Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 15, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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Summer School Edition Published Every Thursday Offices In Graham Memorial Student Union -w- n til jar i i CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1963 uildings To Cost 0 -IJlMfilSfl li Pill r . it t JOAN ARCIIER, a runner-up Orange County pageant held in on the lawn in front of Wilson Protests Halted Temporarily Efforts to gain the desegrega tion of Chapel Hill's 19 remain ing ' segregated establishments came to an apparent standstill tills week when all parties con cerned failed to take any defi nite action Floyd McKissick, defense at torney for the Chapel Hill Com mittee for Open Business, said he would file notice of appeal in Orange County Superior Court for the 15 persons convicted this week in Recorder's Court on charges resulting from anti-segregation protests staged here last month. Action on a proposed ord inance to prevent future business es established in Chapel Hill from practicing racial discrimin ation was deferred by the Board of Aldermen Monday night. The Board also referred a re port on the '"whole racial situa tion here" to a state-wide com mittee of mayors. The proposed ordinance, con cerning future businesses, had Mark Ethridge Named To Editorship Of 'Newsdaf A new member of the UNC School of Journalism faculty was recently named editor of News day, a daily newspaper publish ed in Garden City, N. Y. Mark Ethridge, board chair man an dformer publisher of the Louisville, Ky., Courier-Journal and Louisville Times, will teach one course at the University, 'Newspaper Management," be ginning Feb. 3. He will lecture one day a week, on Monday afternoons. "We are most fortunate in be ing able to add such a distin guished publisher to our staff," Norval Neil Luxon, dean of the journalism school, said when Ethridge's addition to the faculty was announced. "Mr. Ethridge's long experi ence in all phases of newspaper in the Miss June, relaxes Library. Miss Archer, "the daughter of a retired Army colonel and a recent graduate of Chapel Hill High School, . intends to enter the University this fall. been offered as a possible al ternative to a public accommo dations, law which would . deny licenses to any local business de nying service on the basis of race or color. The Aldermen had planned to discuss the new proposal, and had earlier requested a study of such a law's constitutionality and feasibility by the Institute of Government. Mayor Sandy McClamroch told the Board the Institute had not completed the requested study. Further action on the ord inance is expected at the Alder men's next regular meeting. Twelve Negro and three white COB members were convicted on trespassing, obstructing traf fic and blocking sidewalk charg es Tuesday in Chapel Hill Re corder's Court. Harold Foster, former chair man of the Committee, was convicted on two counts ob structing traffic, in a July 17 street demonstration and block- work on small and large news papers in Mississippi, Georgia, Virginia, New York, the District of Columbia and Kentucky will afford our students an unusual opportunity to study under one of the acknowledged leaders of the newspaper profession. "The original arrangements were that Mr. Ethridge would begin teaching this fall. Of course, when his new responsi bility arose, we re-arranged the schedule so he could orient him self to his new position. "'We feel it will be very stim ulating to both students and fac ulty to have him here even one day a week." The Ethridges plan to build a house on acreage they have pur chased about twenty miles from (Continued on Page 6) - 4, n t ing the sidewalk on July 19. Twenty-one persons were charged,, with - trespassing " July 19 after staging a sit-in at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants ' Bureau office. Judge William S. Stewart found 10 guilty; three cases were nol pressed with leave by Solicitor Roy M. Cole; one was found innocent; one case was (Continued on Page 3) Triangle Players Are Presenting 'Anything Goes' "Anything Goes," the final production of the Triangle Sum mer Theatre, opens tomorrow night at the YWCA auditorium in Durham. The play, directed by Richard Parks, UNC graduate student in drama, is a Cole Por ter musical comedy, popular on Broadway several years ago. Robert Sitton of the philosophy department here heads the cast, which also includes other stu dents from here and Duke and residents of the Triangle area. The play concerns a brassy night-club entertainer who loves a whacky playboy who loves a wealthy heiress who loves an English lord. Thrown together with Chinese stowaways, public enemy number one and members of the clergy on an ocean liner in the Atlantic anything goes. Songs featured are "I Get a Kick Out of You," "You're the Top," "Anything Goes," "Blow, Gabriel, Blow," "Friendship," "Take Me Back to Manhattan," and ten others. Production dates for the show are tomorrow night through Sun day night and next week Thurs day through Sunday. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale In Chapel Hill at Ledbetter-Pickards for $1.50. 19 Million Dollars By JIM NORTON Building'' improvements and additions here for the immediate future are expected to total at least $19 million, University Business Manager J. A. Branch an nounced this week. ' The N. C. General Assembly . this spring voted to appropriate $9 million for capital improvements here for the next two years. UNC authorities had requested $13.9 million from the State. An additional $11 million will come from other . sources in cluding federal grants, the already-announced dorm . rent in creases, income from student activity fees, and utilities owned by UNC, Branch said. Construction of five new build ings and additions to three oth ers are scheduled to begin next summer. Renovations will be made in three more campus buildings, and a $1,380,000 addi tion to the heating plant near Cameron Avenue will be built to supply the heating needs of the new structures. Income from University-owned utilities will pay the costs of the heating plant addition, he said. Two and a half million dollars was appropriated for a proposed nine-story men's dormitory. The new dorm will have a planned capacity of 925 students and will be located near Craige and Eh ringhaus. . The remainder of the cost of the new dorm will be liquidated over , a 40-year period through the $20-per-student-peryear in crease in room rent which goes into effect this fall. $1,100,000 was voted for a combined Cafeteria and Service Building, which will be near the new men's dorm. A new undergraduate library building will be constructed ad joining . the present Wilson Li brary, at a cost of $1,315,000. New Student Center Proposed The same architect who is de signing the library addition is also planning a new student cen ( Continued on Page 2) Chilean By BONNIE PLEASANTS Cecilia Gajardo Leopold of Concepcion, Chile, will enter the University as a visiting student this fall. Cecilia, 21-years old, is the first woman student to par ticipate in the Foreign Student Leadership Project here. This trip to the United States is the first Cecilia has made out side Chile. She plans to study teaching meth ods here. fc. She can read English well Miss Leopold and has little difficulty speaking it. She studied the language in secondary school for six years, took it in college for four years and had an additional year at the British Institute. Cecilia is presently attending an orientation program for all project participants in Philadel phia. She will attend the United Committee To Find Aycoek Replacement Consolidated University Pres ident William C. Friday indicat ed this week he intends to name a special committee before the end of this month, to begin con sideration of a successor to Chancellor William B. Aycoek. An organizational meeting of the committee is scheduled for early September, he said. Friday said the committee would probably consist of 15 or 16 members, including alumni, faculty members and trustees. He noted that a student repre sentative, probably the Student Body President, would be in vited to the first few meetings of the committee. Friday added, however, that after the early meetings, whether or not the stu dent remained on the committee would be up to the committee itself. He said the committee would be requested to submit a list of three choices to him by early spring. Under the administration code the president has the duty to nominate a chancellor for ap proval by the full board of the University's trustees. Friday indicated that he would probably submit his choice to (Continued on Page 8) Coed Here States National Student Associ ation National Student Congress in iBloomington, Ind. August 18 29. . J The purpose of the Foreign Student Leadership Project is to select student leaders from new ly independent and developing countries and allow them to spend a year on an American campus. The program was be gun with a Ford Foundation grant in 1955. Special emphasis is placed on the American system of govern ment and society. The student is integrated into campus and community life as a student leader. Cecilia will report her experi ences and impressions of Chap el Hill at another meeting for project participants in Decem ber. She will attend a similar meeting next June. During her stay here, Cecilia will prepare a detailed report on a phase of American life that interests her. She will take a (Continued on Page 3)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Aug. 15, 1963, edition 1
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