Wednesday, April 20, 1966
Anonymous Grant Gives
tINC Child Care Center
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Page 3
By LYNXE HARVEL
Special to the DTII
Child care administrators,
children's institutions and so
cial service staffs are now re
ceiving aid from the Univer
sity, thanks to an anonymous
donor.
It is in the form of a Child
Care Information Center
v.hich "was added as a new
service late in 1965 and is a
clearing house for information
on group care and treatment
of children. Publications, jour
nals , papers and newsletters
are being collected and index
iki by the computation center
of the University for fast re
trieval," according to a
pamphlet published by the
center. The system is design
id to accommodate storage of
live to ten thousand docu
ments plus special additional
material.
Project director H. H. Hol
lingsworth, said "Requests for
information are now being
handled on a limited basis un
til collection is more complete
and an equitable fee system
can be established."
- Hollingsworth said the "work
is slow but it is keeping up
with the proposed timetable."
Ine two - phase timetable is
to be completed by the end
of this summer.
The already r completed first
pruse includes identification
of literature, listing locations
of all items, indexi
siiication of documents, books
and pamphlets, selection of a
practical machine system to
satisfy anticipated retrieval
purposes and a limited pro
cessing oi requests.
Phase two. now in nrntJrocc
consists of indexing, classifica
tion and annotation of mater
ial from January l0 through
oauucuy iix, processing re
quests on a limited basis and
organization of the computer
program for immediate ac
cess to documents.
Future plans include addi
tion of foreign language docu
ments, wider use of existing
services and addition of spec
ial information such as direc
tories and lists of available
training programs.
"The scope of the center has
had to bo somewhat limited
for the first one or two years
in order to accomplish the ob
jectives which ultimately will
include information services
other than simply retrieval of
bibliographies," said Hollings
worth. Present staff includes the di
rector, one part - time secre
tary, two part - time comput
er programmers and one stu
dent research assistant.
The child care center is a
non - profit organization es
tablished through a Prant sun-
plied by an anonymous lay
man associated with a child
care organization.
I
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Ari:
zona Oath Unconstitutional.
By ALAN BANOV
DTII Staff Writer
The State of North Caro
lina's "oath i,f allegiance,"
".hich all state and Universi
ty employees are required to
sign, is different from Ari
zona's "loyalty oath" which
was declared unconstitutional
Iy the U. S. Supreme Court
on Monday.
The Arizona law subjected
tii prosecution and loss of his
job any state employee who
took the loyalty oath and
"knowingly and willfully be
comes or remains a member
of the Communist Party" or
other organizations dedi
cated to overthrowing the
state government.
Justice William O. Douglas,
announcing the s 5-4 decision,
said the law "rests on the
doctrine of 'guilt by associa
tion' which has no place
here."
He added that the law suf
fered from a "constitutional
infirmity" that it broadly
covered membership in the
Communist Party and similar
organizations rather than a
"specific intent to further the
unlawful aims" of the organi
zations. '
North Carolina, had such a
loyalty oath for state employ
ees some vears ago, but it
was discontinued. The present
stiputlation for university per
sonnel is an "oath of allegi
ance, not a loyalty oath," ac
cording to personnel director
Fred B. Haskell.
The requirement is part of
a 1941 resolution of the Uni
versity Board of Trustees,
which requires "all officials,
teachers and other employees
of the University of North
Carolina, who are citizens of
the United States" to sign the
oath.
The resolution, which is
printed on the back of the
oath, further states that "no
official, teacher, or other em
ployee (who is a citizen of the
United States) shall be con
sidered an employee of t h e
University of North Carolina
or receive payment for any
services rendered unless, or
until, he or she has taken the
oath."
The oath asserts that the
signee "do solemnly swear
(or affirm) that I will support
the Constitution of the United
States; so help me, God.
"I do solemnly and sincere
ly swear (or affirm) that I
will be faithful and bear true
allegiance to the State of North
Carolina, and to the constitu
tional powers and authorities
which are or may be estab
lished for the government there
of; and that I will endeavor to
support, maintain and defend
the constitution of said state,
not inconsistent with the Con
stitution of the United States, to
the best of my knowledge and
ability; so help me, God."
The oath is to be "subscribed
and sworn to (or affirmed)"
before a notary public. All
employees of the University,
including student employees,
must sign it.
Haskell said yesterday that
some employees have signed
the oath under protest, for re
ligious or political reasons.
"Some Quakers (Friends)" he
noted, "say they could ri o t
swear," according to the pre
cepts of their religion, so they
"affirm" the oath rather than
"swear" to it.
The wording is also changed
for some people, he added, if
they find it offensive.
Neither Haskell nor Miss
Billie Curtis, secretary to the
University Trustees, foresaw
any change in the N. C. oath.
Miss Curtis had "no comment"
about the Arizona law.
Professor of Law Daniel H.
Pollitt said the Supreme Court's
decision should have "no af
fect" upon the N. C. oath.
10:00 Long Hot Summer
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YOUNG MAN WITH A
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Channel 4
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CHRONIC ILLNESS
Rheumatic Fever (RF) is a
chronic illness which may
Hare' up from time to time
over a period of years. Today
"repeat episodes" of RF can
be prevented with the right
medical care.
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STORY a
OF 'ii
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Hour
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Sen. Morris K. Udall on
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Live from Memorial Hall
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10:45 Music for the Keyboard
Schubert Sonata in B
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COLUMBIA
PICTURES
presents
MARLON
BRANDO
SAM SPIEGEL'S
poduction of
PANAVISION
TECHNICOLOR9
Shows at 2:00 4:24
6:48 9:12
NOW PLAYING
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Wedge
shaped shingle
5. Begone!
9: Vocal
quality
10. Not any
11. European
finch
12. Relative of
the
Rockies
14. Spruce
15. He snoops
to conquer
16. Chief chef
17. Elevates
19. Babylonian
god
20. A univer
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21. Macaw
22. Slope of
vein or
lode
23. Climb
25. Turkish
titles
27. Electrified
particle
28. Compass
point
30. Wayside
hotel .
31. Rapped
33. Behold
34. Aegean,
for one
35. Suspend
36. Deep-blue
pigment
38. Entertain
39. Noble
40. In this
place
41. Abel's i 19. A
brother :. stripe
42. Keel-billed 22. Staunch
cuckoos sup-
DOWN: porters
1. Soaks in ; 23. Corn
liquid mon-
2. Hourly i wealth
3. Monograms mem-
4. Troops ; ber:
5. Breaks j abbr.
6. Europ. 24. Scary
rabbit sound
7. Conjunction 25. Troubles
8. Abounded 26. Goblins
11. Rebuff 28. Feels
13. Transaction 29. Border
15. Strength 31. Sail
18. Friar's ing
title vessel
" '5k Hi C
Yevtrrdar
32. New
Zealand
tree
34. Cut
37. Mimic
38. Exclamation
3"
il ii p
" II
tr-iT- "
so r it a
J 57;
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, j . 4-ZO
Mai
NOW SHOWING
STAMP OUT
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Tcny Curtis
jack Letntnon
NatalieWoOd
BLAKE EDWARDS'
"The Great
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TECHNICOLOR PANAVISIOPT
FROM WARNER BROS.
J 1
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ii
BUND DATES ! $3
Everybody's talking about it. Everybody's doing it. Operation Match. It's camp.
It's campus. It's the modern way to meet. It whammo's blind dates.
It started at Harvard. The original Operation Match featured in TIME, LOOK,
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our computer's memory bank. Now's the time to line up your Spring Fling.
Let our IBM 7090 Computer (the world's most perfect boygirl matcher) select
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Just send us the coupon below . . . we'll send you the Operation Match Quan
titative Personality Projection Test Questionnaire.
Answer the questions about yourself, what you're like, and what you like. Return
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Dear IBM 7090 ... I am 17 or over (and 27 or under) and I want to help stamp
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NAME
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SCHOOL
ADDRESS
CITY
STATE
ZIP CODE
I 0fftERTl3f OC5 MJTCH
i Compatibility Research. Inc. 671 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge. Mass. 021 39
We set out to ruin
some ball bearings and
failed successfully
t I. i J
.1 ! , j Si
The Bell System has many small, automatic
telephone offices around the
country. The equipment in them
could operate unattended for
ten years or so, but for a problem
The many electric motors in those offices
needed lubrication at least once a year. Heat
from the motors dried up the bearing oils,
thus entailing costly annual maintenance.
To stamp out this problem, many tests
were conducted at Bell Telephone
Laboratories. Lubricant engi-
neer George H. Kitchen decided f 'Jf.
tn n r o haeir ovnori m pnt tmrt
would provide a motor with the
worst possible conditions. He deliberately set
out to ruin some ball bearings
by smearing them with an
icky guck called molybdenum
disulfide (MoS2). j
Swock! This solid lubricant, used a certain
way, actually increased the life expectancy
of the ball bearings by a factor
of ten ! Now the motors can run
for at least a decade without
lubrication.
We've learned from our
"failures." Our aim: investigate
everything.
; j i iic vi ii cApciiiuciii wiai van
really be said to "fail" is the
one that is never tried.;
Bell System
Amencm Telephone I Telegraph and Aswciated Companies
fC A
If f I
f
1
MO
THERS' DAY CARDS
SUNDAY. MAY 8th