Paga 8
THE TAR HEEL -
" Thursday, July 1, 1965
South Campus Expanding
To Tune Of $30 Million
Construction in progress or
soon to begin on the south side
of campus, concentrated in the
Health Center area, totals
about $30 million.
The expansion will provide
more treatment facilities for
patients, more space to train
physicians, dentists, nurses and
other health personnel and
more living and eating areas
for the mushrooming student
population.
In the Health Center alone,
projects now authorized and
largely funded total over $25
million. Of this amount, about
$11 million is in state funds,
over $12 million is scheduled
to come from federal grants
and the remainder is from spe
cial funds already on hand.
The physical plant of ' the
Health Center will double : in
the next five years, followed
by a doubling of the overall
teaching, research and pa
tient care programs.
Full - time students in the
schools of medicine, public
health, dentistry, nursing and
pharmacy are expected to rise
from a level of 1,621 in 25
programs during the past year
to over 2,700 in the 1970-71
school year.
Dr. Henry T. Clark Jr., ad
ministrator of the Divi
sion of Health Affairs, has this
to say about the expansion in
the Health area: "Planning
for expansion began in the late
1950's when we analyzed the
programs we had and set lar
ger program objectives in or
der to serve the growing needs
of North Carolina.
'A master - plan architect
helped in 1960-62 to chart the
physical development of the
Health Center.
"All of this was in anticipa
tion of the passage of federal
GOT A QUARTERLY
The Carolina Quarterly needs
copies of its winter, 1965 (Vol.
17, No. 2) issue. Anyone do
nating a copy in good condi
tion will receive a free year's
subscription. Students who can
help should contact the Quar
terly office in GM Friday or
Monday from 1:30 to 3 p.m.
PIIE-J
ULY 4th SEE
illl Ladies' SVMITS .... 13 Off
1 Rack Color Beige
MR. D. COORDINATOR .... i2 Off
1 Table Children SHIRTS, SWIM SUITS,
Other Value to $3.00
SWIHWEAR ..'.;..'v;;;'H0W:B0c
Men's
SPORT SHIRTS ..... 1.75 to 3.
Boy's BERMUDAS ........... 2.25
Boy's Polo KNIT SHIRTS . . 3 for 1.03
Ladies Bermudas
BERMUDA SETS .......... 14 Off
All These Values Available at
Our Durham Stare
ALL STORES OPEN JULY 5TH
ILL OUTLET SALES flOOM
of B & L HOSIERY MILL, Burlington
Located on Franklin St. Upstairs over Sutton's Drug Store
legislation to assist in the con
struction of facilities to train
more medical, dental and nurs
ing students.
When the Health Education
Assistance Act of 1963 was
passed, the Division of
Health Affairs had already
done the necessary prelimi
nary work to apply for match
ing federal funds.
Clark is a member of the
National Advisory Council
which passes on all requests
for aid under the Health Ed
ucation Assistance Act.
With major federal match
ing grants provisionally ap
proved in late last year and
early this year, the Universi
ty turned to the 1965 General
Assembly. - - ' j
"We were gratified, in early
June when the Legislature
acted favorably on our re
quests for capital funds for an
addition to the basic science
departments, a new Health Af
fairs library, a new education
al wing for the school of Den
tistry and a new School of
Nursing," Clark said.
"Two more key grants con
cerned with these projects are
awaiting action in Washington
one for the School of Nurs
ing and one to construct re
search space in the basic sci
ences addition. Favorable ac
tion on these is expected soon."
In recent days, a request has
been submitted to the Nation
al Institutes of Health for $1.6
million in matching funds to
construct a Child Development
Center in the Health Affairs
area. The 1963 General Assem
bly made an initial appropria
tion of $390,000 for this project.
In addition, NIH and Uni
versity officials are discussing
the location of a major phar
macology - toxicology research
center in the Health Center
here.
Construction of an ambula
tory patient wing and a surgi
cal addition for N. C. Memor
ial Hospital, costing about
$2.4 million should begin this
fall.
Architects are currently be
ing appointed to prepare work
ing drawings for the other
newly authorized facilities.
In Clark's words, "There
are busy days ahead."
AND
AFTER
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END OF THE LINE: Twenty-three years of serving food for
UNC students has ended for Nellie Croker. The Lenoir Hall
server, who is retiring, was honored yesterday by her fellow
workers at a reception in Lenoir. They presented her with a
cake and a traveling case.-"Photo by Ernest Robl.
Police Discover Peyote
In Dead Student's Home
Although there has been no
autopsy report on the June 4
death of David B. Snelling Jr.,
Chapel Hill Police Chief Wil
liam Blake confirmed that a
hallucination - causing drug
was found in the downtown
apartment from which the UNC
senior plunged to his death.
The drug was identified as
peyote, a natural product of
certain types of cactus plants
CAUBLE HONORED
Kathy Cauble, a rising UNC
senior has been named Out
standing Young Business Wo
man by the North Carolina
Business and Professional Wo
men's Club. She will compete
in the national meeting of the
organization in Washington la
ter this month.
YOiTPLAY
Just 20 n?;lcs away
Kebane.
A. SI Eft
uresn lees iguana v:,ou m.
Arrowhead
Golf Club
found near the Rio Grande.
br. Hubert Patterson, Orange
County medical examiner, has
ruJrt SnpWm's n on
parent suicide pending com
pletion of the autopsy, being
delayed by the fact that there
is no standard test for this
drug. Authorities are current
ly attempting to determine
whether Snelling had actually
taken any of the peyote "cac
tus buttons."
Blake said Friday that pey
ote had been found in the
apartment and that Patterson
had been supplied with sam
ples to use in comparison tests
with body substances.
According to Blake, posses
sion of peyote, a non-habit-forming
drug, is illegal.
Patterson said the peyote is
similar to LSD, but that while
LSD is ?n artifically produced
chemical, peyote is a natural
plant product.
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Selections
Announced
For SG Jobs
The interview process is over
and Student Government com
mittees are functioning. This
-list of SG appointments to sum
mer school vacancies was an
nounced this week by Student
Body President Paul Dickson.
Assistant men's attorney gen
eral, Van MacNair; assistant
women's attorney general, Lin
da Harrison.
Men's Attorney General staff,
both sessions, Paul Sch-'ffer,
D. Martin Lorber, John Wiggs,
Andy Culpepper, Robie Harris;
first session only, John Lovell.
Women's Attorney General
staff, both sessions, Bummie
Crowell, Mary Bruce Batte,
Susan Jane Pfouts, Nancy
Barr; first session only Mary
Steward Curry, Kathy Stone
ger. Men's Council, both sessions,
Vn MoNir. ch'rmQn. B'll
Miller, Robert Dornbugh, Soott
Castleberry, Stephen Weller;
first session only, Richard Hol
derness, John Wall, Wrh;tney
Durand, William Samuel Wood
ard; second session only, Stu
art Kagel, John Mundy.
Women's Council, both ses
sions, Gloria Stephenson, Car
ol Gallant, Suzie Roberts,
Judy Fletcher, Sara Hamilton,
Guinevere McLamb, Carolyn
Murpy, Suzanne Pharr, Ann
Wesson; first session only,
Nancy Aycock, Bev Coleman,
Molly Johnson, Susan Mitchell,
Drusylla Murray, Frances
Pegues, Ellen Robon.
Summer school Attorney Gen
er?l secretariat, Janet Ann
Blake, Pamela Kay Cherry,
Judy Fletcher.
Student Body President Paul
Dickson and Treasurer Tom
White are filling their regular
positions. Miriam Dorsey is
summer school secretary.
De Leon Named
J. Mario de Leon, 26-year-old
Texan, has been named chief
medical illustrator at the
School of Medicine here.
De Leon is a graduate of
North Texas State University
at Denton and received his
master of science degree in
medical illustration from the
Medical College of Georgia.
He taught facial prosthetics
(his major research interest)
and moulage to medical art
students at the Medical Col
lege of Georgia in 1963-64.
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