THE UNC NEWS -WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 15 PACE 7
Motifrea
Conference
Goal For Two Prof s
Two faculty members and a for
mer staff member of the School of
Medicine have left to speak be
fore the ninth International Con
gress of Pediatrics in Montreal,
Canada, which began last Sunday.
Dr. E. C. Curnen Jr., professor
and head of the Department of
Pediatrics, is chairman of a panel
on "Viruses of Acute Communica
ble Diseases."
Dr. Judson J.. Van Wyk, associ
ate professor of pediatrics, speaks
on "Etiological Factors in Simple
Sporadic Goiter."
Dr. R. W. Winters talks on
"Genetic Studies in Vitamin D
Resistant Rickets and Familial
Hypophosphatemia." Last year
Dr. Winters was a fellow of the
National Foundation of Infantile
Paralysis) here with a joint ap
pointment in both the Depart
ments of Pediatrics and Medi
cine. The meetings are scheduled to
conclude Saturday.
In 'Reluctant Debutante'
-1-
Playhouse Spotlifes Horton
CHAMBERLIN ATTENDS
CONGRESS
Dr. Harrie R. Chamberlin of the
Carolina School of Medicine will
attend the International Congress
cf Pediatrics in Montreal, Can
ada July 19-25.
Dr. Chamberlin will lecture at
the congress on "Benign Congen
ital Hypotonia." He is assistant
professor of pediatrics.
"The purpose of a newspaper
is to comfort the afflicted and to
afflict the comfortable . ."
Finjey Peter Dunn
JSC
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MUSIC for the
Long
Hot
Summer Session
BROWSE
IN AIR CONDITIONED
COMFORT IN A BOOKSTORE
THAT
IS
A BOOKSTORE
THE BOOK EXCHANGE
Five Points -:- Durham, N. C.
"THE SOUTH'S FINEST BOOKSTORE"
CHUCK WAGON
Welcomes New Students
Try Our
, CHEF'S SPECIAL
Luncheon. Daily
Complete Lunch
C
Menu Broadcast Daily
8:20 And 11:45 - WCHL
OPEN 11 A.M. 1 A.M.
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
175 E. FRANKLIN ST.
Popular actor
Edward Everett
42 Students Attend
Annual Drama Session
Forty-two high school students
from 11 states and the District of
Columbia arrived here Sunday for
the 13th annual Junior Carolina
Playmakers session.
The five week course will in
cludes studies of acting, voice and
diction, and production. The stu
dents will give an opportunity for
practical application of stagecraft
skills.
Instructors for the course are
Playmakers personnel.
and comedian j rently staring in "The Reluctant
Horton is cur- Debutante", fifth production cf the
Durham Star Playhouse, which
opened Tuesday night at the Rialto
Theater.
Horton is making his second ap
pearance with the local theater
group. He starred last year in
"White Sheep of the Family." '
An actor who has enjoyed a
career of over 50 years in the
theater, Horton still is as active
as any trouper. His Durham ap
pearance is one of several in sum
mer stock theaters all over the
country this season.
"The Reluctant Debutante"
plays' nightly, Tuesday through
Sunday at 8:30, with 3 p.m. ma
tinees scheduled for Wednesday
and Saturday.
3
Officials
Clarify
Referendum
(Continued from Pag 1)
vote taken of the Council by
secret ballot was required for
conviction on an Honor Code
violation. In regular session, on
ly ;a two-thirds vote of the jury
is required for conviction."
This action was taken by the
Summer School Student Govern
ment Board 'because cf a feeling
that a lack of knowledge of
Honor Council administration ex
isted among summer school stu- j equine encephalomyelitis and oth-
Durham To Be
Site For Study
In Sociology
Research in "social issue per
ception in the Negro community"
will soon be undertaken in Dur
ham by sociologist Ernest A. T.
Barth. '
Dr. Barth, who taught in the
first summer term at Carolina as
visiting professor in sociology, is
an assistant professor in the De
partment cf Sociology at the Uni
verity of Washington.
Specializing in social differentia
tion, he has done a similar study
in Seattle on the leadership struc
ture in the Negro community and
another on social issues in the
Jewish community. His study in
Durham will deal mainly with pat
terns cf issue perception among
Negro leaders.
Barth received his M. A. and
Ph. D. degrees from the Univer
sity at Chapel Hill, completing the
latter in 1955.
dents.
"The signers of the petition,
calling for the initiative on the
question of a jury in summer
school Honor Council trials, sin
cerely believe in trial by jury
as granted by the regular ses
sion legislature of the Univer
ty. The members of the Student
Government Board are pre
pared to enact a bill providing
for a jury in summer school
trials if a majority of the vot
ing members of the student body
should vote yes in Wednesday's
referendum.
"The Board will meet in spe
cial session tomorrow to take
action on this matter should you,
the members cf the student
body, choose to have jury trials
this summer,
"We cannot over emphasize
the .. importance of this issue.
Consider this most important
matter seriously before you
vote, for the Honor System is
the verv hasis of the "Carolina
Way of Life."
Both Patterson and Jchn Min
ter corrected a statement in the
last issue of the UNC News
which quoted Minter as saying
that a bill had passed the Sum
mer School Executive Board
which allowed a jury trial for
any student specifically request
ing one,
Patterson also stated that Min
ter at that time was not speak
ing as a represent ative of the
summer school student govern
ment, Dewey Sheffield, chairman of
the elections . board, ending a
plea for a strong turnout, said:
"If ryou vote yes. then you
vote Jo instruct the summer
school executive board to enact
legislation providing for a jury
system, as is the case in regular
school session. If you vote no.
then you register your approval
of the current system now em
ployed, where the council de
cides the guilt or innocence by
a unamimous verdict and de
cides punishment by a majority
decision."
School Of Medicine
To Be Site Of Speech
Dr. Karl F. Meyer, director em
eritus cf the Hooper Foundation
of the University of California
Medical Center, will speak at the
j School of Medicine Friday at 3
j p.m.
1 Dr. Meyer is considered among
the top 10 leading bacteriologists
! cf the world. His subject here will j
! be "Certain Aspects of Plague (
land Psittacosis 'parrot feveri,"
! Dr. Meyer is world famous for j. Let your watchword by Dispatch,
his research in epidemiology and ; And practice what ycu preach,
j control of plague, parrot fever, Never let your chances,
j botulism, bruce'losis, leptospirosis, j Like sunbeams, pass ycu by,
For ycu'vl never miss the water
'Till the well runs dry.
Anonymous
ADVICE
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Is the maxim I wculd teach;
er diseases of animals traasmitted
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