mmer vernmenr rsopes to OSTS H s The first Student Government Board meeting of the second sum mer session is scheduled today 4 p.m.' in the Grail Room at Graham Memorial. . Several openings for positions W I J I 1 W ii . JT in Student Government are avail able under three categories sum mer session Student Government Board, summer session Men's and Women's Honor Councils and summer session Attorney Gener al's staff. . Applicants for these positions will be interviewed in the Student Government Office, second floor Graham Memorial, on Monday and Wednesday, 4:30 to 5:15 p.m. and Tuesday, Thursday and Fri day, 3 to 5 p.m. Also any student who wishes to sign up for jury duty may da so at the Student Government Of fices in Graham Memorial amm IW M I V.ll j 111 I l . l jj Congress shall make no laws abridging the freedom of the Press" U. S. Constitution VOL. 1, NO. 7 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1959 EIGHT PAGES SUDPflS ill I j! 'Plans For Survival '--Hester Oft -W-i . ' , w ' If 7 ' 'f IT. : :-. . - .f. .-r.-' . ' i -c 1 I- wX I. Si l J :: f 1 i PL-. --TV 1 1 Brigadier General Hugh B. Hes ter, noted lecturer and writer on United States foreign policy, will speak at Gerrard Hall Monday night at 8 pjn. on the topic, "A Program For Survival." Hester, a Carolina graduate and a retired army officer, is con sidered a military expert on for eign policy with more than 34 years of service behind him. A native North Carolinian, Hester did graduate work in law and international relations at UNC, George Washington Uni versity and the University of Pennsylvania. The 64-year old retired army officer is considered an authora tive source on the cold war situa tion and the Berlin crisis. He is co-author, with Dr. Jerome Dav is, of "On the Brink," to be pub lished in the fall of 1959. General Hester has received the United States Distinguished Serv ice Medal and has been awarded the Legion of Honor 'officer) by the French Government. (See SURVIVAL, Page 7) V 'Dk. V REGISTRATION LINE . . that long uxiit is ever Enrollment Plunges To 2600 For King's 2nd Term Estimate Dr. A. K. King, summer ses sions director, Wednesday esti mated the enrollment for the sec ond summer session to be ap proximately 2,600. "Aflcr studying the pre-rtp-utf ration figures and learning many students have reg-if-lrrei thus far today." King r'tod. "I would estimate 2.600 a conserat:vr enrollment rg-cre for the second session. "It is normal," King po-n: ci:t, "for the second term to run ibeut three-fourths of the cnroH mert cf the first session." Enrollment Jo; the first sun-jner session in the ration's oldest sum mer school was 3,513. According to Dr. King, 29 prop-am? in ur.dergraduat and p-aiaale fields tre being offered during the second session, which hc-jins today .r.d titfs on August 22 Special features of tlie second term wi) te the n-Sch0 Tele- ! vision Works hep, Augurt 3-21, and the 13!h suirTitr session in Dra-rr.a-ic Art Jcr E gh School Stu-ctn'-';. July lS-ALevt L2, in addi licn t? oihcr insttLtts, workshops d jsserr.blifs liited on fage three of this Isinc. Insurance Agents To Muster The 10th annual Institute of In surance has been scheduled for August 2 through 7 on campus, sponsored by the N. C. Associa tion of Insurance Agents, Inc. More than 100 agency owners, their employees and others con nected with insurance are ex pected to attend. The institute will be held in co operation with the University and the Educational Committee of the National Association "of Insurance Agents (NAIAt. Robert M. Senn Jr., CPCU from Greensboro, will serve again as institute president. He announced j schedules for an advanced under- i writing seminar, as well as re-; gul.ir courses for beginning in- j surance personnel and for agents I with experience. Three nationally known execu tives will address the advanced; seminar on Monday and Tuesday, 1 Au;;. 3-4. discussing the future of , the American agency system I method of marketing insurance. it.-'-- f - v" - - i i '' , ' ' ''sf i '' Ktjl ':' V .11 I I J ? y n - 4 PROF. C. L. WRENN Visiting Oxford Prof Conducts Chaucer Class By J. A. C. DUNN Those who claim that Univer sity professors lead a sedentary, unexciting life would certainly have trouble maintaining their argument in the face of Professor C. L. Wrenn, Rawlinson and Bos worth Professor of Anglo Saxon at Oxford University. Professor Wrenn is at the Uni versity during its second sum (See VISITING PROF, Page 5) Petition Fights For Juries A campus - wide referendum scheduled for next Wednesday will decide the fate of a petition calling for jury trials at every Summer Honor Council hearing. The petition was launched early in the first session by two mem bers of the new campus political party, Campus Independent Peo ple's Party (CD?P): Troy Blan ton and Bill Miller. 360 signatures were added to the petition, thus forcing the'issue to referendum. The polls for the referendum will be located in front of Ger rard Hall in Y-Court. The polls will open at 9 a.m. and will close at 6 p.m. All summer school students are eligible to vote. In inaugurating the petition, Miller and Blanton claimed that the absence of juries at summer Honor Council trials violated the judicial machinery set up by the Spring Student Legislature. John Minter, speaking for the Summer Student Government Board's stand on the petition, said that a bill had just been passed by the Board instituting juries at any trial where the de fendant specifically requested it. He added that a broader sanction of juries was unfeasi ble because of a lack of interest among students towards volun teering for jury duty. '54 Coed Assumes Women's Office Job Dr. Katherine Kennedy Car michael, dean of women, an nounced Saturday the appointment of Miss Carolyn Johnson, as as sistant to the dean of women. Miss Johnson will join Dean Carmich ael's staff July 16, replacing Mrs. Arthur DeBerry. Miss Johnson is an fJumna of the University f.t Chapel Hill, where she received her A.B. de gree in physical education in 1954. During her yers as a mem ber of the studt&t body she served on the Women's Honor Council, presided over the Wom en's Athletic Associalion, as sumed presidential resfonsibil ity of Smiih dormitory for a semester, and was a member of Valkyries. The only caagh:er f retired Navy Chaplain Jchr E. Johnson and Mrs. Joh-ison, Miss Johnson came to the Uravrrs-ty cf North Carol na frccn a var.ed background. As a member of this traveling Navy family, Miss Johnson lived throughout the United States, in cluding Annapolis, Md., the Great Lakes region, the Pacific Coast and Hawaii. From her college career. Miss (See JOHNSON, Page 3) CAROLS hi JOHNSON

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