Page 4
—University Enrollment —
i (Continued from Page 1)
years to accept an increase in
students each year of about 500
over the previous year.
Because of the unusually large
number of requests for admission
froth qualified North Carolina
students, and because of the re
turn to school of pnany who had
been in school here before, and
now are returning, the almost
triple increase has been register
ed here.
In this past seven years more
than 3,000 more students have
been added to the undergraduate
and graduate population at Chap
el Hi|l —or larger than the size of
the average liberal arts college
in the nation today.
Chancellor William B. Aycock
said that although conditions are
crowded, in dormitories and in
classrpoms, ml students here
have now received accommoda
tions in housing and in academic
facilities.
Three-in-a-room is still the
practice in dormitories, although
some relief is expected in a few
.WPCfe jvhep .students go to fra
ternity troiises, or make other
housing arrangements in Town or
nearby.
The enrollment statistics fol
low; Freshmen: 2,078. General
College (freshmen and sopho
mores): 3,911. Total undergradu
ates: 7,800. Graduate School:
UPp- f 'HSHaBBP
® w W- J MBfIBBBBBy
■
i i : W
W*
Any Time Anybody Does Anything,
ns * Mss HHHfp
..•>< . L^^^B
£■9l ~ SBH ’ sfr it
'” _ “VV-. V' "ifc jOSfeh. *BH 7 Jsshß|BßeL ’’
v ( B !
’ B ' hl I
.A- ... - r-i
It Has Some Effect On Somebody.
■
■r - r *4L mHm
W jßStk ’sL V- :'/« V
pSr- -yWn- -it - -*WL?j3£!r
Hflgwf ‘a - M iaL jl’’
, ... "\V
V ■ j 'Mr.' MM2
wHBKL'' fj'jpg f • i WKfifyt, mji ■
These People Might Affect You.
I ■E^k^^l^BßihM b tis &t
Read About Them In The WEEKLY
2,280. Post-baccalaureate profes
sional: 827. Special students:
128. !
Men students: 8,534. Women:
2,353.
By schools—Arts and Sciences:
3,689. Business Administration:
746. Education: 751. Journalism:
85. Law: 374. library Science:
100. Social Work: 106.
In the Division of Health Af
fairs School of Medicine: 389.
Dentistry: 233. Nursing: 282.
Pharmacy: 247. Public Health:
207.
The total enrollment figure of
19,887 does not include other stu
dents in University programs.
The totals given do not include
an additional 3.082 students in the
Evening College, special educa
tion courses, Graduate Centers in
Charlotte, Winstpn - Salem and
Greensboro, interns, fellows and
residents in the medical school,
technicals in the health fields.
Additional thousands also are in
cluded in correspondence instruc
tion, occasional workshops and
other programs at Chapel Hill
and throughout the State. 1
PRIZE WINNER
Mrs. E. W. Crissman of Carr
boro was the winner of the con
test drawing at the Econ-O-Wash
Laundry last week. Her prize was
a set of dinnerware.
—Adjustment Board Revokes Building Permit
(Continued from Page 1)
found that the structures would
not meet specifications of the
State Building Code. North Caro
line has no regulation applying
to standards for trailers. How
ever, they are not necessarily
excluded from meeting stand
ard of thg lowing (?#>. said.
It is a matter of practice tq per
mit house trailers a bit more
leeway than for conventional
housing.
If Mr. Carlisle’s units are
found to be trailers, Mr. Peck
said, he would request that the
Board rule that three trailers
parked adjacent to one another
on location do not constitute one
trailer. The Chapel Hill Zoning
Ordinance requires that trailer
parks provide 2500 square feet
of space for each trailer, with
at least 25 feet of space separat
ing units.
Robert Page, attorney for Mr.
Carlisle, said he conceded the
“hybrid nature” of the units,
and agreed that "no doubt they
are ' trailers, mdvable' vehicles,
made injo gpgr^ipents."
Mr. fqd, however, he
felt the- primary objection to
their use was a matter of per
sonal dislike On 'the part of
neighboring property owners.
Mr. Edwards, representing
the property owners, said he
THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY
was “surprised that Mr. Page
admits that these are trailers.
We are contending that these
are a nuisance and would con
tinue to be a nuisance. They
have* what amounts to a fratern
ity house. There are 25-30 auto
out there and parties
gp on all night long.”
Mr. Carlisle replied that no
fraternity occupied the units,
that they were leased to
'University seniors and graduate
students and that the occupants
hai signed individual leases for
the units. He had observed no
parties in the neighborhood, he
said.
Seven residents of the area
disputed Mr. Carlisle, stating
that parties on weekends had
lasted until 10 o'clock Sunday
momns, that cars had been
observed on numerous occa
sions speeding up and down
Wave Road, which runs through
Boiling Hills, and that students
were littering the area with beer
cans.
Carl Brandon, a student who
owns property in the neighbor
hood, -described activities at the
development as "deplorable.”
D. A. Blackwood, one of the
original complainants before the
Board of Aldermen, complained
of noise from the units and traf-
sic hazards resulting from stu
dents speeding to and from the
apartments over Wave Road.
Mrs. Jewell Blackwood charg
ed that foundations had been dug
for the units prior to the issu
ance of building permits, and
■ty|r. Carlisle subsequently stated
that one of the.trailers had been
in place prior to the issuance
of a building permit.
Assistant Town Manager Don
Archer said today that several
courses of action ware opgn to
Mr. Carlisle. Under the ruling
he must remove all but one unit
from the two tracts within four
teen days and find separate lots
for the other trailers. He could
then seek a special use permit
from the Board of Aldermen for
operation of a trailer park, or
he could subdivide the two
tracts, providing separate lots
for each unit. The Board of Al
dermen would also be approv
ing authority for this move. Or
he may aooeal to Superior Court
for a writ of certiorari, requiring
submission of the records to the
court for review. Mr. Carlisle
said he would make the appeal
at once.
—Sutherland—
(Continued from Page 1)
by the strong ami venturesome,”
he said.
The U. S. Government gave
grants of millions of acres of
land, granted transportation
monopolies, chartered banks and
granted other privileges.
“Then, Government having
thus granted charter, was to
stand aside and let a plan run
things to suit himself, unless
of course the Indians, or the
British on the Northern border,
or the Bons in the Spanish south
west, made trouble beyond the
abilities of the neighbors to set
tle things with their rifles. In
that case the enterpriser might
ask the Government for troops!”
Full sway was enjoyed by
speculators, oil combines, “coal
barons,” steel magnates, min
ing kings, said the Harvard lec
turer, and these men came to
look upon their gains es natural
and right, somehow Heavens-de
rived. They seemed to feel, said
Prof. Sutherland, that "God
would not have given them so
much if they had not deserved
it.”
The agricultural depression of
the 1870’s and the rising of the
Grange, with regulatory acts
limiting the power of the previ
ously powerful came as a pain
ful shock to the "bewildered
great proprietors,” said Prof.
Sutherland.
■Reviewing regulation of rail
roads, breaking of trust, pre
vention of unfair competition,
control of food and drugs, and
banning deceptive acts in bus
iness, Prof. Sutherland also told
of advances made in curbing
child labor. H referred to the
Federal Reserve Banking Act
of 1913 as one means of super
vising the nation’s complex
banking system."
The 16th Amendment to the
Constitution, relating to the in
come tax was one of several
pieces of “social legislation”
passed that “in the long run has
had and will have tye greatest
effect on American life,”- said
the Holmes lecturer.
“With all the battling to and
fro that had gone on over the de
tails of the federal income tax,
the main, decade by decade, it has
increased. It has tended to pre
vent the accumulation of the
great fortunes characteristic of
industrially successful operators
at the turn of the century.”
He suggested that the Ameri
can people may now be in the
midst of profound social change.
“Are changes so profound and
so pervasive that we. to some
extent, fail to notice them as I
suppose marine creatures are
unconscious of the gulf stream’s
current?”
“Apology for Uncomfortable
Change” is the theme of tthe
three addresses at Chapel Hill
by Professor Sutherland in toe
Holmes Lectures. The second of
the three speeches will be deliv
ered tonight at 8 in Carroll Hall
auditorium, with Dean Henry P.
Brandis, of the University Law
School presiding.
"Education in the Obvious” is
~ < Sutherland's topic tonight.
jk scries will be concluded with
a third lecture Thursday night.
Prof Sutherland's topic then
will be "ToMJrow More Civiliz
«i”
The Oliver Wendell IJplipes
Lectures were made possible by
a gift of money in the will o!
the late Supreme Court Justice
O. W. Holmes. The Holmes Lec
tures are controlled by a Holmes
Devise Committee, appointed by
the Congress. The lectures are
held at a different university
each year, with a nationally
prominent speaker selected each
year.
ORANGE METHODIST
The Rev. David B. Lewis's ser
mon topic at the U am. service
at Orange Methodist Church Sun
day will be "Diversity—Yet Uni
ty.” Worldwide Communion will
also be observed at the dnqgh
Sunday. Sunday school begins at
10 a in. and Methodist Youth Fel
lowship meets at 5:».
■ hhb
"ABOVE ALL THEY’RE BUICKS”
—That’s the phrase accompanying the
introduction of a larger.thsn ever line
up from Spick. The series gre Skylark,*
Le Sabre, Special, Riviera, Wildcat aftfl
—Planning Bofird Would Ease Sign Restrictions —
(Continued, from Page 1)
roughly the same size when
viewed from the rqad, if built
to maximum dimensions. ,
After agreeing cm this form
ula as a good point of departure
for controlling sign sizes, the
Board then discussed extensive-,
ly what part of a sign could be
considered sign, and what part
could be considered standards.
The size formula does not in
clude the area of the standard,
or support, and the Planners
eventually agreed to “mull” the
definition of signs, and at some
time in the future, probably in
a subsequent recommendation
to the Aldermen, they would
have to define what is a sign
and what is a sign’s standard.
“I think we’ve demonstrated
that we can’t write a perfect
ordinance the first time,” said
Mr. Scroggs. “I think we ought
to try this and see how it works.”
The Board gave both prelim
inary and final approval to a
proposed subdivision of one large
lot into three small lots in Glenn
Heights by Dr. J. B. King.
Dr. King proposed that the
two new lots be conforming, but
that the lot on which would con
tain his own house would be
slightly smaller than RA-20 re
—Town & Gown —
(Continued from Page l)
sceptical?” asked the secretary.
“No,” said Justice Hqlmes, 1
still prefer for my own use to
spell it skeptical.”
* * *
One of Justice Holmes’ habits
in later years was to go to the
burlesque show. He was a fre
quent visitor at the burleyque
houses, both in Washington and
in Boston.
The most conspicuous story
that is popularly repeated about
Justice Holmes is the remark
he made to a fellow ninety-year
older. The two men stood silent
as a pretty girl walked by. Then
Justice Holmes said, “Oh, to be
70 again.”
• * *
Speaking of 90-year-old men,
John Motley Morehead who was
here last week is 93 in November.
. When he was at the Carolina
Inn last week, he was observed
by Ralph Howland to be reading
the advice column by Ann Land
ers in the newspaper.
“This column deal* with how
to raise children,” said Mr. More
head, “and you never can tell
when such information may come
in handy for me ” Mr. More
head regards himself as the uncle
of several hundreds of boys who
are and have been Morehead
Scholars in the University.
Several years ago the news
papers ran a story about Mr.
Morehead, referring to him as a
philanthropist.
“Philanthropist is g word that
Cf mes from the Greek and means
lover of man," said Mr. More
head. consklor myself more
of a ladies than that. I pre
fer ladies to men.”
. * • t
An advocate for Orange Coun
ty’s "locgf son” in the Guberna
torial sweepstakes, Mr. Stansbury
of Hillsboro, said he has evolved
a couple of Stansbury slogans.
Offered for political use, these
are:
"We Stand for Stansbury.”
"You May Bury Stansbury,
but You’ll Never Bury Stans
bury’s Principles."
“Show me a man who plucks
the bai|jo, and I’ll show you f
man who never plucks his leHpw
man." *
Electra. Shown are Wildcat (top) and
Skylark models. New bodies, engines
and transmissions are debuted in Buick
here this Friday at Colonial Motors,
I pc., 15-501 Bypass, Chapel Hill.
quires. The Planners wrestled
with the question of how much
variance should be allowaule,
end finally agreed that in the
future they would have to make
up their mipjjs where to draw
the line on' puerinisslble non-con
formances. Dr. King’s variance
was granted because the Plan
ners did not think it violated the
intention of the zoning ordinance.
Dr. King plans to build a house
on each of the Iwo new 1 ots thus
created, as an investment. He
faces restrictive covenants in
his deed, drawn up in 1955,
which stipulate that Glenn
Heights property owners may not
subdivide their land, that
adjoining property owner|. may
exchange small portions of lots
in order to improve their build
ing sits but the lots thus modi
fied would also be ruled by the
no-subdividing restriction.
The deed’s restrictive cove
nants rpay be waived by agree
ment of 51 per cent qf Glenn
Heights property owners.
The Planning Board agreed
that, while it was not affected
by restrictive covenants, in other
words could make what rulings
it felt best tor the area despite
what Dr. King’s deed said could
and could not be done; at the
same time, the Board’s ruling
would not override the restric
tive covenants.
The Board’s ruling will go to
the Aldejmen as a recommenda
tion. Because no improvements
are necessary on Dr. King’s
land, the Board’s approval was
bth preliminary arid final. Dr.
'Wa.fyuU’K AGENCY
ONE^CENT
BUY ONI ITIM AT ITS
BMULAB KVIIYDAY
PRICE...
ADD 1 CENT AND GET 2!
SUTTEES
Drag Sion
159 B. Franklin St.
BEGINNING TOBAY
— Hl' ' K I I II I—-
Wednesday, October 2, 1963
King will have to deal with the
restrictive covenants himself.
“Dr. King, good luck with
your covenants,” said Mr.
Scroggs.
In other business, the Board
agreed to recommend to the
Aldermen that the present def
inition of a landfill be removed
from the zoning ordinance, and
be replaced by two definitions:
one of a sanitary landfill, the
other of a reclamation landfill.
A wide variety of materials may
not be dumped in a reclamation
landfill, such as stumps.
The Board also agreed to bring
to the Aldermen’s attention the
fact that present regulations
make it difficult for persons liv
ing outside the town limits to
legally dispose of uprooted tree
stumps.
The Board will elect officers, at
its gext meeting.
PTA MEETING
The first meeting of the 1963-64
school year of the Lincoln Jr.-
Sr. High School Parent-Teacher-
Student-Association will be held
Thursday night at 8 p.m. in the
school cafeteria.
The Chapel Hill Weekly,
issued every Sunday and Wed
nesday, and is entered as sec
ond-class matter February 28,
1923, at the post office at Chap
el Hill, North Carolina, publish
ed by the Chapel Hill Publish
ing Company, Inc., is under the
act of March 3,1879.