Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 12, 1964, edition 1 / Page 5
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
Thursday, March 12, 1964 THE DAILY TAR HEFT. F una! The final end to polio is in sight, according to Dr. Robert J. Senior, Chapel Hill pediatri cian. Dr. Senior said the means to eradicate completely the dread ed, crippling disease is at hand, waiting to be used. It is the newly perfected Sabin oral vaccine, which has passed all safety tests and is being pro duced in large enough quantity to offer to the public. Sanford P Chapel Hill Road Problems (The Cfcapel Hill Weekly) A delegation of eight people from Chapel Hill and Carrboro went to see Governor Sanford about roads Tuesday after noon. The Governor said he'd see what he could do to get road projects moving in this area. The delegation came home reasonably satisfied that the Governor meant what he said, and that the Thoroughfare Plan deadlock between Chapel Hill Carrboro and the State High way Commission might soon be broken. The meeting, held in the Governor's office, was short but congenial. Attending as representatives of the recently-formed .Chapel Hill -Carrboro Committee for Safe and Improved Roads were Carr b o r o Commissioner Wiley Franklin, Chapel Hill Alder man Mrs. Harold Walters, Chapel Hill Town Manager Robert Peck, Planning Board Chairman Ross Scroggs, Plan ning Board member Jack Las ley, Chamber of Commerce executive Joe Augustine, Lu cien Faust of the Research Tri angle Regional Planning Com mission, and Arthur Tuttle of the University's Planning Divi sion. Governor Sanford seemed im pressed. After introductions had been performed he asked who an accompanying news paper reporter was represent ing, and added that he hoped the reporter might be repre senting the Governor. Mr. Lasley , explained the problem;-the Chapel Hill -arejf is growing fast. By 1980 its population should double, pos sibly will triple. To prepare for this, major local highway proj ects should be undertaken now and continued, ideally at the rate of one a year, until the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Long University Student Wins In Met Opera Competition A University student, Bert Adams, has won first place in Metropolitan Opera state com petition and will vie for the dis trict title in Atlanta on March 13. If he is successful, the young baritone will take part in na tional competition in New Yrok on March 20. The national win ner receives a contract with the Metropolitan Opera Company. Airs. Marilyn Burris, a sop rano from Chapel Hill, was sec ond alternate winner in the state DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 2. White Arctic bear 6. Greek letter 11. Harden 22. A shade of purple 13. Enclosures 14. Angry , 15. Kitchen range 17. Craggy hill 20. Piece out 3. Haul 4. God of war 5. Paused 6. A Dickens' boy 7. Bog 8. Guido's highest note 9. Gun: si. 10. Trick taker: cards 16. AH correct 17. Fuddled 21. Presidential 18. Egg nickname shaped 24. Vine- 29. Vexes covered 21. Prevent 26. Competitor 22. Tropical 28. To become vapid 29. Prison enclosure 30. Branches 32. Poetry S3. Affirmative reply 34. Malt beverage C5. A shade - ofbrcwa 87. A certain dance craze 9. Rot' 42. Small drum 46. Conscious 7. Discharge through, pores 8. Measure 3. Ate dinner DOWN 2. Turkish distance measure ": . 2. Cape Horn 222.ti.va tree .End. nn The Durham-Orange Medical Foundation is offering the vac cine to residents of Durham and Orange Counties March 22 in a mass feeding program the foundation hopes will cover the area. Similar programs are being conducted simultaneously this spring throughout toe State, in an effort by North Carolina physicians to wipe out polio for good. romises Range Thoroughfare Plan is completely in effect. But 'reali zation of the Thoroughfare Plan's road projects requires cooperation between the Town and the Highway Commission, and this cooperation does not exist. Mr. Lasley also explained that his delegation had not come "precipitately" to the Governor to tattle on recalci trant highway officials. Chan nels had been gone through without results over the past few months, he said, and the Governor was the last resource available. Mr. Peck explained that progress in putting the Thor oughfare Plan into effect was at a standstill over a south bound radial road, which the Town claims is unnecessary, and which the Highway Com mission claims must be shown on the Thoroughfare Plan map before any roads can actually be built. "(Seventh District Highway Commissioner James) Mac Lamroc says 'nothing doing' (on the Thoroughfare Plan) until the Town concedes on the ra dial road," said Mr. Peck. "We want the Plan approved with out the radial road," which, he added, might be included in the Plan later if needed. Mrs. Walters pointed out that the Highway Commission was making a "feasibility study" of the radial road, and that "meanwhile the whole thing just sits there." It was also pointed out that alttiough Highway Commission Chairman Merrill Evans was waiting for Mr. Faust to com plete a Regional Planning Com mission study which would in volve roads, Mr. Faust himself supported the Town's conten tion that the bulk of the Thor oughfare Plan could in fact competition. Both singers were sponsored by Dr. Wilton Mascn, director of the University Opera Workshop and professor of mus ic. Adams is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at UNC and will con tinue in his chosen field despite his accomplishment as an opera tic singer. Adams and Mrs. Burris were selected on the basis of a pre sentation cf three arias which displayed various aspects of their operatic repertoire and 23. IMIOILIAIRI Terry, actress 25. Shade tree 27. Frozen. water 31. "Tom by Mark Twain 32. En dowed 35. Chinese measure 37. Vetch 38. Public vehicle 39. Embank ment Saturday's Answer 40. Female sheep 41. Family pet 43. Kind of roll 44. Poem 45. Primary color M AGE I U N I TE IB E S E TU A R I A Is r Is P A" S P EjA Ts) FTritTlL OSuL D E A SOGO RIG EJ rieIl yqIR qnTgIsJ to A SOA T EPE T AS PER HTRE SIEVE JERA5E HATES JREBEL 1 ' 1 ' ' ' ' 'jJ 1 2. Is 14- is KVVjw Ti a 3 o $- lr Z JtM- Zf 11 zzzzbfezzzz 4a ' I vA I I 1 The type being used in Dur ham and Orange Counties is the Trivalent, two-dose vaccine that is being administered on a lump of sugar. Patients will simply eat a cube of sugar on which a physician has placed two drops of the concentrated vaccine. Eight weeks later they repeat the dose for maximum protec tion against all three strains of viruses which have been iso lated as the causes of polio. To Study should be approved imme diately. "That doesn't seem to be a serious problem," said Gover nor Sanford. "It has been to us," said Mrs. Walters. Mr. Augustine said approval and work on the Thorough fare Plan was necessary also for safety. ''We've been real lucky not to have any school buses turned over, he said.. This struck a spark off the Governor, who asked for am plification. Mr. Augustine said that in the school district were "a couple of roads," particularly the Airport Road, which had been resurfaced, while their shoulders had been raised to the level of the new surface, and had not been widened either. The resulting sharp drop-offs could capsize an un wieldy vehicle like a school bus, he said. Mr. Tuttle threw in the ob servation that the University at Chapel Hill is serving the State as a whole that, in fact, the Health Affairs complex was "a community in itself" involving over 5,000 people daily. "I have been part of the Thoroughfare Plan study for the past five years," said Mr. Tuttle, "and I think you'd have to search a long way to find a town with a thoroughfare plan as thoroughly studied as Chapel Hill's." Governor Sanford looked at a map of the Chapel Hill area. "Let me talk to 'em," he said. "We'll see what" we can do about it." -J He did not say when the Roads Committee should ex pect word on his action, but members of the delegation agreed that the Governor's re sponse to their presentation, and his manner, indicated favorable results. command of languages, then stage presence and movement, and their potential as operatic performers. "These awards mark a signi ficant recognition of the splendid progress of these two young singers,", said Dr. Mason, "and I feel confident in predicting highly successful singing futures for each of them.". In 1961, Adams was the reci pient of the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, and he is presently completing study for his Ph.D. degree under a National Institute of Mental Health grant. Last summer he had a Career Teach ing Fellowship from the De partment of Sociology and An thropology here. Upon comple tion of his studies, he hopes to teach sociology on the college level, do . sociological research, and to continue with his singing. -Cross (Continued from Page 1) Caldwell, a laboratory tech nician at the UNC Medical School, is a former leader of the Committee for Open Busi ness (COB) which disbanded last summer. Caldwell said he felt the in cident was directed at him as he is still listed in the local telephone directory as residing at the house which is located on Sunset Drive just inside the Chapel Hill-Carrboro line. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS j Vant Exciting; fo Do For A Dalo? ". B. ;1 PflnflBISE" cq:x:g To;.ionnov! Polio in Dr. Senior said the Trivalent vaccine is an improvement over the Salk serum which marred the first breakthrough in the fight against polio. The Salk, injection-type vac cine, which was made from killed polio virus and was in troduced into the body through the muscle tissue, has saved many lives, Dr. Senior explained. But with the more complete protection of the new Sabin Playmakers Score Again With 'J.B. 9 "J.B." by Archibald MacLeish. Presented by the Carolina Playmakers. Directed by Harry Davis. Cast: David Hooks, Foster Fitz-Simons, Davis Gullette, Martha Nell Hardy, Harry Calla han, Pascal Tone. By BOB O'STEEN The Lord's voice thundered forth saying, "Whence comraest thou?" And Satan answered the Lord and said, "From going to and fro in the world and from walking up and down in it." Thus began the dialog between good and evil, vying for the truth in Man's relationship to God, questioned through the sufferings of one man, Job. This eternal story of suffer ing, dramatized poetically in Archibald MacLeish's Pulitzer Prize winning "J.B.," is the basis for another Carolina Playmakers success, in a pre sentation requiring a delicate blend of interpretation, stag ing, timing, and emotional em phasis. The symbolical setting is a grey old circus tent in which two vendors assume the roles of God and Satan. Mr. Zuss (Foster Fitz-Simons) mounts a high balcony, dons his magis trate's robes, and begins the dialog with Nickles (David Gullette) who, wearing a Sa tanic cape, remains on stage level to roam "to and fro" about the earth. Throughout the play they carry on an inter mittent dialog over the suffer ing J.B., Nickles wanting J.B. to curse God, Mr. Zuss wanting J.B. to accept his fate with bowed head. I heard upon his dry dung heap i; That man cry out who cannot sleep "If God is God He is not good, If God is good he is not Gdd." Then enter J.B. (David Hooks), his wife, Sarah (Mar tha Nell Hardy and five chil dren played by Billy Britt, Tema Okun, Melissa Hardy," Peter Hardy, Melanie Lewis, all to sit joyfully around . a Thanksgiving meal. J.B., a wealthy banker, is thankful for what they have; the wife as concerned that they be overtly thankful lest they lose every thing through God's wrath. Nickles argues with Zuss that J.B. is "perfect and upright" only because he is prosperous, and Zuss, to test J.B.'s right eousness, commends him into whatever fate Nickles wills for him. j In a "matter of minutes -the blows fall with three quick, slashing sordid episodes. Two drunken soldiers blurt out the news of David's death in " the war, one soldier (Pascal Tone) hard and brutal, the other (Harry Callahan) guilt ridden and dissolute; a newsman shockingly photographs their reactions as J.B. and Sarah are told brutally . of Mary's and Big Jim Swelled By BOB QUINCY The late Jim Tatum turned out six bowl teams and one na tional champion in football, but if he were living today he would proclaim his greatest thrill the recent accomplish ment of son Jimmy. Jimmy, now 17 and owner of a physique to rival the friendly Green Giant, was tapped for a Morehead Scholarship .here last week. His acceptance means he will enroll at North Caro lina next fall. Sam Frey, a member of the faculty at Woodberry Forest (Va.), where Jimmy isan honor Student, had high praise for young Tatum. Said Frey:- "He is a good athlete, a campus leader and his classroom excel lence would qualify him for any school in the country." Jimmy, who stands 6-6 and weighs 230, is a three-sport ath lete. Like his father, he. is la tackle in football. He also plays basketball and has distinguished himself in field events (discus, development, he noted, there is hope that polio can be made a disease of the past. The viruses responsible for causing polio are thought to enter the body through the mouth and nose and to multi Ply in the intestines. Dr. Sen ior explained. Since the new Sabin-devel-oped vaccine is taken orally, it can, for the first time, combat t'e virus on its own battle ground. Jonathan's deaths in an auto accident; two cops give them a red toy umbrella of Ruth's telling them of her rape and murder by an idiot; he loses his wealth and remaining daughter in an explosion, and when he refuses to "curse God and Die," as Sarah asks, she leaves him in disgust. Deserted and writhing atop a dung heap, J.B. is visited by the Three Comforters of the Bible: in this case, a psycho analyst, a condemning priest, and a Marxist, who each offer his own solution to the cause of J.B.'s suffering, explaining it away, giving no comfort. JBut J.B. is resolute. He cries out: "Guilt must always matter. Unless guilt matters the whole world is meaningless. God too is nothing." Finally, J.B. hears the voice of God and is sustained by it, though his questions are not answered. Satan implores him to fling his restoration back into God's face, but J.B. in stead takes back his wife and tells both Zuss and Nickles to get away from him; he will trust in the Lord, but not dumbly; he will make his own way in the world without bowed head: "Life is a filthy face, you say And nothing but a bloody stage can bring down the cur tainAnd men must have ironic hearts and perish laughing Well, I. .will not laugh!" J.B." is not a realistic play but.. rather a poetic, dramatiza? ti'on dependent on a combina tion of many subtle factors to carry the dramatic illusion. Surely as the universal theme of man's relationship to God is expressed through the suf fering of one man, so does the dramatic fulfillment of this production ride on the power and intensity of the central figure, given wondrous depth and tragic beauty by guest ac tor David Hooks. In the second act Hooks kneels on the "dung heap" twisting in torment ' as he cries out in dismay to an unanswering God for the cause of his anguish: "What fault! . . . What fault!"and the audience believes in his suf fering, is moved by his plea. What more is there? The overall success, the com bination of interpretation, tim ing, blocking, acting too much to name all brought to a unity, is the fulfillment of Harry Davis' fine directing hand. Archibald MacLeish and the Carolina Playmakers combine with force to explore the eter nal theme of Man's suffering. The result is poetry and drama. Would've With Pride shot) in track. At Woodberry, the students set up their own governing process, guided by some 12 pre fects. Jimmy is one of the dozen leaders. Jimmy's college board exami nation produced a score in ex cess of 1400. The average stu dent beams if he can record as much as 800. Tatum shows a proficiency at math and chem istry. Jimmy's prowess on the ath letic field and in the classroom is excelled only by an appetite which brands him a human in cinerator. His mom, Edna, who resides here at 308 Laurel Hill j Road, recalls one lunch last j summer which consisted of four sandwiches, five hotdogs and a bowl of soup. Jimmy said he hated to stop, but he was trying to cut down. Delivery Service Delivery until BILL'S BAR Specialising in Pit Cooked Bar-B-Q Chicken Boxes and Shrimp Boxes to Tu Out Sandwiches Cold Drinks Smokes 115 N. Graham Street Gil Is Attending Leoni Inauguration Fedrico G. Gil, professor of political science and director of the Institute of Latin American Studies at tie University, is a special guest of the Venezuelan government at the inauguration ceremonies of the Venezuelan president, Raul Leoni today in Caracas, Venezuela. President-elect Leoni, of the Venezuelan Accion Demccratica Party, will succeed Romulo Bct ancourt in Venezuela's hiest elective office. The Accion Demo cratic Party is one Gf Venezue la's three leading political par ties. Dr. Gil has been a close per sonal friend of Fres'.dent Bet ancourt's for over 20 years. When President Betancouvt visited Washington, D. C, last year for meetings, with the late President Kennedy, Prof. Gil was invited to join his party. Just elected to serve as presi dent of UNC's Faculty Club, Dr. Gil's research areas and teaching specialties are in Latin American government and Latin American political parties. He is director of the Venezuelan Peace Corps Training Project which prepared Peace Corps volunteers for serv ice in Venezuela. These volunteers trained at UNC during the fall of 1962 and began their two-year service in Venezuelan universi ties in December, 1962. Dr. Gil's latest publication is a section entitled "Latin America Social Revolution and U. S. For eign Policy," appearing in the book entitled "World . Pressures on American Foreign Policy," just published by Prentice-Hall. Dr, Gil is one of eight specialists con tributing to the book on various subjects dealing with the outer limits of American foreign policy. Prof. Gil is co-author of "The Governments of Latin America," Greek Week Is All Set Greek Week, the annual competition for fraternity pledges, will begin Monday, according to IFC President Ned Martin. The best pledge class will be selected on a point basis de termined by scholarship and community service. The week's activities will be gin Monday and Tuesday eve nings with "exchange dinners" for the pledges. Tuesday after noon the pledges will do com munity service work in the town. "Field Day" will be held in Woollen Gym Wednesday after noon and pledges will enter booths in the Campus Chest Carnival on Saturday. The week's activities will conclude Sunday with the an nouncement of the best pledge class and a talk by a member of the administration. Co-chairmen for Greek Week are Mike Hoyt, DKE, and Gor don Fitz-Simons, Chi Psi. FIRST FOREIGN TV Montreal (UPI) The Archie Moore - Yvon Durelle light heavyweight championship bout at Montreal, Dec. 10, 1958, was the first title fight to be tele vised from a foreign country to the United States. NOW SHOWING ROGER VA DIM'S ::-:. An ASTOR Release . Not recommended forth ianature. Weekend Special! Ready to Fly Airplanes Reg. $9.95, Now $77 Billy Arthur EASTGATE Phone 968-2571 11:30 P3L - B - Q I lo.1 Chapel mnt N, Cf written vith UNC Kenan Profes sor of History and Political Scien ce William W. Pierson and pub lished by McGraw-Hill in 1956. Committee (Continued from Page 1) Ross Scroggs said this would be a major battle that would create lots of problems. In other business the Alder men: Approved an amendment to the home occupation regu lations limiting occupations to 25 per cent of the floor space or a maximum of 500 sq. feet; excluding persons not livin on the premises from employa.ent there, and requiring adeqi.ate parking. Approved amendment to the. subdivision ordinances re quiring the posting of bond for all improvements listed on the the approved preliminary plat. Approved an amendment to sketch for Colony Woods sub division section 2; approved the preliminary sketch for part of Farrington Hills sub division with a minor condi tion; and approved the pre liminary sketch of J. H. Riggs bee Estate section 2. . rPostponed further consid eration of a new fire insurance policy for Town-owned build ings pending a recommenda tion by the Town Manager on bids submitted. Postponed action on two amendments to the table of spe cial use permits. Professor Joseph Straley, chairman of thf 'Committee of Concerned Citizens, urged the Aldermen to enact a proposed public accommodations law. Mr. Straley said "the federal civil rights bill will not elimi nate the need of a local ordi nance prohibiting segregation in places of public accommoda tions. "The Town may better pro tect itself from federal inter ference (if the bill pending in the Senate is adopted) by tak ing local initiative and enact ing an accommodations law," Mr. Straley said. Robert Page, representing John Cates of the Chapel Hill Realty Company, requested the Aldermen to authorize a new survey of the land on East Rosemary Street between North Columbia and Henderson Streets to establish new lines to correct an alleged shortage of land. The Aldermen re quested the Town surveyor, the Town Manager and Mr. Page to get together to dis cuss it. NOW ON THE SCREEN The most acclaimed ballet of all time performed in its entirety by the BOLSHOI BAT J, FT In Lavish Eastman COLOR starring MAYA PLISETSfEAYA ft KlKOUU FAOEYECHEV DiltribuUd by COLUMBIA PICTURES Shows at 3 - 8 Adults 90c Children 35c TODAY ONLY i. i j I FINEST QUALITY 128 Fayetterille ML TSCHAIKOWSKTS jKUljf itfBfcivrin t ii 'TuiTirei urn urn n iinimii leTnaLtElJ ' i ' - , f A , " y m 38 ' -Items (Continued irom Page 1) tional training or experience is required. Those desiring appointments with Miss Isker may arrange them through the University's School of Education 'ieaclier Placement 0-Tiee. Education Association May Accept Negroes The North Carolina Educa tion Association announce.! yesterday that it was consider ing proposals to admit Negroes to the all-white organization cf teachers and educators. "Our board cf directors al ready has approved integration proposals," Dr. A. C. Dawson, executive secretary of the or ganization said, but he admitted that it would take a year to make constitutional charges necessary to admit Ii'egroes. Dawson said that the move would lead lo a merger of I he NCEA with its Negro equiva lent, the North Carolina Teach ers Association. The integration proposals adopted by the board of direc tors . require a two-thirds ma jority of 37,000 members of the NCEA. Gerson Will Give 1st Riggins Lecture Professor H. Gerson. Direc tor of The Netherlands Insti tute for Art History, The Hague, will speak at the first Riggins Lecture in Art in Room 115 of the Ackland Art Center on March 13. He is currently visiting pro fessor at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. He will give two - lectures, one at 11 a.m. and the other at 8 p.m. The first will be an illustrated, informal talk on "The Et-rly Rembrandt" and the other will be an illustrated lecture on "Art and Society in Seven teenth Century Holland." Professor Joseph C. Sloane, chairman of the UNC depart ment of art, announced the new lectureship. It was established by Mildred and McLeod Rig gins of New York City, to be called the Riggins Lecture in Art. The endowment was made for the purpose of supporting a lectureship by a distinguished person in the area of art, pre ferably in the field of painting;. The public is invited to both lectures. Carlos Tickets Now On Sale Daily at 12:30 P.M. At CM DIAMONDS $100 up Raleigh, N. C. eiuff h trit h b pa if VJ s I ( must be heard u fi to be believed" t f ' - f
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 12, 1964, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75