PAGE 2 The Carolina Journal Wednesday, February 28, 1968 Original Prints For Sale Feb. 29 Interested area residents will have an opportunity to examine and purchase original prints by modem and old master artists next TTiursday. A sales represen tative from the Ferdinand Roten Galleries of Baltimore, Maryland, Mr. Anthony G. Marsiglia, will be at UNC at Charlotte-Union from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Thursday, February 29, 1968. On view will be approximately 500 original etchings, lithographs and woodcuts by such artists as Picasso, Chagall, Lautrec, Re noir, Roualt, Goya, Piranesi, Bes kin, and many others. There will also be a selection of outstanding manuscript pages from works of the 13th-15th centuries. Established in 1982 and now one of the largest American print dea lers, Roten Galleries has been sening representatives to show their original graphic art collec tions to museums, colleges, and collectors for many years. One of the Gallery’s special interests is the work of Kaethe Kollwitz (1867-1945), widely re garded as art history’s most ac complished woman artist. The col lection to be shown here next Thursday, includes many examples ct her restrikes of the artist’s early etchings. Original prints are impressions on fine paper taken from plates, woodblocks or lithograph stones prepared by the artist and hand printed by him or under his super vision. No photo-mechanical pro cess is employed as in repro ductions of paintings, etc. Ori ginal prints are usually limited in number and often the modem nrint is sienedbv the artist. Prices for items of the collection to be displayed range from $5.00 to $2,000 with the majority in the under-$100 range. All works are for sale and purchases may be charged or paid for over a three- month period. However, visitors to the exhibititxi are under no obliga tion to purchase any of the works to be shown. New Constitution Reduces Number Of Representatives From Five To Three (Continued from Page 1) writing a new one was to eliminate patchwork which several years of amendments have made of the old one. Billups explained, “We realize that the coming of dormitories and other circumstances may change things but until that time we need a workable constitution.’’ There are, however, a few major changes in the proposed document. They include the limiting of the number of representatives from each class from five to three and making the positions of secretary and treasurer of the student body appointive rather than elective. Gus Psomodakis, former student body president and present judi cial committee chairman, ex plained the changes with aid from BilluOs. Psomodakis gave two reasons for reducing the representative number from five to three, “first,” he said, “five is too much because several from each class are lost often dut to low grades.” “The smaller number makes positions more competitive, as well,” he said. “When fewerposi- tions are at stake, people running will be more qualified,” he added. In regard to the section which makes secretary and treasurer non-elective positions, Psoma- dakis remarked,‘“niese are really not elective positions when you think about the kind of jobs they do. These people need to work with the president,” he added. “Just compare it to the national scale.” Billups saidthis would just “give more responsibility to the presi dent who actually has it anyway.” In addition to these major chages in the proposed constitu tion, Billups said a minor change gives the president the jxjwer “to convene the newly elected and ap pointed judges of the Student Court”. There was no procedure for this earlier, he said. A major change in the by-laws section has to do with new hour requirement tor offices. For Senior office, the minimum hour requirement for office has been changed from 70 to 72, tor Junior office from a minimum of 43 to 40 and from a maximum of 69 to 71, for Sophomore office from a minimum of 15 to 19 and from a maximum of 42 to 39, and for Freshmen office from a maximum of 14 to 18. Copies of the proposed consti tution will be on display in the union throughout the week. Paul A. Miller Speaks At Education And World Affairs Conference Student Ct. Revises Act Dr. Paul A. Miller, assistant secretary tor Education of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare will b3 among the nationally prominent speakers on campus this week. Dr. Miller will speak at an open meeting at 8 p.m., Thursday, February 29 as a participant in a conference sponsored by Educa tion and World Affairs and the University. Dr. Miller will arrive by plane in Charlotte at 10 a.m. Thursday and will hold a press conference at 11:30 a.m. on campus. He will deliver a statement at that time which is expected to be of national significance. His statement will be of Interest because of develop ments in his department in light of the recent resignation of John Gardner as Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. Dr. Miller is a former presi dent of the University of West Virginia. The conference will bring ap proximately 175 educators from 10 Southern states and Puerto Rico to Charlotte to discuss the roles of the following professional areas in worldaffairs: businessadminis- ration and public administration, education, medicine and public health, engineering, law, and agri culture. Education and World Affairs is a private, nonprofit educational or ganization founded in 1962. Its purpose is to assist in strengthen ing the performance of American higher educational institutions in world affairs. Its basic support comes from grants from the Ford Foundation and the Carnegie Cor poration. In addition to Dr. Miller, the president of Education and World Affairs, Dr. William W. Marvel, is on the program. He will speak at the opening session at 2 l.m., February 28 in the Barringer Inn. Since 1965 Dr. Marvel has been concerned with the federal govern ment’s international education program. He was a member of the President’s Task Force on Inter national Education and special ad visor to its chairman. Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Other speakers will be Chan cellor John T. Caldwell of N. C. State University at 7 p.m., Febru ary 28; and Dr. Irwin T. Sanders, study director and vice president of Education and World Affairs, at 3:15 p.m., February 29. The Student Court is in the process of revising the judicial act under which the court now functions. Perry Moser, Lieutenant Jus tice, states that there is a strong possibility that the new act wfil provide for several standing court committees made up of both faculty members and student court judges. A traffic committee, academic disciplinary committee, and voting misconduct committee are only three of the possibilities open. The court, which consists of Sam Scott (Chief Justice), Perry Moser (Lt. Justice), Vince Batts, Frank Crooks, Susan Allen, Bud Stokely, and Rod Smith, has not had a case since last summer. HARRISBURG BARBER SHOP 3 Miles North On 49 Newly Equipped With The. Vacuum System C)pen Daily 8-6 Closed Wednesday Best in Records ERNIE'S Vh";' Cotswald Center TALL BOY ESSO CURB SERVICE TALLBOY 44( Complete Service Station Hwy. 19 Harrisburg CURB SERVICE 3631 South Blvd.—523-6311 3101 E. lnd«p«nd.->-377-4509 ♦ The Amber House THE RESTAURANT NEAR THE UNIVERSITY Open 6 A.M. To 11 :30 P..M. .•>62.'. 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