After July 30, 1965, police Asheville For Fifth Asheville - Biltmore Col lege last week requested to be come the fifth campus of th? Consolidated University sys tem in North Carolina. In a resolution adopted by the College Trustees and sent to UNC President William Fri day and State Board of High er Education Chairman Watts Hill Jr., the trustees said: "The Board of Trustees of Asheville - Biltmore College, convinced oi the need in West ern North Carolina for a cam pus of the Consolidated Uni versity of North Carolina, does, by this resolution, re quest the Board of Trus tees of the Consolidated Uni versity of North Carolina and the State Board of Higher Ed ucation to examine the need for continued expansion of higher education facilities in Western North Carolina and to consider the advisability of converting Asheville - Bilt more College into a campus of the Consolidated University, which campus would be nam ed The University of North Ca rolina at Asheville." The Executive Committee of the UNC Trustees will consid On The Football Preview 1966 Poll Shows Students Favor More War 'if' : . Illegal Drug Use On Decline Here A Reply From Nelson Algren One Year A ir '- "J'JL 1 si investigate - Biltmore Campus er the resolution at its next meeting in Raleigh on Sept ember 9, Friday said. Friday is in Western North Carolina this week and plans to discuss the issue with col lege officials. Hill made these comments: "The resolution passed by the Trustees of Asheville-B i 1 1 -more College points again to the necessity of developing a comprehensive long-range pro gram for higher education is this state. It is to be expect ed that other institutions in North Carolina will also wish to be considered for future Un iversity status. It, therefore, becomes all the more import ant that major educational de cisions, which these questions require, be made within the context of a sound plan for the future of higher education in this state. Such a plan is now being developed under the di rection of the Board of High er Education. "Although the Board of Higher Education will work with the Trustees of the Con solidated University in consid eration of this resolution, it is, of course, the Consolidated University Trustees who, by Inside It takes about 75 seconds to walk through the arboretum using the middle path. Suellen Evans had walked about 40 seconds when a black hand seized her and drove a "sharp bladed instru ment" into her heart. That was July 30, 1965. Almost one year later the owner of the black hand, a killer, is still loose. Suellen has been dead that long. Chapel Hill Police Chief William Blake says, "This is the toughest case I have ever handled in 25 years of police work." The veteran law officer says the case "will not be closed until it is solved." But Blake admits that "the only way we would ever get a conviction would be through the killer's confession." Police and State Bureau of Investigation of ficers have followed up and eliminated 250 leads. Many of the leads consisted of persons connected with sex crimes. Blake says that the motive, as far as police are concerned, was attempted rape. Police are Petitions Of UNC v existing law, must first con sider the addition of new units to the University. It is only af ter the Trustees have made their study and recommenda tion that the Board is requir ed to take action." The petition to become a branch of the Consolidated University was the second from Asheville-Biltmore. The college had previously asked in 1963, when Charlotte Col lege asked to become a branch. In order for the petition to be considered by the State Le gislature, it must first be stu died and recommended by the University Board of Trustees and the State Board of High er Education. Asheville Biltmore present ly has an enrollment of about 500 students. Schools Land $630,000 Grants totaling more than $630,000 have been awarded to UNC in th3 past week. The UNC School of P u b 1 i c Health received $410,600 from the U. S. Public Health Ser vice. The one - year grant will be us'd to pav tuition and a stip end to students working to ward a graduate degree in any one of several public health fields biostatistics, mental health, environmental sciences', epidemiology, - par asitology and others. Allocation of funds from the grant will be supervised by Dr. W. F. Mayes, dean of the School of Public Health. Nine federal grants totalling more than $140,000 were ap proved for the UNC School of Nursing. The funds will assure the continuation of special educa tional programs for practicing nurses and faculty members Killer ooerating on the theory that the killer was a Negro. Suellen, a 21-year-old coed here for the sum mer session, was walking through Coker Arbor etum about 12:30 on a hot afternoon when attack ed. Minutes later, while an ambulance from N. C. Memorial Hospital was still en route to the scene, Suellen died. "He tried to rape me ... I believe I'm going to faint," were her only words before dying. Medical examiners reported that Suellen was not raped. There were no witnesses to the stabbing, al though two coeds and two nuns reached Suellen shortly before she died. "She put up quite a fight and probably pulled some of the hair we .found out of the attacker's head," Blake said. Lab reports established that hair found at scene was Negroid. Police also made a plastic cast of a fresh footprint near Suellen's body. The path had been (Continued on Page 5) p. J V xx 4 They are preparing story page 8. of collegiate, hospital and prac tical nursing programs. Mrs. Ruby Barnes, head of continuation education at the School of Nursing, is the pro gram director. Th? grants include a U. S. Public Health Service award of $80,505 for seven different one year studies in nursing administration and profession al improvement programs. Also included is a National Institute of Mental Health grant of $33,231 to continue for another four years a program dealing with "The Study of So cio - Psychiatric Concepts in the Practice of Nursing." A final grant, totalling $28, 409 and covering a one year period, will finance the third year of a program of "Improv ing Nursing Care of the Aging and Aged." The National Cancer Insti tute has awarded $74,852 to the School of Medicine to establish Ik-"", )i S&.H:-, Sis v, - , iv. 1 11 i n 'mtm i m mh Waits VHp" x jV -x p : J . J. j.. r f; m I f I, Old Kenan for the football wars. See In Grants a clinical cancer training pro gram. Dr. James F. Newsome of the UNC Department of Sur gery will be the program di rector. -The federal grant will pro vide an expanded teaching pro gram in cancer treatment for medical students, graduate stu dents, and practicing physici ans. The new program will be built around a cancer registry and special cancer clinics op erated here since 1952 when N.C. Memorial Hospital was opened. About 8,000 cancer pa tients have been listed in the registry since it began. Tuesday, The Chemstrand Corporation presented Chan cellor Carlyle Sitterson with a $5,000 check for the Chemistry Department. The check, a "goodwill ges ture" from the company, may be used for any purpose.