Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 21, 1965, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Tuesday September 21, 1965 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pafre3 trike 11 By GEORGE W. CORNELL Associated Press Writer NEW IfORK (AP) The situation iad a strange muff ling effect to many, as if the clamor of life had suddenly subsided, the peace slowed and the dimensions shrunk to neighborhood size. "It's like being in a small town," a Manhattan office worker remarked. "It's a cur lious feeling." As some sensed it, the sur face impression was that noth ing much was going on in the world, or so it seemed, judg- HELP WANTED Male student from Charlolle with car for afternoon work. Call 92-2920 for interview. THE SINFOfWS of U.N.C. CONCERT - DANCE JAZZ BAND The Best in Musical Talent for Formals. Parties and Shows Contact Box 654 Chapel Hill 933-1003 Now Auditioning Female Vocalist Trumpet Saxes Trombone Bass Contact George McLain 966-3103 Yack Photos The Yack will start taking pictures off students next week. Senior women are, asked to wear black sweaters with pearls. All other women are to v. ear black sweaters. Men must wear dark coats and ties. Staff interviews will be held next week. All interested par- . ties are asked to apply. Photos will be taken from 1-6 p.m. as follows: - SENIORS AND FOURTHS;. YEAR MEDICAL STUDENTS Those whose last names be gin with A E Sept. 20 ... P-T Sept. 23 F-J Sept. 21 U-Z Sept. 24 K-O Sept. 22 For those who do not have their pictures taken on the specified date, a late fee of $1 will be charged. However, we are unabLr to guarantee that the late pictures will ap pear in the Yack. Deadline for late pictures: Wr4: j H.ith ., M j A t ' s ' You can now dial the girl f I friend or parents direct. -( ' ' ' jfl ?tA Dial the new 3'digit ac" i I f j I ! ' mi k li'i cess code tne distant : I V iv ;1 area code and their num- ; j I t f -i ; f ij tel Save time, same money. . J - ' r - 1 Si -r VI I k" . v r 7 f -rS :-v . : Students, dial direct and get the fastest service at the low station-to-station rate! No operator will break in and vour bill will be automatically prepared. Also, don't forget you can obtain the information operator by dialing 555-1212 following the access and area codes. No charge for the service. If you get a wrong number, find out the location and number reached, quickly dial the operator and explain the situation . . . she will prepare a credit and you will not be charged. ThiB new service, effective i n mid-August, is provided by The Chapel Hill Telephone Co, OWNED & OPERATED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA Makes ing from the silencing damp r which had descended voer most major news circuits this metropolis. Feel Lost "I feel lost," a midtown ex ecutive said, "Completely out of touch." Such were reactions to the closing of most newspaper outlets here, as if the local scene had become oddly mut ed an insulated, without the stir of events-at-large. "It's sort of peaceful," a young secretary said. "I know it's not real, and that all the fuss and happenings in the world are still going on, but without seeing the papers, it doesn't seem like it." Newsstands were mostly STUDENT GOVERNMENT Interviews for Student Gov ernment committees will be held today through Friday from 2-5 p.m. in Student Gov ernment offices of Graham Memorial. All interested students urged to apply. are L FOR SALE 1959 CHEVRO LET V8 White, one owner, ex cellent condition. Power steer ing, radio, heater. $690. Tele phone 942-3862. Taken Soon FRESHMEN Those whose last names be gin with A-E Sept. 27 P-T Sept. 30 F-J Sept. 28 U-Z Oct. 1 K-O Sept. 29 SOPHOMORES Those whose last names be gin with A-E Oct. 4 , P-T Oct. 7 F-J Oct. 5 c! U:Z Oct. 8". K-O Oct. 6 JUNIORS Those whose last names be gin with A-E Oct. 11 P-T U-Z Oct. 14 Oct. 15 F-J K-O Oct. 12 Oct. 13 Seniors Freshmen Sophomores Juniors Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct. 15 Oct. 22 I W-, 4Myv,.W...y,.. I. , N Yo bare of headlines, as crowds shuffled to work for the day. Seven of the city's eight ma jor dailies were shut down be cause of a strike against one of them, The New York Times. One afternoon daily, The New York Post, still was pub lishing, but that didn't ruffle the placid exterior of the morning. No papers came out here then. Radio and TV Unless you tuned in the ra dio or television set at break fast, you were out of contact with affairs in general. The atmosphere on the subways, in the hotel lobbies, on park benches was of something lacking, a missing link with the every-day rou tine, a vague sense of being cut off from things. A tense commuter com plained that it made him ner vous. "I can't stand all these people staring at each other on the train." It also upset special sectors of society, the stock market investor trying to learn the day's quotations, the horse player anxious about track re sults. New-stand Dealer A newsstand dealer said he was frequently asked aboi't most anything he had in print, "Does it have the re sults?" To many people, however, even though their own par ticular pursuits went along as usual, there was a sort of il lusion of quitude, of nothing going on. It was all the more noticeable because of its in congruity in New York. In this communications cita del, with its endless flow of news columns press agentry, celebrity stunts, cultural pro motions and advertising, it's simply not normal to get no word 'of doings of the mo ment. "It's almost as if the town had changed all at once and the usual round of activity had stopped," observed one citi zen. Life Goes On "Of course, things are bound to be going on out there just the same." He waved a hand IJNC Debate Team To Hold Reception For Members UNC's Debate Team will hold a reception for all inter ested students today from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in 105A Cald well. Students attending are ask ed to come in through the back door. Organizational plans and the schedule of planned debate tournaments will be discuss ed. This year's varsity debating A Small at the stoic skyscraper- ou just don't read aioiit U To try to fill the -.oid. broadcasters had great.;- ex panded their news pro,:: .ms. WNBC-TV yesterday c 'ted Times" featuring top members reading their -tat'f ries and columns. "You had to listen to the fashion and women's nev..- and other stuff. I don't read M get the rest of it." a suburbanite said. "I keep the set on all morning before I got any ' news." Radio station WINS even ; aired summaries of the Sun- ; day comic strips, to help keep j fans up with Steve Car.yon, L'l Abner and Rex Morgan, j MD. But to many working : ien. and the more industrious housewives, the day's sched ule leaves scant chance for sitting down to rrdio or tele vision until nightfall, and they ordinarily catch the day's news on the run. Lonely Subways That means while riding the train, at the lunchcounter. or in slack time at the office desk or store, where it's easy to have a newspaper at hand but not electronic equipment. And the absence of that ready news fare left an un familiar gap in the popula tion's preoccupations. Eyes of subway riders wan dered uncertainly, bereft of their usual refuge in the morn ing newsprint. Finding them selves staring at someone across the aisle, people would look uncomfortably to the ceiling, to panel posters, or down at their feet. Others found substitute ab sorption in books or maga zines. You could spot even some dignified elders perusing comic books and "authentic" romances, grabbed from the denuded newsstands. INTERVIEWS Interviews will be held for student legislature committee investigators and assistants this afternoon at 3:30 in the Publications Board Office in Graham Memorial. For further information con tact Hugh Blackwell at 968 9215. slate includes Georgetown University, Wake Forest, Har vard, New York University, Dartmouth, Duke and the Un iversity of Chicago. In addition to these sessions, the group is also planning to hold an intercollegiate tourna ment of its own October 21 to 25. This year's debate topic is "Resolved: That law en forcement agencies in the United States should be given greater freedom in the investi gation and prosecution of crime." B and B SERVICE STATION (Cities Service) i Beer, Groceries, and Wine "See Us and Pay Less -the Best Prices in Town" Owned by BERT and BILL 403 East Main Street Carrboro Meet Your Literate Friends in The Intimate Bookshop 119 E. Open Town' To help keep ne-At:,nd dealers in buines t-M PH.- Uense tummisiijiK-r i.-sutd emergency authorization. ior thiT.i to seli razor blade shoe laces, tobacco and other smad items if the .shutdown noon. There also were moves by some out-ol-tuwn newspapers to help fill the news gap. A trickle of bundled papers was beginning To reach a few city points from outlving commu nities. OTIS REDDING OTIS REDDING, rhythm-and-blues artist who released such hits as Mr. Pitiful and Respect last year will appear in Memorial Hall under the sponsorship of the Men's Res idence Council Friday Night. Accompanying Redding in his first concert on the Tar Heel campus will be his band of 13 musicians and three singers. Tickets will coast $1.50 and will be available today in Y court from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. TODAY THRU WED. Iwo Mighty Armies Trampled Its Valley.. .A Fighting Family Challenged JAMES STEWART SHEIMAIUDOAH DOUG McCLURE GLENN CORBETT PATRICK WAYNE Shows a t 1:00 - 3:00 5:00- 7:00- 9:00 968-6151 Franklin St. Till 10 P.M. (V I I i KATHARINE ROSS - ROSEMARY FORSYTH A UNIVERSAL PICTURE -"I Campus Activities TODAY Folk Dancing Group Pres byterian Student Center at 7:30 p.m. UNC Student Wives' Club 8 p.m. in 08-0y Peabody. Drawing for eight door prizes. NAACP executive commit tee meeting. 7:30 in the Grail Room. All officers and highly motivated non-executive members may attend. U.N.C. Debate team open house 7:30 - 9:30 for all in terested students in 105 Caldwell. Plans for the year to be discussed. Band practice 4:30 in Hill ; Hall. All interested persons ! report. WEDNESDAY Carolina Women's Council 3 p.m. in GM. All members ( 4iyoHlL4'f TODAY JOHN IRELAND LEIF ERICKSON Today Shows ai: 1:00 2:20 - 4:02 5:44 7:26 - 9:08 TUE. LAST SHOWING AT 7:26 TONIGHT AT 9 P.M. IF YOU THINK YOU'VE LAUGHED BEFORE DON'T MISS OUR HILARIOUS , ... ADVANCE SHOWING iarry wn v-ieo The tunmest movie r.mce 54 BC! rrii I STARRING JOHN CRAWFORD Capable of speeds better than 2,000 mph, the YF-12A is the hottest aircraft around. Now Maj. Walter F. Daniel, test pilot for the YF-12A, answers your questions about the world's fastest manned airplane and America's Aerospace Team. (Maj. Daniel, a test pilot since 1954, is a member of the Society of Experimental Test Pilots. He received a B.S. degree in Aeronautical Engineering from the University of Oklahoma. In February 1962, he set world class time-to-climb records in a T-38 jet trainer.) Is the YF-12A the world's fastest manned aircraft? It certainly is. On May 1 of this ear the YF-12A (formerly known as the A-l 1 ) reclaimed the world absolute speed record from the USSR. It was clocked at 2.062 mph over Edwards Air Force Base. How big is the YF-12A? The exact dimensions of the YF-12A hae not been released yet. But it's approximately 100 feet long, with about a 50-foot wingspan. That's half again as big as our present interceptors! Is the Air Force training many men as pilots these days? Yes. very definitely. In spite of all you hear about unmanned vehicles, the human pilot is still very much in the picture. As a matter of fact, the Air Force pilot quota is on the increase' What other kinds of jobs does Since it's one of the world's foremost technological organizations, the Air Force has plenty of openings J for scientists and engineers. There are also many J challenging and varied administrative-managerial i positions. ji What do I have to do to become 1 an Air Force officer? j Air Force ROTC is the best way to get started as an L Ik present. I MX.BI will bold interview for two vacancies on the bureau. Sicn up in Student Government for appointment Wed. or Thurs alternoon 2- 5 p.m. Chos club meets Wed.. 7:30 p.m. in GM Roland Parker Room 3 All interested per sons invited. If you have a chess clock, or a better chess board, please bring it. - Till RSI) Y Film Dommittee in R P. No. ililll'll'IIIM illlillliilil: SMRAF YIROKCIiKI WE MAY BE A LITTLE BACKWARDS IN OUR SPELLING BUT WE ARE STILL 1 AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORE EASTGATE SHOPPING CENTER ill DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Revolved 5. Puncture 9. Extent 3. Improved morally 4. Compass point .5. Vapor 6. Civil wrong 7. Girl's name 8. Make a for 9. Strike 11. Sledding areas 13. Demeter's daughter 18. Lubricate 19. Road surface material 10. Musical sounds 12. Recline 13. Grain of corn 14. White ant 15. Grain .16. Behold! 17. Act 19. Slope 20. Seven to seven, for instance 21. Rational 22. Semipoly gonal window 25. Funeral piles 26. Fix 27. Distant 28. Inquire 29. Renders quiet 33. Mongol 34. Hasten 35. Poultry cage 36. Light-tan. color 38. Dipper 39. Endured 40. Willow 4.1. Weakens Truman, DOWN 1. Scottish tea cake 2. ' bear tbe Air Force offer? Name Address. City State. :-:-:n Today 2. i p.m. Interviews for the Toronto Ex change will be held from 3 to 5:30 p.m. Sept. 27-29 in Roland Parker 1 and 11. Per sons interested should obtain application blanks at the GM Information desk. LOST Hamilton natch. Contact Dav id Paster. 968-9021. Reward. Alligator grain wallet in Li brary between 9:30 and 10:30. Important papers in side, please return to Steve Mvers, 318 Parker. liliiillillililli!!!! immiH 21. Port on Ionian Sea 22. Ne braska Indians 23. Effects 24. Writ ing fluid mm 25. Moc casin 27. Nourish 29. Ties 30. Asiatic lemur 31. Leader of the Israelites Yeiterdajr' iJiiwar 32. Mast 34. Croquet wicket 37. Extinct bird 40. Before: prefix U f I4 YA TW .Z2 17 18 19 WWLZZW-ZZZ S2 l 24 6. .VZVZ T ' li -r, -21 Air Force officer. The new two-year Air Force ROTC program makes this method available to men who have already completed a year or two of their college education. For college graduates, if you did not take advantage of ROTC. you can still get started through Air Force Officer Training School (OTS). a three-month course open to both men and women. Can I keep up my studies while I'm in the Air Force? The Air Force encourages its men and women to continue their educations. For instance, you may qualify to study for a graduate degree during off duty hours, with the Air Force paying a substantial part of the tuition. What kind of future do I have in tbe Air Force? A bright one. As we move further into the Aero space Age. the Air Force is going to grow even more important. And you can grow with it! United States Air Force. Hq USAF. Dept. SCP-59 Box A.' Randolph AFB, Texas 7814& Please send me more information on Air Force ROTC O Air Force OTS. Zip Codt. ; i t i s t 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 21, 1965, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75