Tar Heel People & Issues . -fi Gill's statement on holding taxes strikes strong blow for bond issue BY CLIFF BLUE EDWIN GILL ... Edwin Gill’s statement last week that the $61, 665,000 Capital Improvements Bond Issues could be paid off without an increase in state taxes is a powerful lick in behalf of the bond issues. Edwin Gill is regarded as a conservative and an authority on matters of finance and taxation so when he makes a statement of this nature the people take note. —. TAXES . , . Speaking of taxes, we do not feel that there should be any need to increase , 'Intimate' has new manager The Intimate Bookshop lias a new sales manager, accrding to Paul Smith, president of the famous Chanel Hill hang-out. Carl Apollonio, who has been sales manager for three years has joined the sales ..staff of the J. B Lionincott Company, Phila delohia publishers. His place has been taken by Wallace Kuralt. Mr. Kuralt is a graduate of the University of North Carolina, and first worked at the Intimate when he was a sophomore here. For the past year he has been in charge of paper-backs. In addition to his talents as a bookman, he is a master of the hull fiddle, and ponular with jazz afficionados on the campus. Less well known hereabouts is his skill ,ad skindiving, which earned him the nickname of “The Walrus” in skindiving cirlces on Cape Cod this sum mer. TO HEAR WALTER ALLEN Walter Allen. Jr., University professor of Latin, will be the speaker for the annual meeting .of the Classical Section of the Virginia Education Association tomorrow in Richmond. Va. The subject of Dr. Allen’s address is • “Reading Cicero’s Mail,” a dis cussion of some of the problems in the study of the nearly 1000 letters that have come down to the present time as Cicero’s cor respondence, most of them bv Cicero himself but a number by his correspondents. WADSWORTH—BECK Mr. and Mrs. James F. Wads worth of Chapel Hill announce the marriage of their daughter Ann Sterling Wadsworth to Mr. Leonard James Beck of Long Beach, New York, on Friday, August 11, 1961 in Durham. GIL WINS I T 4..Dr. Federico G. Gil, Professor of Political Science at UNC, has been awarded a United States Educational Exchange Grant to the University of Minas Gerais, in Brazil. Dr. Gil will lecture in “Latin American Government and Politics.” The university is located in the city of Minas Gerais, Brazil. . State taxes in the foreseeable future, unless taxes are first reduced right much, which could happen. We suspect that there will be some tax exemptions before there are any increases! In the 1930’s we had the sales tax pretty much as it is today, but the General Assembly kept nibbling at it, and in 1940 X. Melville Broughton was elected * on a platform to take the tax off the table, and off it went from groceries. Governor Sanford himself has already come out in favor i of doing away with the tax on the sale of newspapers, i since the law does not cover j sales made by carriers han I dling less than 1000, but im | poses the tax on subscribers j who buy from a carrier han dling over 1000 papers. - SMALL VOTE . . . Most people are saying that the passage of the ten bond issues totalling $61,655,000 will stand a—better chance of passage in a small vote rather than a big vote. Most people predict a small vote in comparison to the biennial gen eral election vote. The general feeling is that in a smair vote those interested in the passage of the issues will be doing most of the voting and many of those opposed will simply not take the time to go to the polls. But the people should study the issues thoroughly and go out in mass and vote the way they deem best for the state. HONEST REPORTING . . . Sam Ragan, Executive editor of the News and Observer, and Ashley Futrell, editor of the Washington Daily News in Beaufort County have taken sharp issue with Senator Ben Sumner and John I. Anderson of the Transylvania Times re garding Sumner’s statement there was a need for honest re porting in covering the Gener al Assembly. Ragan and F'u trell have called for specific in stances of dishonest reporting, or in other words, put up or shut up. PROM GERMANY . . . Voit Gilmore, Director of U. S. Travel Service, in a letter to the writer while in Germany says: “Berlin’s prosperity is so great that jobs are looking for people. Many German businessmen' can afford to travel to the U.S.A. It’s the job of the U. S. Travel Service to urge more to come and to bring their families along for a TJ. S. vacation. Our opportunity is enormous. Germans now are prosperous and they are born travellers.” e. e. cummings Here tonight e. e. cummings, one oi Ameri ca’s most popular and controver sial poets will appear at Memo rial Hall, at 8 p. m. today to read from his works. The read ing is sponsored by the English Club. The visit of cummings, who was a member of the famous Paris “exiles” including Ernest Hemingway and Gertrude Stein, is a nearannual feature on thfe UNC campus, and consistently draws a packed house. --;_:______^ I His first book, “The Enormous Room.” a prose work describing his time spent in a World War I concentration camp, immediate ly placed him in the vanguard of I American literary figures. His reputation has not diminished since that time. His major books of poetry in clude: “Tulips and Chimneys." 1923; “Is 5,” 1926; “Collected Poems,” 1938; “50 Poems,” 1940; “IXL,” 1944; “Xaipe,” 1950; and in 1954 his monumental “Poems 1923-1954” was published. In 1931, “Eimi,” a description of his pilgrimage through Rus sia, appeared, “i; six nonlec tures,” a book of lectures given at "Harvard, was published. Cummings’ early reputation was made as a painter. He has exhibited in leading museums in I the nation. " .. .. _ ■- • 1 EQUIPMENT SALE The following items of property will bo-offered for sole under sealed bid at 2:00 p.m. on Monday, November 6fh. - -— f Two (2) 1961 Plymouth 4 Door Sedans One (1) 1959 Ford 4 Door Sedan —--— To inspect these vehicles contact the Orange County Sheriff's — office in Hillsboro. *• Forms upon which offers may be submitted, can be secured from the County Sheriff's office or the County Accountant's office in Hillsboro through November 2nd. See the Chevrolet Golden Anni versary Show—CBS-TV—Friday, Nov. 3, 8:30-9:30 p.m. E.S.T. .[■gw THE WAV chevyn GOING GREAT GENS I Chevy II Nova bOO Sport Coupes and there are 8 more models, just as nifty, where this one came from This one was on the road to suc cess right from the start, a new land of solid simplicity blended with economy and dependability. Beneath the hood . a frugal 4 or satiny 6-cyiinder engine (your choice in most models). Nine new models ... sedans, wagons, hardtop and convertible. If you’re looking lor sensibility at its Sunday best—join the celebration at your Chevrolet dealer’s. It’s Chevrolet’s golden anniversary year, and this new Chevy II is making it a year to remember with a new line built espe cially to save you money on service and main tenance. Get the full story at your dealer’s. A New World of Worth Chevy II 300 Three-Seat Station Wagon Chevy II Nova iOO Convertible TOJiZjH im '• Join in Chevrolet’8 50th Anniversary cele bration at your dealer’s now—By picking up a special order form from your dealer, you can order a "Golden Anniversary Album” LP recording of favorite Ameri can songs from Chevrolet for just $1. (For your convenience, many dealers will have the album for sale in their show rooms). „f\, See the new Chevy 11/62 Chevrolet and ’62 Corvair at your Chevrolet dealer’s One-Stop Shopping Center MASON CHEVROLET, INC. Hillsboro, N. C. ~ ~ Mfg.'s License No.110 Tel. 4101 v \