Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 10, 1964, edition 1 / Page 5
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Thursday, December 10, 1964 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 5 1 1 CM Planning Board Fraternity Zoning Exiemsiow The Town Planning Board Tues. day night 'rejected extension of fraternity zoning along Pittsboro Street, between McCauley and Vance Streets, and approved a rezoning request by University . sociology professor S. H. Hobbs Jr. The Aldermen will consider both items at their meeting next iweek. Hobbs requested rezoning from RA-10 to the fraternity zone cf RA-10A for his property at 311 Pittsboro .Street Hobbs had t said he intends to sell his" prop erty to the Kappa Si professional pharmacy fraternity. His proper ty, however, does not qualify for a special use permit needed for a fraternity. The matter of a special use permit was only briefly dis cussed by the Planners. . Attorney John Manning, repre senting Hobbs, told the plan ners that Hobbs realized a special use permit was required for a fraternity, but added that, the rezoning would "open up the possibility of selling the property." Hobbs had told a public hear ing last month that he had tried unsuccessfully for seven years to find a buyer for the property. -Mrs. Dana Phipps Ray, daught 111 H III I W '- rs -II- n I wMB Rossillini- -Debs i s w er of Recorder's Court Judge, L. J. Phipps voiced the only objec tion to the request Mrs. Ray said she and her parents object ed to having a fraternity house or boarding house (also permit ed in the RA-1QA zone) next door. She said this would cause prop erty values to drop. Planning Board chairman, Ross Stassen Speaks Today At Duke Former Minnesota Governor. Harold E. Stassen will discuss "Disarmament after the Test Ban Treaty" at 10 a.m. today at Duke Law School. The address, sponsored by the Duke International Law Society, is open ta the public; . A question and answer period will follow. . ' - Stassen was a member of the U. S. delegation to the United Nations organizational meetins in San Francisco in 1945. He has since served as deputy reprentative of the U. S. to the U. N. Disarmament. Commission. Mejeeis Scroggs broke a 3r3 tie in favor . of the rezoning. The Board took a uniform nosi lion on the request for extension of fraternity zoning in the Pitts boro Street area, voting 6-0 against it. Strong opposition ' had been; voiced at the public hearing in November against the proposal.: Objections had come from nrOD- erty . owners involved ; and resU r. dents of nearby homes.. ' Several residents expressed I .their - objections last night, say ing; that the rezoning would con 1 stitute ''creeping zoning," and ruin the neighborhood. r Scroggs said long - range plans for the University called for the University to acquire prop erty along. Pittsboro Street for expansion of the Health Affairs . complex. The Planners .also approved a final plat for a subdivision in Lake Forest Estates and. brief ly, discussed possible apartment zoning for Chapel Hill. ftUse DTH Classified Ads Perfect Party - our festive gold lame pump, so right for your gala holiday evenings. Fashionable square throat silhouette with a slightly snipped toe. Either high or medium heel. Also in white dyeable Peau de Soie) 13.00 Matching Evening1 Bags 5.98 Chapel Hill's Finest Shoe WE PERSONALIZE QUICK SERVICE Courses i I 5-: ti 'AH By MARTHA TEMPLE "It's closed out? Oh, no!" And so the pangs of pre registration continue. Ray Strong, director of the Office of Records and Regis tration said yesterday that 43 courses out of 3,000 sections were closed by late afternoon. "More are closing all the time," he added. The number of courses which were filled early this year is greater than ever. "This is because an increas ing number of students the 'war babies' are getting to the soDhomnre and iunior level. The courses are closed, simply because the departments don t have the professors to teach them," Strong said. "Tickets have been set up for 100,000 places in classes and we usually use about 75, 000 f them," he said. The first courses to be closed were in political science. There are 339 undergraduates In. political science this year. Business courses take second place. "It may be that a lot of the 'crib' courses were closed goer . ... Saloon m The ay SELECTION OF iS early," Strong said. "That doesn't concern me much. There are plenty of courses students can take in their majors. That's the important thing." He said his office feels sen iors ought to have priority. "We go to a lot of trouble to fix this. It's harder for us, but the students are satisfied with it." Strong said he has heard rumors of card-trading, but "no one has brought me any in stance of it. If it is being done, it is done without our knowl edge or permission." Yule Concert Set Sunday In Hill HaU Everyone in the Chapel Hill community is invited to recap ture the magic of real Christmas feeling Sunday at 3 p.m. Music for Children, Inc., a community organization, is pre senting an old-fashioned Christ mas Carol concert Sunday in HiU Hall. The Bell Ringers' Choir of Durham and the Recorder Con sort, whose members are UNC and Duke faculty musicians, will perform. Betty Vaden Williams, well known folk musician from Ra leigh, will appear with a dul cimer. Everyone present may take part in carol singing, to be ac companied by the performing musicians and music depart ment students in piano and or gan. CHRISTMAS BALL The Cosmopolitan Club will hold a campus-wide Christmas Ball Saturday night at the Naval Armory from 8:30 to midnight. The Sinfonians, Phi Mu Alpha's jazz band will provide dance mus ic, and ballet and folk singing are. also featured. Tickets, at $2.50 per couple, are on sale at Danziger's, the Y office and at Lenoir during lunch and dinner. Closing Time' Learn French in' France Learn Spanish . in Spain Learn Italian in Italy Learn German in Austria $599.00 includes trans portation on Holland American Lines, room and board and tuition. Also, available; this summer in Europe, student tours and full year study abroad. Write . now: W.S.A. 7621 N. Van Dyke Milwaukee 17, Wis. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Begone! 5. Furnished with shoes 9. To surface, as a street 10. Allowance for weight: comm. 11. A sign of spring 12. Earnest money: Scot. 14. God of love 15. Guides 16. Large keg 17. Exclama tion 18. Cyprinoid fish 19. Mother of Irish gods 20. Garden tool 23. Justifying 27. Shield 28. Liberian tribes 29. Gold: Her. SO. Chatter 52. Single unit 53. Dress 36. Concludes 37. A watered silk 38. Assumed name 9. Let it stand: print. 40. To stop up, as a pipe 41. Bordering surface 42. African xiver DOWN 19. A 1. Occurring news occasionally paper 2. Italian notice navigator 20. Ex- 3. Feminine clama name tion 4. Number 21. Ameri- 5. Condition can 6. Seraglio Indian 7. Voided 22. Exit escutcheon 24. Greek 8. Antlered letter animal 25. Chest 11. Restore to 26. Tan-conscious- talum: ness sym. 13. Steamship: 30. Wearied abbr. 31. Rugged 15. Manacle mountain 17. Cuckoo crest eeiBg Today's All Campus Calendar items most be submitted in person at the DTH offices in GM by 2 p.m. the day before the desired peb licatkm date (by 10 ajru Satur day for Sunday's DTH). Lost and Found items, will be printed on Wednesdays and Saturdays only. TODAY GM Bowling Tournament See Gary French, manager, at All Star Lanes, Easgate., Umstead Committee 12:43 p.m., Y Court. Honors Committee 2-5:30 p.m., 216 Davie, work party, call Jane Dallen or Vance Baron if unable to attend. UP Legislative Caucus 6:30 p.m., Grail Room. Murdock Committee 2:05-5:45 p.m., Y Court, interested stu dents are invited. WAA Basketball Club 4 p.m., Woman's Gym. WAA Table Tennis Intramnrals 7 p.m., Woman's Gym. Mathematics Colloquium 4 p.m., 383 Phillips, "Zero-one Matrices and Convex Func tions," coffee and tea will be served in the lounge (Phillips 277) at 3:30 p.m. preceding the Colloquium. Communications Committee 4 p.m., Roland Parker L Monthly reports from all organi zations receiving Student Gov ernment appropriations are due in the office of the student body treasurer. Funds of the OPENS TODAY m ltrw. - - - . 1'iwnv JOAN Itir mV FREEMAN -ERtCKSCH .- .(Mi RICH iem . WlnunT IWWU" - -"- . $199.00 includes room and board and tuition and certificate. . - J 3OjS S A gjg V tslp ART aJe sjoipT i TiAs F1S E A Lt SLATf UHAgEijE iLlLlSL, 32. The pungent vegetable 33. Part of "to be" 34. Hurl 35. Monkey 36. Girl's. . name 38. Perform n Zyl2m ' 15 2M 25 2i " 11""" WLZ Ji iH HI Ti W- 111 kl 1 i Onir Fine HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM Campus Calendar organizations failing to com ply will be frozen. MOTHS Carolina The Roustabout Varsity African Lion FRIDAY Baptist Student Union 3:45 p.m., supper, speaker, Rev. Ben Fisher. "N. C. Baptists and Higher Education." Missing Duke Coed Found Napping In Sleeping Bag A Duke University graduate coed who just "wanted to get away from it all" was found Conference (Continued from Page 1) "The Student-Faculty-Adminis-trativ Committee on the Resid ence. College System found itself being propelled by a surge of in terest in moving toward the res idential college concept," Long said. Petitions circulated in the low er Quad and the Avery-Parker-Teague areas have caused them to be named the first "colleges" on a trial basis. Conference Scope The conference will cover these proposals in detail and attempt to resolve some of the problems arising from them. Student Body President Bob Spearman, who initiated plans for the conference, said, "We will talk in general terms of how the Administration and Stu dent Government can cooperate in meeting the Problems of the University." Each discussion group will ar rive at conclusions about the system and report to the entire conference at a plenary session. The conference will be held off campus in order to maintain a unity of purpose and foster ob jective analysis of the entire pro gram. Watson To Address Statistics Meeting Professor G. S. Watson of Johns Hopkins University will speak at a Statistics Colloquium Monday at 4 p.m. in room 2fa4 Phillips Hall. Dr. Watson will discuss "The Statistics of Directions," which deals with statistical questions arising from distributions on a sphere. One topic will be a cir cular version ofv the Cramer- Smirnov statistic and another will be the. so-called "girdle" distributions . Dr. Watson is from Australia and has held academic positions in Melbourne, Canberra, Pnnce- Jton and, Toronto. Recently he visited Antarctica to give statis tical help on a survey of pen guins! THURSDAY The true story of Lt. John F. Kennedy's incredible adventure in the South Pacific! V A band of men left for dead in a flaming sea and their epic of heroism and survival! iCUFF ROBERTSON T - ) A IL'Uel Sabbath Services 7 p.m., HiKel Building. Any graduate student interested in working on the library com mittee, call Student Govern ment fcr an appointment. In terviews will be held Friday from 3 to 5 p.m. UP Executive Committee 5 p.m., Grail Room. yesterday afternoon camping be side a dam near Chapel Hill. Joanna DuBerry, 21, Chapel Hill, wfts found by a 50-man search party. Red Tyler, head of the local Boy Scout district, came upon her camp about 200 feet below a dam at the end of Taylor Street. She was in her sleeping bag taking a nap. Campus Police Chief Arthur J. Beaumont said she seamed quite unconcerned about the sit uation. Miss DuBerry. a psychology major, left the house, which she rents with three other girls, on Monday morning. They reported her missing when she had not returned by Tuesday night late. She had not told anyone where she was going. Chapel Hill police began the search Wednesday morning and were joined by numerous local people, including Tyler and AFROTC volunteers from UNC. An airplane had also joined in the search bv the time Miss Du Berry was found. SopJis Acid Five Committee Heads Sophomore class secretary San dra Burden announced additional class committee appointments Wednesday: Kelley Hunter and Gwyn Branon, co-editors of the newsletter; D. A. Humphreys and Penny Cromatie, secretariat; and Janie Lowery, scrapbook. Any sophomores who missed the interviews can still partici pate on the committees, she said, if they come by the Grail Room Monday, from 3-4 p.m. GUITARS FOR SALE CHEAP Harmony 12-string. Retail $140. Harmony and other models on hand. Unused. Substantial dis count. Will sacrifice. Al Gilliam, 104 Carr. 963-9106. A SPECIAL FIVE-MAN NORTII- western Mutual Life policyholders group having no connection with The Northwestern Mutual other than as policyholders examines all phases of the company's business each year. Jack BuelL Jack Nich olson, and Arthur DeBerry. Tele phone 942-6966. FOR SALE: 1962 MG 1G00 MK II convertible, excellent condition. Call 929-1679 after 5 p.m. STUDY AIDS FOR PRE-CHRIST-mas Quizzes Cliff Notes, Mon arch Review Notes, you name it and we'll have it. THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP, 119 E. Franklin St. SOLVE YOUR CHRISTMAS shonoinff emblems ffiva a cift certificate from the Jane Haslem Gallery 113 W. Franklin Certificates on paintings, draw ings, orints. artist materials or custom framingNorth Carolina's Inest art gallery. 1958 CHEVROLET liLJUU. Z door, hard top, power steering and brakes, automatic transmission, push-button windwos. white side wall tires and deluxe interior. $449. Call 968-5757. WANTED: MALE STUDENTS TO share apartment located one-mile off-campus. Call 968-6175 after 4 m. BY OWNER 1959 PORSCHE 1600 Super Roadster, roll up windows. A-l condition. For further infor mation call Greensboro 275-73G0 after 6. MUST, ER. UNLOAD 1957 MER cury before holidays. Owner sev erely broke. Stick, overdrive, Rill, WW tires. All fishes call Brian Roberts, 933-1393. ; utfumm tV mm ', ' m . J CMffl MA CARD mm
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 10, 1964, edition 1
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