SERIALS DEPT. CHAPEL HILL, . C. 8-31-49 - ) o I I I I I I VOLUME LIX CHAPEL HILL, N. C. Sunday, May 20, 1951 Number 147 Trade Sops Study Abroad . Will Be Given. By University Boundaries of the University Summer Session will be vastly extended this summer. University courses in Baroque art and architecture will be ta ught in Germany and Italy, it was announced here yesterday. Dr. Clemens Sommer, professor of art history, will conduct a summer tour, beginning July 25 and continuing hrough Septem ber 11, for students of art and others interested. The study tour is conducted through the cooperation of the Department of Art and the Ex tension Division of the Univer sity, and the courses in art which Dr. Sommer will teach en route will carry full credit in the Art Department. Dr. Sommer .and the students will sail from New York July 25, on the S. S. Atlantic and arrive in Naples August 4. The group will remain in Italy, visiting Rome, Orvieto, Florence, and Ve rona until the middle of August, when it will proceed to Munich. In Germany cities to be visited include Augsburg, Regensburg, Bamberg, Ansbach, Stuttgart, Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, and Stras bourg. There will be three days in Paris before I sailing for the States on the Queen Elizabeth September 6. Students from colleges and un iversities other than Carolina may make the tour with the Chapel Hill group, and information may be obtained from Russell M. Gr umman, Director of the Univer sity Extension Division thre. House Made Phi Speaker In elections held at the last meeting of the Philanthropic As sembly, Al House, rising senior from Hobgood, was unanimously chosen Speaker for the coming year. Other officers elected during the Executive Session were Sp eaker Pro Tern Bob Pace, Mor ris ville; Parliamentarian Sol Ch erry, Roxobel; Clerk Jim Fouts, Lexington; Sergeant at Arms Bob Gorham, Jr., Rocky Mount; Cri tic Kent Jackson, High Point; and Treasurer Franz Roberts, Hillsboro. Four new members have been initiated into the Assembly. They are; Richard Sharnock, Jake Ro berts, Robert Daye, and . John Peddycord. Herman Seiber, who attended his last meeting as an active member, closed the meeting with a farewell address to the Phi. Standii ings Students must see Col. F. Car lyle Shepard. advisor on military affairs. Room 315 South Build ing, io see that their class stand ing information is forwarded io local draft boards. Shepard also reminded stu dents ihai induction of college men has been postponed until scores on the Ccllega Qualifica tion Test and scholastic standings hare been received, by the boards. Holmes I umanities Talk Dr. Urban T. Holmes, Kenan Professor of Romance Philol ogy, will deliver the Humani ties Division Lecture in Ger rard Hall Tuesday night at 8:30 o'clock. Topic for the lecture, , third of this year's series, is "The Beast Epic of ' Reynard the Fox." Dr. Plohnes has been a mem ber of the Department of Ro mance Languages in the Uni versity since 1925, soon after receiving his Ph.D. degree at Harvard and after a period of study in the University of Paris. During the war he was with the Office of Strategic Services , and has been a Kenan profes sor since 1945. He is a Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America and has written ex tensively in the field of the Bettering Coed Affairs Topic For Discussion In an attemot to helo various- groups on campus and sororities in particular to realize their po tentiality in bettering campus af fairs the YWCA Campus Affairs Committee is -sponsoring a dis cussion tomorrow night at 7:30 in Person Hall. Gina Campbell, Jackie Bump ous, Barbara Chantler and Peggy Stewart compose the panel which will direct the discussion. Moder ator wil be Mrs. Frank Hanft, chairman of the YWCA Advisory Council and the meeting will be presided over by Evalyn Harrison, chairman of the Campus Affairs committee. Following the panel there will be an open discussion. The Panhellenic Council, Faculty-Advisory committee on sor orities, sorority advisors and all interested coeds have been in vited to take part in the discus sion. Questionnaires were sent to 119 colleges throughout the coun try and the answers have been compiled for presentation at the discussion. The answers received will be used by the committee next year which is under the leadership of Barbara Chantler. 1 Rooter' Hat Stunts May Add To Color At Football Games By Mac White Although football season be yet in the future, Carolina boosters are already digging up schemes to add move color to the cheering section. Two students are trying to in stigate new routines to supple ment card stunts, and which could be performed during the actual game. j This is impossible to do" with j cards. The cheering section would j be unable to follow the game's ! progress and at the same time 1 handle the cumbersome cards. I However, oldtime University; Cluber Paul Winslow and Head, Cheerleader Cyril Minett are in favor of a gimiek worked with; sold to students. Thev would "be' o Deliver Middle Ages and of Old French language. Last winter he was awarded the Legion of Honor Medal by the French government for his contribution to the promotion of the French 'language and culture. One of the most versatile men on the faculty, Dr. Holmes has had an important place in dramatics on the campus, in music and in the religious life of the community. The Reynard theme of his lecture permits him to bring to the general audience for whom the lecture is intended a store of learning and a zest ful approach. The lecture is one of a series sponsored each year by the Hu-. inanities Division of the Coir lege of Arts and Sciences. Knight To Write Education History Edgar W." Knight, professor, History of Education, has been chosen by the U.S. State De partment and the Office of Edu cation to write a history of the development of free compulsory education in the United States. The history will be used at a meeting of the International Bureau of Education to be held later this year in Geneva, Swit zerland, at which the ministers of education of several countries will be present. The main discussion at the meeting will be on the growth of free compulsory education throughout the world. Knight will probably be un able to attend the meeting him self. His history is supposed to out line the development of this sys tem which has worked so well in the United States. Also, it is to point out obstacles which were encountered in its development. blue and white' reversible "rooter" caps. As Winslow and Minett see it, the hats would be passed out in the card section shortly before game time by the ushers. At any time during the game, Minett could call out a number. The students in the card section would look on their stunt key,! found in its usual place under the I seats, and find the stunt corres- j ponding to the number. i They would then put en their1 caps with the color up indicated! on the key. This would take only ; two or three seconds and not in- 1 terfere with watching the game. : Winslow feels. i The rooter hats would not be! patented, and the Card Board or1 Marty Cohen Leads Terps With First, Two Seconds By Bill Peacock Maryland, powered by Marty Cohen, won its first South thern Conference outdoor track meet yesterday, putting to an end Carolina's four year domination of the meet. The Terps scored 67 93 100 points to whip the runner-up Tar Heels who piled up 52 85100 points in a meet run in a driving rain. ' " DuKe, sorely ieeiing the absence oi bpnnter iienry ross, was third with 44 93; 100 points. Other scores were: West Lynch, Cox Are Soloists Here Tonight .A joint faculty recital' Will be presented by Anne Lynch, sop rano, and Richard Cox', baritone, tonight at 8:30 in Hill Music Hall. Both.. Miss Lynch and Cox are graduate assistants in the Music Department. , . Miss J.vnrh will nrpsont a frmin , of Italian songs and arias from Gounod's "Faust," Bizet's "Car - men" 'and Offenbach's "La Peri - chole." Cox will sing a group of Elizabethan lute songs and selec- tions from Schubert's cycle "Die Winterreise." The program' will close with Miss Lynch and Cox singing a scene from Act II of Verdi's "Traviata." A resident of Chapel Hill, Miss Lynch is at present completing the requirements for a Master of Arts degree. She did her under graduate work at Mary Washing ton College of the University of Virginia, receiving an A.B. degree in 1949. . While at Mary Washington Miss Lynch appeared in a solo recital, sang with the Glee Club and play ed in the school orchestra. In Chapel Hill she has sung as solo ist with the University Methodist Church. Cox, a resident of Raleigh, is also completing work on his M.A. degree. He received his A.B. de gree here in 1949. A former stu dent of Paul Young, Cox has been heard in several recitals and has appeared as soloist with the Glee Club. He is the baritone soloist for the Presbyterian Church choir with which group he has sung the Brahm's "Requiem," Handel's Messiah, and the "St. Matthew Passion" of Bach. whoever would handle them, would be the sole possessers. They would be taken up by the ushers shortly before the end of every game. Winslow and Minett feel that this idea should be carried out, if the student body is in favor of it and willing to back it. To get a student concensus, they in tend to conduct a campus poll on the question before the year is out. If the results of the poll are fa vorable, they will immediately begin trying to get financial back ing from the Athletic Association. They have to get this backing before the end of the school year in order to have the hat stunts in operation bv next football season.. Virginia Tech, 13 43:100: Clemson, 11 State, 7 and VMI. .43. William and Mary, Davidson and Rich mond did not score. -State, 7 and VMI. .43. William and Mary, Davidson and Richmond did not score. ;' ) ." Cohen tied Tar Heel sprinter Frank Scott for the individual high scorer of the meet, both men taking a first and two seconds for 13 points. Bob Hudson of Clemson was third with 11 points and Tyson Creamer of Maryland tallied. 9 points. ; Carolina lost the meet when the 'm ii i lerps iuuk. uuc-ivvu-iiiiee-wajr 111 the 880i giving them 12 points iwhich turned the ' meet from a 1 three-wav rarp tn a Marvland vic- AI Buehler, Gus Meier, and Bill Tucker, all of Maryland, came in 'ahead of Harry Mottley of VPI' and Jack Bennett of Carolina. Bu ehler and Meier, winners in thr qualifying heats Friday, jumped off to an early lead and held on -ii iu. ...... n...,ui.. v,. an uie way, jDueiuti vyjuuiui& ujr 10 yards in 1:57. Scott scored his first, one oi, the four by the Carolina team, in, the 100-yard dash. The finish waa so close that third man Hudson of Clemson received one vote for. first place. Scott was clocked in 9.9 with Piney Fields of Duke, second and Tar Heel Dave Willis fourth. Scott was nipped by Fields in the. 220 in another very close race. Fields won in 21.9, not bad time considering the condition of the track. Carolina's Bill Crimmins was fifth. New Di Is B. Clampitt The Dialectic Senate has elect ed Bob Clampitt, Chapel Hill, a transplanted Floridian, its presi dent for fall quarter. Other officers are John Schnor renberg, president pro tempore; Ed Smith, critic; Heith Carrick er, clerk; Gerald Parker, ser-geant-at-arms; and Bob Smith, chaplain. Ken Penegar was named De bate Council representative, and Gene Cook was named to the De bate Council. The senate voted to hold a sum mer sessionand elected John Sch norrenberg its president. . ' . According to reliable source this summer session will be the first scale summer operation pro gram attempted by the Senate. Trustees The Board of Trustees will meet at Women's College, Greensboro, Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock io consider a code of administrative affairs. A committee headed by Mrs. May L. Tomlinson has been working on the code since 1349. The code includes duties, def initions, and regulations of ib9 administrative branch of tha Consolidated University. Head

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