Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 13, 1951, edition 1 / Page 6
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Page Six THE TAR HEEL Children's Reading Habits Improved In Study Course Friday, July 13, 1951 'A Reading Clinic to aid child ren who need improvement in basic reading skills is being con ducted this summer by the Uni versity's School of Education. Twenty-five children, ranging in school classification from grades three to seven, have been admitted to the clinic after having been recommended for such train ing by their teachers. . ( , They are children with better than ' average abilities who for various reasons have not acquired the desirable reading skills and habits. Each child receives ap proximately an hour a day of individual help with his reading. Nineteen teachers who give this individual help to the children are enrolled m a course in correc tive reading being offered in the University this Summer. In the course, the teachers study the causes of reading dif ficulty, the techniques of diag nosing the difficulty, and the methods by which it can be cor rected. Each teacher uses in the reading clinic techniques he or she has learned in the course for teachers. The clinic makes use of the best that is available in instrumenta tion for. a careful diagnosis of difficulty. Survey and diagnostic tests are used to make an inven tory of reading needs. After an appraisal has been made of the child's present read ing abilities a program is plan ned to meet the reading needs of the individual. R aoiomen I oSpeak Ten prominent members of North Carolina's radio industry have accepted invitations to ad dress the first annual North Car olina High School Institute to be neld here from July 22 to Aug ust 4. Among those who will speak before the group are Paul Marion, program director, Station WSOC, Charlotte, who will discuss pro gramming; Cecil Hoskins, gener al manager, WWNC, Asheville, whose subject is engineering; Bob Rierson, assistant program man ager, WBT, Charlotte, production; pel Lawhon, program director. WVOT, Wilson, announcing; Ed lurk, news director, WPTF, Ral eigh, news; Jack Younts, owner and gen eral manager, WEEB, Southern 'mes, sports and special events: Charles Gaylord, sales manager, WFLB, Fayetteville, sales; Don lerce, program director, WRRF, -Di-Phi- , (Continued from Page 1) never be sufficiently curtailed in order to insure that the appeal court is impartial when the case is tried the second time. President John Schnorrenberg president over the explosive ses sion and found it necessary to pound hard for order on sev eral occasions. The meetins was saddened to learn that Senator Banks Talley's father had died, and in Executive Session the Sen ate voted than an appropriate ex pression of its sorrow and regret be communicated to the family At its last meetine of the ses sion the Phi Assembly Tuesday night passed resolutions on both campus and international issues The first of these, a bill to equalize the coed and male stu dent populations of the Univer sity, pointed to the present re duced enrollment as an excellent opportunity to revise admissions policy to a more satisfactory viewpoint and more realistic one. The bill was opposed on the ground that it would deplete the population of the Woman's Col lege at Greensboro. It was passed by a large margin. The second, a bill to provide for the setting up of an inter national language, was finally passed in an amended form which proposed a language similar in its conception to Esperanto and including the advantages of the international Phonetic Alphabet. CLASSIFIED SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE: Prices reduced up to 50 percent. All summer incicuauuise k&dui;.U1J. THE BABY tiuv under Ledbetter-Pickard. French Consul Will Attend ' ' ': Banquet Here Andre Nemo of the French em bassy in Washington, will attend the French House Bastille Day banquet tomorrow evening at the Carolina Inn to present the Draper - Savage scholarship, awarded annually to the most deserving student of the French House to continue work in the French language. M. Nemo, 30 and single, is a "functionaire" or French civil servant whose specialty is the field of human geography. Besides serving the French embassy, he is an exchange professor at Georgetown University, Washing ton, a post he has held for two years. He obtained his B.A. and M.A. in political science at a Paris university. ' , His home in the United States is in Arlington, Virginia. His stop in Chapel Hill will be made en route to Houston( Texas, where he will take charge of the French consulate there for the summer while the consul in on vacation. The banquet is the culminating activity of the French House, a regular summer offering of the University which this year was so much demanded by French students that many of the appli :ants for admissibn to the House had to be sent to other dorms for lodging. Many guests as well as French House students are ex pected to make this banquet the largest in the seven year history u the House. y N X 1 ' i imi,i.ii.wg.- Keep Your Summer Trousers Always Trim, Always Neat Washington, traffic: Ed Ander son, manager, WBBO, Forest City, management. Band to Play The University band will pre sent its first summer concert Sunday afternoon at 4:30 near the Davie poplar. Under Allen W. Garrett, summer director, the band will offer a program of well-known popular and semi classical selections. To be presented are such compositions as Erik Leidzen's "Debonnaire Overture", Ger shwin's "The Man I Love", and selections from Sigmund Rom berg's "The Student Princo." The concert is free, open to the public, and the band in vites all to attend. One more concert will be given toward the end of the second session of the summer school term. Let Us SANITONE Your Clothes For Results! Quick Delivery REMOVAL SALE V We're Moving Downtown In July Sanforized Galey & Lord Cord SUITS - Reduced to $16.95 Moygashel Irish Linen SLACKS (18.95 value) . ..Reduced io $11.99 Howard & Foster's Imported Albian Grain SHOES with full double leather soles Reduced from $18.95 io $10.99 Bur-Mil Appleskin plaid and India Cord SLACKS Reduced from $8.95 io $ 5.99 Galey & Lord cotton cord SLACKS Reduced io$ 5.99 Group Holbrook spori SHIRTS.. Reduced io $ 3.99 Group cotton argyle SOCKS..Reduced from $1.50 io $ .75 Group basket weave SLACKS Reduced io $ 8.95 Group genuine shell cordovan SHOES Moccasin ioe... Reduced from $19.95 io $13.99 Genuine white buck SHOES Reduced io $ 9.95 Group Hammonion Park SUITS Reduced from $66.50 io $36.95 Group Harris Tweed Spori COATS Reduced io $29.95 Group tweed, gabardine, and flannel SUITS, values to $56.95 ......:....... .....Reduced io $29.95 MANY OTHER OUTSTANDING VALUES TO TEMPT YOU Two-tenths of a mile can save you So Much Milton's Clothing Cupboard Across from Long Meadow Dairies Phone 2-5346 CHECK YOUR INTERESTS RETURN TO PARADISE James A. Michener The Pulitzer Prize-winning au thor of Tales of the South Pacific $3.50 FROM HERE TO ETERNITY A novel by James Jones and the "talk of the town". $4.50 FISHING Fresh Water Fishing by Carhart $5.00 ?. SCOTT FITZGERALD The Far Side of Paradise a biography by Mizener $4.00 JAMES STREET The High Calling $3.00 WILL CUPPY The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody $3.00 ALLERGIC TO CAPOTE ? ? Then You'll Love Ira Wallach's hilarious poke at literary vogues. $2.00 HOPALONG-FREUD 3 Bring your book problems to THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin Si. jVqpMi VMM 1 MM mmtm wmm i ll'-l . 'VI ( ' Let Us Thoroughly Wash Your Car and Service it with an Expert GULFLEX Lubrication r Call-for and Delivery Service PHONE 2437 Phone 4921 UNIVERSITY CLEANERS REEVES GULF S ERVICE TATION
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 13, 1951, edition 1
6
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