Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Nov. 27, 1963, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page 8 [Pc® Father Robert Wilken delivers Kennedy Eulogy DUE TO THE DUKE-CAROLINA FOOTBALL BANE THANKSGIVING DAY Dining; Facilities of The Carolina Inn will be open as follows: The Hill Room -12 to 1:45 and 6:00 to 8:30 P.M. Complete Thanksgiving Dinner $2.75 The Cafeteria -7:00 to 9:00 A.M. and 11:30 A.M. to 1:30 P.M (No Evening Meal) Carolina Inn '. it HiU’a TiiH Shut iul r AFTER-THANKSGIVING SPECIALS Fall aai Wilier Fashion SHOES *6"* to 16“ , Formerly priced 8.98 to 22.00 ? \ Including Mademoiselle, Paradise, Rossiiini Debs, Saadler of Bostoa, Domani aad Gapezio. 40** \ 8 ft v> ftj pVCLJ HM ft mmamm l ~? v KbP”ll * . jHw- if JR I Ms ■ Bsfli sp*^ erf l - «WBBBf3 *.' ‘ . A* B s , .. iflßs . Afts I '\ W ''.t’Xjj||&&jftgje|f Wjip ’awra£j *\ %TCfIL - 111 :-syBI .... To University Students And Faculty Members Law Review Prints Civil Rights Articles The North Carolina Law Re view, published here by the Uni versity of Norjh Carolina Press, will contain a series of articles cn ‘‘Civil Rights and the South” in its first quarterly issue of the academic year to come out in late December. The project is unique because a U. S. law review has never before completed a series of es says on this topic, according to George C. Cochran, UNC Law School senior and editor in chief of the Law Review. “We decided that civil rights was something that the South needed education on and what North Carolina needed education on," said the Maysville, Ky:, senior. The special articles on civil rights will be contributed mainly by legal experts. The material, covering the various points of view regarding the civil rights problem, will be presented in such away that any member of the interested public can under stand it, according to Cochran. The members of the Law Re view staff are calling the special series a symposium. To meet demands for reprints of this symposium which have come from most states through THE CHAPEL HJLE WEEKLY out the country, the Law Re view editors are having reprints made of the article. The re prints will be available for dis tribution in early December. U. S. Attorney-General Robert F. Kennedy will write the intro duction for the symposium. Other contributors and their topics are: U. S. Senator Sam J. Ervin and Harvard Prof. Arthur E. Suther land on the constitutionality of the proposed civil rights legisla tion; Martin E. Sloane of the U. S. Housing and Home Finance Agency on civil rights and hous ing; John G. Field of the Poto mac Institute, on equal employ ment; constitutional lawyer R. Carter Pittman on the import of the Brown decision; Berl F. Bern hard, staff director of the U, S. Civil Rights Commission, on the commission after five years; Lawrence W. Knowles, farmer attorney advisor of the U. S. Civ il Rights Commission, now a professor at the University of Louisville, on school desegrega tion; Charles J. Bloch, constitu tional lawyer, on property rights; M. A. Wright, vice president of the Southern Regional Council, on sociological aspects of inte gration: and Paul R. Ervin, for mer member of the Civil Rights Commission's 50 - state advisory committee, on integration in North Carolina. *~ y ‘ ' 4 ' * News In Brief * I IN HONOR SOCIETY Ralph Mayo Warren, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Warren of 308 Burlage Drive, has been elected to Eta Kappa Nu, the national honor society of electric al engineers, and was inducted into the North Carolina State chapter on Nov. 22. He is a junior at North Carolina State, majoring in electrical engineer ing and a participant in the junior-senior honors program. ARTICLE PUBLISHED Mrs. Cherry Parker, part-time instructor at the University School of Nursing, i g the author of an article in the November is sue of “Nursing Outlook,” the official journal of the National League for Nursing. The article, “Put it in Writing—in a Faculty Handbook," discusses the facul ty handbook and other communi cations methods used in the UNC School of Nursing. IN STUDENT VESTRY Robert Cornell Harriss Jr„ the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. C.' Har riss of Chapel Hill, has been ap pointed to the Student Vestry of Bjue Ridge School, in St. George, Virginia, by the headmaster, Hatcher C. Williams. Harriss is presently serving as senior war den. The Vestry assists the chaplain in the operation of the school’s chapel program. W. H. Thompson - Funeral Tomorrow Funeral sendees for William Henry Thompson. 43, of Rt. 3, Chapel Hill, will be conducted tomorrow at_4 30 pm . at Hd- JamL-ehapel C M E. Church by ihe Rcv S. P. Cook. Burial will be jin the church cemetery. ■Mr. Thompson died Saturday at his home. Surviving are hi* wife, Mrs. Bertha Thompson; one son Wil liam Thompson of the home; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Barnes of Baltiqjpre. Md„ and Mrs. Elean or Kittrell of Wake Forest; and two brothers, .lames and Edgar i Thompson of Baltimore. * CENTREX PROGRAM i WUNC-rrv, Channel 4. will feature a program on the Uni versity’s new Centrex telephone , system tonight at 10 o’clock. The system is scheduled to en ter service December 1. thanksgiving pM 10m Give Thanks As we at J. B. Robbins join with friends and loved ones, we shall give Thanks for the blessings of your friendship and the privilege of working together. May Peace, bounty and joyful hearts be continued to you during the approaching holi days and throughout the year to come. Thanksgiving Specials SAVE $5 $lO sls S2O $25 '5 on all MATS up to 5 49 *l6 n all MATS 'SO to ‘BS ‘ls on all MATS mill *2O oa all MAR 110 to 141 *25 aa all MAR aver 140 Large Group Large Group Group a^e DRESSES SKIRTS GOATS BL ?“ SES 1 / OFF , . OFF i / OFF SWEATERS J/q REG. l/ 0 REG. 1/q REG. price /o PRICE /o PRICE \/ CAR MAR Leathers and Suedes 20% Off Reg. Price j ■ m I The House of Fashion in Chapel Hill for the Cmolinas Town Aldermen, Planners Discuss Sign Restrictions The Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen and Planning Board In a joint quarterly hearing Monday night, considered the sign size formula for regional commercial and suburban com mercial districts proposed by the planners. The new formula would ease the present restrictions on signs in these zones. It was worked out by the planners some weeks ago. Ted Danziger objected to the formula, ana suggested that a provision be made tor signs for businesses set closer to front property lines than the formula anticipates. Mr. Danziger was referring to bis Ranch House Restaurant, which has a non-conforming front yard. The formula may be consid ered arithmetically taxing by persons with a non-mathemati cal turn of mind. According to the formula, the area of a sign would be one-twelfth the dis tance from the center of the right-way a business faces to the center of the base of the Sign, squared. Signs would be allowed as close as 15 feet to a 175-foot or wider right-of-way, no closer than 25 feet td a nar rower ri^it-of-way. The matter was referred to the Planning Board for further Iconskleration. The planners and the Aider men also heard objection to a requested rezoning on Eastwood Lake Road from residents of the area. C. A. Ellinger has requested rezomng of 9.68 acres on the East side of Eastwood Lane Road between Framum Street ana the (Ad Oxioro Road from Agricultural to RA-10. Mr. El linger dhi not state what he in tends to do with the land, out objections were based on the hssuniption that he plans to sub divide. Objections .were only to the rezon.ng as requested. Resi dents of Lake Forest and Coker Hills, which are zoned RA-20, gave their opinion that land in the same area should be zoned higher than RA-10. The matter was referred to the Planning Board for further Consideration. Three discrepancies in the Zoning Ordinance were consid ered for correction, as recom mended by the planners. The planners recommended a change in wording which at the moment permits parking in suburban commercial, regional commercial and industrial front yards, as well as requir ing parking space in back yards. The planners do not intend that parking be permitted in front yards in these zones. Ted Danziger objected, stat ing that building close to the front property line should be .. able to provide parking just as close to the property line as the building itself. Wednesday, Nov. 27, 1968 The planners recommended amendment of the definition sec tion of the Zoning Ordinance to bring the definition therein of !a land fill into comformity with the definition of a land fin in the Table of Regulations for Spec ial Use Permits. The planners also recommend ed that a discrepancy in build ing height regulations be eli minated, which states that in suburban commercial and cen tral business zones a building can be built up to the side property line, but that the height of the building can be no more than the sideyard distance. The planners’ recommenda tion was that in the central business district, buildings be built up to the side property line if desired, but that in sub urban commercial zones the sideyard must be equal to the height of the building. Mr. Danziger again objected, asking that the central business district rule be applied also to suburban commercial zones. All three discrepancy recom mendations were referred back to the Planning Board. LARSH ELECTED Dr. John E. Larsh Jr., chair man of the Department of Para sitology iaAthe UNC School of Public Heann, has been elected vice president of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 27, 1963, edition 1
8
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