Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 29, 1959, edition 1 / Page 5
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Credit eet Here Credit bureau and collection service executives from through out the southeast will gather here, Aug. 9-14, for their 14th annual management institute. William A. Kirkland of Dur ham serves as institute president and chairman of the board. Ad vance registration is being hand led by business manager-registrar J. Ernest Yarborough of Winston-Salem. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS -VISIT- DAIRYLAND Steaks Short Orders Seafood GLEN LENNOX SHOPPING CENTER Let Pete Do It Pete The Tailor 135V2 E. FRANKLIN ST. M PACE in The GSen Lennox Shopping Center On The Raleigh Road Fine Scandinavian imports: furniture, ceramics, crystal and china. Prints and facsimiles of drawings and paintings. Open Daily Except Wednesday 9:30 to 5:30 Wednesdays Close at 1:00 SUPER mm Carolina Tire Service, Inc. (formerly Carolina Motors) 301 S. Main St. Carrboro, N. C. Phone 8460 Bureau Execs August 9 Management of credit bureaus, collection services and merchants' association is studied as three seperate fields during the two year "core curriculum." Four prominent North Caro lina business executives will par ticipate in the advanced curricu lum on management. Coordinator will be Carl Roewe of St. Louis, Mo., educational director for the Associated Credit Bureaus of America. Dr. Rex. S. Winslow, director of UNC's Bureau of Business Ser vices and Research, will be lead off speaker for the inter-business exchange of ideas. Three Chapel Hillians will help teach courses: Prof. J. 0. Bailey and Prof. Norman Mattis of the UNC Department of English; and W G.. Slattery, lecturer in distri butive education. Institute sessions will be held in Carroll Hall in the adult edu cation facilities of the School of Business Administration. CAMPUS SEEN Carolina gentleman and lady friend sitting in arboretum on a hot Friday afternoon with their feet immersed in the brook. Anything to beat the heat! Will Compare U.S., U.S.S.R. Economies Blackman Named Dr. James H. Blackman of the UNC faculty has been se lected to help in a study of comparisons of the economy of of United States with that of the Soviet Union. He will be an expert witness in November. 1959, on a study undertaken ty the Congress ional Joint Economic Commit- SAFE -fa Retreads at V2 New Tire Prices fc One Day Services We Guarantee Our Treads OTHER SERVICES US Royal Tires Amoco Gas fc Auto Repairs Gulf Oil Gives UNC $1,000 For Research A check for $1,000, present ed to UNC by the Gulf Oil Company, will be used for re search in "statistical samp ling." The thousand dollars is one of forty grants made to col leges and universities over the nation in support of special programs of education and re search. S. J. Usher of Greensboro, district manager of the Gulf Oil Corp. presented the grant to Dr. W. M. Whyburn, vice president of the Consolidated University of North Carolina. Others here for the occasion were C. E. Medlock and F. W. Wooding of the Atlanta, Ga. headquarters of Gulf Oil, and Dr. Alva L. Finkner, professor of experimental statistics, N. C. State College, Raleigh. The Gulf Oil Corporation has an extensive program of "Aid to Education", including merit scholarships for students, mat ching funds to institutions by employees, faculty salary sup plementation, direct grants, graduate fellowships and other financial assistance to higher education. tee in Washington. An . authority on industry structures in Russia and rates of economic growth, Dr. Black man is a research associate in the Institute for Research in Social Science and a lecturer in economics in the School of Business Administration. Announcement of Black man's selection was made known here by Chancellor Wil liam B. Aycock. Representa tive Richard Boiling (D., Mis souri), chairman of the sub committee on economic sta tistics of the U. S. Congress, notified Blackman of his ap pointment on consulting pan els. The third of a series of stu dies by the Joint Economic Committee, the project is an outgrowth of previous work by the committee in this subject area in the 83rd to 85th Con gresses. BJackman will serve as a member of a group of special ists on industry selected from throughout the United States. Panel members have been ask ed to prepare papers for dis cussion before the subcommit tee in a public hearing in Washington in mid-November. The UNC economist has been ' invited to make comparisons of industry structures and rates of growth of the U. S. and Russia. Other members of the industry panel will pre pare discussions on investment and management. The papers, summaries and discussions will be published in full in the hearing volume at the completion of the study. In addition to the panel on industry the subcommittee will conduct hearings with panels in subjects as popula tion and labor force, agricul ture, levels of living, transpor tation, and national income and product A final group of papers will synthesize these findings and relate them to national policy issues. . THE UNC NEWS -WEDNESDAY, JULY 2 1959 PAGE 3 GM's Got It- Anything From DanclngTo Pool By JANE McCORKLE Do you ever get the pool hall itch? Do your feet feel like dancing, but your pockets feel empty? Are you tired of sitting up in your room all iday because nothings going on? Then come to Graham Me morial, UNC's student union, because everything's going on. In the basement of GM, along with the barber shop and game rooms is the Ren dezvous room. Here is an ideal place for a young man without a car to take a date. It offers a 100 record juke box and an occasional combo and plenty of dancing area. Down the hall across from the soft drink and candy ma chines are the local ping pong and pool rooms. Photo-fanatics are invited to use the dark room. Although chemicals aren't furnished, all developing and enlarging fa cilities are available. The main lounge is upstairs on the main-floor. Here, under the influence of giant fans, overstuffed chairs and strains of album music from speakers on the cedar paneled walls, To Panel a fi 7 . DR. JAMES H. BLACKMAN Book Worm's Delight Used Bookt including used paper-backs, starting as low as 3 for 25, used texts, many at special prices, and running on up to really rare and expensive books. Dollar Books A table full of new books priced at $1.00. New Book Fiction, poetry, non-fiction plenty of every thing to browse through. Children's Books Most of them for every age and every purse! Com treasure-hunting in North Carolina's most famous bookshoo! THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 20S East Franklin Street Open 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. run, lady, run ... kins f chapel hill for jewelry. j students study, relax and talk. Music from the record li brary at the main desk, is play ed in the sitting room over the hi-fi set only by student re quest The record selections include popular, jazz and clas sical music. A magazine rack contains 50 ' different publications. Card "tables are set up by the stu dents for bridge, canasta, .' chess, monopoly and checkers. Equipment may be drawn from the main office where there is also a mimeographing and a poster service. A kitchen equiped with vending machines and a TV room with a color TV set are also on the first floor. , Student activities are organ ized in the offices on the third floor of Graham Memorial. The Student Council, Daily Tar Heel offices, Carolina ' Quarterly and Honor Council offices are located here along with several small conference rooms. ' Three dollars of the summer activities fee each student pays goes to the student union for ' its upkeep. The Union is run entirely by the students, with the exceptions of Mr. Howard Henry, the permanent director, and Mrs. Douglas Fambrough, the secretary at the main desk. Floaters, the "marine corps" of the organization, walk " around the union "at your ser- : vice" to open windows and doors, find equipment, give di rections and keep things in order. Although the union has been. " used more this summer than last, the GM staff doesn't thinfe the students are taking advant- " age of the union's opportuni ties. Mr. Henry ciied three rea- sons why overcrowded condi- 1 tions characteristic of the win j ter terms aren't a problem dur ' ing the summer sessions. "We ' I don't have air conditioning in the first place. We're hoping to get it by next summer. Then ' the students go away to the beach for the weekends, to have a summer vacation along with summer school. And be cause it isn't in the general trend of traffic, few people drop in to see what we have to- . offer." Will you? 1 PERFECT IDIOT! A UNC student recently made the perfect "zero" on an hour quiz but all he got from it was a few laughs from the clcss. Knowing nothing of the sub ject matter on an essay quiz, he turned in a blank blue book and: failed to sign his name or pledge. When the quizzes were return ed the professor" said. "I was able to deduct which quiz booklet wax your's Mr. X" "I didn't mean to cause you any trouble," the student's re plied, "I would've signed the pledge, but I didn't have any in formation to give and you can see I didn't receive any." right to the studio of chartes Hopkins of chapel hill for the only unique hardwrought corn temporary jewelry in this part of the country, gals who are in the know all go to charles hop- originally designed inexpensive
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 29, 1959, edition 1
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