Free Flick Last Call, Otis Fans The last chance to receive refunds for the MRC Otis Red. ding show will be today be tween 1 and 2 p.m. inside the door at Y-Court. You must have your ticket stub. Tonight's free flick at 7 and 9:30 in Carroll Hall will be Suspicion," an Alfred Hitch cock production starring Cary Grant and Joan Fontaine. A provincial British girl mar nes an unprincipled charmer, whom she discovers to be a warped and lying cheat, and possibly a murder. mm KrX ZJv ir -L" r t w 9 The South's Largest College Newspaper Vol: 74, No. 14 CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1965 Founded February 23, 1893. chool Of Medicine, Charlotte Memorial To Unite 9 UNC By ED FREAKLEY DTH Staff Writer The UNC School of Medicine and Charlotte Memorial Hos pital will become affiliated next July providing a unique education and exchange pro gram between the two institu tions. Dr. Isaac Taylor, dean of the School of Medicine, and John W. Rankin, director of Charlotte Memorial Hospital, made the announcement Wed nesday. Under the agreement Me morial's chief resident will 5 .... i' J I Si .if .- fV'v 1 1 s -EX)b , i j I ( J J;V i ft Attorney General Reverses Moody's Concession Stand By DAVID ROTIEV1AN DTH Staff Writer Chuck Erickson, UNC's di rector of athletics, was de lighted by the attorney gen eral's Wednesday ruling that state public schools can sell food and soft drinks at ath letic events. Atty. Gen. Wade Bruton's op inion overturned Deputy Atty. Gen. Ralph Moody's decision, which many educators feared would have raised school tax- 1 es or curtailed extra activities because of loss of funds from concession stands. The original opinion did not directly affect fund raising ac tivities at UNC. Erickson called the refresh ment stands an integral part of high school football, saying they attracted many specta tors who otherwise would not attend the games. He said loss of the funds would have "cut down fresh man high school squads, and we need to develop this talent. The boys are at a formative age, and if possible, we'd like to help the late-bloomers. "That's why we'd like to see as many boys as possible playing ball. "Kind of A Shock" "It was kind of a shock to see Moody's ruling especial ly since the concession stands have been operating for 50 years." Bruton apparently agreed with the director of athletics, commenting that "various fund raising activities in the public schools" and related activities are "traditional and accepted. "I do not think the school laws are to be interpreted as prohibiting such activities so long as they are supervised and kept withm reasonable, appropriate limits by the var ious school administrative au thorities. ... . . . The activities of the hundreds of different schools are too numerous and varied to enable me to set forth a definitive list of activities which a school is legally- au thorized to conduct." serve under the joint sponsor ship of the departments of medicine at both institutions. Clinical Faculty Six of Memorial's specialists in internal medicine will be appointed to the clinical fac ulty at the medical school here. Any teaching these men do, either here or in Charlotte, will be as part of the official medical school faculty. A N. C. Memorial Hospital resident in medicine will be sent to Charlotte to become chief resident there. Pep Rally! Have classes started to get you down yet? Do you feel like screaming? Well, tonight's the night to do it. At 7:30 p.m. the cheerleaders will be gather ing forces for the biggest pep rally to hit UNC in years. Head cheerleader Jerry Houle said yes terday to remind everybody to bring torch es to the planetarium parking lot before 7:30. When the crowd has gathered to mam moth size the great march will begin across campus; pep band, torches and all. The marchers will parade over to the upper quad, and down into the lower quad picking up forces along the way. Then the cheerleader, with the band and the crowd at their heels will stomp into Emerson stadium for some good healthy yelling. A giant bonfire will be waiting for the crowd when they get to Emerson. Cheer leaders said some necessary equipment for tonight's festivities, in addition to the torch es, will be trash cans to beat on, or any thing else that makes noise. Just to show their confidence in the team the cheerleaders said that helium-filled bal loons will be on sale at tomorrow's Virginia game. Each time UNC scores, everybody will release his balloon, to the amazement of Virginia fans. Remember, 7:30 in the planetarium park ing lot. And bring torches and trash cans. Asks Clarification Bruton suggested that the 1967 General Assembly clarify how the "government in bus iness" section of the general statues apply to public schools. Dr. Charles F. Carroll, state superintendent of public instruction, had requested the attorney general's opinion. Bruton said the so-called government in business law Miss Mississippi To Date Some lucky North Carolina male will have the honor of dating the first runner-up to the 1965 Miss America this weekend. Lovely Patsy Puckett, Miss Mississippi, will arrive here Friday evening and will fill out an "Operation Match" questionnaire. The data from her question naire will be telegrammed to the computation center in Cambridge, Mass. which will process the data and telegram back the name of the boy who from the data on his question naire seems to be the ideal date for Miss Puckett. Her plane will set down at Raleigh - Durham Airport to night at 7:55. UNC students are urged to join Duke and Wake Forest students to greet her there. After a brief press confer ence at the airport, during which she will be officially crowned "Miss Match," a car avan will bring her to Chapel Hill for a tour of the UNC campus. She will spend Friday night at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house. After an 8 a.m. breakfast with Gov. and Mrs. Dan K. Moore in the Governor's Man sion Saturday, she will attend a reception at Erdahl-Cloyd Student Union at N. C. State. Initially, the emphasis in Charlotte will be directed to ward doctors who have gradu ated from medical school and are taking advanced training. However, it is hoped that after a few years, senior UNC medical school students will receive part of their training in Charlotte once the exchange program is set up properly and under way. First Small Step Dr. Lewis Welt, chairmen of the Department of medicine, said yesterday, "The Univer- "does not mean that schools have been given legislative au thority to enter unrestrainedly into the field of retail mer chandising without limitation or restriction. He did not "think it would be proper for a school to op erate a commissary or store that competed generally in tne entire field of retail merchan dising." N.C. Boy At noon she will be back at .Carolina for a press confer ence at the Kappa Sigma fra ternity house. Television sta tions WRAL, WFMY and WTVD will broadcast the an nouncement of her ideal date. This lucky gentleman will es cort Miss Mississippi for the remainder of the weekend. Saturday afternoon Miss Puckett and her escort will attend the Carolina - Virginia football eame. after whicn they will be honored guests at the Rams Club. Then it's on to the Maverick House for a reception which is open to evervone. The erand finale of her visit to Chapel Hill will be a ban quet m her honor at the Blair House at 6:45 p.m. Immediately after the ban quet Miss Puckett will go to Duke where she will attend a large reception in her honor eiven bv Pi Kappa Phi tra ternity to which all members of the Durham community have been invited. Miss Puckett plans to leave Chanel Hill Sunday at 9 a.m Young men who would like a chance to date this beauty, but have not yet submitted a questionnaire m?y get in on the eame by filling out the data sheet and slipping it un der the door of 5 Old west before 8 p.m. Friday night. sity is taking its first sma 1 step toward the communi:y hospitals of North Carolina to foster a better understandirg between us, so that medicine may benefit and our knowl edge can grow." The affiliation is expected t: spread to other departments in the two institutions. If this happens Charlotte doctors in the 15 or so other specialties, such as surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics and gyn ecology, will receive appoint ments to the medical school faculty here. niversity 700 Acres From the Associated Press One of the largest bequests in the $100 million estate of William Rand Kenan, UNC benefactor who died last July 28 in Lockport, N. Y., was left to The Consolidated Uni versity of North Carolina. He left his 700-acre Rand leigh Farm at Lockport, plus $2 million, to the University, his alma mater. Most of Kenan's estate was left for educational purposes. Kenan's will, filed in Niagra, N. Y. County Thursday, be gan: "A good education is the most cherished gift an indi vidual can receive." Industrial Pioneer Most of his fortune, which Kenan made as a pioneer in the carbon acetylene business and in Florida real estate, will be used to establish professorships, instructor- MRC Hears Resignation Resolution A resolution calling for Paul Dickson's resignation as stu dent body president was intro duced in the Men's Residence Council Wednesday night, and MRC members voted to post pone its consideration until next week. The resolution was intro duced bv Jim Sturees of Gra ham Residence Hall, one of three students who sponsored a recent campus-wide petition calling for Dickson's resigna tion. The petition, signed by near ly 1500 students, was present ed to Dickson last week. After Sturees introduced his resolution, Andy Holland of Maneum Hall moved to sus pend the rules for the resolu tion's immediate consideration bv the body. According to MRC rules, an bills and resolutions are intro duced by their sponsors and the body waits until its next meeting before voting on tne proposals. A suspension requires two- thirds of the body s support to be approved. Holland's motion was de feated by an estimated vote of 35 to 15. The Sturges resolution said Dickson s conviction for a campus code violation "has endangered the respect for Student Government and in particular the Campus Code and Honor Code. "A recent poll of student opinion in residence halls and fraternities has shown that he no longer has the confidence of the student body," it reads m part. The resolution also cited ap peals by h'gh Student Govern ment and University adminis tration officials calling for Dickson s resignation. In other business, MRC President Sonny Pepper an nounced the resignation of MRC Vice - President Bob Peyton. David Keil, chairman of the Freshman Class Scholarship Committee, explained plans for a tutorial service offered students in the freshman sophomore honors program. He urged MRC members to support the service. This would also mean that residents in the other special ties would probably be ex changed between the two hos pitals. The program will give UNC a base in Charlotte on which the training of doctors could be expanded as required. To implement this, mem bers of the department of med icine here will commute to Charlotte to give lectures. In turn, Charlotte faculty mem bers will come here to give lectures at the medical school. o ships, scholarships and fellow ships." Chancellor Paul F. Sharp said yesterday that "through the years, this will be a very great thing for the Univer sity." He added, "I hope that it will substantially enrich the Kenan Professorships." Student Body President Paul Dickson on behalf of the student body: "I wish to express a feel ing of deep gratitude for this generous gift from a man who, in the past, has given ,much to the people of North Carolina through his gifts to its primary educational insti tutions." Kenan, a North Carolina na tive, was born in 1873 and graduated from the university in 1894 with a B. S. degree. He was a football letterman, playing halfback. His gifts to the University over the years were many. He and his family" set up the Ke nan Professorship Fund, which supplements salaries ot ais- MRC Presses Suit Against The Men's Resident Council is suing Otis Redding for ex penses including cost of pub licity, phone calls, tickets, sal aries and posters for a con cert in which he failed to per form. The entertainer will also be sued for breach of con tract and defamation of the character of MRC. Sonny Pepper, president of the MRC said, "It is hard for us to have concerts now with out people being skeptical." Pepper also noted that Red ding never contacted the Coun cil. The band and singers showed up for the program but had no idea of the where abouts of Redding. The Jokers Three m Greens Air Force Opens UNC Soccer Season By BILL ROLLINS DTH Sports Writer Carolina's soccer team kicks off its 1965 11 - game sched ule this afternoon at Fetzer Field (3:00) against the U. S. Air Force Academy. "This looks like the best bunch we've ever had," UNC Coach Marvin Allen said yes terday. "There - are a good number of boys back from last year (20) and we have a lot of talent to work with. Our offensive line is strong real strong and should score on anybody. They are good ball handlers, good shots, and they are fast." Allen is beginning his 19th season as coach here. His clubs have a composite record of 92-44-12. With 13 sophs on the squad last season, UNC posted a commendable 5-2-2 slate and finished second to Maryland in the ACC. On the other hand, USAFA streaked to a 7-2-1 record and won the Rocky Mountain Area Championship. It was the first year of coaching there for Capt. Carmen Annillo. a UNC grad of 1954, and it was the Academy's best record event. Allen has only one sopho more starter as of now. He is center foreward Jimmy Mutual Benefit Members of the two hospit als said the program will "mutually benefit and strengthen the opportunities for graduate and undergradu ate medical education." In their formal statement, Taylor and Rankin said: "The School of Medicine at the University of North Caro lina and Charlotte Memorial Hospital are pleased to an nounce an initial step in an affilliation for graduate medi cal education between the two institutions. Gets In Kenan WILLIAM It. KAN AN tinguished professors. The University's football field, Kenan Stadium, was a Redding boro, agent for Redding, is su ing him along with the MRC. The band itself was one and a half hours late but had call ed MRC to let them know of their lateness. The band had had an engagement in Hamp ton, Va., the afternoon of their scheduled appointment here, Friday, Sept. 24. The band and singers put on a two hour show while wait ing the arrival of Redding. Pepper announced that each ticket holder would receive a refund from the advanced sales of $1,200 if they present ed their ticket stubs in Y Court. The sum for which Redding is being sued has not been announced as yet. Johnston. The UNC co-captains are right wing Drew Murphy and goalie Tom Roberts. Pressing them for starting positions have been juniors Bronum VanWyck (RW) and Bob John son (G). Perhaps the strongest play ers on the squad are inside left John Loud and left wing Jackie Writer. "These boys proved them selves last year, and should contribute a great deal to the good season we're looking for," Allen said. Another Tar Heel starter is junior right halfback Gordon Cadwgan, a transplanted full back who has shown up well in his new position. Rounding out the starting eleven are: inside right Ed die Belmont; left halfback Danny Galves; left fullback Terry Henry; center halfback Jim Hammer; and right full back Billy Reeves. USAFA was expected to run into a good de;il of difficulty this year after losing 9 of 11 starters off last year's champs. They well might, but the sea son was opened in impressive fashion last Saturday when the Falcons blanked Wyoming, 7-0. Joint Sponsership "Beginning in July 1966, the chief resident in medicine of Charlotte Memorial Hospit al (currently a member of the residency staff of the medi cal service at N. C. Memorial Hospital) will serve under the joint sponsorship of the de partment of medicine of Char lotte Memorial Hospital and the department of medicine of the UNC School of Medicine. 'The administrative officials and the members of the de partments of medicine of the two institutions support this Million a. m m m mm gift from Kenan in 1926, as a memorial to his parents, Wil liam R. Kenan and Mary Har grave. At that time it had a seat ing capacity of 24,000 and cost $375,000. Kenan also directed building of Kenan Fieldhouse in the east end of the arena at a cost of $28,000. In recent years the stadi um capacity was increased to 43,000 permanent seats, at the expenditure of more than $1 million, with funds made avail UNC, Town Argue Route Of By Pass Officials of the University and the Town of Chapel Hill are in disagreement with the State on a proposed route for a northwest by-pass linking Carrboro and Airport Road. The State Highway depart ment has apparently chosen a route which: almost parallels the pro posed thoroughfare plan road. will take up 10 acres of university-owned land. blocks off 10 more acres of "the best undeveloped land the University owns." creates a dog-leg connec tion with Estes Drive causing a possible traffic hazard which will be compounded when Airport road becomes a four-lane highway. According to UNC Business Manager J. A. Branch, the Chapel Hill throughfare plan, which has been approved by the state, shows the by-pass meeting Estes Drive at Air port Road. The by-pass would be part of the secondary road system. The new route proposed by the state shows an intersec tion of the Airport Access Road, some distance south of Estes Drive. The Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen Monday voted to UNC Inside Left An development enthusiastically in the belief that such an af filiation will be mutually ben eficial in strengthening the opportunities for graduate and undergraduate medical educa tion and will serve to improve the quality of medical care in North Carolina. "It is anticipated that this initial affiliation may be ex tended at some future time to include other departments in Charlotte Memorial Hospital and the School of Medicine of the University of North Car-olina." Will able by Kenan. Last fall two new wings cost ing $100,000 were aided to Ke nan Fieldhouse. Press Box Another Kenan gift, in 1949, made available funds for con struction of a new press box and a guest box on the oppo site side of the field. While at the university, Ke nan and Dr. Francis P. Ven able we're co-discoverers of the commercial use of car bon acetylene. use "all possible influence" to pursuade the Highway Depart ment to return to the original plan, and make a direct con nection with Estes Drive. Branch said the University is opposed to the new state plan "for two reasons." First, "it takes 20 acres of the best land we have, ten acres for the road and the ten which would be shut off by the road." Branch said the state plan has no connection with the lo cal thoroughfare plan, but if they were both built the thoroughfare road and the state road would be almost parallel. "We think some road is nec essary," Branch said, "so we will try to find out why anoth er plan couldn't be used. All we can do is try to work out a suitable plan." Branch added that state of ficial have been "very coop erative and considerate in the matter." He will meet next week with the Highway De partment's district engineer to try to work out a new route. Final action by the Univer sity will be up to the board of trustees. Because the road is part of the secondary sys tem, the University is being asked to donate the 'right-of-way. John Load

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