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Page 1: North Student Newspaper 0 A I · 2016-09-03 · rut rrcsmcun Mitt!“ tsFromTheEditor ‘_ . ”flanglylarge cut in the proposed budget of 3.21’9 2 .. lidated University by the

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North Student Newspaper

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Page 2: North Student Newspaper 0 A I · 2016-09-03 · rut rrcsmcun Mitt!“ tsFromTheEditor ‘_ . ”flanglylarge cut in the proposed budget of 3.21’9 2 .. lidated University by the

rut rrcsmcunMitt!“

ts From The Editor

‘_ . ”flangly large cut in the proposed budget of3.21’9 2 .. lidated University by the State Board of

WiEducation came as a shock to us as well as toof our college and the University.

‘ «tumcondemn the Board, for we realize that_ Mposed of sincere and competent people, and that

.- tions which are not immediately realized.2'1119ruling. It is evident, however, that if

2‘ recommendatmns are approved by the AdvisoryCouncil and the Legislature that Higher Edu-in this state will receive one ofthe greatest set-

7 that it has ever experienced.glance at the requests in the different categories inwthe colleges asked for money and the reduced

2'1 gal.recommendations are allowed to stand, there will”'wlrtually no room for expansion of any of the col-" e: which comprise the Consolidated University for

' next two years.This is graphically pointed out when one looks at the

Mary on this campus. Chancellor Caldwell stated thatthe recommended budget goes through, “the further

‘ opment of our library will be gone completely,’ and2 k at the facts will show that this is certainly true.

_ (Everyone who is in contact with State College isg; were of the fact that the library is woefully inadequate

San institution of this sort. Research is conducted in‘. many difiereht fields, and good references are manda-

'ffiory to a good research program. The library must con-fiin all periodicals and books which have a bearing on

' all the .diflerent types of research, for anyone engaged.. - In a study has to be aware of all the new advances in his

field.2 ' j State presently offers doctorial degrees in twenty-

, four different fields and Master’s degrees in thirty-six.i.-'~ " This graduate program requires many more references‘_ ~ than our library can presently provide.

"It also must provide books and periodicals for under-graduates in almost all branches of human knowledge.A broad selection in the humanities must be kept, whilealmost everything in the fields of science must be onhand. '

State has been among the lowest in the nation amongmajor schools in its total expenditures for books, andthis inadequate support has shown up in gaps in thefiles of hundreds of important journals and mono-mphs now needed for research. The present budgetWill barely cover the cost of just staying abreast withthe new publications which are being printed, andIaabes no room for catching up on the backlog of short-

which have accumulated.The Board of Higher Education, however, recom-

.The Technician2‘2 ' November 14, I960

s; 1' . Editorial Stafl52w .......................................... Jay Brame

2 Jim Editor .................................. Mike LeaNews Editor ................................... Bill Jackson

Paternity Editor .............................. Ed Puckhabercopy Editor . . . ................................ John Curlee

‘9‘” .- .W Editor ................................. Earl Mitchelle. A-ociate Sports Editor ................... Richie WilliamsonSta! Writers .............. Parks Cobb, Sidney Andrews, Allen

_ Lennon, Kermit Humphrey“ll-Ill ....................................... “Ann Smith

A. Why .................................... Clyde HoeyWat .................................. Richard Groom

g5!- m..- sueif. audac- Manager ............................. Richard Culp

-Adstant Business Manager ................. Dave WilkinsonWu Manager ............................ Doug AngelW ................................ Joe Eagles

22Mad for National Advertising by NATIONAL ADVER-1 MG SERVICE, INC., College Publishers. Representative, 18E“ Street._New York. N. Y.

2.*”Kgghwaaaeeeadelamwer February 10. late. atthel’eetomeeatL mmwmmamamahbmm

“WW“WMMWflth.“, V”.aad1hralayhthendeataetleeth0erellae8tatesmells-r.

0m 5mm.

which the Board recommended will show that a

hope

requests.We also urge

Ala Magma

mended that a great deal less money be granted to allof the University for libraries than the amount thatthe State College library requested.

There is one room for hope, though:- The action bythe Board is not final. It must now be passed by theBudget Commission and the General Assembly. We

that these bodies will see the need for expansionof all the facilities of Higher Education in this state,and will find some way to giVeapproval to the original

everyone at this college from the ad-ministration to the students to do everything in hispower to see that our needs are truely understood.As Chancellor Caldwell stated, “This is the end of

our dreaming for the next two years.’Without dreams, there can be no progress. . ,

ML

Cruising .- With Croom

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bus I ass rue (1011?»511I CAN 111151”:an N moNonsense remakesmm 15me 1ch or 5an spansMuseums 11: mm.11: 1111111; or 21»qu USED AS

all menus roa Reuse AND 11111111051112. 1mm 1126101531111111» snow was mm LITTER or mum Is A NEGA-Toay emenem sum A5 NEIN , 1161’ ,AND NON ......"

MI“1

As Commerce Secretary

—North Carolina Gov. LutherH. Hodges, who gave up anannual salary of $75,000 to de-vote full time to public service,probably will become the nextsecretary of commerce.

' Although President-elect JohnF. Kennedy has a policy of notmaking public his choice forcabinet posts, it was revealedyesterday that he had selectedHodges for Secretary of Com-merce. 'And federal government work

is nothing new to the 62-year-old industrialist turn politician.

Hodges gave up the presi-dency and general managershipof Marshall Field to devote theremainder of his life to publicfederal government’s industrydivision of the economic cooper-ation administration beforeentering the tar heel state’slieutenant governor race andspent 13 months in germany.

A Letter—To The Editor of TheTechnician:We commend you on your edi-

torial with regards to the cheer-leader situation, but we say:“Let the boys (2??) of Turi-ington Dormitory have theircheerleaders. We of Syme Dorm-tory prefer thegirls.

The Resident ofSyme Dormitory

Hodges ProbanyPicked

service. He became chief of the.

As Governor of North Caro-lina for the past six years,Hodges has put into state gov-ernment many of the ideas thatpushed him to the top of textilemanufacturing.He has streamlined state gov-

ernment, trimming the numberof boards and committees andmaking those remaining groupsactive. He looks at his job asgovernor just like it was one inthe business world and it haspaid off.As an industry-seeker he has

been responsible for bringingmany firms to the tar heel stateand he is still working hard atit.(See POSSIBLE SELECTION. out 4)

TEVERYBODY KNOWS!

EVERYBODY GOES!

Hudson-Belk

Eastern CaroIIaa''sLargest DepartmeatSlala

V.. .v T":—v—1—'..- r .xgvgrrq,

President’sThe following statement was

issued Thursday by PresidentWilliam C. Friday of the Con-solidated University of NorthCarolina:

“In recent months the Uni-versity in Chapel Hill, StateCollege, and Woman’3 Collegehave continued to lose some ofour most valuable and mostcompetent faculty people — de-spite our all-out efforts to main-tain competitive faculty salaries.

“In preparing the budget re-quests for the 1961-62 bienniumwe made a man-by-man survey.to determine the minimumamount of salary increase fundsnecessary to hold our strongfaculty. It is a modest amount,but the Board of Higher Educa-tion now recommends to theAdvisory Budget Commissionthat this amount be cut by 46per cent. We must object tothis severe reduction as it willseriously jeapardize our faculty.“The Board of Higher Edu-

cation has recommended furtherthat our overall “B” budget,which contains expenditures toimprove the quality of theMUni-versity, be cut by 67.6 per centfor the year 1961-62 and 76.6per cent in the year 1962-63.These recommended reductions,if followed by the AdvisoryBudget Commission ,and the1961 General Assembly, woulddo severe damage to the qualityof the University. The “A" bud-get negotiated by the Univer-sity with the Department ofAdministration, in accordancewith the department’s formula,recommends additional appro-priations to accommodate anenrollment increase of 2,171students in the three-fold Uni-versity by 1963. We appreciatethe endorsement that the Boardof Higher Education gave these“A" budget requests.“While we have not seen the

final recommendations of theBoard of Higher Education oncapital improvements, we under-stand that their approval hasbeen given to a substantial por-tion of the capital improvementsrequested by all state-supportedinstitutions of higher education.This is a major step forward aswe prepare to meet the enroll-ment pressures of this decade. .“Why are the “B” budget re-

quests ‘so‘ important?“The ability of the University

to improve the quality of itsprograms rest on increased ap-propriations provided in thisparticular budget. The improve-ment of faculty salaries to meetthe intense competition we facefor qualified personnel, the im-provement of our libraries, theurgent necessity for a minimumreplacement program in equip-.ment and new programs, wherewarranied, will maintain an im-proved quality of faculty andthe level of excellence of theirteaching, research, and produc-rADMIT YOU'REHENPECKED !

Bring I'ler .Alone

norman’s

Statementtive scholarship. Here is thetrue measure of the distinctionof the University.

“Let us examine two elementsof the “B” budgets particularly.“Among the 15 state univer-

sities in the Association of lAmerican Universities our aver- ~"age salary far a full professorplaces us 11th from the top, theassociate professor 11th fromthe top, the assistant professor8th from the top, and the in-structor 10th from the top. Ourrequest for salary increasefunds, the first priority item inthe “B” budget request, receivedcareful study, and we believethe funds requested are veryessential if we are to maintainand strengthen our faculty.

“In the South, the library atthe University in Chapel Hillranks third in its holdings, nextafter Duke and Texas. It ranksfifth in total expenditures forbooks and journals. The libraryat State College stands 21stamong 32 Southern institutions,13 of which are land-grant in-stitutions, in its holdings and16th in total expenditures. Ourrequest for an increased appro-priation of $966,600 for 1961-62and $830,000 fOr 1962-63 werereduced by the Board of HigherEducation to a recommendationof $60,000 for each year to beappropriated among the threelibraries. Again, we feel thisrecommendation will not enableus to make substantial progressin library improvement. 5

“In the recent Carnegie studyof graduate education in theUnited States, the author ratedthe leading American univer-sities. The top 13 institutieswere Harvard, California, Co-lumbia, Yale, Michigan, Chica-go, Princeton, Wisconsin, Cor-nell, Illinois -— including twotechnical instiutions—MIT, andCal Tech. The next 10: Pennsy-vania, Minnesota, Stanford,UCLA, Indiana, Johns Hopkins,Northwestern, Ohio State, NewYork University, and Washing-ton. In the third group of 36institutions is the University ofNorth Carolina. The author ofthe study pointed to the greatdemands to be made uponhigher education in the nextdecade, and he observed that ifthe job is to be done, it must beperformed by an emerginggroup of universities that heidentified. Among those werethe University of North Caro-lina, Duke, and Texas.“The “B” budget requests

which we submitted were ourbest judgment of the increased

(See Statement. M 3)

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Page 3: North Student Newspaper 0 A I · 2016-09-03 · rut rrcsmcun Mitt!“ tsFromTheEditor ‘_ . ”flanglylarge cut in the proposed budget of 3.21’9 2 .. lidated University by the

(co-anus rio- p... i)«hands State had the ball ontheir own 21. Gabriel rolled outto the left and started upfield.

t He got to the 25 before he washit by a host of the ASU tack-lers and the ball squirted outof his hands into the waitingarms of Joe Zuger, who scootedthe 25 yards for the score. Jonesconverted to tie the score at22-all.Midway in the fourth period

00ch Moore punted to the SunDevils and the ball was return-

a.

Field Goal Margin

Beats Wolfpack —ed to the State 22, but a penaltyput the ball on the State 11.After two unsuccessful attemptsto run and one incompleted pass,Jones booted the winning fieldgoal.State drove to the ASU 30 be-

fore a fumblehalted the driveand the Pack’s last chance toscore. ASU ran out the clockwith routine ground plays.The loss left the Pack with a

6-3 mark on the season, whiletheir conference mark stays at4-1. ' ' K

1l?

(Continued from page 2)appropriations necessary tomaintain our place in this com-pany of universities and do ourrightful share in fulfilling thegreat demands of higher educa-tion in America.

1 “As to procedure, under the;- laws of the State, the Board of3 -.

NoticesAll intramural football teams

must turn in their footballs byWednesday, November 16. Ifthe balls are not returned bythis date the respective AthleticDirectors will be charged forthe missing footballs.

t i OAnyone interested in ofliciat-

~ing intramural basketballshould be present at FrankThompson Gym for a basketballclinic. The clinic is slated for7 :30 on Thursday, November17. O U 0

All nominations for all-. campus volleyballmust be turn-' \' ed in by noon on Tuesday, No-

vember 16.

The SCCA Chimney RockSports Car Hill Climb will beheld November 26 and 27 atChimney Rock Park, Chi eyRock, North Carolina. Satur aywill be set aside for practiceruns with, .the events set forSunday.

Charge It — Nothing DownTense to Fit Your BudgetWM. DANIEL'ScmrsA snor

n 22 W. Hergelt St.V

StatementTrustees is responsible for themaintenance of the quality ofthe faculty and the excellenceof the programs of the three-fold University. The “B” bud-get request was studied by theUniversity trustees .and recom-mended to the Advisory BudgetCommission as their best judg-ment of the urgent needs of theUniversity.

“In recommending a cut of67 per cent for the first year ofthe biennium and 78 per centfor the second year of the bi-ennium, the Board 'of HigherEducation does not, in our judg-ment, advocate the increasedsupport necessary to preserveand improve the University."

Jaws—n -»....‘ -,_...,M_ H.

-\

By Ritchie WilliamsonAssociate Sports Editor

The climax of the intramuralfootball season is the finals ineach division, and these gamesare being played this afternoon 0‘ Bragaw N' and Blake of B2“and tomorrow afternoon on theintramural fields at 4 o’clock.This afternoon, is the champion-ship game in the fraternity divi-sion which matches the defend-

‘ing champs Sigma Chi againstKappa Alpha. Tomorrow after-noon will pit Bagwell againstBragaw N. in the dormitorychampionship. "The fraternity championship

will be a replay of i the finalslast year when Sig Chi and KAbattled to a 0-0 tie but Sig Chitook the championship on themost yardage gained. Sigma Chiis unbeaten this year, goingthrough their section and twoplayoff games. KA suffered asetback early in the season buthas roared back strongly, mov-ing through their opposition ingood fashion. This game shouldbe a very close battle again.Bragaw N. has shown a great

last half scoring punch and hasbeen particularly strong duringthe latter part of the season togain the dorm finals. Bagwell

Finals Set In

All Campus Teams Selected

W04“._.. .'

TN! TECHNICIANNovember Id,’ 1’“

has been a potent team through-out the season and has playedsteady ball in every game.'Thisgame will probably develop intoa passing battle between Tullis

opening period for a 9-0 leadand then held on for a 9-7 vic-tory over Berry. Bragaw N.scored three touchdowns in thelast quarter to break a 6-6 tieand go on to a 25-6 win overpreviously unbeaten Syme. Tul-lis sparked the victory by pass-ing for three TD’s.

Also decided on this weekwere the all-campus selections:FRATERNITYMosingo—S. ChiSkidmore—PKTGilbert—D. SigCordell—D. SigFerrell—RASnyder—S. NuPerry—D. SigHooks—SPE

.well.In the semi-final games Sigma

Chi edged Sigma Nu 17-13. TheChi’s rolled up a 17-6 lead inthe first half and held off thethreats of the Nu’s in the lastperiod. KA scored in the firstand last quarters to stop DeltaSig 14-6. Passes from GradyFerrell to Jimmy York account-ed for both TD’s.Jim Blake scored a touchdown

and Bagwell got a safety in the

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Page 4: North Student Newspaper 0 A I · 2016-09-03 · rut rrcsmcun Mitt!“ tsFromTheEditor ‘_ . ”flanglylarge cut in the proposed budget of 3.21’9 2 .. lidated University by the

TH! TECHNICIANmu,”

"dun: faculty and stu-3' EngineeringSchool

. Mindtodtoattend

. . the Circle K Club pleasethe next meeting thisy night at 7:00 p.m.

the Faculty Club Room ofCollqn YMCA building.

p,‘ Fogarosy, a student herea V apt State, will present a program, '1‘ - Ibout the Hungarian Revolt of

.1050,in which he took part. Wewill adjourn by 8:00 p..m

C O Of The Christian Faith Search

.1 ‘ M of the YMCA will meetin room B of the college cafe-tom-la Henley night, November1‘ ”at 7:30“

ow Can I Findg 7" during the month of No-

“her. This week’s program,é? '.'Divine Human Relationships"

. {will be given by John Curiiow.:- ‘ The Revde.Hartley Hall

IE A MAN!VlsltAMan's

1mm .

Cnerv

interested are invited to attend.0 0

There will be a very interest-ing meeting of the N. C. StateNewman Club Wednesday even-ing, Nov. 16, at 7 p.m. Themeeting will be held in the con-ference room of the YMCA.

,The Club's chaplain, FatherJohn Breunig will speak on“Catholic Action in a SecularCollege.” All students are cor-dially invited to attend.

C C 0Applications for the Air

Farce ROTC advanced courseare being accepted for eligiblestudents, it was announced to-day by Colonel. Robert C. Paul,Professor of Air Science.Those students who are in-

terested should contact the AirForce ROTC Personnel Branchin room 141 of the Coliseum assoon as possible.

0 C OThe deadline for material to

be published in The Technicianis 7 p.m. on the evening before[each issue.

“ti-Netal. The rebels wanted a safe-conduct through loyal troopswho surrounded htem. Constitu-tional guarantees were suspend-ed and martial law declared.The rebels had attacked Friday.COSTA RICA: The country

went on a war footing to try tocrush guerrilla bands in the in-terior trying to enter Nicaragua.

President Mario Echandi wasat Las Dimas on the frontier totake personal command in thefighting that has raged 72hours and has cost the life ofthe Costa Rican civil guard com-mander. Twin-engine planes

Threatenedwere reported supplying therebels who were said to includebearded Cubans. 'GUATEMALA: Fierce fight-

ing between rebels and the armyunder President Ydigoras wasreported at the Atlantic port ofPuerto Barrios. Governmentwarplanes were ordered to at-tack, and 3000 troop reinforce-ments were.L‘rhshed to the area.Rebels backed by tanks brieflyheld Zacapa, 95 miles northwestof Guatemala City. In the capi-tal itself, rebels attackedva bar-racks, killed the commandantand made off with arms andtroops they recruited from thegarrison. .

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Possible Selection(Confined frompage I)

The creationof the researchtriangle in the center of NorthCarolina is probably one of hisadministration’s biggest achieve-ments. Several firms — whichwill utilize the facilities of the'University of North Carolina,North Carolina State Collegeand Duke University—have al-ready begun construction withinthe Research Triangle Park.

Hodges, whose hair is now’thin and white, believes in goingafter industry. And last year heled 67 other tar heel industrial-ists on an industry-seeking tourof Europe. Similar tours toparts of the United States havebeen conducted as part of histheory of going after industry.

TDD... Tau Mm:Initiates FourteenTheN. c. StateCollogeRho‘

Chapter of Theta Tau, a natiar-al professional engineering frarternity, has just recently takenin fourteen pledges. The pledgesare Barry Fraselle, Raleigh;William E. Gardner, Kernese-ville; Edwin Hauser, Lewisville;Robert Holder, Winston-Salon,5.George S. Hutchins, Sanford;Peter Lesslie, Mt. Holly; JerryMcCracken, Boone; Wendell No-Gee, Kernersville; Jerry Moore,Fayetteville; Ronald Sheppard,Winston - Salem; JamesStevens, Raleigh; John T. Tay-lor, Nashville; Edward Todd,East Bend; and John Yandlo,Paw Creek.

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If you find studying sometimes soporilic (and who doesn’t?) the wordtornambsrisNoDosg. NoDosolerts you with asafeand accuratenount of osl'eine-the some refreshing stimulantin cafes and tea. Yet non-habit-l'ormingNoDosto foster, handler, more reliable.

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YOU MAY RECEIVE A LIFE-SIZED,

AUTOGRAPHED PORTRAIT OF

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Hurry! Rush out now and buy a pack 0f Luckies! Smoke

them quickly! Send the empty pack to Dr. Frood. If you

do it now—Frood guarantees n_ot to send you this photo.

(DOA-(III.

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THIS IS NO IDLE THREAT! Dr. Frood portraits will be mailed at random beginning November 15.Only students who send us empty Lucky packs will be safe! TAKE NO CHANCES! Mail thoseempty packs today. Send them. with your name and address.Station, New York 17, New York. ,

CHANGE TO lUCKIES and get some taste for a change!

toDr.Frood.Box299o,GrandCditr€

Mad of(RMW-~%1': our middle seen.