TOC Library- . Ielphins wilL splash as they encounter East Caro lina College.- The non-conference meet is set. for 8. Bicycles Lost a bike? If so try the Chapel Hill Police Depart ment. Chief W. D. Blake said yester day that about 23 found Llics have been stored. Founded Fob. 23. 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NOKTH CAROLINA,. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 571965 Associated Press Vlra Service AN ANALYSIS n O H .Tnrrirrh hi 71 r7Ch J 1LJLLLL kj JliL life? n (0! Cut Almost In Half; By ERNIE McCRARY DTH Managing Editor Forty-eight per cent. That is the amount of UNC's total 1965-67 budget request which was recommended by the General Assembly's Advisory Budget Commission Wednesday. The assembly usually follows i such recommendations fairly closely when it approves the budget, although it is not re quired to. Consolidated University Pre sident William C. Friday may succeed in getting some of the cuts restored when he appears before the Joint Appropriations Committee. Actually three budgets were submitted. The "A" budget is for con tinuation expenses money needed to maintain services of the University at their present level, including provisions for the expected increase in enroll ment. The entire "A" budget re quest was recommended by the commission, but at $4,577,402 this budget is by far the smal lest. W Takes Big Cut The "B" budget request "This is the one we're actually concerned with," Shepard said was the one which was cut most. The $9,041,676 request was for new and expanded pro grams. . j. ne rcuummeiiudiiuii was for $2,049,311, 34 per cent of the request. The "B" budget is divided into four parts: academic af fairs, health affairs, psychiatric center and Memorial Hospital. 1 recommendation for $2,196,667, 41 per cent of the request. Health affairs got $599,588 of the $2,389,229 requested and Memorial Hospital funds were recommended at $241,416, 22 j per cent of the request. The , psychiatric : i center ; requested Summer Job Seminar Set The Placement Service will hold a summer job seminar at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday m 105 Gard ner Hall. Students will report on jobs they have held and information they received from the service. The service has urged students wanting summer positions to come in during February or March. A representative from sum mer camps in New Hampshire will be on campus from 9 a.m. o 4 p.m. the same day to inter view students. Interested stu dents should register at the service office, 211 Gardner. Jobs are open as counselors for athletics, arts and crafts and nature study. Y Issues Request For Local Tutors A call for volunteers for the elementary ttuor program has gone out from the YMCA. A meeting of people inteersted in helping the program has been called for 2 p.m. Feb. 13 in 203 Y Building. During the past year help was offered deficient students at Frank Porter Graham Elemen tary School. This year service will be made available to North side Elementary School pupils. Watch Those Legs, Girls LONDON UPJ Girls, if them warm in cold weather. . Wear heavy bloomers, thick stockings, tweed skirts, even boots. If you don't you may get erythrocyanosis crurum puellarum frigidum, and who would want that? Author of the keep-your-legs-warm-and-keep-them-pretty theory is Prof. Alexander Boyd, 59. "Girls who dress scantilly in cold weather run the risk of getting fat calves and blotchy skins by the time they're 30," the pro fessor said. They can be victims of erythrocyanosis cru rum puellarum frigidum, the medical name for a condi tion caused by exposure to cold. "Every week I see six or seven cases of women who are perfect down to their legs then they bcome awful and gross," said Prof. Boyd. His theory is that tissue and fat multiply on :old legs to keep them warm, and they outgrow the blood supply. Speaking of the modern miss, he said: , "The skirts they wear are comparable to the grass skirts in the West Indies, and other places where under neath their skirts they wear, very little or nothing ac cording to what my assistants tell me." ' "Hideous legs," he said, "can ruin a girl's life. The only cure is to keep them warm." J $205,469 but only $11,640 (5.7 per cent was recommended. Items In B Items included in the "B" budget academic affairs recom mendations are: reduction in the graduate school student- faculty ratio, assistant chair men for large departments, honors program support, sum mer school and extension credit instruction, Institute of Out door Dramas, fifth5 year pro gram in the School of Educa tion, community college teacher education, research and publi cation, computation center faculty research, salary in creases and student internships at the Institute of Government The only requests recom mended for health affairs, are equipment and personnel at the School of Medicine and salary increases for residents, faculty and staff of the school. Administration expenses of $11,640 were the only approved request for the psychiatric center $205,469 was requested The "C" budget, for capital expenditures, was cut 57 per cent, from $20,569,094 to $8, 766,000. The request for academic af fairs under the "C" budget was $12,147,837 $3,515,000 was recommended. Included are funds for a new law building near the Institute of Govern ment, the Institute of Fisheries wiring and renovation of New East, work on Venable Hall and the construction of new rest dence halls to house 2,000 stu dents. Residence Halls The commission recommend ed that the halls be built on a 100 per cent self -liquidating basis, to be paid for from stu dent rental charges. The Uni versity had requested that they be 50 per cent self-liquidating Health affairs received recommendation for $5,251,000 62 per cent of its $8,421,257 re guested. .-'"Projects - included - in the recommendation are reno vation of MacNider Hall, basic science educational facilities, expansion of the sewage treat ment plant and a School of Nursing building. No recommendations were made for requests for cancer treatment research and an ad dition to the School of Dentis try. Expenditures for remodeling Carolina Inn, a utilities office and shop and a community cen ter near the married students housing area were approved but no tax money will be involved in these projects. They will be financed with grants and non- state funds. White House Post Goes To Graduate A former president of the stu dent body here was named re cently to a White House staff position. He is Eli (Sonny) Evans, son of E. J. Evans, for mer Durham mayor. Evans was speaker of the Stu dent Party, president of Tau Epsilon Phi and a member of Order of the Grail. The 1958 Phi Beta Kappa graduate re ceived his law degree last year from Yale. He was an aide to Richardson Preyer during the guberna torial primaries and has worked with Princeton Professor Eric Goldman whose office funnels ideas from the nation's aca demic community to the White House. 'you want pretty legs keep i t s 5- PRETTY COED Roxanne Kalb browses through stacks of books at the APO book exchange in Y Building lobby. The exchange is open today from 9 a.m. to 4 pjn. for students to either buy or sell text books. The APO takes a 10 per cent cut of any book sold and gives profits to the March of Dimes. Photo by Jock Lauterer Six Delegations Assigned To :MN, By ALAN BANOV DTH Staff Writer UNC will have six foreign delegations one less than Duke . in the Model United Nations General Assembly here Wed-.' nesday through Feb. 14. The Di Society will represent Cyprus and the UAR, the Phi Society will serve as Brazilians and Byelorussians (one of the; Soviet Union's republics) and. the Collegiate Council for the, United Nations will be Jordan--. ian and Icelandic delegates. . , Some 500 students, from 70 other "schools will man delega--tions from about 100 nations, as: the Middle South Region of the CCUN presents its seventh an nual model U.N. In last year's meeting at Duke, UNC won the award for the best delegation. The mock XJ.N. is modeled ! after the actual world body and will function with a General Assembly, a Security Council and various committees. Some 100 flags, from the U.N. coun tries represented here, will be displayed around the meeting places. - About 315 visiting students will be housed by townspeople, and 98 will stay in dormitories. Although taxis may be used, volunteers here will provide, transportation for the visitors. Arthur Larson, director of . the World Rule of Law Center at Duke, will keynote the meet ing at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Hill Hall., The former undersecre tary of labor and director of the United States Information Agen cy will talk of "A Future for the U.N." . ; ' . : WUNC-TV will tape the speech and ' broadcast it Friday night, and the Voice of America will use the tapes in connection with ! one of its foreign pro grams. 1 ' , . By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer "I've been called just about everything in the book, and most of it is unprintable." Don Carson's dilemma .is not uncommon among the characters who inhabit -Graham Memorial, and being student body vice presi dent tends to aggravate the situa tion. Epithets -ilke "greasy devious politician" and a "man with no basic philosophy at all" may easily come with his job, but if these things worry him at all, he doesn't show it. A junior from Rocky Mount, Carson's career in Student Gov ernment has been long, diversified and highly controversial. : His roots are squarely in the residence halls, and in his. fresh man year he represented Everett Hall in both the Men's Residence Council and Student Legislature. In the MRC he helped introduce legislation which led to that body's getting a new name and a new Controversy Old Word To A general debate will follow the address at 8, when each delegation will proclaim the policies of the country it repre sents. : r The main committees will convene Thursday, but the day's highlight will be a speech at 7:30 p.m. by. Steve Robins of UCLA,- president of National Student Association. I' Dr. Arthur Waskow, of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, will address the Model U.N. at a dinner Friday night in Lenoir Hall. - , J The -General , Assembly, . made up of all committees and dele gations,. will meet on Friday afternoon and Saturday morn ing to consider " resolutions passed by committees. Byelorussia will present a controversial resolution to the Social, Humanitarian and Cul tural Committee to, suspend South Africa's vote in the U.N. because of its apartheid policies. The bill also requests "all mem ber nations of the United Na tions to immediately cease all economic and diplomatic rela tions with, the republic." .North Carolina College's United Kingdom will , propose to the Administrative and Budget ary Committee solutions to "the U.N. deficit problem. It urges the model assembly to pass a resolution that "a- U.N. peace keeping fund be established to finance and maintain peace keeping enterprises in troubled nations." Other resolution's to be con sidered will be Algeria's (J. C. Smith) proposal to seat Red China in the U.N., Malasia's (Randolph - Macon) condemna tion ' of ' Indonesia "for its ag gressive actions," and Chad's (Catawba) suggestion to create U.N. . control, over the sale of atomic reactors.' . Names Ih The lJniver sity's Neivs outlook, and he helped introduced the paid intramural manager pro-, gram. A position as co-chairman - of -the Legislature's Residence Hair Improvement Committee motivat ed Carson to help plan the Joyner ' Pilot Project and he succeeded John Ulf elder as University Party " Floor Leader in the fall of 1963. In 1964 UP candidates swept ; all but one of the executive of-, fices in Student Government, and Carson readily admits that he : went- through a lot of trouble! to become vice president. "You know me," he said. "Dur ing a campaign one does almost anything for a vote. "I talked so much I got laryn gitis, and for three days Don . Curtis, the doctors at the hospital -and the entire UP brain trust singed my stomach with gargles and remedies. Curtis said : there was nothing more useless . than a candidate without a voice." V V - - He won the election, and Car Gove islators Praise Talk RALEIGH (AP) Gov. Dan Moore's broad program out lined to - a joint session of the General Assembly vesterdav brought approving comments irom legislators. "It was a very fine message a strong message," said House Speaker H. P. Taylor, Jr. "He outlined a magnifi cent program for this state." Said Lt. Gov. Bob Scott, "I thought it was excellent. I liked his giving, priority, to edu cation which in essence was the program, of the United Forces for Education." Sen. Carl Venters of Onslow added, t?I thought it was very well done. I'm inclined to think he'll get. the great majority of the program he recommended." - Sen. Sam Whitehurst of Craven-said, "I thought it was a very good arid very construc tive program one I hope we can find funds for. Most every thing he said I am going", to help him get done." - Sen. Robert Morgan of. Har- nett said, "I think it was the -most comprehensive I Jiave heard. It spelled out the prob lems and come out with rec ommendations toward a sol ution." Sen. Fred Royster of Vance said he was "very pleased" with the speech and feels most of it would be approved by the Legislature. Sen. Walter Jones of Pitt I said,-""As chairman of ' the. Sen ate Committee on Education, 1 was interested in his comments on the public schools. I think he made a realistic approach to reducing the teacher load and the multiplicity of fees. I feel if the legislature will follow through it will upgrade the schools." Expressway Gets Boost RALEIGH UP) The State Highway Commission yesterday advanced the Raleigh-Chapel Hill Expressway, running through the Research Triangle Park, to the construction stage. William F. Babcock, commis sion director, told the commis sion the move was necessary because of the $25 million fed eral environmental health cen ter which will be located in the park.. He said it , would be. three to four years before the express way would be completed. The commission recently i approved acquisition of right-of-way for the project. The route of the expressway will relocate U.S.' 54 between Raleigh and Chapel Hill. son's thin frame, drawling, light ly satirical sentences and charac teristic slaps on his desk with an open palm have become in tegral parts of Graham Memorial life. . - "Student Government -administration relations were in a shamb le when Bob Spearman and I took office," he said. "This was due to a large degree to the unfortu nate handling of the apartment rule crisis and the integration boycott situation by the Lawler administration. "I don't think this was entirely Mike's fault," Carson added, "but he never tried to be a diplomat with the student body or the Ad ministration. "Bob and I have," he said. "We have never been afraid to stand up for our position, but we have always been willing to talk things over before a controversy develops." ' Carson continued his work with residence hall improvement and the developing Residence College System . Le8 To Assembly fiicdf speecioi l &5 1 Late News Briefs m 1" i From Daily Tar Heel Associated Press Wire Reports PRESIDENT LYNDON JOHNSON yesterday challenged Charles de Gaulle's view of United Nations problems and ex pressed indignation over denial, of voting rights to some Ala bama Negroes. In his first Washington news conference since the Novem ber election, Johnson ranged across many topics. He said American and Soviet diplomats are discussing a possible presi dential trip to Moscow. He admitted he "may have made a mistake" by asking Chief Justice Earl Warren, rather than Vice President Hubert Mum phrey, to head the U.S. delegation to Sir Winston Churchill's funeral. HUNDREDS .OF NEGRO STUDENTS in Selma, Ala. yester day heard a prediction from black nationalist leader Malcolm X that the campaign for racial equality may be forced to abandon the nonviolent image. .The former Black Muslim leader's unexpected visit to Selma delayed scheduled resumption of protests over voting rights. But in neighboring . Perry County Negroes .continued demon strations and about; 200 more were arrested. That brings to about-1,700 the number arrested in West Alabama this week. TWO PSYCHIATRISTS and a lawyer showed up yesterday in place of Walter Jenkins 'at the Senate's Bobby Baker hear- ings; . v ' ' The psychiatrists were reported to have urged that Jenkins, a former top' aide to President Johnson, be excused from testi- Chairman Everett, Jordan said no decision was reached at the Senate Rules -Committee meeting on whether to insist that - Jenkins put in a personal appearance. THE SENATE JUDICIARY Committee yesterday unanimous ly approved a constitutional amendment to establish proce dures for dealing with presidential ' disability and keeping the office of vice president filled. Only minor changes in the proposal authorized by Sen. Birch Bayh (D.-Ind.) who called them clarifying and said the basic provisions of his original versions were preserved. Sen. James O. ' Eastland (D.-Miss.), " chairman of the committee, said some members who favored sending the proposal to the Senate floor for action reserved the ' right to support amendments during debate. ' ' '. ; : PRESIDENTIAL ASSISTANT McGeorge Bundy began a round of fact-finding conferences with U.S. officials Thursday amid speculation in some Vietnamese quarters that a U.S.-So-viet deal on ; Viet Nam was in the making. Bundy's arrival coincided with the departure of Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin from Moscow for talks in Hanoi, capi tal of Communist North Viet Nam. Bunday denied that his ar rival was in any way connected with the Kosygin visit. Bundy's arrival statement reiterated American pledges to continue support for Viet Nam's . anti-communist struggle. But the statement contained the diplomatic hint that Viet Nam was expected to do its part. "The record of the last 25 years all around the world," he said, "shows that those who stand firm in their own freedom can be confident of the strong and untiring support of the United States of America." .' FRENCH PRESIDENT Charles de Gaulle Thursday sug gested a five-power conference including Communist China to resolve the crisis in the United Nations. . He said the U.N. has strayed from its charter and has be come a political tool in the cold war. Without mentioning the United States he said the U.N. Congo operation has been used to send in political, economic and administrative missions favorable to one big power. He said the only way he could see to get the U.N.- back on the track was to call the conference, at Geneva of Britain, the U.S., the Soviet Union, Communist China and France. FEAR GAVE WAY to relief Thursday for thousands of coast al residents on bolh sides of ' the Pacific who spent much of Wednesday night apprehensively waiting for tidal waves that never came. - Seismic wave warnings were flashed around the Northern Pacific rim and in Hawaii after the severe earthquake rocked the end of Alaska's Aleutian Island chain. The Oregon resort town of Seaside was evacuated after a Coast Guard helicopter sounded warnings from the sky by loudspeaker.. One woman died in the excitement, apparently from a heart attack brought on by the scare. As a result of the success of the Joyner "Pilot Poject,,, he said, "the administration agreed to help finance fututre projects with Student Government "In the late spring, Student Party leaders started attacking me for being chairman of the Residence . Hall Improvement Committee while I was vice presi dent," he said, "so Sonny Pepper was appointed to take my place. "I haven't seen ' much action from the commtitee this fall, but we are hoping for some prog ress before the end of the year." Carson then took over the chair manship of the newly formed Campus Radio Committee, which is working actively for the estab lishment of - a campus carrier Jcurrent radio station. One of Carson's favorite occu pations is attacking the Student Party and praising the UP. "The Student Party is more in terested in being than doing," he said. "The SP. pseudo-intellectuals spend hours talking about 9 Carson the SP's philosophy of Student Government, but I have yet to hear any clear cut definition of that philosophy. "The SP has been talking about residence hall improvements for five years and hasn't done any thing about it," he said. "Jubi lee Weekend, the Fine Arts Festi val, Campus Radio have all reached fruition under UP ad ministration, not to mention the residence hall improvements. Carson feels that the . great est challenge facing Student Gov ernment's autonomy is its pond erous and antiquated organiza tion. "It is impossible for the Stu dent Body President to person ally administer the direction of 32 executive committees," fie said. "Unless reforms in our judici ary and orientation systems are instituted soon, we will be in danger of losing these functions to the University administration." I Consolidation Gets Moore's Full Approval By HUGH STEVENS DTH Co-Editor RALEIGH Governor Dan K. Moore lent his resounding vocal endorsement to the University of North Carolina's "concept of consolidation" yesterday, and indicated that he will attempt to prevent the controversial Speaker Ban and "name change" issues from interfering with the University's progress. The governor included his statements concerning the Uni versity in a "State of the State" address to a joint session of the General Assembly at noon. Moore called on the legisla tors and the people of the state to step forward from "the hreshold of greatness" by en dorsing a legislative program concentrating on education, but including such diverse measures as a $300 million road bond is sue, a 10 per cent pay raise for state employees, and a system of annual automobile inspec tions. The governor said no new taxes would be needed to fi nance his program. Supports Fourth Branch Most of Moore's statement? concerning the University were associated with a hearty en dorsement of Charlotte College a the site of the institution s fourth branch. , v "The University is the single most important factor in higher education in this state," he said. "I believe in the 'one univer sity' concept, and I. will vigor ously oppose any effort to weaken it. "I strongly recommend that Charlotte College be made the fourth branch of the University as quickly as possible." In response to this statement, UNC President William C. Fri day said yesterday, "Gov. Moore has always been a strong supporter of the University. We are indeed grateful for this strong and clear statement which indicates his desire to see the University move forward. Moore also noted his feeling that "the Board of Trustees is not properly apportioned at this time," and asked the legislature to appoint a commission to study the "selection, .appoint ment and representation of the board." "Every effort should be made to equalize the representation," he said. Skirts Ban, Name Issues Moore skirted the controver sial issues surrounding the Communist Speaker Ban Law and the name of the Univer sity's Raleigh branch, saying 'neither issue should be al owed to weaken our Univer sity." "The welfare of the Univer sity shoald be your overriding concern," he instructed the General Assembly. Moore thus threw a damper on rumored plans of some legis lators ' to expand the "name change" issue into a full-scale effort for greater autonomy for N. C. State. At the same time, his state ment that "my views on the Speaker Ban are well known" indicated that he intends to stick by his previous stance of favoring at least limited amend ment of the law. Gov. Moore said if the state wants greatness "the path we must follow to achieve that goal is education." He recommended a seven point program for improving public education. They were: 1. Reduce class size by three in grades 1 through 3 and by one in grades 4 through 12. 2. Provide a salary increase of 5 per cent for public school instructional personnel r for the first year of the biennium and 5 per cent for the second. 3. Provide additional guidance counsel and remedial teachers. 4. Restore the continuing contract for teachers. 5. Extend the term of em ployment for public school prin cipals. 6. Relieve students and par ents of paying necessary school and book fees and study ways to eliminate unnecessary fees. 7. Strengthen school lunch (Continued on tags 3)

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view