Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 21, 1968, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL Wednesday, February 21, 12 C3 Pace 6 Sororities Take 23 Twenty three girls pledged in the six sororities which sponsored spring rush this yeai Two sororities, Delta Delta Delta and Kappa Delta, did hot participate in rush. Approximately 100 girls went through rush, according to Susan Alexander, President of the Panhellenic Council. . Pledges are as follows: ALPHA DELTA PI: Karen Kcndrick, Rebekah Pope CHI OMEGA: Mary Earle, Polly Haines, Elizabeth Robinson, Bonnie Schultz KAPPA ALPHA THETA: Mary Euwer, Linda Karlage, Darncna Sain KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA: Judith Atwood, Louise Bloxom, Rebecca Ireland, Virginia Mailling PHI MU: Linda Kixon, Linda Elherington, Judith F r y e , Patricia Guarino, Jane Trapnell, Paula Wise PKI BETA PHI: Jeame Hahnson, Carroll Kyser, Betsy. Murrell, Deborah Patterson 1 4 - ' : ;m r v. ' ". ! . ii'- .; v " " -, " '- . - ? "- , . r . -. , J 4 f ' 1 -" Z ' ' ' ' - ' . - - s o. . , -. . , ' " . . 1 ' ' - v ; ' . ' ' . - f . -v " , ' S . v u " ' , ur.,-- - ' , .. J" m . s A ,, V ... - '.' '' ' 1 ' ' ' - '--':' ' i - , ' . 1 v . . . -. , . , .". ..4 -.-. -; DTH Photo by Steve Adams 'Grnnaiowr J! . ). f -'ys ItirdDim UN A 77 17 7T7 -. 1 - " --i-W - - - J.ii I tmmw0 4'- Abominahle Snowman? DTH Photo by Steve Adams Chapel Hill has its own abominable snowman. Really, it was a member of a plaster-mixing crew, working on the new nndergrad library. It seem that the plaster mix sticks almost as well as Chapel Hill's own mud and dust. At least it stuck to the "snowman" and his associates. Six University of North Carolina students were designated Feb. 19 by the Wood row Wilson National Fellowship Foundation a s among the best future college teacher prospects on the con tient. Four from UNC won honorable mentions. The UNC students named were among 1,124 college seniors at 309 colleges and universities in the United States and Canada. The win ners were chosen from 11,682 nominees from the 15 regions. UNC students and their fields were: Frank Parker Hudson Jr. of W. Paces Ferry Rd., Atlanta, Ga., economics; Mary D. Hyde of Rt. 2, Box 574-A, Candler, -English; Michael J. Vara of 2001 E. San Juan, Phoenix, Ariz., economics; Tracy L. Mars hallberg, philosophy; Frank P. Westbrook of 209-B Branson St., Chapel Hill (formerly of 1054 Nichols Dr., Raleigh), French; and William M. Woodall IH of 0-6 Colony Apts., Chapel Hill (formerly 1623 Geneva a., Charlotte), - Campus News Briefs 4 ram frS February J Peace The Peace Corps has established a Chapel Hill office in the Wesley Foundation which will be open for the re mainder of the spring semester. ' In addition to counselling, the office will sponsor weekly seminars, lectures, and films Opens Office For 1421. information, call 967- 'Problems Of Faith? To Meet Monday The Experimental College 1968 Companies Recruit Here Next Week I n corporated; International Business Machines Corporation (Summer jobs available). Thursday, February 29 Eli V . Lilly v& Company (Slimmer ine louowing companies will jobs available); Trust Corn- English. ' UNC students awarded honorable mentions were Daniel Cox of Rt. 7, Box ICO, Burlington, economics; Mrs. Margaret King of 1230 Iredell Dr., Raleigh, English; Charles Murray Jr. of Box 56 McKay St., Wagram, philosophy; and Patty Ritchie of S12 Fairmont Ave., Salisbury, sociology. North Carolina State University at Raleigh had two designates and one honorable mention, and the University at Greensboro had four designates and three honorable mentions. The total number o f Woodrow Wilson Fellowships awarded since the program's inception in 1954 exceeds 15,000. UNC has produced 124 Fellows during this period. In the last ten years, with funds from the Ford Foun dation amounting to $52 million, the Wilson Foundation was able to make direct grants to approximately 1,000 American and Cana.dian students annually to support their first year of graduate study. "Now our major role is to identify for graduate departments those students who in our view have the best potential for college teaching," Foundation President, Sir Hugh Taylor said. The Ford Foundation pro vides an annual grant of $L2 million to support the Wilson Foundation's recruiting and selection procedures. It also provides for 50 first-year graduate school fellowships for Canadians and up to 200 Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowships Annually. Out of funds from ether, sources, the Wilson Foundation expects to support 10 0. American students with .direct grants as Wilson Fellows. Prospective designates, after initial nomination by a faculty member, must submit creden tials (college transcripts, recommendations, and a 1,000 word statement of their in tellectual interests); have them reviewed and judged by committees; be interviewed; and go through the final, selec tion process which is based on regional quotas. Fellows receive one academic year of graduate education with tuition and fees : paid by the Foundation and a living stipend of $2,000. Ad ditional allowances are made for dependant children. The Woodrow Wilson pro-', gram was supported during its ; first 13 years by the Carnegie Rockefeller Foundation. Other North Carolina schools with winners included Ap plalachian State University cl), Atlantic Christian College (1), Davidson College (2). Duke University (12), and. Wake Forest University (2). : Honorable mentions in other; North Carolina schools in-; eluded Davidson College 3), Duke University (4), Wake" Forest University (1), ard! Winston-Salem State College (1). recruit on camnus durine the veeK ot February 26-March 1, of the Experimental class, Problems of Faith, will : P Hilton's a I! When the frog is being strangled, the ground hog, the Leprechauns, basketbaH---you name it it all takes a back seat to this crazy wild goings-on! It's not going to be nasty weather forever J . . r r if and Milton has to make room tor rrunung or spring. This is the last price reduction the last roundup. For $20.00 you'll find coats that were $65.00. For a pair of twos you'll find some dacwool sport coats that were $70.UU. For a pair of threes, look twice at wool sport coats regularly going tor ?u.w. For a pair of fours, you're getting into our high cotton Scottish Shetland $35.00 sport coats. . as nart College. The course will be held each Tuesday, beginning Feb. 27, at 7:30 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation. The objective of the pro gram, according to Galen Hull, Office of Public Affairs, Southern Region, is "to ac quaint applicants, and others interested in the Peace Corps, with selection, training and overseas service of the Volunteer. Washington staff officers will be available to present an overview of Peace ; Corps operations and aspirations. Thus far, sixteen students have signed up for course. RCS History To Be Told Over WUNC meet Monday, at 7:30 p.m. m the Parish House Chapel of the Cross at 304 E. Franklin St. The topic will be, "Is Man's Body the Whole Man or Merely an Envelope m Which He Lives company available); Monday, February 26 Seid man & Seidman; REA Ex press ; General Foods Corpora tion; Monsanto Company (Summer jobs available); Con- XTJL nPPfiVnt Mutual T.ifc Tncnranno vxpuxatiuu, for a Little While? New students are welcome Physics Colloquium -Planned For Today ' The UNC-Duke Physics cbi loauium will meet at 4 p.m. in 215 Phillips Hall. Dr. Wern? (Summer jobs General Electric Company; The Pillsbury Com pany ( Summer jobs available); Boise Cascade Corporation. Tuesday, February 27 The Prudential Insurance Company of Am erica; International Business Machines Corporation (Summer jobs available): pany of Georgia; International Business Machines Corporation (summer jobs available). Friday, March 1 United Merchants & Manufacturers, I n corporated; Westinghouse Electric Corporation: Shell Owens - Illinois J. Walter Thompson Company; the Junior College District, St. Louis County, Missouri. Students desiring interviews with the company . represent tatives should go to the Place ment Service, 211 Gardner HalL Trifi,prSor Weyerhauser Company. in the UNC Physics Depart- Wednesday, February ment will speak on 28 West Virginia Pulp : & Atomic Charge Dates in Cobalt Paper Company (Summer jobs Compounds by Mossbauer Ex- available) ; Standard Brands, periments." - ' - ; : ; ' lea and coffee will be served 1 V ' in 277 Phillips at 3:30 P.M. Chicken The Chamois Shirt in yellow, gold & wheat The leisure shirt Jacket, with satin yoke lining. mhos eioriiQusnusic... Cameron Will SpeaU Ml 112 ilOUICS IliIQT ;GF At Conference Today f For a pair of fives, you get the living end a great handwoven $95.00 Shetland sport coat. You can also play this two of a kind Frog strangler with our Suits Dac wools cut from $95.00 to strangler of $33.00; $100.00 to $44.00; Worsted wools from $110.00 unvested to $55.00 and vested, add a pair of ones. Pants have to be divisible by $5.00 da cron cottons from $16.95 to $5.00; da- cronwools $25.00 to $10.00; wools from $29.95 to $15.00. Next spring's half sleeve shirts cut from $8.50 to magic five. Long or short sleeve shirts, regularly to $8.95 at a single three. Long sleeve dress shirts or short sleeve sport shirts, all in fine single needle tailoring, regularly to $9.95, at single four. Johnston & Murphy and another famous make shoe, regularly, $32.00, at Frog stranger of $26.00. Scarfs solids and plaids, all from Scot land $3.95 to $2.99; $7.95 to $5.99; $14.95 to $10.99. Shetland gloves with leather palms, from Dumfrees, Scotland, strangled from $7.00 to $4.99. Zip lined raincoats cut from $65.00 to low $29.99. Lots of sweaters at a single nine that were $19.95 and at a dozen instead of terrible $25.00. These Frogstranglers are so much fun, lots of old Cupboard patrons keep asking when this wild event takes place. A discussion on the history and development of the residence college system will be broadcast over WUNC, channel 4, tonight following the Maryland DasketDau game. Bill Darrah, Governor of James, and Jed Dietz, Vice President of the Student Body, will trace the residence college concept as well as pointing out some of its practical ap plications. The program is part of the .Student Legislature State Af fairs Committee's program to "let the state know what is going on at UNC," according to Ed Briston, chairman of that committee. The show will be the first in a series of such programs A combined staff lecture and research conference will take place at 4:00 p.m. in the Clinic Hospital. Douglas G. Cameron, M.D. Professor and Chairman, McGill University Dept. of Medicine and the Montreal General Hospital will speak. Dr. Cameron's topic will be "Anemia Associated with Disorders of the S"m a 1 1 Intestine." Zoology Seminar Meets At 4:00 I the truly magnificent PUCCINI MASTERPIECE B-.OflbBaisHUKi A zoology seminar will be held at 4 P.M. in 107 Wilson Hall. Dr. John TT RinHoir M which will continue throughout ?arne?ie Institute of E 1 the snrinff anH intn npvt Washington. Deot. r 0 T7 U 1 7. -n ' . year. muiuiugy wiu speas. y - tt: t. ? - -it 1 lhree or four more hour documentaries on life at UNC will be presented this semester. 4 1 ' 1 s rjLc:::ric::sTi.YTCLD in nmusm . s I Y COLOR DY TECHNICOLOR I t V SHOWS 1-3-5-7-9 J I V TODAY ONLY ' 1 ' A L k .,.)ii.if.r fr :f of c m I A Snsursrtc I CUT OUT THE MIDDLE MAN BUY AND SELL THRU THE ; I CLASSIFIED ADS f His topic will be. "Studies on Sequence Homology of Ribosomal DNA's from Plants and Animals." m SHAGKTIM Ik TODAY (and every Wednesday) 2-5 If SP mi ' I LADY MILTON I CLOSING STRANGLER I m The response to our Impossible buys has been over whelmingshop early before everything is gone. We must make room for our new ladies lock well have the only one like it in the entire Southeast! Handful of chesterfield herringbone topcoats cut from $500)0 to ridiculous $20.00. Pamela Martin, Jeune Leigue, Crazy Horse, Yankee Pedlar, McMullen, Austin Hill, David Ferguson take your pick of all our fine brands all at Vz price or less. Hawaiian Jam swim suits to $16.00, at $4.00. Elizabeth Stewart swimwear regularly $16.00 to $35.00, further cut to $5.00, $750 and $10.00. Entire stock dresses regularly to $55.00, now further cut to $5.00; $750; $10.00; $1250 and $15.00, Sweater sets to $35.00, at low $15.00. Group ladies shirts to $7.00 at $159. All Ettienne Aigner pumps and flats and handbags at Vi price. Remaining stock shirts including Lady Hathaway at Vz price. YouH never have mere fun saving mere mansy! Si if r i n n m -5' 1 Cold Beer, Ch eap
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 21, 1968, edition 1
6
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