Sunday, March 10, 196S
Parra 6
THE DAILY TAR
Kb
Qr Daily ear tjrrl
World News
BRIEFS
By United Press International
Rocky Holds Strategy Meeting
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New Yqrk, who says he is
"ready and willing" to run for president if the Republican party
wants him, summoned two dozen GOP leaders to his Manhattan
apartment for a major strategy meeting Sunday.
the guest list was as secret as the purpose of the conference.
But it appeared Rockefeller was taking the initiative in efforts to
agree on a candidate to replace Gov. George Romney of
Michigan, who withdrew from the race.
Gov. Ronald Reagon of California let it be known in
Sacramento that he was not invited. Sen. Hugh Scott of
Pennsylvania, a former GOP national chairmen,. .said he will be
there. Others likely to attend include Gov. Raymond Shafer of
Pennsylvania and Sen. Jacob K. JavitsR-N.Y.
Rights Passage Appears Imminent
WASHINGTON Civil rights strategists, anticipating final
Senate approval Monday of a sweeping open housing bill, are
turning their attention to the all-important question of timing and
tactics in the House.
Barring an unexpected last minute reversal, the Senate was
expected to give final formal clearance Monday to the com
promise rights package, which would outlaw discrimination in
more than two-thirds of the nation's housing,' crack down on ri
oting, and broaden laws against racial intimidation.
The Senate tentatively approved the legislation by an
overwhelming 61-19 vote Friday. Although southerners could try
a final filibuster, reports indicated they were ready to give in.
Wallace Seeks W. Va. Candidacy
MONTGOMERY, Ala. Former Gov. George C. Wallace an
nounced Saturday that a drive has been launched in West
Virginia to qualify him as a third party presidential candidate by
collecting 7,920 signatures.
The Wallace campaign headquarters also announced his
schedule for vists to Texas and Oklahoma next week. He will ap
pear next Saturday at the Texas convention of his American Par
ty in Austin and speak that night at the farigrounds in Tulsa,
Okla. "
Wallace, who hopes to get on the ballot in all or nearly all of
the states, has already been assured of ballot position in
California, Pennsylvania and Nebraska.
ANOTHER
WEEKEND LIKE
THIS PAST ONE
AND r IX PUT
ON ANOTHER
40 YEARS
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Project Hope Founder Speaks
Silhouette
Sunlight,
Charlotte
on.
i
DTH Stajf Photo by GXXZ WAXG
girders, and spectators form a quiet contrast in
Colisuem as the tension-filled ACC tournament goes
Medical Team
(&e
By GLENN TUCKER
Special to The Daily Tar Heel
"We only want to help people
who are willing to help
themselves" Dr. William B.
Walsh, founder of Project
Hope, explained Friday night
in a speech to about 40 people
at the Weslef Foundation.
Project Hope is an attempt
to spread medical know-how
throughout the world. The ship
Hope visits foreign countries
and trains people in various
medical skills.
Dr. Walsh, who founded the
project in 1953 by request of
Pres. Eisenhower, was here to
help organize the North
Carolina Committee for Pro
ject Hope. The organization's
aim is to spread knowledge of
Project Hope throughout JNorth
Carolina.
Dr. Walsh showed a film to
the group that illustrated the
many activities of Project
Hope. Its main concern he
said, is to teach people of
foreign countries how to main
tain high health standards.
"Project Hope's budget has
grown from $150 in 1C58 to
Grant
JL
about $7 million this year," Dr.
Walsh said. "We are
hopeful of getting a fleet of
ships so we can expand our ac
tivities."
The present ship Hope has
teaching programs in six na
tions and a faculty of 150
aboard the ship.
Educational Reform
(Continued from Pare 1)
The committee has met
twice a month all year in
deliberation of improving that
curriculum, Eel says.
He sees a general feeling in
the committee of wanting
more courses available to
students in their first two
years at the University, or
stated differently, of wanting
less requirements.
In a 1966 report to the
Chancellor, the committee
"strongly" recommended that
"the present General College
system be re-examined with a
view toward possible redefini
tion and reorganization." .
The report went on to sug
gest a change in which a stu
dent would be in the General
College or it's "equivalent" on
ly in his freshmen year, after
which time he would be "free
to register for any general
course open to undergraduates
(providing, of course, that he
has fulfilled all prerequisite re
quirements)." In order to assist the com
mittee, Student Government
last October founded a Special
Committee on General College
Reform.
The purpose of that com
mittee is to conduct a survey
of U.S. colleges and
universities to determine their
requirements, Kiel says.
The special committee,
chaired by sophomore John
McMurray, should be sub
mitting it's report shortly, Kiel
believes.
A medical research team
here will continue for another
year to study the cause of
weight loss often seen in pa
tients with diseases or surgery
of the stomach or small in
testine. 8
The National Institute of
Arthritis and Metabolic
Diseases has approved a
$46,500 grant for the third year
of research on villus motility,
lymph flow and intestinal
absorption.
' Researchers suspect that
faulty movements of tiny,
finger-like projections on the
lining of the small intestine
(villi) are partially to blame
for the malnutrition seen in pa
tients with diseases such as
sprue or regional enteritis or in
some patients after surgery on
the stomach.
Dr. John T, Sessions Jr., a
specialist in gastroenterology,
is the project director.
Assisting him are Dr. Oscar L.
Sapp III, Dr. Ezster Kokas,
and Dr. Eugene Bozymski.
Weinstein To Give
: . . v ,
V enable Lecure
The third Francis Preston
Venable Lecture in a series of
five scheduled for the 1967-63
207 Venable Hall
Monday, March 11.
at 8 p.m.
Stern Appointed
Air Hygiene Prof
Arthur C. Stern, an air pollu
tion and smoke abatement
engineer and administrator for
25 years, has been appointed
professor of air hygiene at the
School of Public Health, ef
fective April 1.
He has been assistant direc
tor of the National Center for
York City's air pollution
survey from 1935 to 1938.
Mclntyre To Attend
Air Pollution Contral of the
U.S. Public Health Service in
Bethesda, Md., since 1961.
For six years, Stern was
chief of the Laboratory of
Engineering and P h y s i c a 1 fedia Institute
Sciences, USPHS's Division of 4 eaia insnnue
Air Pollution in Cincinnati.
O.
Before joining the U.S.
Public Health Service in 1955,
he was with the New York
State Department of Labor as
chief of the Engineering Unit,
Division of Industrial Hygiene
for 12 years. He directed New
Week In Review -
Cloture Voted By
By United Press
v International
v Senate members decided
during the week to stop talking
and act. They voted by the
narrowest possible margin td
shut off debate on the proposed
civil rights bill. ;
- Since Congress convened
Jan. 15 a group of Southern
Democrats and some
academic year at UNC will be Republicans had kept the
1 s -m. r 1
given on Aionaay (Marcn
11).
Prof. Saul Winstein of the
University of California, Los
A n g eles, chemistry v depart
ment will lecture on
"Nonclassical Ions and
Homoaromaticity."
The lecture will be given in
1 " 1 . ""
THIS WEEK IN THE OLD BOOK
FEATURE CASE
Travel Books
A small but world-spanning col
lection of books on travel, for
arm-chair dreamers and jet set
alike. Europe, Asia, Africa, the
South Seas, and Latin America
all are well represented. Be
worldly-wjse: come for a visit.
The Old Book
Corner
in the Intimate Bookshop
119 East Franklin St
open evenings
Senate from acting by talking,
sometimes to a virtually emp
ty chamber. They had hoped to
kill the bill by keeping the
Senate in inaction.
But Wednesday the Senate
voted 62 to 32 to invoke
closure, the rule that limits
debate by each senator to one
hour, after three previous at
tempts failed. The vote was
the exact two-thirds required
' to enact closure and it was on
ly the eighth time the Senate
had invoked the rule since it
was adopted in 1917.
After the vote, the bipartisan
coalition backing the com
promise bill beat back a series
of amendments that would
have made it virtually in
effective. Senate conservatives
did succeed in tacking on
several antiroit measures.
some with the backing of the late Francis Cardinal Speilman
bill's sponsors, and at the as Roman Catholic Archbishop
week's end the upper chamber of New York. Bishop Cook, 47,
was dealing with some of the a native New Yorker, had been
J
Washington-Sen. J. William
Fulbright, D-Ark., set off the
strongest Senate attack yet on
President Johnson's Vietnam
policy when he -demanded
Congress be consulted before
any more American troops are
committed to the war. .
W a s h i n g t o n - President
Johnson broke his silence on
the report of his Advisory
Commission on Civil Disorders
by saying the report should be
read along with his own con
gressional messages on civil
rights and aid to the cities. He
did not comment .on the com
mission's conclusion that a
major cause of racial rioting
has been white racism.
Geneva-The United States,
the Soviet Union and Britian
pledged to aid non-nuclear na
tions threatened by "nuclear
blackmail." This was an effort .
to appease nations that have
balked at giving up all rights
to develop nuclear weapons.
Salisbury, Rhodesia Rho
des hanged three black Afri
cans convicted of murder in de
fiance of Queen Elizabeth's
royal reprieve.
Vatican City-Bishop Terence
James Cooke, 47, was named
by Pope Paul to replace the
YOUNG PEOPLE MAR
RIED or thinking of getting
married, should investigate the
advantages of mobile home liv
ing; no furniture to buy and
payments less than rent. A
home of your own. Gerry Cog
gin, campus representative.
Chapel Hill, 968-9182 or Capital
Mobile Homes, Chapel Hill
Durham Blvd., 489-3353.
Special this week at TRAVEL
ON MOTORCYCLE CO., 504
West Franklin Street. 650 cc
B.S.A. $625. Vespa $150. Honda
90 $225.
ft if. imm
T t m m ' -
uniurnisnea l Dearoom apart
ment with fireplace. $95 per
month excluding 'beat and
other utilities. Within walking
distance of. campus. Call 929
3138. 3 Bedroom spacious furnished
apartment near campus. Want
2 roommates to share with
me only $40 per month
apiece. Call Jim Batmasian
967-2803 (evenings and
weekends). Bernie Smith 942-
5168 (day).
THIS WEEK IN THE PRINT
ROOM
Travel Posters
A handsome display of travel
posters to harmonize with the
books in the feature case. Old
favorites and new numbers
enough to make the old em
porium look downright exotic.
the Print Room
the Intimate Bookshop
in
80 other proposed
amendments.
Rights backers kept intact
their major goal a broad ban
on housing discrimination.
Chances for passage of the
bill in the Senate appeared ex
cellent. In the House, which
passed a rights bill two years
ago only to see it die in the
Senate, prospects for the bill
appeared gloomy.
Around the World:
Saigon-American deaths in
Vietnam for the week were
542, one short of the record, as
both sides continued their of
fensives throughout .the coun
try. The American command
said enemy dead for the week
totaled 3,849.
serving as one of Spellman's
auxiliaries.
Belle Isle, La.-A fire in the
shaft of a mammoth salt mine
trapped 21 miners 1,200 feet
below the surface. Sixteen
bodies were recovered Fri
day. Baker, Calif.-A Greyhound
bus loaded with passengers
collided headon with a car
going the wrong way on an in
terstate highway, killing 20
persons and injuring 12
others.
W a s h i ngton-U.S. officials
revealed a Czechoslovakia
general had defected to the
United States the C z e c h
government asked later that he
be extradited to bis native
FOR KALE: 68 Mtistane -
Convertible. 6 cylinder, 3 ATTENTION MEDICAL,
speed. Power top, candy apple P H ARM ACEUTIC AL
red interior, 7 tires. Easy , STUDENTS New microscopes
terms, excellent condition. 929- at low prices due to oversbip-
5393.' ment Excellent for medical,
Dharmaev srhnnl hinlntrioal
A diplomat is a person who can research, etc. See Jim Van
teU you to "Go to Hell" in such Hecke at Beta Theta Pi House,
forward to the trip. COLOR
POSTER 16 x 22. Send $1.00
plus 25 cents mailing charge to
P.O. Box 14302 Univ. Sta.,
Gainesville, Florida 32501.
61 Chevrolet; 2 door Biscayne,
6 cylinder standard
transmission. $250 or best of
fer. Call 942-2335.
FOR SALE: 1966 Fairlane
Convertible. 289 V-8, 3 speed,
yellow with black top and in
terior. 5 year with 50,000 mile
warranty. Excellent condition.
Van Hallman, 123 Teague, 968
968-9068 for more information
and a look at samples.
Need extra cash? We are now
paying $1.30 up to 100 for silver
certificates, $1.35 up to 500.
Good to March 13. Eagle Coins,
1502 Broad St., Durham.
HELP WANTED: Salesman
Part time or full time employ
ment. Some previous selling
experience helpful. Apply
manager The . Young Men's
Shop, Durham.
Kenneth M. Mclntyre, direc
tor of the UNC Audiovisual
Bureau, has been selected one
of 28J educational media
specialists in the nation to at
tend a Special Media Institute,
March : 11-15, , at the Oregon
College of Education, Mon
mouth, Oregon.
Aro You Missing Out cn Our
Monday Hito Special After 5P.M
Select from: Ee. Prfc Est Cell
L Pastrami , , 80c . 73c t5z
1 Kosher Corned Beef $0c TSr Cs
Cheese Cake, per slice, 19c
SPECIAL PRICES ON DRAFT EZZZi
The Gourmet Center oper2a
IVY ROOM RESTAURAI1T
COSMOPOLITAN ROOM & DIUCATtCTi
1S94 W. Mala SL-Partisi b Eesr-Pfces GMUl
! . , tm if',,, ill" H
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She isn't
Vr the girl you
.-v thought
yuu riiew:
Senate
country to face charges of
embezzling government pro-,
perty and plotting to aid ousted
party leader Antonin Novot-
W a s hingt on -President
Johnson received a letter pro
ported to be from crew
members of the captured U.S.
intelligence ships Pueblo, apJ
pealing -: "assistance in bur
repatriation" by a public
apology to North Korea, which
seized the ship off its coast.
Egg) ?CECT0
: 1 GmtCraMtBafrtrui iicturti Umifrd Product ma
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE in TECHNICOLOR uor-i
NOV SHOWS 1:33 3J5
J PLAYING 5:20 - 7:15 - 9:10
Y Wrapped Sandwich X
Y Bowl of Soup X
Y Choice of Coffee, Tea or Fruit Drink X
Colonel.
meters is
you somet
MM I
titagfo
o give
rlree!
J U ka j U .J j) 0
advertised in
Reader's
IV Digest
V.. ' I
i
Colonel Sanders will fix you up with 4
pints of free fixin's (potatoes, cole slaw,
gravy, baked beans, potato salad, etc.) One
everytime you buy a bucket or barrel of his
"finger licknV good" chicken. (Through April
7, 1968.)
Get your Free Fixin's coupons in the
March issue of Reader's Digest.
We fix Sunday dinner seven days a week,
COLCHZL tANDERS RECIPE
Chapel Hill - Carrboro
Durham ct Raleigh '
i