EDITORIALS, FEATURES... {Continued from Page l) >5 There's no reason to break the agreement Above we discussed the necessity for enforcing local zoning laws if land use restrictions are to be meaningful at all. Now comes before the Chapel Hill aldermen another test of whether the law is to be the law. Some months ago a Durham boulevard property owner, anxious to develop his res idenrially-zoned land for business purposes, asked the Town Board to re-zone it. He proposed an agreement binding him to the terms of a then-proposed highly restrictive regional business zone in developing his land. The Board, in an attempt to be co operative, approved the pac t as desired by the land owner. Now the land owner through his attorney admits that it will he impossible tor him to develop the land as he wishes—specifically, to build a service station on it— in keeping with the terms of this agreement. So he asks to be relieved born the very agreement which he proposed ■iitd secured acceptance of only a lew weeks ago. Tn seeking to accommodate the land owner bv accepT ing his proposal the Board went far more than “the first mile" toward helping him. Actually the aldermen dipped into the realm of the District Planning Board by assumin'’ subsequent recommendation and passage of the new re gional business zone. (It has now been recommended but is yet to be passed.) Certainly the aldermen cannot now in the public in teiest acquiese to the breaking of an agreement that they made at the request of a person who now wants to erect a structure that will not meet the high standards calle lot bv this agreement. I he suburban commercial rezoning in* this instant was granted by the aldermen with the assumption that i would enable the property owner to more quickly mov ahead with a high-type business development in compli ante with the then proposed zoning amendment. lot either or both parties to now violate this ao,et tuent will violate a public trust. n Notepad {Continued) volved in hai<1 labor over most 01 a summer, building a dam un iter direction of Freddie Utley on a liny trickle of a branch that dribbled down the draw into the Stadium bottom. The resulting four-foot-high dam and swimming hole was a thing of bounty a joy for several summers to the youthful constructors. The new geology building that will ‘ soon rise on <th;.s site will recall • to a few local citizens yet left of this hardy band of young en gineers the man-made geological wonder that previously occupied the site. * PRESENTS PAPER '• AT LONDON Professor James G. Ingram of k University Department of Bionomics just returned from a 10-day Conference on the Ec i noonric Development of Asia • held at London’s School of Or iental and Asian Studies, Lon *■ 'b'O; England where he present ed a paper entitled “Thailand’s ftice Trade and the Allocation of Resources.'* POLITICAL SCIENTIST IS APPOINTED James Warren Prothro, visit ing professor in the University Department of Political Science, has been appointed a professor in the political science depart ment. New Morehead Planetarium show to feature macn-shotproject and what to expect Now comes the Morehead Planetarium with its own theo ries why the Carolina moon is prettier and shines brighter than the, moon of Missouri, on the Wa bash and over Miami. „ In the show “Carolina Moon." now being presented at the More head1 Planetarium, it is pointed out: ' 1. “If we were located much farther north than North or South Carolina-, the full moon would be so low. in our skies as to be dis figured by haze or hidden by buildings and trees to a much greater extent.” 2. “if we were located much farther south, the full moon would net attract attention so often.” “Carolina Moon,” a new pro gram to run through Oct. 9, opened at the Morehead Plane taritim last Friday night. The demonstration highlights re search and work being done to suc cessfully place a man on the moon, what he should expect when he lands there and the current aspects of a moon space shot. “This achievement.” according! to Planetarium Director Anthony F. Jenzano, “will probably be matte sooner than anyone had imagined a- few years ago, prob ably within the next ten years.” The program also touches on the prominence of the moon of Carolina, its phases, superstitions and eclipses. Numerous effects and first time-shown charts, date and maps will enable Planetarium patrons to appreciate the research. Plan ning and labor that so far have contributed and will contribute to a successful moon shot. They include the latest moon maps made by a U S. Geological Survey team for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Official current data on land- j ing, movement and ffie relative ease of building structures on the moon also are given. Charts j classifying areas of the moon | scape likewise are presented j though it is admitted' that “man ! has to go there to get the actual j facts.” , * j Near the close of the program the audience suddenly finds its self imaginatively on the moon, a feeling made realistic by a beau tiful panorama more than 200 feet in circumference. That leads : to a discussion of the satellite’s , physical environment and of in- ‘ struments needed to send to the j moon in advance of man’s trip. j i ‘‘Carolina Moon" will be pre-! sented every evening at 3:30 and j at matinees on Saturdays at 11 j a m. and 3 p m. The school version of the pro-j gram, recommended for children in grades 7 through 12, will be1 given at 11 a.m., 1 and 4 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays. Ad vance reservations are necessary for the school programs only. LYLE JONES IN DENMARK Dr. Lyle V. Jones. Professor of Psychology at the University and Director of its Psychometric Lab oratory, is^ currently in Europe, where he was scheduled to ai/ rive in Copenhagen on August 11. There he attended the XIVth International Congress of Applied Psychology, at which he present ed a- paper on psychological studies of aphasia. His itinerary included Warsaw, where he is visiting psychologists of the Pol ish Academy of Sciences, and the psychologicalt laboratories of the University of Stockholm. If you have a phone listed in your name your credit is good lor .News Classified Ads. W. R. MURRAY COMPANY A . (..’s Oldest Piano Dealer — In Ouv 75 /h Year HAS MOVED TO J24 E. Parrish Sheet, DURHAM i \ PIANOS For Sale For Rent Phone 682-4931 Mason Sc Hamlin — Checkering — Steck Kohler & Campbell Pianos What DURHAM BANK'S Daily Interest Means to YOU! When you save at DURHAM BANK & TRUST COMPANY, you get daily interest. And daily interest means— 1 •You start earning interest immediately. • You are poid interest for every day your <.J 7 money is in the Trust Company. • Your interest is paid and compounded < Quarterly. • You get TEN FREE interest days at the s start of each month. • You get n»e full return for your money, * regardless of when you start saving. ■] - • You earn the highest rate of interest paid ” ' by any bank in the country. Save and save regularly at the Trust Company where you earn DAILY INTEREST member fdic i urham f. ■ * ■ ank * & trust COMPANY HILLSBORO

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