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Chancellor Speaks On Bond Issue
.Mot Sufficient To. Endorse The Status Quo
9
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An address by William B. Aycock, Chancellor of the
University at Chapel Hill, in connection with the State
wide bond issue on Nov. 7.
The bond election to be held on November 7, 1961, will
pass if the people of the State are adequately inform
ed on the issues involved. The purpose of the state-wide
bond election is to provide essential capital improvements
for several state agencies and institutions. The ten items
to be voted on involve an initial outlay of $61,665,000.
But this is not the full picture.
Item 6. to provide $13,500,000 for the development of
our ports in Wilmington and Morehead City is in reality
a loan which is to be repaid from port receipts. Thus
Conservatives
See Edits, Page Two
Oft ices in Graham Memorial
T FT
ace lvieasiire
in
Tabled
Financial
Bill Is
Withdrawn
A resolution which would have
voiced support for complete racial
integration of downtown theaters
was tabled by Student Legislature
Thursday night after considerable
debate.
Although one of the theaters has
admitted Negro students, there is
no clear policy on the matter, Tim
Tetlow, sponsor of the bill, said in
debate.
The motion to table was made by
Bill Whichard, a supporter of the
bill who used the move to test the
chances of the bill's passing. In
effect, opponents of the bill voted
to table, proving that had the bill
been submitted for a vote it would
have met defeat.
Controversial Bill
Another controversial proposal,
to appropriate $300 to reimburse
the Orientation Committee for a
dance held this fall, was withdrawn
by its sponsor, Bill Criswell.
The bill will be rewritten and
submitted. In its new form the bill
will state what funds the Orienta
tion Committee will need to con
tinue this year's programb. The
proposal had been criticized by op.
ponents who claimed that if passed
in its original form the bill might
indicate Legislative approval of
spending funds and then expect
ing the body to meet the bills.
Asks $155
A bill asking for $155 for Stu
dent Government offices was re
turned for further study to the
Finance Committee.
A bill which clarifies and expands
the powers of the Rules Committee
was passed by voice vote.
In other action at the session, Fi.
nance Committee Chairman Arthur
Merrill announced a permanent
weekly meeting time of 8:30 Mon
days. Rules Committee will meet
Monday at 5 p.m.
Carrier
Sunday
6:00 Dinner Hour
6:55 Campus News
Vespers Initiated
By United Church
A Sunday evening vesper service
has been inaugurated by the United
Congregational Christian Church.
It begins at 6:30 p.m. and is for
UNC students and all other inter
ested persons. The program is con
ducted by the minister, the Rev.
DeWitt L. Meyers Jr., with music
under the direction of Marvin Nal
lcy, the church's minister of music.
This Sunday evening's service
will be followed by a discussion of
Eric Fromm's book, "The Art of
Loving," led by Hank Hollings
worth of the UNC Department of
Social Work.
Once a month the vesper service
will be in the form of a supper for
the students at 6 p.m. at the
church.
By
SG
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Faculty ji
News
Five UNC historians will play
key roles at a meeting of the
Southern Historical Association at
Chattanooga, Term., Nov. 9-11.
James W. Patton, head of the
library's Southern Historical Col
lection, will direct a discussion
on Reconstruction: Negroes and
Politics."
. Alumni Distinguished Professor
Carl H. Pegg, chairman of the
tJNC History Department, will pre
side over the European Section
of the Association; Prof. J. E.
King will discuss three papers
to be presented on "English and
French- Politics in the 17th Cent
ury"; Dr. Douglas Hale will read
a paper concerning Heinrich von
Gagern, president of the Frankfort
Assembly of 1S48, and Kenan Prof.
Flethcher M. Greene and several
history graduate students will also
participate in the three-day meet.
Clifford M. Foust, assistant pro
fessor in the Department of His
tory, spoke at the Fifth Annual
Social Studies Clinic of the Flori
da Council of Social Studies in
Tampa, Florida, Thursday.
The title of his address is "Who
Cares About Confucius?"
Charles B. Robson, Kenan pro
fessor of political science, present
ed a paper at the 33rd annual
meeting of the Southern Political
Science Association in Gatlinburg,
Tenn., Friday.
He spoke on "The Role of Com
parative Political Systems in Po
litical Scence: An Appraisal of the
Present State of Comparative Gov
ernment." Current
y.:
7:00 Canterbury Hour
7:15 Man with a Question
7:30 Sacred Note
7:45 The Search
8:00 Concert Hall
10:00 News
10:15 Viewpoints
10:30 Quiet Hours
10:55 News
11:00 Campus News
11:05 Quiet Hours
11:55 Preview
12:00 Sign-Off
12:00 Sign-Off
NEHRU HITS BOMB TESTS
LONDON ( UPI ) Prime Minis
ter Jawaharlal Nehru said Satur
day the resumption of Soviet nu
clear tests was an evil thing and
that it "is of the utmost import
ance to put an end to all nuclear
tests by formal treaty."
The explosion of the big Soviet
bomb "shocked us," he told re
porters at London Airport where
he arrived from India en route
to the United States and talks this
weekend at Newport, R. I., with
President Kennedy.
the ultimate expenditure from state tax sources will not
be $61,665,000, but only $48,165,000.
Another important point is that several projects in item
3 (Higher Education) and item 4 (Community Colleges)
must secure matching funds in order to qualify for sup
port from the bond issue. Matching funds of not less than
$12,200,000 will be required. Consequently, the total
value of the capital improvements program is approxi
mately $73,000,000 rather than $61,665,000. This program
involving over 200 specific projects has been carefully
screened by the Advisory Budget Commission and ap
proved by the North Carolina General Assembly. The
basic issue on November 7, 1961, is whether or not we
concur in the judgment of our elected representatives in
Old PHILLIPS WALL
: BCU0VAT10U
AT IMC PUUT
X
II
71
CHANGES Above is a map of proposed or under
way additions to the University's facilities. The pro
posed student union and undergraduate library would
be at the south end of Emerson Field. Cobb Dorm will
Chemistry
Grant Is
Set Up
The R. O. E. Davis fellowship in
chemistry has . been established
at UNC through a $10,000 bequest
in the will of Mrs. R. O. E. Dav
is. The fellowship was named for
her husband, Royall Oscar Eugene
Davis, recognizing his interest in
sciences in the University here.
Mrs. Davis was the former Bir
die Pickard, native of Chapel Hill
and a graduate of the University
in 1902. She died here June 25,
1961. She lived at the Carolina
Inn several years after the death
of her husband in 1949. They were
married in Chapel Hill in 1906.
The fellowship, according to
Chancellor William B. Aycock, will
be awarded annually to a student
who is adjudged as outstand
ing in chemistry.
Mr. Davis was a member of the
class of 1901, and received the
Ph.D. in chemistry in 1903. He
taught chemistry at the University
here and later became a chemist
for the U. S. Department of Agri
culture in Washington, D. C.
FOURTH TERM
BONN (UPI) The Christian
Democratic Party voted Saturday
to join the Free Democrats in a
coalition government. The move
ensured the election of Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer to a fourth term.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1961
Proposed University Changes
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SISIISIIlis
liiill
Mil
See Editorial Page
Fallout Shelters
Panel Set Monday
The Chapel Hill-Durham Branch of the Women's International Lea
subject: "Fallout Shelters Safety or llusion?" from the WUNC-TV
gue for Peace and Freedom will
studio in Swain Hall on the UNC campus at 8:30 p.m. Monday.
The studio will accommodate from 75 to 100 persons and audience
participation is invited.
Mrs. Wayne A. Bowers, chairman of this meeting, will introduce
the following panel: Moderator, Dr. Donald Irish, formerly on the
faculty at Ohio Wesleyan, and now at UNC working on a three-year
Research Grant in the Institute for Research in Social Science.
Panel speakers, the Rev. Vance Barron, pastor of the Chapel Hill
Presbyterian Church, who has had a long-standing interest in this
question; Dr. Warner Lee Wells, professor of surgery at Memorial
Hospital, who served with the Atomic Energy Commission in Hiro
shima, Japan, from January 1950 to June 1952, and who translated
the book "Hiroshima Diary" written by a Japanese doctor.
Dr. Emil Chanlett, Professor ot Sanitary Engineering in the Uni
versity, and Director of a Training Program for Radiological Health
Specialists in the School of Public Health; and W. G. Wren of Hills-
boro, Veterans Service Officer for
tor of Civil Defense for Orange County.
The public is invited to attend.
UN C Studen t In jured
UNC student Norwood G. Clark,
Jr., 19, was admitted to N. C. Mem
orial Hospital with a badly bruis
ed left arm yesterday authorities
said, after he was struck by a
car while crossing Raleigh street
near Lewis Dorm.
Chapel Hill police said the acci
dent, investigated by Campus Po
lice Chief Arthur Beaumont, occur
red shortly before 5 p.m.
Authorities said Clark, who lives
the need for a capital improvements program of $73,000,
000 which will require an initial investment by the State
of $61,665,000 but an ultimate tax expenditure of over
$48,165,000.
Can the State of North Carolina afford this investment ?
It has been stated forthrightly by state officials that the
credit rating of the State is high and that low interest
rates on the bonds would be secured. Also it has been
asserted that the present tax structure is broad enough
to retire the bonds in an orderly manner without the
necessity for a tax increase. Regardless of political or
economic views we as North Carolinians must agree
that members of the General Assembly and the executive
i
,V: ,y ?- -tC W
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be renovated to accommodate women students next fall.
Franklin Street is at the top, and the two X-shaped
buildings at lower center are the new six-story men's
dormitories, to be ready for occupancy next fall.
sponsor a panel discussion on tb
Orange County, as well as Direc
at 204 Graham, apparently ran be.
tween a bus and a car into the
traffic lane, where he was struck
by a car driven by UNC student
Zcbulin Ward May. Police said
no charges would be filed against
the driver.
Hospital authorities said Clark is j
lrij satisfactory condition. They
said X-rays showed his arm, al- i
though badly bruised and scraped,
was not broken.
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Music
Group
Honored
The local chapter of Phi Mu
Alpha Sintfonia music fraternity
was selected by its national office
as the outstanding chapter in its
province.
The . award came last Tuesday
at the province convention held
here at UNC
This plaque is the second in the
past year for Alpha Rho chapter.
At the fraternity's national conven
tion in 1960, it was the winner of
this area's manpower award. This
area consists of chapters from
South Carolina, Furman, W'illiam
and Mary, East Carolina and Da
vidson.' The outstanding chapter award
is for the past year, during which
Jay Lambeth was president. Pre
siding now is Bob Greason, who
is also president of the band..
Bergman Film
'Seventh SeaL'
Shown Tonigh
The special Sunday free flick
will be Ingmar Bergman's
"Seventh Seal." The film takes
place in Europe in the middle
of the 14t4h century while the
black death rampaged around.
The flick will be shown at
7:30 and 9:30 in Carroll Hall.
ID cards will be required.
branch of our State Government have through the years
proved highly responsible in fiscal matters.
A bond issue for a growing State is comparable to bor
rowing by an individual with a growing family. A person
with a good credit rating and a steady income often finds
that the only feasible way to finance a new home or a
growing business is to borrow. So it is with a growing
and developing state. In the past when the people of
North Carolina have invested in the future of the State,
the decision proved to be a wise one.
Over two-thirds of the proposed capital improvements
is for education in some form. Item 2 (State Training
Schools), Item 3 (Higher Education), Item 4 (Community
(Continued on Page 3)
Partially
Germans Bil
Broth
Campus
Briefs
TODAY
The Carolina Christian Fellow
ship will meet from 3:30-5:30 p.m.
in the Grail Room, GM.
A panel discussion of
warfare will be featured
Binkley Baptist Church
nuclear
at the
supper
study at 5:45 p.m. at the church.
The speakers will be Joe Park, a
physics graduate students; Dr.
Ray Dawson, political science pro
fessor and Calhoun Geiger, Ameri
can Friends Service Committee.
The Cosmopolitan Club will elect
a new president at 4 p.m. at Gra
ham Memorial.
MONDAY
The Publications Board will
meet at 3:30 p.m. in Woodhouse
Room, GM.
TUESDAY
The Philological Club will meet
at 7:30 p.m. in 115 Ackland Muse
um, Joseph C. Sloane of the Art
Department will speak on "Velaz
quez.
Peace Corps
Man Visiting
UNC Campus
B. James Kweder, a field repre
sentative of the Peace Corps, will
visit Carolina, Wednesday and
Thursday.
Kweder's arrival coincides with
a nationwide information program
by the Peace Corps to explain the
purpose of the new agency and the
many opportunities it offers for
overseas service in the newly de
veloping areas of the world.
Although he will be speaking pri
marily to students on the campus,
Kweder has said he would like to
meet all persons interested in the
Peace Corps.
Wednesday Kweder will speak at
noon in Lenoir Hall and again at 4
p.m. in the Cabinet Room of the
YMCA Building. Both meetings are
B en-Gut
peaks Monday
Zvi (Harry) Zinder, public af
fairs advisor to Prime Minister
David Ben-Gurion of Israel, will
speak Monday night at 8 in Howell
Hall.
Zinder, a native American and
graduate of Northwestern Univer
sity, will speak on "Turmoil in
the Middle East."
Beginning in 1936, Zinder cov
ered Palestine, Syria and Lebanon
for AP, and later became Middle
East war correspondent for Time
and Life at its Cairo headquarters.
During the war he covered both
the China-Burma-India and Euro
pean theatres of war.
On the eve of the establishment
of the Jewish State of Israel, Zin-!
Weather
cloudy and cooler.
Complete UPI Wire Servic
n
49
ers
Concert
Set For
Nov. 10
The German Club will feature
Joe Bushkin and The Brothers
Four at its Fall Germans concert,
November 10.
Bushkin, nationally renowned pi
anist and composer is an old hand
in the entertainment world. He
has appeared with the Bunny Bcri
gan, Tommy Dorsey and Benny
Goodman bands and has been on
a number of television shows, in
cluding the Steve Allen Show,
Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby Spe
cial and the Chevy Show.
He was a soloist on two occasions
at the Hollywood Bowl and has
made several night club stands,
such as the Embers and Round
table in New York, The Sands in
Las Vegas and the London House
in Chicago.
To date, Bushkin has recorded
on Capitol and Columbia, ten al
bums, including "Nightsounds,"
"Blue Angels" and "After Hours."
As a composer, he has written
"Oh Look at Me Now," "Some
thing Wonderful Happens in Sum
mer," "There's Always the Blues"
and "Indian Sign."
Infirmary
Students in the infirmary yester
day were Nancy Jane, Victoria
King, Frances Rhyne, Steve
Vaughn, Gaston Caperton, Jeff
Blankenship, Charles Mattes, Wal
ter Shuford, Peter Maupin, Char
les Coble, Robert Langford III.
Dewey Collins, Jones Pharr.
Claude Pryor, Marshall Redding,
Horace McKee and Jane Crutch
field. Infirmary hours are from 9-11 a.
m. and 2-5 p.m. through Saturday
and 10-11 a.m. and 4-5 p.m. on
Sunday.
open to the public.
On Thursday the field represen
tative will be in the "Y" Cabinet
Room from 9 a.m. to noon, and
from 1-5 p.m.
ion's Aide
der joined the staff of the Jewish
Agency in Washington, which was
to become the first Embassy of
Israel. He remained at the Em
bassy until 1950 as Public Relations
and Information Officer and later
became Press and Public Relations
Officer of the Israel Delegation
to the UN.
Zinder returned to Israel in 1954
as Director of the Press and In
formation Office of the Government
and served as Director of the Is
rael Broadcasting Service, estab
lishing the country's modern
broadcasting network.
At the end of 1960 he assumed
the post of Adviser to the Prime
Minister on Public Affairs.
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