3 G o s Yaeh Pictures Yack pictures of seniors and I-iw school students will he taken today-Friday in the basement of Graham Memorial. Today9 s Weather - Considerable cloudiness and mild. High between 74 and 81. Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22.-64 Associated Press Wire Service MI? 1 i i 1 Friday May Get alary Increase RALEIGH (AP) President William C. Friday of the Con solidated University is paid less than three UNC chancellors be cause Friday sought higher pay for the chancellors and did not make an issue of his own salary. Director of Administration Hugh Cannon said this Monday in Modified Silence Is Nixed By IFC The Interfraternity Council last night ruled that "Bull Pledges," pledges who had not been initiat ed two semesters after joining the fraternity, could live in fra ternity houses for the first semes ter this year. The IFC also put members un der strict silence with prospec tive rushees at all times school is session. The two votes were made in order to solidify fraternity rules regarding deferred rush, which begins , this year. The. "Bull Pledge" rule was made" in order that houses can have aid in overcoming the fi nancial burden expected, due to the' absence of regular pledges. The IFC emphasized that the rule would only be in effect the first semester of this year. 'He's Another Huey Long9 By JOHN GREENBACKER DTII StaH Writer "He's another Huey Long." This was just ; one of the charges opposing politicians leveled against UNC undergrad uate Jim Hutchens in last May's Republican primaries.. For those of yea who don't know him, Jim is UNC's man in Yadkin County politics. Al though he missed out in his bid for a State House seat, he is far; from through. Jim Hutchens The University has put in a bid for nearly $20 million what it hopes will be3the State's share in a capital improvements pro gram here totaling nearly $32 million. The difference between the re quested State appropriation and the total cost of the program would be made up by Federal grants, private funds, and through selMiquidating financing. The request for State funds was made to the Advisory Budget Commission during a three-and-a-half -hour hearing here last month. . The Advisory Budget Commis sion will consider the Univer sity's requests limited at this time to capital expenditures and offer its recommendations in Uie proposed budget to be presented to the 1965 General Assembly next February. ' Before presenting the capital improvements requests in detail, UNC President William C. Friday described the enrollment crisis in higher education in North Caro lina. Total enrollment in all North , - 3 :--.:v:-:v::::;:y:;.: S 1 GOLD WATER U jfflR PRESIDEVTp . A i ' A I y i uTr-rr explaining why the chancellors' pay was raised above Friday's. Cannon said he had "no doubt Friday's salary will ultimately be raised above those of the chancellors." It was learned last week that Gov. Terry Sanford with the ap proval of the Advisory Budget Commission had set the salary of UNC Chancellor Paul Sharpe at $28,500, and had raised sal aries of John Caldwell at N. C. State and Otis Singletary of UNC at Greensboro to $27,000 each. Friday is paid $24,000. The action was taken several weeks ago but was made public only last week. Man Arrested In Hit And Run A Durham man, Wayne How ard, has been charged with hit and run after he struck a pedes trian near Spencer Dorm early Sunday morning. Chapel Hill Police Chief Wil liam Blake said Howard struck the pedestrian as he drove east on Franklin St., tossing him in the air and onto a parked car. The man was treated at Memori al Hospital for minor injuries and released. Howard, released on bond, will be tried Friday. Yadkin,; one of the few strong ly Republican districts in the State, was looking for someone to fill the Republican nomina tion for its House seat earlier this year, and several local leaders suggested mild-mannered education major Jim to. fill the spot. The principal of Yadkin's high school offered to be Jim's cam paign . manager, and - several, others offered money for ex penses. - And Friend Mi Carolina colleges and universities will have increased by 68 per cent by 1970, Friday said. The increase in State-supported insti tutions will be about 80 per cent, with increases on the three cam puses of the University project ed to at least 40 per cent. If the University is to accom modate its share of the enroll ment increases, Friday said, ma jor steps would have to be taken by the 1965 Legislature. Because of the time lag in authorization of funds and actual construction, he pointed out, action later than 1965 would come too late to meet the crisis. Urgent Needs The needs are urgent, Friday said, "because the children we're talking about are already born and in schools. The demand is here and it's pressing." . Dean of the Faculty James Godfrey explained that, starting in 1959, the University at Chapel Hill had been planning for year ly enrollment increases of about 550. In the fall of 1963, however. Chapel Hill had an increase of 1,300. Because of that 1963 in "Tentative Agreement99 Halts Rail Strike WASHINGTON (AP) Strike, signals flying over most of the nation's railroads were hauled down Monday, ending the second threatened national transporta tion tieup in less than six months. Negotiators for the railroads and six shep craft unions an nounced a "tentative agreement" on four major issues in their job security dispute and settlement cf a fifth point seemed assured. In the absence of an agree ment, the strike was to have started at 6 a.m. today. Both J. E. Wolfe, chief railroad negotiator, and Michael Fox, head union spokesman, expressed confidence of being able to "wrap up the balance of the dis pute" in talks resuming at 10 a.m. today. They indicated this should be accomplished within a few days. Bombings Hit Miss. Churches McCOMB. Miss. (AP) Two more bombings in the Negro sec tion of this South Mississippi Jim filed. The only chance he had to do any serious cam paigning was the day after the final tests ended this spring, one day before the May 20 primar ies. Jim's opponent was a former county sheriff and state senator. The sheriff's advanced age of 71 seemed to enhance his can didacy, and he was a man with many friends. : Starting into politics at the tender age of 21 proved no asset to Jim, and the sheriff branded him a "puppet" for the Republi can candidate for the State Sen ate. Jim couldn't say much about his opponent, for to do so wouid have made him seem a brash youth scorning Uie wisdom of age. Jim was content to run a lew advertisements in a Yad kin newspaper. Troubles mounted for the stu dent as his campaign manager's school burned down a week be fore the primaries, and the be leagured principal couldn't give much time to the race. The morning of May 20, found the old slhexiff standing out side the polls, ready and willing to shake hands witfi voters and instruct them in the task they were about to perform. Many voters arrived at the polls through the kind auspices of the sheriffs wile and the family car. Jim lost, 371 to 901. Jim will finish school in Jan uary and may do graduate work ' in history. Until that time he will help spread young Republicanism and support Barry Goldwater. Two years from now there will be another election, and the sheriff thinks he will be too old toehold office then. Two years from now may be Jim Hutchens' lucky year. Is crease Chapel Hill has been "about like a boa constrictor that swallowed a goat," Dr God frey said, with problems con tinuing right down the line. Chapel Hill enrollment increas es at the graduate and profes sional levels have been larger than at the undergraduate level, Dr. Godfrey said, and this gen eral trend is expected to continue through 1970 with significant in creases also in junior and senior transfers. . "We want to keep taking all qualified North Carolina students p.t the three campuses," Friday said, "but we don't want ability to pay the cost to become the standard of admission to the University." The Advisory Budget Commis sion was told that at Chapel Hill dormitory rooms designed for two students were being used by three, laboratories were being used mornings and afternoons and classrooms were being used at night. Summer, school enrollment also is booming, with 10,296 enrolled in both sessions this year. The WORLD NEWS. BRIEFS' town Sunday night damaged a home, demolished a church and sent Negro tempers soaring. As FBI agents studied the dam aged home of Mrs. Aylene Quin "and the rubble of the Society Hill .Baptist Church, Pike County Sheriff R. R. Warren questioned the motives behind the twin blasts the 13th and 14th in this area since early summer. "In my opinion, the bombing at the home and the one at the Society Hill Church were plants," the sheriff said. " The sheriff said the two bomb ings followed a pattern of a big blast and . no injuries to anyone. . Mrs. Quin, 42, a civil : rights worker and operator of a cafe, said her two children were in jured slightly by the blast at her home. 25 Children Die Of. Foofl Poisoning HYDERABAD, India ( AP ) Twenty-five Indian school chil dren died of food poisoning over the weekend and the state govern ment has ordered a suspension . of care package deliveries from the United States to the area. The Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere (CARE), im mediately denied that its food supplies had been the cause of the deaths. The deaths occurred, and 70 other children were rushed to hospitals for treatment, after about 300 boys gathered in the village of Maddikera for a free lunch. They ate a meal prepared from corn and powdered milk supplied ??3- by CARE, officials said witmn minutes about 150 were taken ill. 4 De Gaulle Arrives In Latin America CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) President Charles de Gaulle of France arrived here under mas sive security guard yesterday, to open his drive to spread France's influence in Latin America. For the next 27 days De Gaulle will travel through this contin ent's ten major nations on a 20,000 mile tour. Church Elected To Head 'Giving9 John T. Church of Henderson has been named chairman of the University's Alumni Annual Giv ing Council, it was learned to day. Church, a 1942 graduate of UNC succeeds Harry H. Montgomery cf Wilmington who held the post for the past two years. Montgom ery will now serve as an ex of ficio member of the council. Two new members were elect ed to the council. They are Alex H. Galloway of Winston-Salem and Charles A. McLendon of Greensboro. A report released today show ed that 7,440 UNC alumni con tributed a record total of $137,322 to the Alumni Annual Giving program during 1963-64. For summer school enrollment figure did not include more than 90 short courses and special programs provided at Chapel Hill. To Keep Pace The $16,323,000 capital improve ments program planned for Academic Affairs is aimed pri marily at keeping pace with this growth. , Of the total cost of the Aca demic Affairs program, $12,497, 837 is being sought from the State. - The other $4,325,163 would come from grants, gifts, and a self-liquidating loan. " Top priority in the Academic Affairs requests has been given to a new Law School building. This would cost $1,880,000 and would be used to take some of the pressure off Caldwell, Saun ders and Murphey Halls. Second in priority is a request for $950,000 for an addition to Bingham Hall which would be used as an English Department classroom and office building. The addition would be directly in back of the present building and would be used mostly for faculty offices. Dean Godfrey pointed M RARE SIGHT NOWADAYS is a Carolina Gentle man taking it easy under one of the shady trees on the south campus. Within a couple of weeks when things7 settle down students will begin to YRC Plans Mem -Campaign Attention, all ye loyal, even if underage, Republicans! (We said "underage" n o t "underdog.") Don't let being under 21 stop you from aiding the ticket of your choice this election year. The UNC chapter of the Young Republicans Club is conducting a membership solicitation cam paign this week. Voting age is not a requirement, Representatives stationed at Y Court and Lenoir Hall are cur rently taking the names of inter ested students. Charles Hooks, chairman of the YRC, says that the group will work closely with the Orange County Republican Committee during the coming weeks in dis tributing campaign materials, staffing information booths, and "aiding in a general information al program designed to keep GOP candidates before the voters." Several prominent Republican speakers have been invited to speak before the local group dur ing the year, Hooks said. The club is sponsoring a Gold-water-Miller Headquarters deco rating party, Thursday afternoon at 5:30 at Eastgate Shopping Cen ter, where free hot dogs, cokes, and encouragement will be ser ved. Also soliciting support are the "Greeks for Goldwater," a group composed of fraternity and sor ority members who are support ing tne republican ticKet. out that the English Department now teaches 6,000 students and slso has mere graduate students than any other department at Chapel Hill. The Law School enrollment is expected to pass 400 this fall and the present Law building, Manning Hall, will certainly be inadequate when the enrollment reaches 500, Dean Godfrey said. . Third in priority is a $1,740,000 addition to Wilson Library, of which the State is beinj asked to contribute $740,000. The other $1 million would come from gifts, a foundation pledge, a fund trans fer, and federal funds. The Wil son addition would house special collections and would free space in the present building for gradu ate and professional students. Other requests and their priori ties include: 4. $530,000 ($380,000 from the State and $150,000 in a federal grant) for the Institute of Fish eries Research Faclliaes. Seven scientists are now doing applied and pure research at the UNC facility at Morehead- City. The requested funds would provide a bership Grand MigMs it tt Harriss To Address Student Bill Harriss, president of ' the UNC student body in 1961-62, Will address the first meeting of the Student Party tonight at 7:30 p.m. in 08 Peabody Hall. Harriss, a former Student Par ty member who is now a law student at Duke, will speak, on "The Reasons for Joining a Cam pus Political Party." In other business, vacancies in Student Legislature and the par ty's standing committees will be announced, according to party chairman Paul Dickson. "There will be several resolu SG Interviews Interviews . for appointment to Student Government committees will be held from 2-5 p.m. today Friday ' in the Student Govern ment offices in Graham Memori al. Interested students should call 933-1257 for information and appointments. Bitter End Singers Friday, 7:30 .Biiil din brick building. 5. $140,000 for rewiring New East building. - 5. $165,000 for Venable Hall al terations and renovations. - 7. $350,000 for an addition to the sewerage treatment plant op erated jointly by the University and the Town. 8. $340,000 for campus site im provements. , 9. $1,350,000 for an addition to Ackland Art Center. The present building would be turned com pletely to gallery use, and the addition would be used for art education. 10. $1,345,000 for a new Drama tic Art building, of which $175, 163 would come from a bequest from Mrs. Lillian Prince. A new theater is badly needed, said Dean Godfrey, and unless the re quest is approved, the Dramatic Art Department will "be con demned to moribund gentility." 11. $860,000 for an addition to the Institute of Government (Knapp building). The Budget Commission was told that the present facility won't accommo date the number of programs Probe dot the lawn near South Building and the Wilson Library, gathering up their last "rays" for this year. Photo by Jock Lauterer Par m tions introduced at ihe meeting, and plans will be completed for filling our vacancies," added Dickson. He urged all freshmen to at tend the meeting "to find out about the SP." The other campus political par ty, the University Party, will meet Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. Only Five Remain On Housing List Yesterday only five students remained on the waiting list for University dormitory space this fall. There are still men living in the basements of Avery, Park er and Teague. However, at least one of these was there not for lack of space, but for lack of funds for a room. According to the Housing Of fice, cancellations occur at least three times daily. No students will have to remain crowded in basements until the spring semes ter. UNC's increased enrollment is responsible for the rush on dormi tory rooms, but many students ere now finding some off-campus living quarters. Rooms 'will be available ?Jthe Housing Office sometime within the next few days. 73 m M Program that can and should be carried cn in the building, and that work vas being hindered by cramped quarters. 12. $175,000 for acquisition of the remainder of uie Baity prop erty. The Baity land, which ad joins the University to the south, v.ould be held for future expan sion. 13. $675,CC0 for air-conditioning Murphey, Manning, Bingham and Saunders Halls. Quoting Lin coln's observation that the Na tion could not long survive half slave and half free, Dean God frey said, Our faculty cannot survive naif cool and half hot." 14. $5,000,C00 for residence halls for .2,000 students 'half of which would come from Stat? appropri ation and half from a self-liquidating Federal loan). The Bud get Commission was tcld that 1,334 students already had been crammed into buildings that weren't designed to hoid them end the University was not hold ing its own in trying to meet the demand for housing on campus. 15. $270,000 for recreation facili ties (tennis courts, and playing Begins Investigation Can Broaden BILOXI, Miss. (AP) A bi-ra- cial federal grand jury yesterday began looking at the govern ment's carefully collected evi dence in the case of the three murdered Mississippi civil rights workers. The investigation during the next two or three weeks could broaden into a full-scale probe of alleged civil rights violations in the sttae. One juror said the government reported it would rroduce S3 witnesses. The 22 whites and one Negro on the jury were told by U. S. Dist. Judge Sidney Miza to keep in mind the federal laws on con spiracy to violate the civil rights of individuals, intimidation of voters and willful denial of con stitutional rights. Neshoba County Sheriff Law rence Rainey of Philadelphia was the first witness called into the guarded jury room in the Feder al courthouse here A half hour later Rainey emer ged and said he was returning home. He said the grand jury indicated it didn't need him any more now. The dead civil rights workers vere last seen alive June 21 when they were released from the Neshoba County Jail. They had been arrested on a speeding charge by Rainey's deputy, Cecil Price, who also has been sub poenaed to appear here. H. V. M. Herring, the jailer, appeared to;?ay and, like Rainey, later said he was heading home. Testimony before a grand jury is secret. The murdered civil rights trio Michael Schwcrner and Andrew Goodman, bothfrom New York, and James Chaney, a Meridian Negro had gone to Philadelphia to inspect the ruins of a rural Negro church that had been burn ed. .They disappeared after Price said he released them about 10:30 p.m. Two days later their charred station wagon was found at the edge of a swamp. Despite an intensive manhunt, their bodies were not found until Au. 4 when an informer told the . FBI to look beneath an earthen J;irn. Each had been shot and. in addition, Chaney had been badly beaten. The grand jury can only return indictments based on civil rights violations. Murder is a state of fense except where it occurs on Federal property such as mili tary reservations. A parade of Neshoba County Negroes entered the grand jury room during the afternoon. Among them were a man and woman who said they were beat en by a group of men several nights before the civil rights workers disappeared. GM TICKETS Graham Memorial officials said yesterday that only about 200 tickets have been purchased to Friday night's presentation of the Bitter End Singers. A stu dent ticket may be purchased for 0 cents upon presentation ct an I.D. card. field). UNC Business Manager J. A. Branch pointed out that while enrollment had been in creasing, recreation facilities had been sacrificed to new construc tion he cited three playing fields lost to the addition to Woollen Gym now under construction). 16. $53,000 for alterations to Quail Roost, the Durham County estate, donated to the University by Mr. and Mrs. George Watts Hill. The University plans to use the estate for scholarly confer ences and the money would be used to alter the main house to increase accommodations. In the area of University En terprises, authorization was ak ed for $830,000 worth of additions znd renovations to th3 Carolina Inn, $235,000 for a utilities and shop office building, $135,000 fcr a community center and service building in the married students housing ar?a. and $655,000 for telephone f-icilities for the Divi sion of HeaHh Affairs area. All of these projects wou!d be self liauidating, costing the State nothing in appropriaiions.

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