Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 24, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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
tf.n.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 I DEFENSE : 1 I 1 D2 Some cloudiness today with slowly rising tempera tures. See Edits, Page Two j - Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA- SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1963 UPI Wire Servic UNC Peace Union Elects Officers Duke Topples Tar Heels tronser o " aylor : : v. . s j - ' ; ' r. Tf , ' ' , ., x " - - - " " , ' 1 - ' V f . jjr f f ' ' v - ' x ' ' ' , , " t - , f; - 4 ' Mil l J o f - - - t i v - , 'f f ' - - - r , j. K r r-i:- V, ' y . H-,.-, Mora. Admission Free The Student Peace Union elect vd . a , Steering Committee and -liairman at its weekly meeting s.indav afternoon. Pat Cusick as elected cha.rman of the group j y acclamation. Norwood Pratt, yti',- ave Canalos, John Dunne, and rvin Hochran constitute the new-y-eiected fleering Committee. "The increased scope and n inn er of our activities have made rs o r e organization necessary," .aid Cusick. "We plan to continue ponsoring speakers and films, astributing literature, and provid ing displays to make the UNC student body aware of the grow ing possibility of nuclear war and alternatives to the policies that .naxe it possible. This week we .-ponsored a delegation to the UN Model General Assembly and will soon open a lending library and reading room at the YMCA in con junction with the YMCA Foreign iiiairs Committee." Cusick announced that Dr. Jose ph Stariey of the Physics Depart ment is the group's Faculty Ad visor. The SPU meets every Sunday at 4 p.m. in 205 Alumni to dis cuss the goal of and obstacles to disarmament. Visitors are welcome. Sense r 10 Prevent W Mulligan Here Wednesday " DWARFED AND SURROUNDED by Duke's 6-10 center Jay Buckley, Carolina guard Yogi , Poleet looks for a teammate to pass the ball ' to in the second half of the game yesterday. .Poteet's. problem here , seemed to plague the Tar Heels all afternoon as the Blue Devils rolled to a 106-93 victory. See story and more pictures on page 4. Photo by Jim Wallace k ORGANIZATION REPORTS 1 All organizations that wish to be included in the 1963-64 Student Government budget must send their organization reports to the SG of fices in GM before Monday. p.m. in Gerrard Hall. The speak er will be State Senator' Charles Strong. NEW LEFT Bob Millon will address the New Left Club Tuesday night in its meeting at 127 Rosemary St. The topic for discussion will be Latin America. THEORETICAL SEMINAR Professor Egil Hylleraas of the University of Oslo will address the Duke-UNC Theoretical Semi nar Tuesday afternoon at o'clock, Room 265 Phillips Hall. YOUNG REPUBLICANS The Young Republicans Club will meet Tuesday night at 7:30 STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM John Adams "will show the Statistics Colloquium Monday how an analysis of variance might be performed in a special case of circular dependence. The meeting will be at four o'clock in Room 265, Phillips Hall and will be open to the public. di pm The Di-Phi will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Di Hall, Third Floor, New. West to elect officers for the spring term. It is extreme ly important that all members and conditional members attend this meeting and that they be on time. Chicago U. Will Permit Nazi To Talk CHICAGO (UPI ) The Univer sity of Chicago said this week it would permit American Nazi George Lincoln Rockwell to speak on the campus Tuesday even though it expects "no truth or wis dom" from him. - Residents of a dormitory have invited Rockwell to speak, and the appearance of the self-styled Nazi has aroused opposition both on and off the campus. Dean of Students Warner A. Wick said in a statement this very opposition has made it "more im portant ... to these students to demonstrate that the freedom we take pride in exists in fact as well as in name." "Although we should have pre ferred to celebrate our principles on an occasion that promised to be more wholesale, the university will keep its faith with the student code SPO The Student' Peace Union will meet Sunday at 4 p.m. at 205 Alumni. Discussion topic will be Vraskow's "Limits of Defense." Interested persons are. cordially invited. - - - v -m North : Carolina." The address, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in room 111 Murphy, is spon- jsored " by the State ' Affairs Com mittee. The meeting is open to the public. . . SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Mr. John Ensign, Director of Camp Hanover outside Richmond Va., will be in Chapel Hill Thurs day evening and Friday morning to interview those interested in summer employment as staff coun selors. Camp Hanover is a Presbyter ian Camp. Those interested should call the Presbyterian Church Office (942-3573) Monday for an appointment. PETITE MUSICALE Rene Flachot, a young French 'cellest, will appear Sunday night at 8 p.m. in the Main Loung in GM in a Petite Musicale. This program is open to the public. (Continued on page 3) Heine Flachot To Appear Here Tonight French 'cellist Heine Flachot will appear : at 8 p.m. today in the Graham Memorial student lounge. The program is free to UNC stu dents arid faculty. Born of French parents in ' Ar-j gentina, Miss Flachot began play ing the violoncello at the age of eleven. At fifteen she was win ner of the coveted Prix Piatigor- Graham Memorial will present Gerry Mulligan and his baritone sax at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Me morial Hall. Mulligan and the three, members of his quartet, Bob Brookmeyer on valve trom bone, Bill Crow on bass, and Gus Johnson on the drums will appear free for all UNC students. Mulligan has formed a number of quartets in his 20-year career. "Each of my groups has had an entirely different sound, and an entirely different effect on me," Gerry said recentl y. "It's mis leading to talk about 'the quartet' as if there'd been only one." Gerry has run the gamut from best-selling LP's to nightclub attendance records and jazz festi val eminence. At the first New port festival in 1954, he not only sat in with the Eddie Condon's Dixielanders; but also took part in a finale that brought Mulligan, Stan Kenton, Condon, and a dozen more into a wild version of "I Got Rhythm." WWVV'" t v,iwww w vMJWWWWff , mm 'I ' "" ' ". '4 ' 1 s " 1 in-, rir iiHiiiiirr.if miKiin ri mrrrnf mm i. .. fr-, ,. ,,.,. ,.. ..y.v.y,-,'.-ff . '(--(, mail , War inevitable' But Impossible Says Professor 4 t IS. t iff " "nr-tminfi-irrriifi rirri--!! i--v"';'iiiji imimi STATE. AFFAIRS' Dr. John L. . Sanders, Director of the Institute of Government, will speak Monday night on "The cards at 7:30 and 9:30 pjn. in proposals for Higher Education in ' Carroll .Hall. : SUNDAY CINEMA Yvonne de Carlo and Alec Guin ess star in "The Captain's Para dise," a satire on one man's idea cf paradise centered around a ferry which shuttles between Gi braltar and North Africa. The film is open to students with ID MISS FLACHOT sky and in 1960 she was honored by Russian composer Aram Khatch a tar ian by being asked to appear as a soloist in a cello concerto given in his name at a festival in Paris. Miss Flachot will appear here accompanied by pianist Alan Mo tard, recipient of the Marquerite Long-Jacques Thibaut Prixe for Doctor Of Old Needed Only tars, Peonies And Leeches : Ever hear of an out-patient clin ic or a medical hospital in the thirteenth century, A. D.? Or see mystically-empowered . "Cala- drius r- bird that could save a man's life just by looking at1 him or let the patient die by failing to turn his head? ' These and - other practices and institutions identified with medi cal history are little known to the general public. But they'll gain in popularity if . a local scholar has his way. . j The scholar is Loren MacKin-' ney, a Kenan Professor of Med ieval History whose knowledge of early medicine could probably have qualified him as reputable practitioner in the years 500-1500. j research He would need only some stars i Practices deals with in Miniatures to gaze, upon, several springs of 4 peony .a -jar. of , leaches to suck blood from patients and an array of herbs and someone to heJp hold his more unruly clients. And, cf course; he'd have to know of spots on the human body from which blood should be drained in order: to bring relief from a spec ific disease. These and other practices view ed through the 20th Century eye as medical oddities are only a few among numerous findings which Dr. MacKinney is incorpor ating into a detailed volume near ing completion for publication. His! By PE1TER VOORIIEES G. V. Taylor, UNC associ ate professor of history, said Friday night in a speech to the U.N. Model Assembly war is a normal occurance m any system of independent and proximate states," and that "diplomacy can only ar rest war for a time." When governments run out of concessions to offer, Tay lor said, they must follow the advice of their generals. Speaking of the advances of military technology, how ever, Taylor said that "while in terms of history war is inevitable, it is in this tech- io!ogy inpermissable." Taylor began his Memorial Hall speech by labeling himself a 19th Century anachronism, and admit ting that many cf his proposals would be impractical. "Mankind has obligations to gen erations yet unborn," Taylor said, "and no government may right fully peopardize the lives of citi- &ens of a nuetral country." Tay .or said of today's international .ensions that "Man must revitalize lis moral sense." In spite of this pressing need Tiankind is st ill "willina in adiust "Medical 1 himKMF in arnihilatinn " Tavlnr and! :aA nnrl in (imps nf war Vias; IpH iexu, anotner way Ot saying hirrvf in nlW trar-rtv in p. he's studying early medical prac- oressed in terms of statistics "Sta tiees by examination of extant small paintings depicting them. The job has taken Professor MacKinney to the best libraries in almost every European country, including nations behind the Iron Curtain. Now, at home in Chapel Hill, MacKinney is recording the medical evolution into a two-part volume with reference as far back as 510 A. D. The heart of his research are the "miniatures," or small paint ings, themselves. He has found (Continued on page 3) tistics," he said, "anaesthetize our morality. We must not think of people as digits." Man must eliminate the "cor porate revulsion at the thought of foreign states merging into in ternational bodies," for as long as this contjiues, war is inevit able, Taylor stated. Dr. Taylor closed by saying that we are endangered by entrenched attitudes and opinions and our refusal to face harsh realities. 'Man will not survive unless mor als retain authority," he said. Dr. Graham, Sanford To Dedicate "New Building For Public Health Gov. Terry Sanford; Deputy Sur geon General David E. Price; U.N. mediator, and former Consolidated University President, Dr. Frank P Graham, and Dr. Abel Wolman of Johns Hopkins University, head a rlictincriiicVio rncter nf cnoalrpr; pianists di me .cuciim: muaaaiC,for ceremonies dedicating the new Napoletana. ; School of Public Health Building, ivnss riacnot, wno siuuui m Anr;i c nnri 7 Paris under Gregor Piatigorsky and Pierre Fourier, will present the first of GM's Spring Concert Series. Princess Liliane Might er Son To Carolina Send H By GARRY BLANCHARD The new facility, completed and occupied in the fall of 1962, repre sents $1,816,000 in new construc tion and, combined with a previous ly existing unit, gives the UNC School of Public Health a two million dallor building, with 120, 000 square feet of space. Dr. E. G. McGavran, dean of the School, will preside at the two day celebration. In Chapel Hill to commemorate the official opening of the building will be educators and administrators from the na tion's public health schools and from national and international health organizations. Keynoters for the event are Dr. Graham and Dr. Wolman, profes- I quired of me. "I want my son to arrived a few minutes earlier, come here to study. His name is joined his wife in greeting the Her royal highness Liliane, sec- Alexander. He's 20 years old and entourage, cod wife of the former King of the 5r, u;s second vear of medical Earlier in cur conversation, the Belgians, looked a little pooped. jschool." (princess said that she and her r" and director, Department of It was about noon Friday. She Did she mean the Uuittd Staes husband had been to the United Sanitary Engineering, John Hop and her husband, King Leopold Dr Carolina? . . (States "very, very often" since ns University School of Public nr haH. enpnt thp mornin2 tour- Hpre" she said with a smile.' her son's operation at Harvard Health and a former president of B in- separately the areas of the pointing at the floor. "As a moth-' Medical School for Children in. the American Public Health Asso- end with the tradition of free in-, University of North Carolina cam- er, I'm very interested ki Lhe at-j 1357. tcrchange that the code embodies, Wick said. SP MEET pus 10 w.iicn mey were mieitaicu. mospnere anu uie sunuuiiuuios., xm i& k;u titi uacicai The Leopold 1 ciation. Twenty outstanding authorities in The Student Party will meet at Carolina Inn's nrinrp was waiting for Fere, it's cozy, it s nice. It s ex- forming a heart foundation in iei-i"! 01 puuuu ntdiuu m printesb .waixio . . . , - . tlcioato in a fnur-nart discussion. in inin hpr in OPC Ot Uie aCUy Uie Uldtc I U Aiftc iu.u iv vt. yuin iiau LUii. : i " - to join ner in olc ui v.j w,; .t.. uCvl;-. a Satnrdax- aftprnrxw. " Anr 1 6. on .AmC I V f HIUvll.N flrStl 1 1 I HIV I i t I in I .III L ' V lit 1 ' ' I I I rf fJl ALOILCU J ' - i . Gov. Terry Sanford was due to ar- to put him in -aarvard, because writing me,, asking me to neip r. 'tTC 7:30 P.m. in Howell Hall All mem- ov. "y-0. loyal was where, he was operated their duldren get the- same help Present, and Future." Heading the 5Si, r LK c;upte io lunch in the lorehead on for a heart ailment in 1.57. i ours had. So I started working end discussion will be Dr. John Wright, Rut a doctor friend told me created the foundation." . :.j tomer head of tfle ursu epari- dues have been reduced from $1.50 i .atie.anum. - make vour decision.' The roval visit was Promoted in ment of Public Health Administra te. $1.00 since last semester. Ir-:.l o"1" - . 1Tiversitv r,f North nzrt be Dr Pierre Riilant .'tion and current director of the . i : -, . ,1 hc rliior. include current relaUons with the 1he reporter walked over to --afna ttafs why I'm professor of physiplogji and direc-j school's program in continued eou- m iue . . . vn . Thatr nrl to see vour heart- tor nf th Solw Tr&tit.iite of Phvsi- canon service; Mr. Lmu naiueu. ii.F, me tumg oi ine vacarn or-, " . . j u , 4,.rr,n nnter nf r-rvirsp " rlnpal rarrh in KrnsseJs. is professor of sanitary engineering; Legislative seat in Dorm Ien s o, piece green ' . governor walked in' workins temoorariiv at the Re-IPr. Jchn Larsh, professor and ( Joyner, Alexander, Connor, and black fur neckpiece tion. r igin Sunday morning, with a special Deputy Surgeon General, will make Dr. Wolman will talk at the First memorial honoring the late Dr. opening addresses at the building General Session, Saturday, at 10 Milton J. Rosenau, former direc- dedication Sunday afternoon at 2 a.m., on "Trends and Challenges tor and dean U936 to his death in p.m. Governor Sanford will make in Public Health." Dr. Graham's ; 1946) of the School of Public Health, the dedication talk and will pre talk, at 8:30 p.m. Sat., will be on and founder of the world's first sent the dedication plaque to Dean "The University's Role in World such facility, the Harvard Univer-, McGavran. -w- i i t i j it t- i - ' : a . ri t r n..Li: ft i i I liiaucaiipn. - com lants win De in suy ocnooi oi r-uuiic neaiin. UNC's HiU Hall auditorium. Dedictation ceremonies will be- Following these ceremonies, the UNC Chancellor William B. Ay-1 rcw building will be open for cock and Dr. David E. Price, ! tours. i ... Stop.. ZJ? 'T . iTLj-j-). - r 3 VA iJ Jw.flww-w. i . Z? 1"'" V-" s - -, Me 1 ' f ft " m I 1 t 1;z 1 -if. t : -..,.... , . y : ,y ,,-.. Z , -L j , 4 . i A, . .. ,. ' ' WinctAr.) t.ft comir2 SnriS Degan cnaiuss . - . . , - - -- - - . '-vrsu k-nrw whv In lacking cenu trom -. . ousie elects. . addiuon : , u J"yher 1 Raleigh. The former ki. with four 'Belgian exchange stu-', search Triangle Corp. in Durham, j bead, UNC Department of Parisi- who had! the royal couple. - i Professor of public health, educa- SANFORD." GRAHA?I TO DEDICATE Gov err 3 r Terry Sasfc-id, Dr. Frank P. Graham, and the Deputy Snrgeoi General ef the United States head a list or distinguished speakers for ceremonieb dedicating tois new $2,000,000 home of the UNC ScfeocI cf Public Health. A two-day program, April 6 an-i 7, will commemorate the cificial opering or the new facility, completed and occupied in the fall. DyiW C4UW WTil IJB VUtU UU. -aiuuuM i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 24, 1963, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75