate library. The remaining one million dollars needed for the building will be furnished by stu dent self-Kquidating funds. The total bond issue is for $61,- Miisic I frame as Hill X gives way to newer and bigger things. The new addition to Hill Hall will be finish ed in January, 1963. The new annex will cost $485,000. ' Holcl 2 TTT JdLOIIF! mandant Col. Andrei I. Solovyev. Under four-power agreements U.S. forces are subject to control only by the Russians on the Berlin West Germany autobahn. Despite the Communist interfer ence with autobahn traffic, the East German foreign ministry re peated assurances that the three Western airlines can continue oper ating under present conditions along the air corridors to West Ber lin. But, it hinted things would change when a peace treaty is signed. Khrushchev, in his message to East German workers, mentioned frequently the threat of war over Berlin but said a German peace treaty must be signed It is as necessary as it is unpostponable. ' West Berlin police said a family of three East Berliners Friday jumped from the fourth floor of an East Berlin apartment house into nets held by West Berlin firemen. The flat was on the Bernuuer Stresse where the building is on the border. Police also reported four wom en and seven men escaped over the concrete and barbed wire wall or slid down ropes from windows oneninff on West Berlin streets. One man swum from East Germany to West Berlin across a border lake. .665,000. CU's portion is $13,245,000. The total amount for state-supported colleges and universities is approximately $31 million.' In addition to the student center, UNC has seven requests in the issue: Phillips Renovation Renovation of Phillips Hall, $205,000; addition to Wilson Hall, $570,000; a new cafeteria and service building, $730,000; addition to heating plant and steam distri bution system,. $1,380,200 less $690,200 . self-liquidating; remodel ing of Cobb dormitory ffor wom en), $50,000; paving driveways and parking lots, $25,000; and addition to- the Health Center, $3,628,000, less $1,628,000 self -liquidating. Thr issue will be voted on in a statewide referendum November 7. 'X' Aniiex; 1963 Old 'X 75 Is Being Leveled By Bll Dowell A new annex to the Music De partment's 1111 Hall will be com pleted in January 1963. The new bulding will be built on the site of old Hill Annex X, which is now in the process of being torn down. Architect for the new bulding is r. Marion Ham of, Durham. King-Hunter Inc. will be the con tractors. The new building will cost $485,000. It will cover - 27,300 square feet and will include a main rehearsal hall, a library. stack rooms, practice halls, and classrooms. Ground Broken Ground for the new addition was broken Thursday, Septem ber 14. Present at the ceremony were Chancellor William B. Ay cock, Dr. Glen Haydon, head of the Music Department, Walter King, the contractor, Roger Davis, assistant to Mr. Ham, and J. Arthur Branch, business manager of the University. The passngi of Annex X marks the endng of an era. Old and musty, it once housed a piano in every room. Graduate stu dents taught everything from trombone to voice braining in it. One of Three Hill-"X was one of . three buildings brought to the Univer sity towards the end of the war to accommodate the growing in flux of veterans. Z Annex was cut in half last summer and taken away. The remaining an nex, Y, will remain standing until the new addition is com pleted. At that time it will also be destroyed. Infirmary Students in the Infirmary yes terday included Carolyn Manuel, Suzanne Vanderborne, William Wood, Jay Leggett, Darl Fow ler, Robert MacArthur, Tom Up- church, Steven Greenberg, John Lee, Bonn Gilbert, Andrew Winkle, man George A. Evans, William Gravely, Clayton Smith, Thomas Wood, Marjorie Hoje, Daniel Mickalek, Wally Dunham, Don Constantine, Robert Briggs, and George Lewis. FALSE LAW ARRESTS HAVANA (UPI) Cuban army intelligence agents rounded up 14 persons in Havana Friday and ac cused them of distributing a "false" law draft by which the government proposed to national, ize children. Two persons were arrested in the interior and accused of having 15,000 copies of the draft-law in their possession. Archbishop Assistant To Make Address The Right Rev. Stephen Field ing Bayne Jr., S.T.D., the as Canterbury, will be here cn Oct. 2 at 8 p.m. in Hill Hall. Rev. Bayne will speak about the ecu menical movement, titled "New Wine in Old Bottles." Rev. Bayne assumed his' duties as executive officer of the Anglican Church in January 1960. He graduated from Trinity School in 1924. Amherst College (A.B.) in 1928 and the General Theological Seminary, New York (S.T.B. and S.T.M.) in 1934.. Rev. Bayne is married and the father of fair sons and ere daughter. Bishop Bayne worked on "The Wall Street Journal" for a year. In 1934 he was rector cf Trinity Parish, St. Lcuis, Ho. He served as a chaplain ia the U.S. Naval Reserve in 1344 and 1945. He has written ssveral books on theology.' ".'
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1961, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75