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lo0 t5!ie Tt&tsra" " " Seriate -5P George Sokol Baseball Team Win (See Sports Page) Weather Cloudy with chance of afternoon showers; high in the 80. Founded Feb. 2-3, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1964 United Press International Service "O CO T ivil Daytona Comes To Chapel Hill 1 fit romise jrfVf Tfnl Off r LBJ L I I 1 bill rW'',; rw5 i 4?V TWIST. TWIST, TWIST As twisting afternoon yesterday at swimming party co-sponsored by Socialized Medicine A Must In America Says Harrington "It is absolutely necessary oj this country to have social ized snedicine," anti-poverty au thor and presidential consultant Michael Harrngton told a facul ty seminar at the School of public Health. "The propaganda job on the American people (against so cialized medicine) has been fan tastic. They've been tokl such misleading things as 'You won't e able to choose your own doctor," Harrington, on the UNC cam pus for three days of lectures, claimed that Americans don't . Jike medicine as it is now prac ticed. . "Some day," he said, "some American politician is go ing to break through the barrier of fear built up by the opponents f socialized medicine and ask for medical care for everybody." He labeled the federal govern ment's controversial medical care for the aged proposal under So cial Security as "an excellent band-aid." He said, however, such - a concept would help peo ple only at the end of their misery, "We need a lifetime of medi cal cafe for everyone," tie said. But money alone is not suffi cient to provide a "human care industry" which this country peed, he said. "The issue is not getting a check in the mail to cover the costs of medical care for the poor," he said. "We need per sonalized medical care. "Poor people now complain they don't see the same doctor twice and the doctors they do see don't care about them be cause they won't have to see them again. "This is a huge impersonal bureaucracy and doctors don't i 1 r t i 1 HI 9 - xt. it f3W PYRAMID BUILDERS During- the IVIRC-CWC swimming combo party yesterday afternoon at Kes sing pool, this p-oup of Carolina Males displayed SI the Monzas played, it was a wet, Woollen's Kessing Pool during the the MRC and the CWC. This was care whether their poor pa tients get well or die." ' Harrington maintained medical care for the poor is "a problem of culture and doctors and nurses must practice a form of social work." He stressed medical care for the poor, he said, because this group gets sick more often, stays sick longer, loses more time from work and, therefore, is less able to trope with their health problems. "We need a vast , increase in medical and health programs for the poor," he said. Looking into the future, Har rington pictured the "human unny By HUGH STEVENS It was just one of those days. By two o'clock, the heat had melted the asphalt on Hillsboro Street in front of the Pi Beta Phi house, turning it into a sticky goo. The sand which the city had thoughtfully dumped on top of the mess only made things worse as passing autos flung grains of it into my face and under my al ready wilted collar. On the lawn, a lovely Pi Phi sat blissfully in the grass, tossing cloverleafs into the air and chat ting with her date, who rocked slowly back and forth in the porch swing. "Funny how the heat affects some people," I thought to my 1 F 5 I 1 -4 lfe"-toY.V.VVfe..,,..-J.-.-, ,. ni nV - j the first combo party of its kind quite a splash. care industry" as being unique in that it will requre people, not machines. He said it is "auto mation immune" and "job pro ductive." - v v He envisioned the use of the aged nd the untrained in such areas as community nursery schools for slum-area young sters as young as two years of age. Finally, he predicted that anti-poverty programs will be "an utter failure" unless ade quate health care is provided to everyone in the U.S. Such care, he said, must contribute to healthy minds, and emotions as well as healthy bodies. What self. I walked on. The Morehead Planetarium parking lot, as usual, was pack ed with chartered buses, and out side the rear entrance stood long lines of school children, looking like so many flowers that had been left out iii the sun too long. One of them calmly removed a water pistol of fantastic size from his pocket and blasted little girls in front of him. "Oooow, that's wet!" she shrieked. "Well, of course it's wet, stu pid," he leered. The arrival of a large matron ly teacher sent me on my way. I couldn't bear to watch. I headed for Graham Memorial, thinking all the while of the fan ',.1 Ifi? 1 ' '''wii. ) , 1 it,,', , ""-t '..'!i.L.i.,h z . .i' their athletic prowess by making like the Egyptians and attempting to build a human pyramid. Starting from a small group at the bottom, a circle was formed YPij' r ir held here, and all in all it was Photo by Jim Wallace. Wallace Goes To Maryland BALTIMORE (UPD Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, break ing a hoped-for "wall of empty silence," won both applause and derisive laughter Saturday from more than 1,000 Johns Hopkins University, students with another slashing attack on the Civil Rights Bill. In the first major address of his Maryland presidential pri mary campaign, the segregation ist governor was applauded when he appeared on the stage of Shri ver Hall, but his audience laugh ed and hooted later when he said: "Never in my career have I made a remark against a man because of his color. That doesn't go in Alabama." 90 Degrees Will Do in my office. . I was interrupted by two fellows using a pushcart for a scooter. "Watch out!", they yelled. I jumped into the bushes. ZOOM!!! The converted parcel carrier careened down the brick walk as pedestrians headed for cover. "Spring Fever," I muttered, crawling out from behind a tree. Mopping my brow, I walked on toward GM, which shimmered on the horizon like a mirage. On the lawn, I paused to look at the only three people in view two girls (sans shoes) and a boy. They were filling the air with long streams of delicate, fragile bubbles, accented by giddy laughter. Bubble pipes on the GM lawn? . i J. ' .'V-.: '- i jfo -Mmr immtiit iiinA) ' iS IS : v: 1 JaigMs ivafe May Vote Possible NEW YORK (UPD President Johnson Saturday promised that the Civil Rights Bill will be pass ed even if it means congressional sessions "around the clock." He said the Senate should be ready to vote on the House-approved measure by the end of this month. ' ;The President also all but con firmed that he would run for re-' election in November and said he would make more tours of the poverty - stricken Appalachian area. er chants lion t Suffer In Ccntary to some 'beliefs, ' the merchants of Chapel Hill do not "feel the pinch" too badly dur ing the summer months when the regular students leave. "Chapel Hill is becoming a more stable community with many permanent personnel from the hospital and the teaching professions. We are less depen dent, on a whole, upon the stu dent trade as we formerly were," said Joe Augustine, UNC alumnus and executive director of both the Merchants Associa tion and Chamber of Com merce. "Also, since WW II there has been to steadily increasing amount of " summer students to compensate for the void left in June. With as many as 8,000 students in last year's summer sessions, coupled with the other summer activities held at the University agencies, extensions and institutes the merchants are taking no less a loss than any other non-tourist town does during the holiday season." Are the merchants and cham ber members encouragfing new industries to come here? "Yes; we cannot have heavy "Humph," I grumbled. "Some people will do anything when they let the weather get to them." I entered the Daily Tar Heel office. At least I could expect some measure of sanity here. My co-editor glanced up as I entered the office. "Well, see ya," he said cheer ily. "Huh?" I replied. "Goin' on a picnic some where," he said. "I figured you could handle everything. I wrote one edit, but you'll have to re write it. The heat's got me got to find some shade." "Yeah," I said, "take off."' Just then there was a resound ing thud on the office door.' I opened it and peered cautiously x - O if F A -- Ss -lr l'- and several others struggled up on their shoulders. Everything was fine until someone laughed, which wasn't hard, and the whole thing started to sway . . . In a characteristic whirlwind day, Johnson traveled to the World's Fair, spoke to 7,000 per sons at the Singer Bowl, visited the Venezuelan pavilion, and held a news conference at the Federal pavilion. ' . The President told his news conference that he would not tell Senate leaders : when debate should be cut off on the Civil Rights Bill. But he said that blocking the legislation hurt Con gress and pleaded for passage for the sake of the national in terest. Summer industry here due to our limited water supply, but we are very desirous of such industries as Hospital Savings and other serv ice offices ana oranches. .We are just as well located and equipped to handle such work as Raleigh or other larger communities in the area." Auguine, originally from Pennsylvania, graduated from the University in 1952 after playiry: offensive guard during the Justice Era. He has been a merchant here for the past 11 years and for recreation flies a Stinson-Voyager airplane. Presently he is trying to ex tend Chamber of Commerce membership and influence since many of its members include not only merchants but private citi zens who also have a stake in the community and desire to see it prosper and prograss. FALL SORORITY RUSH All freshman girls interested in Fall Rush should sign up in Daryl Farrington's office, 202 South Building, between ten and two o'clock Wednesday (May 13). At that time additional infor mation concerning next year's Fall Rush will be handed out. outside. There lay a rather large rock, and grinning at me from under a mop of red hair, our deuce reporter, Kerry Sipe. "I kicked it all the way up stairs from the parking lot," he reported. , "You WHAT?" I ventured cau tiously. "Kicked it. From outside. Nev er touched it with my hands all the way up. here." I slammed the door in his face with some sort of utterance about the crazy . characters that come out in the spring. I sat down to type, but it was impossible. The seat was too low for me to reach the keys. Those big blocks ; of j ice just don't last long in this heat. - f&g-ii w 1 i 1 o The Senate has debated the bill for 51 days. - Johnson told a cheering audi ence at Singer Bowl: "It may take all summer it may take sessions around the clock but I promise you here " and now that we are going to pass that bill. "We are going to bring new hope to 20 million Americans who for two centuries of our history have been on the outside looking in." Pressed on plans for his polit ical future, the Chief Executive carried on a bantering exchange with newsmen and said he "wouldn't want to shoot from the hip" on the subject now. But he wryly noted that he had ask ed Congress to authorize $800,000 to cover expenses of transition between an outgoing and incom ing President. "I'm informed by the budget director that my re - election would save this $800,000" he said. "While I have no announcement ... to make at this time, I think you all know how strongly I feel about economy." Johnson added, . however, that his plans were not definite, and said it was unlikely he would announce them until after he had seen delegates at the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City, N. J. Here Comes The . . . Hey Look, G eor ge DELRAY BEACH, Fla. (UPI Sissy Dawson wed her sailor sweetheart Saturday, three nude bridesmaids at her side and a band of naked musicians mer rily playing the wedding march. Sixteen-year-oid Sissy was one of the most elaborately dressed ladies at the wedding. Her suntan was set off with a simple white veil and a bouquet. The groom, 23 - year - old Charles D. Morrow, wore noth ing, and beside him, acting as best man, was Sissy's father John, naked. Naked policemen guarded the gates while naked reporters re corded the event for posterity. Only the lawyer performing the ceremony, Paul Kwhitney, wore clothes. "I have no intention of per forming civil marriages in the nude," Kwhitney had snapped before the ceremony. Otherwise, "it is the largest nudist wedding of all times," said the proud father, who runs the "Sunny Acres Lodge Camp," the nudist park where the mar riage was performed. Sissy and Charles stepped from the wedding to a short re ception and afterwards "the guests plunged into the pool, having no clothing to remove. Sissy met Morrow two years ago, she said, and it was love at first sight. His ship, the name of which no one would divulge, if in dry dock and he took the op portunity to get married. I - 1 I ! 1 t . hi, f J i'y t ending in a rather confused, wet mess on the pool floor. Photos by Jim "Wallace Pass Brewer Says San ford Ones State $25,000 RALEIGH (UPD KBd Brew er charged Saturday that Gov. Terry Sanford illegally fct iis own salary above the law's limi tation and thus owed the state $25,000. Bewer, a parolee and a Demo cratic gubernatorial candidate, nresented Lis charge during a 45-minute news conference here- He said that Sanford acted without le?al authority in 1361 and set his salary at $25,008, which he said was $10,000 above the legal limit. He charged that Sanfcrd's $25,009 salary was not legalized until the 1963 legisla ture. In between time, said Brewer, Sanford collected $25,000 in il legal money $10,000 in 1961, $10,000 in 1962 and $5,000 in 1963. Far Eastern Study Open To Students One hundred all-expense paid scholarships will be awarded to - Americans for study in fields re lating to Asia and the Pacific Islands by the East-West Center, a national American educational institution. Mrs. Marion Saunders, director of the Center will be at UNC this month to talk with students and faculty members interested in do ing graduate work at the Univer sity of Hawaii. The grant for 21 months of study includes travel expenses to and from Hawaii, books, room and board, health insurance and a small personal allowance. The Center, established by the U. S. Congress in 1960, seeks to promote mutual understanding by bringing students together from Asia, the Pacific area and the United States for study, inter change of ideas and shared liv ing experiences. Acceptance requirements are high academic achievement, ex cellent health, ability to relate to Asians ?nd interest in promot ing the objectives of the center. Carolina students who qualify and want to inquire about the program should contact Frank Duffey, assistant dean of the Col lege of Arts and Sciences, in South Building. Appointments with Mrs. Saunders will be ar ranged by Professor Duffey. His phone number is 933-1164. a s 's ' " ' -vs v jff sy , , ' m GMAB FILMS COMMITTEE Interviews for the GMAB Films Committee will be held Tuesday afternoon from 1:00-5:00 in the GMAB office or by appointment. Sign up at the GM information desk. "fir 'S ft'' i I ::J ; 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 10, 1964, edition 1
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