Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 5, 1968, edition 1 / Page 6
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Gardner Ontlim.es Farm Program By United Press International Republican gubernatorial candidate Jim Gardner outlined a five point program for aiding Tar Heel farmers and a four-point proposal for "revitalization" of rural North Carolina, Friday. "What is needed is a multi-pronged attack on the numerous ills that beset our rural areas," Gardner told a GOP rally in Tabor City. "The unemployment rate, per capita income, median school years attained and percent of people with activity limitations because of health, vividly describe the disadvantaged positions of the rural areas." Gardner later told a rally in Greenville that if elected Govornor, he would "meet with farmers throughout the state to receive first-hand their ideas on how to hrprove transportation. distribution and marketing." Other facets of his New Radio Planned For Area The Federal Communi cations Commission (FCC) will open hearings Oct. 17 to determine whether Chapel Hill needs another radio station. The FCC will also determine which of the two applicants, Radio 1530 or Radio Collinsville, could best serve the area; and if they will be granting a license at all. Radio 1530 named after its call letters is a partnership between Michael C. Turner and Howard A. Weiss, both of Chicago. Radio Collinsville is based in Collinsville, Va. A $10,000 grant to the School of Public Health has made possible the establishment of a new lecture series at the University. According to Dr. Charles L. Harper, assistant dean of the School of Public Health, the ' grant was given to the school in honor of Dr. Fred T. Foard, Jr. by his widow, Mrs. Elsie D. Foard of Raleigh. The lectures were be called the Fred T. Foard,Jr., Lecture Series. Dr. Foard was director of the Division of Epidemiology for the N.C. State Board of Health from 1952-64. Before that he served in the U.S. Public Health Service where he pioneered in the development and improvement of organized public health services in the Rocky Mountain and Pacific coastal regions of the U.S., and in Alaska and Hawaii. He also made outstanding contributions toward the development of health services for the American Indians. He died this summer. According to Dr. Harper, the grant "wiU enable the School of Public Health to invite outstanding leaders in the field to address students and faculty. It will provide at least one lecture per year," he said. The first lecture is tentatively set for spring, 1969. Thirty-Four Graduate School Of Pharmacy Thirty-four candidates for pharmacy licenses have passed Grant Honey's Restaurant THE PLACE FOR NEW AND OLD STUDENTS Featuring Luxurious Dining Room Instant Car Service Take-Out Food at Its Best 8 Varieties of Pancakes five-point proposal for increasing farm income included construction of a major east-west highway, improving secondary roads to speed crop transportation, promotion of agricultural research and experimentation programs, and consideration of a privately owned market system similar to the state owned Raleigh farmers' Gardner's four-fold suggestion for stemming the migration of the rural poor to urban ghettoes included offering tax incentives to industries locating plants in Gen. Lemay Returns To '18-Hour Day' TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)-Presidential candidate George C. Wallace, taking a break from a heavy schedule, spent Friday conferring in a hotel here with his new running mate, retired Gen. Curtis E. LeMay. His schedule called only for a fund raising dinner and rally Friday night in Buffalo, N.Y. LeMay was to remain with Wallace through Saturday but his campaigning plans after that were not announced. Wallace indicated in the past, however, his running mate would campaign extensively, and LeMay referred to a return to "the 18-hour day" when his selection as Wallace's running mate was announced Thursday at a news conference in Pittsborgh. Wallace's aides announced the former Alabama governor would visit 14 states and the District of Columbia next week in a long trek across the north to the Far West. Campus News Briefs Given Public the examinations given by the N.C. Board of Pharmacy here. Timothy Ray Kroboth of Charlotte, a 1968 graduate of the School of Pharmacy, amde the highest grade on the examination. Candidates who passed the examinations are: Eugene Givson Anderson, Endield; Joe Hilton Barrett II, Rocky Mount; Judity Margaret T . T T 1 T- O.IJ oaucom,nicxory,enni5uoia Beatty, Shelby; Jean Winter miss, Disunion, va., naruia Arthur Bolick, Hudson; Harry Lee Brogden, Garner, Wayne Gilbert Chandler, Augusta, Ga. Ronald WiUiam Coberly, Chapel HiU; Robert Wesley Cotton, Ruquay-Varina; John Spencer Crawford, Old Fort; Janet Lela Eakins, Chillicothe, Ohio; Thomas Albee Fulton Jr., Greensboro; Margaret Susan Graham, Burlington; John Robert Greene, Hamlet; Gene Frederick Herring, Wallace; La Voice Hardison Howard, WaHace, Stephanie Rogers Hunter, Raleigh; Kay Emily Johnson, Washington, D.C. Martha Hendrix Kaley, Hickory; James Franklin Killian, Lincolnton; Timothy Ray Kroboth, Charlotte; Nancy Adams Musselwhite, Ayden; WiUiam Melvin Oakley, Durham; Sandra Simpson AsheviUe; Mona Reddick, LiUington; WiUiam Rhoden, RandaU, Boston Charles Shelby. Mary Ida Silver, Raleigh; Lynn Canady StaUings, Selma; Robert Nathan Sykes Jr., OPEN 9 A.M. 'TIL MIDNIGHT Also Rural 'Revitalizatiori farmlands, paving some of the 27,000 miles of unpaved rural roads, providing student loans to be' rescinded for graduates who teach school for five years in rural areas, and increasea emphasis on vocational and technical education in rural schools. "If this is done, we can safely leave with the people themselves the decision as to the balance between rural and urban living," he said. The GOP nominee said the population of rural areas has been rapidly declining over the past 20 years, and most ot He will start the week Monday with a speech at the United Press International Editors Conference in Washington and will wind up Staruday night in SEattle, Wash. Several of the states Wallace will visit on this trip were ones where he was not considered strong. Through declining to write off any state, Wallace has said repeatedly his strategy was to put together the votes of the 17 Southern and border states and add enough of the big industrial states to win. Among the non-Southern states he mentioned . most frequently were Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois and California. The hecklers generally numbered about 200 at most, however, and Wallace merely told them they were helping get him votes. Wilmington; WiUiam Lawrence Thompson, Charlotte; Allan WardeU Umstead, Fayetteville; Jolin Roland Waters Jr., Rutherford CoUege, N.C. and Carolyn Faw Zimmerman, N. WUkesboro. , Results of the examination were released by H.C. McAllister secretary of the N.C. Board of Pharmacy. Board members include C.E. Page Jr Henderson; W.H. RandaU j,., LiUington; H.V. jw SDruce Pine: D.D. ciaytor, Greensboro; and J.M. Pike, Concord. Supervisors Meet In Study Group The Supervisors' Study Group here will hold its first meeting of the year Monday, Oct. 7, at the Carolina Inn. UNC Education Prof. Lester BaU wiU speak on "The Supervisor's Role in Professional Negotiations" at the noon luncheon meeting in the ballroom. . The Study Group is composed of some 60 public school supervisors within a 60-mile radius of Chapel HiU. This marks the 20th year that area supervisors have scheduled a series of meetings on the IVY Cl ACKS v- V MALE slacks . . . fine fashioned tailoring designed for the man on the go . . . MALE Traditiona Ivy Slacks are PER MANENTLY PRESSED to a long day of classes and lying around in your room . . . so that you can be sure of a smart, neat apparance ... anytime . . . any place ... MALE slacks . :. for the man of the hour ... THE HUB of CHAPEL HILL those who migrate from the rural areas leave in their teens and twenties, when, on the verge of their productive years, they carry with them the investment in their upbringing and education." Gardner also decried "excessive government regulations and misdirected federal and state assistance," which he said caused the income of North Carolina farmers to be one of the lowest in the nation. He said Tar Heel Hawkins: Have N.C. GREENSBORO (UPI)-Dr. Reginald Hawkins, the unsuccessful Negro candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, said Friday Negores are in a position to take over the state Democratic party. "This is the first time in our state's history when the blacks were less frustrated politically than the whites," said Hawkins, who addressed the Negro North Carolina Piedmont District Teachers Association. Hawkins, who said he "leans toward" Vice President Hubert Humphrey, said third party candidate George Wallace is running a close race in North Carolina. Allies SIAGON (UPI)-U.S. Green Berets and South Vietnamese militia Friday reported killing at least 150 Communists, most campus here to roles in the discuss their educational process. UNC Education Prof. Arnold Perry is director of the Study Group. Mrs. Jessie Gouger, director of instruction for the Chapel HiU City Schools, is in charge of Monday'sprograra The next Study Group session wiU be held Dec. 9. There wiU be no November session because of a state meeting tor supervisors m Raleigh Nov. 13-15. Guest Geologist Lectures Thursday A Johns Hopkins University geologist wiU lecture in the Department of Geology here on Thursday, Oct. 10. Dr. Robert N. Ginsburg is slated to conduct a seminar on "Origin and Accumulation of Lime Muds" at 9 a.m. in Room 305, Mitchell Han. He wiU also lecture on "Diagenesis of Bermuda Reefs" at 4 p.m. in Room 205, MitcheU HaU. ' Dr. Paul Ragland, associate professor of geology, is chairman of the Geology Department's Visiting Speaker Committee. PERMANENTLY PRESSED - Hi a TRADITIONAL i-4 ,, i keep their razor sharp crease after farmers averaged S3,691 in 1966, compared to a national average of $5,049. "A x -r went national survey showed that the per capita disposable income of the : m ... larmer averages only SI 692 per year-less than two-thirds the annual income of other Americans," he said. "Only a few decades ago, one of every two North Carolinians was a farmer, today less than 20 per cent of the state's population lives on a farm." ''Blacks Power "But if North Carolina goes for Wallace and the blacks go for Humphrey and Humphrey wins the election, then you'd better believe we will have something for ourselves," the Charlotte dentist said. "We stand in a position where we can literally take over the Democratic party in North Carolina. With our voting power, for once in our life we stand to do something that will mean something for generations to come," he said. Hawkins described the state's Negro vote as three times stronger than it was several months ago and said he would endorse candidates for state offices at a later date. Kill 150 of them regulars, North Vietnamese in a six-hour battle along the Cambodian border where Red forces were apparently using tanks for the first time. Allied casualties were placed at eight killed and 49 wounded, including four Americans killed and two wounded when Communist gunners shot down a U.S. helicopter over the battlefield. Near Da Nang, more North Vietnamese shells fell on the beleaguered Thuong Due outpost as U.S. helicopters threaded through machinegun fire to pick up wounded fenders of the strategic camp on the seventh day of a heavy siege. The helicopters at Thuong Due touched down Friday only Be the first man on campus to wear the only Koratron-approved year-round permanent press suit. Imagine a great-looking vested suit that machine washes and machine dries and always looks freshly pressed. This is it. The first true permanent press suit. At last! A special blend of 50 Dacron polyester to shed wrinkles plus 25 wool worsted and 25 Avril rayon to feel good and rich. Tailored by. University Seal in a natural shoulder 3-button model in the latest fashion colors. Only $CEit mm mm mm mm. mm m-m mm m, m rr'- ....-.. -mm -mm DuPont reg. trodemork fSIightly higher west of Mississippi Pragmatic Peace Plan Is Nixon 's Strategy WITH-THE NIXON CAMPAIGN (UPI)-RichardM. Nixon believes that through diplomacy he can end the wax in Vietnam in less than a year, perhaps in only five or six months after he takes office as President of the United States. In the mind of the Republican presidential candidate, there is no question but that he win be elected in November. Convinced of that, he says he will do everything possible to end the war during his first months in the White House. Nixon refuses to make campaign promises to this effect, reasoning that North Vietnam could exact concessions merely by stalling for time if the new President were publicly committed to ending the war by a certain date. Nevertheless, Nixon spoke about the war and other major -issues in a long and relaxed conversation aboard his campaign plane during a campaign swing into the Deep South. Nixon frankly has no secret plan, no magic formula for ending the war. How wiU he do it then? Nixon plans to be flexible and pragmatic to employ whatever diplomatic strategy seems most likely to bring results in the circumstances prevailing at the time. Therefore, in addition to the obvious political reasons for avoiding specifics, he is reluctant to talk about such Reds long enough to load the wounded and get out. A force of about 500 U.S. Green Berets and South Vietnamese are reported surrounded by as many as 7,000 North Vietnamese vowing to overrun the camp and move on to Da Nang. The battle along the Cambodian border, about 66 miles northwest of Saigon, erupted on the eighth day of an allied sweep six miles from the Thien Ngon Green Beret camp which has been under periodic Communist attack for . several weeks. The fight finally ended with the Communists pulling back under heavy U.S. air strikes. Waves of B52 bombers blasted the area Friday with about L5 million tons of high explosives. made with DACRON' KORATROtfl 1 1 specifics as a bombing halt in the belief that the circumstances may change so much by next Jan. 20, that it would be foolish to anticipate them now. The candidate believes that there can be no real progress toward solving the nation's pressing domestic and international problems until the war in Vietnam is ended "honorably." In private, as well as in public platforms, Nixon emphasizes that word. The United States cannot simply pun out, however tempting that may be, he says. The U.S. must hold out for a peace that will not require a new American intervention in a few months or years. Gift of Bugs Aids Research ITHACA. N.Y. (UFI) Sixty-eight years ago a youngster in Brooklyn took up the study of aphlds. Now he has donated a collection of 500 insects worth $25,000 to Cornell Uni versity. Dr. Mortimer D. Leonard, a graduate of Cornell Univer sity's College of Agriculture, said the collection will enable researchers and scientists to further pinpoint the little plant lice and develop efficient ways of keeping them under control. Leonard, who says his collec tion contains about 500 aphids, got encouragement for his study from a high school biol ogy teacher in Nebraska. FUN WORKING IN EUROPE GUARANTEED JOBS ABROAD! Summer and year 'round jobs illustrated magazine with complete details and applications send $1.00 to The International Student Information Service (ISIS), 133, rue Hotel des Monnaies, Brussels 6, Belgium. m Mid TO OftlAAA BUT 1966 Honda Super Hawk. Very low mileage, excellent running condition, scrambler bars, chrome fender, other extras. $800 new. Clean and fast. $535.942-4446. For Srie: 1967 Au&btf&aley SQOO Mk JH. 15,000 mflesl Afl extras, new michelins. $2800.' 933-262S, FOR SALE: Automatic Buick Skylark, GS 400, 1966, 2-door sport coupe, super turbine transmission, power brakes and steering, radial tires, with 18,000 mile guarantee left, tinted windshield, remote control rear view mirror, power seats and windows, tilt steering wheel, seaform green, black vinyl top. Best-riding 1966 car to be found anywhere. $2295. Call Milton Julian at Milton's Clothing Cupboard. 968-4408. 1967 Volkswagen-light blue, heater, undercoating, 14,000 miles. Regular 3000 mile checkups, exceptional condition. $1500. Call $68-5258 after 10:30 p.m. Motorcycle for sale: 1966 BSA Lightning Rocktt. Serious offers only. Evenings 929-3135 or write Greg Cukor, Chi Phi house. For Sale 1966 Suzuki 150 cc 7000 miles, good condition. $245 or best offer. 929-5455, 403 Patterson PL Honda 300 cc Superhawk. Good condition. Crossover pipes. $275. For info. 929-3650. To see 286-1681 Durham. Nixon seems remarkable rested and free of tension for a man in the middle of a tiring election campaign. His ability to relax, along with his confidence about winning, is part of the "new Nixon." While confident, he's quick to remember what happened to Thomas E. Dewey, the Republican presidential candidate 20 years ago, who "snatched defeat from the jaws of victory-" Nixon insists he s going to pour on the coal, that nothing is being taken for granted, that he's going to campaign like an underdog to the end. He refuses to write off Hubert H. Humphrey as politically "dead" in the campaign, fully expecting the Democratic candidate to gain some in the closing weeks before Nov. 5. But to win, Nixon says, Humphrey would need some "big event"-akin to a peace settlement in Vietnam. i ft - As for George c vauace, Nixon thinks the third party candidate has no chance of winning. But he worries about the impact of the Wallace campaign on his hopes of reuniting the nation. For this, healing the bitter divisions in the United States, is on top of Nixon's priorit's, second only to ending the war in Vietnam. ia Fi; NOW DELIVERING Chicken, Barbeque, Seafood. Hamburger Steak. Hi CALL 9S7-1451 ' jmm 4 "-.' XJ:ii Get paid, travel, meet people for young people 17 to 40. For WHIN YOU WANT RESULTS USt THI DTH WANT AOS For Sale: 1965 Volvo P1800S Pirellis. Overdrive, radio, excellent condition. Blue book price $2300, will sell at $2150. Call 929-5261 after 5:30 p.m. '66 GTO. Good condition. One owner. 4 speed transmission. Burgandy with black interior. WILL SACRIFICE. $1800. Call 29-6618 or 929-6015. Wanted: Waitress and delivery boy at once. Full and part-time. Call 967-1451 after 3. HOSTESSES: Afternoon or evening work. Apply in person, Red Carpet, 12-6. 929-3768. Anyone interested in irresponsible enlightenment, send name and address. Box 1805 Durham, N. C. For Rent: 2 bedroom furnished mobile homa 10 x 55. On large wooded lot Couples only. Call 942-1913 after 6 p.m. ! e INVESTMENT opportunities in modern life insurance are sometimes overlooked. Investigate the special advantage of a Northwestern Mutual Life policy for College Men. For information on the SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCE in insurance COST and COVERAGE, Dial Northwestern Mutual Life-942-4187. I V i. ui lit tin i. . a i:n i 1 1 I : i i. , i t i i .i t tt .M ; ;t it T 1 i i t
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 5, 1968, edition 1
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