Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 17, 1966, edition 1 / Page 4
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Pasre 4 THE DAILY TAR HEEL CIA Recruiting On 100 Campuses WASHINGTON (AP) - The government's super spy agen cy, the CIA, confirmed yester day that it has recruiting teams visiting about 100 college cam puses interviewing students as prospective analysts and ag ents. "We want good people," said Col. Stanley J. Grogan, "We are out looking for them." At present the CIA is parti cularly interested in students, especially graduate students with basic scientific training which would quality them for ' photo interpretation work. That is a high priority field of in telligence which was brought to public notice in the U2 spy plane sensation of six years ago, and in the aerial photo graphs that uncovered Russia's secret rocket installations in Cuba in 1962. Grogan, an assistant ot the CIA director, Adm. William F. Raborn, said the Central In telligence Agency probably has more employes and officials with advanced academic de grees than any other agency Miry mm! Our watch and jewelry repair experts will restore your proud poss?ssions to their original beauty and usefulness. T. L Kemp Jewelry Charm Headquarters in government. It is a nara claim for any outsider to check against the record. Grogan said that under the law even the CIA total employment is sec ret. But he also reported that it is known that CIA has about 600 "senior people" appar ently meaning officials of some importance of whom 53 per cent have advanced academic degrees such as doctorates in science and philosophy. The CIA's recruitment pro gram was propelled into na tional prominence when a small group of students at Grinnell College in Iowa pic keted a CIA man on campus. The students displayed posters asking what the CIA is doing in Viet Nam, Indonesia, and the Dominican Republic. One poster said: "Where there is an invisible government there is no democracy." A Grinnell spokesman said the college didn't mind the pic keting which had been "order ly .. . pretty peaceful." The CIA here was obviously unperturbed also. In fact an inquirer gained the impression that the agency is not adverse to getting a big of publicity for its talent scouts. AM GOING TO EUROPE spring vacation. Will purchase car for someone at considera ble savings, Chuck Cunning ham, 430 Avery, (968-9100). FOR SALE: 1953 M. G. Road ster. M. G.-A engine, runs good, clean, new top. 942-1471. FOR RENT: NEW 2 BED room air conditiond 10' x 55' mobile home. Available im mediately. Telephone 942-3268 or 942-1749. WANTED TO BUY. NEED extra cash? If you have rolls or single coins to sell call J. P. Riggsbee, Chapel Hill Ice Co., 942-3268. SIX BIG PIECES OF A BIG GHICMn! 99 tt T. Grant Thurs. 4: 00-:730 All the Tea You Can Drink ... 15c TOSSED SALAD Heaps of French Fries TOASTED ROLLS F m CAN m mon mi m 39.95 111 OWN THE l AUL-NEHV GONOMY Cfl rvsle mm m Feature for feature Simcd 1CC0 gives you more. 50 hp rear engine. Four forward spscds, all synchronized. Plenty of space for a family of five. Extras? All you could want, free. Don't take our word. Take a test drive. See us today. OLD HICKORY MOTORS Phone 447-2102 334 Roxboro Rd. DURHAM, N. C. Open until 9 P.M. North Carolina News Roundup Outer Banks Project OK'd WASHINGTON ( AP ) The House passed Wednesday by voice vote a bill to authorize establishment of the Cape Look out National Seashore along North Carolina's lower outer banks. The 58-mile barrier reef extends along the Atlantic coast from Ocracoke Inlet to Beaufort Inlet. It would be the nation's seventh national seashore. The bill goes back to the Senate, which passed a similar measure last year. The House bill has some minor and techni cal amendments which the Senate must agree to before the measure can be sent to the White House for President John son's signature. Chairman Wayne N. Aspinall, D-Colo., of the House In terior Committee said the cost of land acquisition to the United States would be very small because North Carolina has ac quired and donated most of the land. Rep. John P. Saylor, R-Pa., senior Republican member of the committee, estimated that by the end of five years the area would be visited annually by one million people. He commended North Carolina for donating the land, as did Rep. Rogers, C. B. Morton, R-Md., who said the State has set an example for other states to follow. Jonas Pledges CPCC Aid CHARLOTTE (AP) North Carolina Congressman Charles R. Jonas Wednesday pledged strong action to aid the fund plagued basic adult education program sponsored by Central Piedmont Community College. Calling the federal government's action in the matter "a shame," the 8th District Republican promised to do what he could "to straighten these people out." His pledge followed a decision Tuesday by Dr. Richard Hagemeyer, college president, to shut down the program af ter Thursday night's classes because all available funds have been exhautsed. Dr. Hagemeyer said he had no choice but to shut down the four - county program because all the money will be gone af ter teachers are paid Thursday. Drunks Can Drive Legally? DURHAM (AP) ' The North Carolina Association of ABC Boards was told Wednesday that motorists in North Carolina might sometimes be driving drunk, and still be within the legal blood-alcohol ratio. Dr. Fred W. Ellis of the School of Medicine of the Uni versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill said the legal level of blood-alcohol ratio in a driver should be lowered. He spoke at the midwinter meeting of the association in Durham. Under present law, a blood-alcohol level of 0.1 per cent or 0.15 per cent may be reached before a driver is considered to be driving drunk. Noting that a number of surveys on drinking people in volved in accidents have been conducted recently, Dr. Ellis said there are indications that the "actual driving ability of a high percentage of drivers is impaired significantly over the wide range of 0.03 to 0.07 per cent blood-alcohol level. "When a bloqd-alcohql level of 0.06pef cent 'is reached, the estimated probability of 'causing ari accident 'is double that of a driver with1 no alcohol," he said. ''Drivers with a 0.1 per cent blood-alcohol level are more than six times as likely to cause an accident as one with no alcohol," Dr. Ellis said. He called for the North Carolina law against drinking drivers to be changed to make it "iUegal to operate a motor vehicle if the blood-alcohol level exceeds 0.05 per cent." Murder Trial Begins WINSTON-SALEM (AP) Three defense motions were denied this morning by Forsyth Superior Court Judge George M. Fountain in the first degree murder trial of Robert E. Porth 57-year-old missile engineer charged with killing his wife. Attorney James J. Booker moved first to quash the first degree murder indictment against his client, who pleaded in nocent Monday in the death of his wife, Mrs. Hilda Borchardt Porth. Mrs. Porth's body was found on a mountainside near Pulaski, Va., last August. Booker then made a motion for a bill of particulars. When that failed, he asked permission to record the pro ceedings of the trial, presumably on a tape recorder or other electronic device. The trial, is being recorded by an official court reporter. The defense motions came after a twelfth male juror was selected following 30 minutes of questioning of veniremen. Thursday. February 17. I960 Savings Bond Rate Viet Nam Bill Debate Begins In Senate Of IiltPlPrPst lUllcddl people on the go... go BURGER CHEF IT J&l II College budgets and Burger Chef beiong to gether. Burger Chef . . . where 50 will buy a com plete meal: open-flame broiled hamburger, a rich milk shake, and a heap of crisp aolden fries. 337 W. ROSEMARY ST, OPEN 10 A.M. -11 P.M. WASHINGTON, AP ) T h e Senate embarked on a historic Viet Nam debate yesterday with Sen. Russell B. Long. D La., saying the body should af firm President Johnson's Asia tic policies. Up for debate was a bill to authorize $4.8 billion of the S12.3 billion of emergency mil itary funds Johnson asked for Viet Nam fighting. Even before the formal speeches began, Long, the act ing Democratic leader, told an informal news conference that "some people would like to pull the rug out from under our boys" by attaching restric tive policy riders to the bill. Because of this, Long said he personally favors an affir mative statement supporting the President's policies. He said, however, he would not of fer it if Chairman Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., of the Senate Armed Services Committee objects. Russell has said he opposes tying any policy statement to the bill. Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind., spokesman for a group of Sen ators who opposed resumption of North Viet Nam bombing, said in a separate interview that a rider opposing escala tion of the war may be offer ed. Long said he regards a vote on the bill expected to be passed overwhelmingly after several days of debate as offering support for "both our fighting men over there and our President." But Hartke said a vote for the bill can't be construed as endorsement of the President's policies. WASHINGTON (AP) The government raised the inter est rate tod iy on U. S. Sav ings Bonds ty four - tenths of one per cent in a three - prong ed effort to itrengthen the eco nomy, fight .inflation and help meet mount ing costs of t h e Viet Nam nar. President Johnson announc ed the increase from 3.75 per cent to 4.15 per cent at a White House ceremony. It was raised from 3.52 per cent. The new rate will apply to all Series E and H bonds, the tvpe sold to the public, as of last Dec. 1. Laser Operation Brings No Blood NEW YORK, (AP) geons have a laser bea mor from lessly, the Sur- successfully used m to remove a tu- a man's leg blood- New York Times reported yesterday. Although it cut through blood vessels like a knife so that no it cauterized them blood flowed. "I'm cbsolutely jubilant," said Dr. Thomas E. Brown, one of three doctors who per formed the surgery at chil dren's hosiital in Cincinnati, according to the Times. 'There's no apparent rea- This means that Series E Bonds bought on Dec. 1 or af terwards will mature in seven years, instead of seven years, "nine months. Series II bonds will continue to mature over 10 years but will yield the high er interest rate. Holders of bonds purchased before Dec. 1, however, need not cash them and buy new ones to benefit from the new rate. As of Dec. 1, their bonds w ill begin earning the new rate of interest although the ma turity date will remain the same. Savings bond sales have been declining and the redemption of nonmatured bonds has in creased because of more at tractive interest rates in altef native investments. Treasury officials expressed hope that the new interest rate will re verse this trend. Banks can pay up to 4 per cent interest on personal sav- as effective and less hazard- ings accounts and some s a v ous, so laser surgery fell into ings and loan associations pay disuse. close to 5 per cent. laser known as argon or "green" laser, developed at the Bell Telephone laboratories in Murray Hill, N. J., by Eu gene I. Gordon and Edward F. Labuda. Unlike some other lasers, it emits a steady, high powered beam, easy to con trol. Lasers were used shortly af ter their discovery' in I960 for certain kinds of eye surgery. But other techniques proved son," Brown said, "why we cannot usej the same laser to cut into the liver, the spleen or even th brain without fear of hemorrhage." He said the laser also might be used to cauterize wounds of hemophiliacs, whose blood doesn't clot properly. The laser is a sharply fo cused beam of light, up to one billion times brither than or dinary light. Brown said that for the tu mor operation he used a gas The Fabulous THE DAVE BRUBEGK QUARTET WITH PAUL DESMOND Presented by the Duke Student Union SEE and HEAR This Sensational Jazz Group Friday, Feb. 18 8:30 P.M. Duke Indoor Stadium Durham, N. C. Tickets $2.00 at the door. AUTHENTIC GERMAN FOODS Served Buffet Sry! Don't Forget Sundoy Family Buffet A Every Sat. Night 5:30-9 P.M. CAFE BRIGHT LEAF 11:30 A.M.-2:36 P3L 5:30 r.M.-:0 P.M. Children tt Pric CAPITOL MONTH CONTINUES AT THE RECORD BAR Thursday ... Friday .... Saturday, and Sunday ALL CAPITOL LP's AT HUGE REDUCTIONS ALL 4.00 LP's . . . NOW lp lt zy ALL 5.00 LP's . . . NOW 1) (9)) ALL 6.00 LP's . . . NOW THE LETTERMEN YOU'LL NEVER WALK ALONE 'ti' 3fn t J. The vibrant versatility of the nation's most popular college trio is freely expressed in a wonderful repertoire of pop favorites. Hear Tony, Jim and Bob sing I Believe; Walk Hand In Hind; You'll Never Walk Alone; Exodus and seven others. (S)T-2213 THE BEACH BOYS AIL SUMMER LONG Or 1 sA9 THE BEACH BOYS TODAY! All Summer Long The Beach Boys Get Around; All- Summer Long; Hushabye; Little Honda; We'll Run Away; Cart's Big Chance; Wendy; Do You Remember?; Girls On The Beach; Drive-In; Our Favorite Re cording Sessions; Don't Back Down. ST-2110 The Beach Boys Today I Do row Wonna Dance?; Good To My Baby Don't Hurt My Little Sister; When I Grow Up; Help Me, Rondo; Dance, Dance, Dance; Please Let Me Won der; I'm So Young; Kiss Me. Baby; She Knows Me Too Well; In The Back Of My Mind; more. DT-2269 Capitol Artists include Beachboy Lt'ttermen, Beatles, Jackie Gleasoiu Judv Garland, Nat Kinr Cole, and many others. Sale Good in Chaps! Hill Store Only . . . Sale Ends Feb. 20, 1SS3 al 8 P.M. THE RECORD BAR Across from the POST OFFICE on Henderson Street
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 17, 1966, edition 1
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