Three Busy Weeks Wm mm 0 DmiA USy threa weeks ne Past in Chapel Hill while the Th Heel's Press was idled by examination schedules, mere were moments of gaiety such as mass snowball fights atter the first snow fall of the season. But there were somber moments as the town lost two cf its prominent citizens, Louis. Graves and Ted Danziger. : There were puzzling ; moments when the Associated Press teletype moved the news-that UNC graduate Larry Phelps was knifed to death n the New York .office of the Progressive Labor Movement. It went like this: - NEGRO CHARGED IN PHELPS SLAYING A 25-year-old New York Negro has been charged in the January 21 knife slaying of Larry Phelps. v Arthur McCall, a laborer, was charged with homicide and felonious assault on Phelps, his wife and another white woman in the Harlem office of the left-wing Progressive Labor Movement. v Mrs. Phelps and Tara Forsyth, both 22, were slashed on the back, hands and face. . McCall was quoted by police as saying he had been at the PLM office for about an hour when he "suddenly felt blue" and "something came over" him. Police said he told them he threw the weapon, a four-inch pocket knife, into a basement furnace. Phelps was a controversial figure on campus because of his association with left-wing groups. He was an unsuccessful candidate for president of the student body. PLM is headed by William Epton who describes himself as pro-Chinese Communist. r Phelps was buried January 26 at Wheeler's Primitive Baptist , Church near Hurdle Mills in Person County. STATE REJECTS ROSEMARY ABC STORE SITE The proposed Rosemary Street site for Chapel Hill's second ABC store was rejected by the state ABC Board January 14. Orange County ABC Board chairman Dudley D. Carroll, who led the opposition to the downtown store, suggested a site on Lake Road near the Highway 54 Bypass. . This site, one of six considered by the county board, is about a quarter-mile west of Carrboro town limits and borders the bypass. , State board chairman Victor Aldridge told the county board to "Select another site and we will be glad to work with you in establishing another store. I certainly would not want to be a party in making liquor moire accessible or attractive to students at the University or to young people anywhere." ' 9. DEATH TAKES T, M. DANZIGER, LOUIS GRAVES Theador M. Danziger and Louis Graves, prominent Chapel Hill residents, died within a week of each other. Danziger, 42, owner of three local restaurants, died January 17 at Duke Hospital. - - , . The native of Vienna, Austria, came here in 139 as a refugee. He was graduated from here in 1942 as a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He opened the Rathskellar in 1946 and since then owned and operated the Zoom Zoom Room and the Ranch House. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Danzger, operate the Old World Gift Shop. ' - : He was buried here January 24. Graves, the founder and longtime editor of the Chapel Hill Weekly, died here January 23. . He was 81. Graves was graduated from UNC "in 1902 and joined the New York Times staff in 1903. He returned here in 1921 to teach journalism and direct the UNC News Bureau. ; He founded the Weekly in 1932 and served as editor until 1954, when he sold the newspaper. His columq "Chapel Hill Chaff" was widely quoted as quality writing of village and campus events. : ? : 1TENSMINATAURS FOUND NOT GUHIY ; " Ten students were found ot guilty of Campus Code violations in a continuation of the Minataur party case by the Men's Council before finals. Nine of 10 students tried two nights before had been convicted of participating in the damage that occurred to Maultsby's Cabin in the Minataur initiation party. Penalties ranged from two semesters probation to official reprimand. " :. The second 10 were charged with being accomplices in the damage, that occurred. Trying them individually and in pairs, the council found each one innocent of Campus Code violations by being accomplices. e The council ruled the students could not be called ungentle manly because of their presence at the party. Several had tried to restrain those who were causing the damage. ".- HODGES GETS RESEARCH TRIANGLE POST Former N. C. Gov. Luther H. Hodges, now residing at his J Glen Manor home here, was elected January 21 as chairman of the Research Triangle Foundation. The recently resigned U. S. Secretary of Commerce succeeds Gordon Gray of Winston-Salem former UNC president as the $l-a-year chairman. The foundation is the policy making agency of the Research Triangle, .which harnesses , the brainpower of UNC, N. C. State and Duke. Started in 1959, the Research Triangle now covers more than 5,000 acres and is' a prospective site for the "world's largest computer." . 5. s . . ; Hodges, who as governor, was a prime mover in establishing the center- said the forthcoming location of the U. S. Environ- i mental Health Center there was and for North Carolina." - . He predicted that related industries would follow the health center and that President Johnson's emphasis oh health and education should accelerate the Triangle's growth. Asked at a press conference if he planned to take on any other chores, Hodges said he had had about 25 job offers. "I'm not interested in a full-time job for pay or in running for office," he said. ' TRUSTEES APPROVE FACULTY CHANGES The UNC trustees have approved five new faculty appoint ments, four promotions, three retirements and two resignations in the Division of Health Affairs. Dr. Stanley J. Weidenkopf was appointed professor of sanitary engineering at the School of Public Health. He retired Dec. 31 asV colonel and chief sanitary engineer in the Research Section of the Army's Medical Research and Development Command in Washington." ' " Dr. William G. Hollister, former chief of the Community ' Research and Services Branch of the National Institute of Mental Health, has become associate professor of psychiatry at the School of Medicine. , TT . , Dr. Faustena Blaisdell, a professor at Texas Woman s Uni versity, will have a joint appointment in the Schools of Nursing and of' Public Health, effective July 1. Dr. Arthur Leonard Finn; a research fellow at the National Heart institute, and Dr. Robert A. Goyer, director of laboratories atSt. Louis' Cardinal Glennon Hospital will both join the School of Medicine on July 1. Finn .will become an assistant professor of medicine and Goyer an assistant professor of pathology. Dr. John A. Ewing, acting chairman ot the Medical School's Department of Psychiatry, has been . promoted to the, chairman ship, and Dr. Robert M. Nelson will become chairman of the Dental School's Department of Orthodontics July 1. ALL THAT LIQUOR GONE! Orange County ABC Store No. 4 on U. S. Highway 70 is operating under around the clock guard. An 18-ton tractor-trailer truck rammed into the building Jan. 20 while its driver was eating breakfast in a nearby restaurant. It made a gaping hole in the side and destroying more than $7,000 worth of liquor . 1 ' - The ABC Board plans to move, the store to a new location several hundred feet east of the present site. Business will continue in the damaged building, however, until the new one is ready in about a month. "a breakthrough for the Triangle . Founded Feb. 231893 uadeinit; Trustees OK Fund Request For Housing The University Board of Trus tees has opened the way for $6 million dollar's worth of new residence halls at UNC. '- The Executive Committee of the board, meeting Jan. 15, ap lion in federal funds and $3 mil proved applications for $3 mil Application for $2 million in 'ion in state matching funds, construction funds for UNC-G was also approved. ; - The residence halls here will be planned to house 2,000 stu dents. The $2 million residence tall at UNC-G will house 800. The trustees expect the resi lence halls to be 50 per cent elf-liquidating, meaning that lie federal 'loan will be repaid with student housing rental fees The General Assembly, which begins sessions tomorrow, must approve allocation of the state funds involved. , A similar request by the Uni versity was refused in 1963 by he General Assembly. That time, however, the loan would have been 100 per cent self-liquidation, with state funds also being repaid by student fees., -. Next GM Slate Features Spanish Music Flamenco, dancer Jose Molina and ; his company of Spanish dancers; singers, and instrumen talists will pound the stage of Memorial Hall Feb, 10 at 8 p.m. as ' the first Graham Memorial program of the new semester. Tickets for the' Bailes Espa- noles will go on sale today at p.m. . '- The program which includes costumes valued at over $80,000, consists of songs and dances from air of the Spanish prov inces, from the court of Charles III, from Spanish operas and ballets, and from the Spanish gypsy camps. Works by non apanisn composers sucn as Ravel and Rimsky-Korsakov are also included. The company is engaged in a 40-week tour the longest ever played by a Flamenco dance company in. this country. Critics in Washington, D. C. called the show "the most dazzling display of Flamenco fireworks, this city has seen in many a season" and predicted that it was "destined to become the No. 1 Flamenco song-and- dance company in the United States." UP INTERVIEWS The University Party Execu tive Committee will hold inter views tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Grail Room for two leeisla tive vacancies in Men's District I and one in Men's District II 1, y t S Dancing LUTHER HODGES, former Secretary of Commerce, has the same problems as other Chapel Hill residents snow. The recently appointed head of the Research Triangle is clearing a path at his home. Fee Mike x-y. " , , f ' v ' 'v - y , , . , s - ' ' ' ' ' ; 1 1 .. ' , 5 , ' ; s ; AFTER SNOWBALL fights and sledding end the campus settles down to sleep in the fresh, white stuff and await another several inches pre dicted for today by. the weatherman. DTH pho T tee s To , By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH - Staff Writer. The Executive Board of the University Trustes t passed a resolution Jan. 15 empowering' Chancellor Sharp to apply for a; Federal Communications Com mission license for a campus radio station. The' action : gave complete : administration.; appro val for carrier current radio. 1 -r. i Final approval for the system ! Carrier will have to come from Student powers to 'appropriate money and establish an organization for the station. '- . . j ""The proposal was forwarded to the Trustees - with my com plete; approval," Sharp said. "I am very pleased with the board's action." - 1 " ' ' The student-run carrier cur rent station, which will provide fiZ,;w" TZhiA "r".- 'initial:-purchases:; of. .equipment, run Dy tne siuaems ana me aa Legislature, -which, hall on tu or:efa: "nilrilstratiDn -would not hamper Student Sus For Exam Two students were convicted of cheating, and one: suspended with recommendation that ; he never - be readmitted in - post examination trials by the Men's Council last week. . : ., The suspension penalty with the recommendation clause is the highest penalty given by the council. It has not been used this year. . . .. One student was alleged , to have copied off the quiz paper of his neighbor. The neighbor was also charged with cheating. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY tographer Jock Lauterer caught the campus last night in just such a slumber. The season's second snowfall caused one student to quip: "That freezy kid's stuff." ' Grant AP Current "AM programming to all resi dence halls on campus and FM transmission over a . five-mile radius, has been planned by the Campus . Radio Committee of Student Government. Student Body : Vice President Don . Carson, chairman of the committee, said a. possible total ,of four .bills for the establish ment of the. system will be in troduced to the' legislature. .One bill, will authorize ., all .tion of the station . over to a Campus Radio Board, which will be composed of six students and four . faculty members and administrators. The by-laws of the Board will be established by another bill, and a campus-wide referendum of the station's etsablishment Both pleaded innocent. The council reviewed the two auiz papers comparing answers and questioning the instructor and the two men. After delibera tion, the council found the first student guilty and the other in nocent. The council noted an answer in which the guilty party made the same mistake as the other student. But the . second stu dent corrected his error when he went back over the quiz. The guilty student had figured out the correct answer on his scrap paper, but did not use this on the quiz. He was then charged for lying to the coun cil about cheating on the quiz and was found guilty. The council suspended him indefinitely with the recommen dation that he not be readmit ted. The student may apply for reinstatement, but this recom mendation will be considered a such a time. The council added the recom mendation because the student had been suspended once before for an Honor. Code violation. In the second case, a student admitted writing some notes into his blue book before going into the exam. He did not use the notes in the exam, however. because there were no questions that were relevant to them. His instructor testified that he could not have used any of the note material on the exam. The student said he had meant to tear the note page out before turning in the exam, but forgot about it. He went back an hour later and turned him self in to his instructor. . The instructor said that he probably would have been able to tell that the notes were made before the exam, but was not sure. He had not looked at the paper when the student turned himself in. The council placed the stu dent on indefinite Drobation. i-eniency was shown because the student turned himself in and because he did not use the notes in the exam. pended Cheating TED .tamed .For Fal. fbval Radio and the subsequent raising of student fees may be called for An initial investment of $28, 000 . by Student Government through 1965 and annual oper ating expenses of nearly $12, 000 thereafter would mean j raise in student fees of about 50 cents per semester. Carson, who expects some op position to the plan in legisla ture, assured members of the body that the . station will be run by the students and the ad- its freedom. x ,;, r , . .., , - "The administration hasn't appropriated one cent for this operation. Carson . said, ."and Student Legislature can cut off student funds for the station at any time, if it sees fit." . Review power over the Radio Board's decisions will be given to Sharp, J as he is the official licensee of the station and is legally responsible for the sta tion's actions. Carson ' criticized a recent proposal calling for the incor poration of Student Government and its subsequent application for the license, rather than the Chancellor applying for it. ; "For an educational station license, such as the one we are applying for, to be granted by the FCC, the institution apply ing must be accredited," Car son said. "Student Government is certainly not an accredited institution. "The FCC also insists on knowing who is responsible for the station's actions," he added, "and every time an officer is changed in SG, whose leader ship is transient, a report must be filed in Washington." -Dean of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey praised the Trustees' action and the proposed station plan. Football Hall Of Fame Honor Goes To Snavely Carl Snavely, UNC. football coach during the famed "Justice Era," was one of several men whose names were enrolled in the National Football Hall of Fame Monday. ' Snavely first came to Chapel Hill in 1934 after seven suc cessful years at Bucknell. After compiling a 15-2-1 mark in two years . as Tar Heel mentor, Snavely moved to Cornell in 1936 where he served until 1944. In 1945, Snavely returned to Carolina, assigned to the task of once again leading the Tar Heels out of the football wilder ness. His first Carolina team in the new order broke even with a 5-5 mark. ; A brilliant football class ma triculated at Carolina in 1945, headed by Charlie (Choo Choo) .Justice, " and Snavely directed this group, through four years in which the Tar Heels won two Southern Conference champion ships and played in three major bowls. " ' - After compiling an 8-2-1 mark in 1946,. the Tar Heels rolled to 2, 1965 Increase Will Be $24.50 Per Year , By ERNIE McCRARY DTH Managing Editor UNC students will pay at least $24.50 more to come to school next year. The $12.25 per semester hike is the result of three fee increases which will go into effect next fall. Total fees will be raised from $54.75 to $67 per year. Financing of the $2 million Frank Porter Graham Student Union will account for the largest part of the new fees, with a $9.60 charge per semester. Director of Accounting Victor P. Bowles said the Uni versity has borrowed $2 million from the federal gov- 'erment for construction of the union, but "we need the money from student fees to cover the cost of furniture the govern ment loan does not include money for moveable furniture." The $2 million loan is self liquidating, to be repaid with other student fees and charges. Summer school students will begin paying their share of the union bill in 1966. Fees will be raised to $20.70 per session, an increase of $3.20. . VWe've tried to distribute it fairly," Bowles said, "so that summer students will pay pro portionately the same as regu lar students." No increases are planned for this summer, according to Uni versity Cashier M. E. Woodard. "A $5 per year increase in athletic fees is the other major portion of the new charges. The $2.50 per semester in crease was recommended by a Student committee and approved by the Board of Trustees last semester. Athletic fees will now total $15 per year. . Bowles said this is the first athletic fee increase - in recent years. It was made necessary by- greatly ; increased athletic costs. . . ; The materials and service fee will be increased' 15 cents 'per semester to pay. library and laboratory costs. "This charge really isn't an increase," Bowles, said. "We have eliminated some specific laboratory fees and spread the cost among all the students. Many, students will actually be paying smaller lab fees than be fore when each fee was paid in dividually. "It's just too complicated to make separate charges for each lab course this way will save time and trouble for both the students and us." Bowles said the trend in re cent years has been toward ad justments in fees such as this, rather than flat increases. The last recent increase was in the fall of 1963 when health service fees were raised from $7.50 to $9 per semester. It is possible that another 50 cent charge , will be added to these increases next fall. Stu dent Body Vice President Don Carson said this amount may be needed to maintain the campus radio station recently approved by the Board of Trustees. Car son is chairman of the Campus Radio Committee which has planned the new carrier current station. 8-2-0, 9-1-1, and 7-4-0 records the next three years. Ironically, the Tar Heels 'lost all three post-season games n i i t i CARL SNAVELY Associated Press Wiro Service Another increase went into: effect this semester for men stu dents who live on campus. Resi dence hall social fee were raised from $1.50 to $1.80 for this year for intramural mana ger salaries, but the extra 30 cents could not be billed in time for payment; last semes ter. A 60-cent charge was made this semester to . make up the difference. Spot Contest Winners' Vie For 12 Albums Spot the Spot, the one-win ner contest with 24 winners, enters its final (hopefully stage today, when those qualifying for the run-off get to see theiff, tie-breaking photos. The two pictures will be pr" ed at 1, p.m. in the DTH off and will also appear in toiy 'or row's newspaper. Answers be turned in any time after' Rep. photos -go on display. ocia The DTH office will L see manned until 10 p.m., and thos wno ininK tney Know tne an swers can call 933-1012. After ' 10 p.m., contestants should call 967-2383 until 9 a.m. Wednes day, when the show moves back to the DTH office. The 24 eligible for the run off are: Ken Saunders. Dwayne Pat terson, Thomas B. Harris, Hob- ert J. Blair, Jim Thompson, Betsy Ann Johnson, Robert Denny, Van II. Johnson, Don Wilson, Charles B. Neely, Susan Barron, Ken Fink and Terry Kellerman, Joel Simpson, Wil liam Senkis, Gisela Tromms- dorff, Mike Wiggin, James Nass, Bill Drake, Franklin Justice, Phi Beta Kappa pledge class, Joe Patterson, Jerry Drozc, Ioward Michael, and Jay Snipes. In case of a tie, the prize, $G0 worth of records from 'Kemp's, will be divided among the win ners. TENNIS TEAM MEETING The tennis team will have a meeting this afternoon at four in 302 Woollen Gym. Coach Don Skakle requests that all students interested In trying: out for the freshman or varsity squads be present. under Snavely. The 10J6 team lost to Georgia, 20-10, in the Sugar Bowl; the 1943 Suar Bowl saw the Tar Heels lose, 14-6, to Oklahoma; and the 1943 team was beaten in the Cotton Bowl, 27-13, by Rice. For years a prime exponent of the single wing attack, Snave ly, now a businessman in St. Louis, made an all-out switch to the Split-T in 1952, his last year at Carolina. Snavely is a-former president of the American Football Coaches Association. He was a pioneer in usin movies to aid in coaching, now a common practice. In 26 years of coaching Snavely compiled a 147-77-16 mark. At UNC his record was 59-35-5. Snavely coached three A1I Americans at Carolina. His firit (and the school's first) was George Barclay in 1934. Justice made everybody's All-American teams during his heydey, and end Art Weine. was named to the elite squad in 1949.

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