Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 7, 1965, edition 1 / Page 1
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7J & Undergraduate Li hra Reference Desk Wilson Library The selection of the Research iriangie for the Environmental ileaUh Research Center is im plant Eot only to the state, but to the entire nation. See editorial, page 2. Barbecue Another barbecue coining up Sun day. The sophomores are after money (his time and for only $1-23 you can eat from 4:30 to ":30 p.m. and listen to the music of the Impacts. JFoundedJb, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1965 Associated Press Wire Service Tar Heels Continue Slu: Aerial View ' M tor gle Area Get Bow To Wake Forest 107-85 WINSTON-SALEM The Tar Heels didn't find the range for ten minutes last night, and by that time it was too late, as Wake Forest rolled over the Heels 107 85. Billy Cunningham set three Memorial Colliseum records, but the torrid Demon Deacons tied a more important one. The Kid set new records , for. a visiting player for most field goals attempted (34), most made (16) and most total points (35), but in the mean time the Baptists were tying In diana's record of 107 points, most ever scored against a Carolina team. While the Tar Heels were trying to find the basket the Deacons jumped off to a 21 point lead 28-7 with 9:37 left in the half. , 197 Selected For Morehead etition Beginning Tuesday 197 high school senior boys will undergo district screening over the state for positions as finalists in the annual competition for John Motley Morehead Awards. According to Roy Armstrong, executive secretary of the Morehead Foundation, a record number of 969 boys were nomi nated by their high schools this fall to appear before . county committees. v: Screening there reduced the field to the 197 candidates who will be interviewed by seven district committees between Tuesday and Jan. 25. Each of the seven district committees will select six boys. These 42 boys will join 32 nominees from. 16 private pre paratory schools for final inter views to be held here Feb. 26 to March 2. . . . EacH Morehead Award is valued at $1,325 per year or $5,300 during the four-year undergraduate period. Sunday Concert .To Honor Golde A free public concert dedicated to the memory of Lillian and Walter Golde at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Graham Memorial Lounge will feature mezzo - soprano Tina Pfohl. Mrs. Pfohl, who studied under the late Walter Golde, is a grad uate of Charlotte's Queens Col lege. She has been active in music circles throught the state in op eras and concerts. A reception will follow the con cert, which is sponsored by the Graham Memorial Music Commit tee. Spot The Spot Conip f & - f - ' rfn J i l Mm h- - - 1 i l "-s ! Is i r 4 J N Uli v ; Nti Pt -7 S - " . I , li . 1 I H It M ) M A tf f h f 7T ; i , J ---j 11 ' ' ' - 1 , i Mil . ' rfrnr"3 X f f S K I : - 1 rit l 5 n I I - v - 1 nU I 1 w -L Ufl i . ' : ) .. -1 ? Believe it or not, this object is on campus. A slight hint to the uninformed or otherwise more f dense readers is that the , Jr. the nicture are in Spanish. If you can identify all or most of the spots in the nine-picture series, hustle your entry to the Tar aeei oince on oan. h auy offer 7'3f a.m. Tim tytw nromised a list of to the contest winner, today, but a nnv deliveries ollvl nuuiu j again tomorrow. e Spot Student Name L Chapel Hill Address After that the Heels fought val iantly trying to catch up, but it was to no avail. In those first ten minutes the Tar Heels could hit on only three of 16 shots. The ball just would not fall for Cun ningham and Bobby Lewis. - .- Trailing 40-15 with 3:55 left in the first half, the Tar Heels scor 10 straight points to cut the mar gin to is. But the Deacons spurt ed again and went in to the dress ing room with a 57-27 lead. , In the second half the Tar Heels heroicly tried to fight back but they were too far behind. Cun ningham and Lewis had a sec ond half surge as the Heels out scored the Deacs 53-57. The Kid Swearing Raleigh Prepares For Inauguration RALEIGH UP) A two-day pro gram for the inauguration of Dan Moore as North Carolina's 66th governor gets underway Thurs day with a record inaugural ball. The festivities will be climax ed Friday afternoon when Moore takes the oath in a ceremony . at Memorial Auditorium. Raleigh police are prepared for record crowds. Police Capt. J. Herbert Hayes said he expects the biggest crowd in Raleigh's history for the inaugural parade Friday. He added "Western North Carolina is really turning out." One group of westerners will . come aboard an eight-car special train. The train will leave Can ton, Moore's home town, Thurs day morning and arrive1 in Ra leigh Thursday evening. - m A record turnout is expected for the inaugural ball Thursday eve ning. Because of the demand for tickets, the scene of the ball was moved from Raleigh's Memorial Auditorium to the larger Rey nolds Coliseum on the campus of North Carolina State. The ball lasts from 7:30 p.m. until 12:30 a.m. Friday's inaugural ceremonies will begin when Gov. and Mrs. Terry Sanford leave the Executive Mansion. They will be accorded! military honors for the last time. Then the inaugural party will set out for Memorial Auditorium. Military and other units will pro- j vide an escort. About a dozen cars will be in the inaugural party. They will include Lt. Gov.- elect Robert W. Scott and mem bers of the Council of State who Contest: No. 3 the fabulous prizes being offered Tiffany's is closed on Wednesday yesterday, nave iaiui, mu uy - . pumped in 26 points in the half and Lewis had 15. Cunningham led the rebounders with 15. Two unsung bards Johnny Yokley and Ray Hassel played most of the second half for Coach Dean Smith and led the Heels pressing de fense. . Junior guard Bob Leonard and senior Richard Herrin hit career highs. Leonard led the Deacs with 31 points while Herrin tallied 20 on 10 of 14 field goals. The Tar Heels shot 32.4 from the floor in the second half and 54.3 in the second period for an overall percentage of 45.0. Bones MeKinney's Deacons shot an ' amazing 65 per cent in the second half and 53.9 for the game, In Friday also will be sworn in office Fri day. Chief Justice E. B. Denny will administer the oath to Moore. Associate justices of the Supreme Court will swear in Scott and the members of the Council of State. After the inaugural ceremony, Gov. and Mrs. Moore will be given military honors, including a 19-gun salute. The Moores, along with Gov. and Mrs. Terry San ford and other state officials will drive to a reviewing stand on Raleigh's Fayetteville Street where they will review the inaugu ral parade. The parade will be made up of 100 units, including 30 bands, some from UNC. They will include the Canton High School band and an Asheville '- Canton National Guard unit. After the parade, Sanford and Moore will drive to the Capitol where in a traditional ceremony Sanford will turn the great seal of the state over to Moore. The inaugural festivities will end with- a public reception at the Executive Mansion at 8 p.m. Friday. Chorus Will Sing Tuesday The University Chorus, under the direction of Wayne. Zarr, will present a concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Hall. The opening portion of the concert will include works by Palestrina and Bach, the three movement motet, "Create In Me a Pure Heart" by Brahms, and Reniamin Britten's Festival Cantata "Rejoice in the Lamb Soloists in the cantata are soprano Walker Glenn, mezzo- soprano Rebecca Rhodarmer, tenor William Cunningham, and bass Jeff Ishee. James Meredith will accompany the selection on the organ. Also on the program will be Debussy's "Trois Chansons, featuring soprano Susan Quinn, and Bela Bartok's "Four Slo vak Folk Songs," which will be sung in Czech. "Over Yonder," arranged by Wilton Mason of the music faculty, and "Charlottetown will close the program. . Piano accompanist will be Nancy Norwood. UNC Honors Mann Thompson Mann, three-time All-American swimmer at UNC and Gold Medal winner at the Tokyo Olympics, was presented a certificate of commendation last night in Norfolk, Va., by UNC swimming coach Pat Earey. The presentation was made in connection with Norfolk's celebration of Thompson Mann Day. Mann's home, Chesapeake, is near ihe Tidewater city. The plaque, presented by Earey on behalf of the Univer sity and the Athletic Associa tion, commends Mann for his aquatic accomplishments and leadership as a student here. It called him an "All-American both in and out of the pool." Mann received the Olympic Gold Medal for his role in the American team's win of the 400 meter relay. He set a new world's record for his 100-meter backstroke leg of the relays The new Environmental Health Research Center will rest some where in the area pictured below. DTH photographer Jock Lauterer took to the air over the Research Triangle area yesterday after noon to try to spot the location. The center will cost $25 million and will employ 1,000 people. Does A Just Ask By KERRY SIPE DTH Staff Writer How many nerds would a mouse-fink zilch if a dipley nerdly could barf scuzz? A recent article in Time Magazine entitled "The Slang Bag," said "Since plain . Ameri can speech suffices only to de scribe the real world, a new vocabulary must be coined an nually at colleges, where all ex perience has a heightened tone and ordinary superlatives fal ter." Disagree With Time Slang is as much a . part of Carolina life and anywhere else, but students disagree with Time aboua the cause of the slang trends." Students agree that words like "nerd," "cull," "troll." and "squid" do pepper a typical Carolina conversation 'and most admit that the ' fads do have psychological origins. "College students are still in the rebellion stage," said Wil liam Gupton. a Senior English major from Zebulon. "They are seeking their own way of life and this includes their own vocabulary." . "Shot Down" Gupton said that words like THOMPSON MANN ... in action I i V f Xt K i " i yiwjni ....WIW. ouise A Slang "shot down" (for a fickle fe male relationship) and "Ace" (for an "A" quiz) "set a student apart from parental culture and gives him individuality." He said that .slang is not very quick to change. "Terms like "BMOC" for 'Big Man on Cam pus' have been around for 50 years." Students who know all about literary irony from their Eng lish classes have enveloped it into their language. "I didn't flunk that quiz much" is under stood by another student as meaning exactly the opposite. Yes Answer . "Study much?" one student is likely to ask another when he knows for sure the answer is yes. Betsy Clark, a sophomore from Littleton, points out that football plavers in urgent need of that solid "C". average refer io a o graae as a pass. Miss Clark thinks that stu dents just want to be different. "They don't consider their talk more expressive just differ ent," she said. ? Similarities "The word 'cull' can mean the. same as 'fink or a 'C grade," said C. H. Pope, a freshman from Magnolia. "A skode is a fink. A 'B' grade is a 'boy.' A 'D' grade is a 'dog.'" Pope says that Time's, thesis is probably true. "You just get Heart Specialist Is Guest Lecturer A British heart specialist known best for his work in detecting heart disease by listening to heart sounds and murmurs will spend two days this month at the School of Medicine as a guest lecturer. Dr. Aubrey Leatham, physician to St George's Hospital and the National Heart Hospital in Lon don, : dean of the Institute of Cardiology and personal physician to the king of Bhutan in Asia, will present a special lecture at Memorial Hospital at 8 p.m. Jan. 26. . Leatham has shown the rela tionship of heart sounds easily heard at the bedside with a steth oscope to the movements of heart valves and the nassase of blood through the chambers of the heart in various disease conditions. ill! ' 1 - " r Sliopter tired of using the conventional words," he said. , One junior from Maysville said he hadn't heard of any of the mentioned slang expres sions. "I read it in Time and wondered where they got them from," he said. He didn't see a need for ab normal language because he didn't "see how college was such an abnormal life." Lots of Slang: "I probably use lots of slang," said John Fowler, a graduate ' student from Ben netttsville, S. C, "but I can't think of any of it off. hand." Fowler hadn't heard any of the synonyms for 'fink.' "A 'squid' is the same as a 'pig (an unhappy date)," he recalled. "Slang is not strictly an at tribute of ; college students," said Fowler. "I heard a lot of it in the Army. Some of it wasn't very nice." Consolidated President William Friday yesterday represented President Lyndon B. Johnson in ceremonies at Flat Rock honor ing poet Carl Sandburg on his 87th birthday. Sandburg was presented a color photograph of himself and his brother-in-law, Edward Steichen, taken with President Johnson April 10 of last year at the White House. The photograph was sent from Washington to Chapel Hill Tues day to President Friday, who drove to Flat Rock with Chan cellor Paul F. Sharp to deliver the remembrance from the Presi dent to the poet who has made North Carolina his home. President Friday read aloud the inscription on the photograph: 'Happy 87th birthday to Carl Sandburg, a legend in American literature, from, his friend, Lyn don B. Johnson." Friday told the poet that he was pleased to bring the greetings and the gift from the President and that North Carolinians, with other Americans, have respect and affection for Sandburg. Friday also recalled the visits of Sandburg to Chapel Hill, at commencements of 1941 and 1955, the latter time receiving the honorary doctor of literature de gree. . . M Fin It - Zilcli? Friday oii Center N. C. Awarded Of 3-State Grant (From DTH Wire Reports) The plum goes to North Carolina the Chapel Hill, Durham, Raleigh Triangle area. The plum is the highly sought Environmental Health Research Center. Forty localities in nine states competed for it. . Part of the-facilities will be located in Cincinnati. Ohio and West Virginia, but the major center will be in North Carolina. 'Wonderful' Say Local Officials "Wonderful." The mayor of Chapel Hill and the chairman of the Borrd of Governors of the 'Research Tri angle Institute both used this word to describe their reaction to news that a large part of the government's, environmen tal health center will be set up in the" Research Triangle. Mayor Sandy McClamroch said, "This is a wonderful op portunity for the entire He- search Park and its develon ment as Gov. Hodges envisioned it. - ''The town will benefit from the type of people who will work there, and we hope they . win live in Chaper JIU1"- - Secretary of Welfare An thony J. Celebrezze. who an nounced the site selection yes terday, said the center will em ploy 1,000 or more people in the Triangle area. George Watts Hill of Chapel Hill, chairman of the Triangle Board of Governors, said, "This is wonderful for North Carolina. We have a tremendous oppor tunity to be the outstanding medical center in the Southeast in the field of environmental medicine. The use of the medi cal facilities at Chapel Hill and Duke is a natural each com plements the other." Need A Job? These companies will recruit on campus next week: Monday Royal Globe Insur ance Co., Public Health Serv ice. Tuesday United Aircraft Corporation, Defense Intelli gence Agency. Wednesday J. C. Penney Co. (will interview women); U.S. Naval Research Lab (summer work; will interview women also). Thursday General Tele phone Company. Sharp A ' .. - v CONSOLIDATED University President William Friday admires the photograph which he presented to Sandburg yesterday as a birthday present from President Lyndon Johnson. Chancellor Paul Sharp accompanied Friday on the trip to the poet's Flat Rock home. " Secretary of Welfare An thony J. Celebreee made the announcement yesterday after noon after Gov. Terry Sanford had given advance notice of the favorable decision at the l.'t press conference of his adminis tration earlier in the day. He noted Uiat he has been working for the acquisition of the facility for North Carolina . for three years. Secretary Celebrezze said the center to be located lit-re will cost more than $25 million nd will have at least 1,000 em ployees. The new facility will serve as a center for research relat ing to programs of public health service, including studies of the effect on man of contamination of air, water, milk and food. "Rapid and accelerating changes in our economy have created problems which concern every American," Celebrezze said. "These problems include the pollution or contamination of our environment, and increased contact with a wide range of chemical substances, such pesticides." Gov. Sanford said land for several hundred acres of fhn new center will be provided free in the Research Triknf;!e Park. "I don't see any problem at all in obtaining the land," he said. He predicted that the center will attract other research fa cilities to the Triangle, and named pharmaceutical compa nies as an example. "It's going to be a tremen dous thing as it develops," lie said. The facilities which will be lo cated in Cincinnati at the Robert A. Taft Engineering Center will consolidate the environmental health activities-now scattered in nine locations in the city. West Virginia's share of the center will be located in Mor- gantown, according to Sen. Robert C. Byrd D.-W. Va.. It will be a specialized Api.'a chian regional environmental health facility and is expected to employ at least 200 persons. The decision to place itiL major center in North Carolira ended a scramble that has ijeen under way since plans r ihr (Continued on I'agc 3 Visit- P K , i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 7, 1965, edition 1
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