Wednesday, March 3, 1971
Workshop presents ideas
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by Jessica Hanchar
Staff Writer
Have you ever been in a class in which
you wake up by having the person sitting
next to you beat you on the back for a
few minutes?
Participants in the Association of
Women Students educational reform
workshop are incorporating new methods
and new ideas, including the "wake up
technique," into their discussions of
educational methods.
The workshops began Tuesday
morning and continue today.
Dr. Walter Sikes and Dr. James Shultz
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of the National Training Laboratory in
Washington, D.C., introduced the idea of
group learning and got the groups going
at the first workshop Tuesday morning.
The faculty members and students
paired up to get to know each other by
saying something about themselves they
would not normally say at first encounter
with a stranger. By talking and interacting
on a non-superficial, informal basis, the
participants became members of the
group on a one-to-one basis.
The two then selected another couple
and repeated the interaction. These
groups then picked other groups and soon
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by Mark Shapiro
Staff Writer
The Invisible University of North
Carolina (IUNC) will sponsor the
Carrboro Great Lecture Series during the
month of March. The lectures are part of
IUNCs drive to make Carrboro the "Paris
of the Piedmont."
All lectures will be given at 8 p.m. in
the auditorium of Carrboro Town Hall on
West Main Street. The opening lecture,
"A View from the Street" by Ed Tenney,
a local realtor and legislator, is scheduled
today.
Following lectures are "Why Crime?"
by State Bureau of Investigation Director
Charles Dunn Friday, "Issues Confronting
the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Metropolitan
Area" by Chapel Hill Mayor Howard Lee
on March 10, and finally on March 17,
"The Response of State Government to
New Trends" by Conservation and
Development Assistant Adrian King.
IUNC Emperor Nyle Frank hopes the
lectures will be an informal two-way
exchange rather than a formal talk, and
invites both students and faculty to
attend.
Frank calls the "Paris of the
Piedmont" drive an effort "to start
bringing people into Carrboro." IUNC has
already undertaken a number of projects
in Carrboro, including a trash pickup and
painting the walls of Barney's Animal
Kingdom.
Fall
raj
hi
Iges
nets 450
ellec
i.
More than 450 UNC men became
members of fraternities during spring
rush, an increase over the 395 who
pledged last spring.
The great majority of the pledges are
freshmen. "At least 25 per cent of the
eligible freshmen men pledged,"
estimated Todd Llewellyn, Inter
Fraternity Council rush chairman. He
arrived at this . figure by subtracting
freshmen withouta 2.0 QPA from the
freshman male student enrollment of
2,084.
"It was a good rush," said Llewllyn.
"The volume of rushees coming through
was not as high as in previous years, but
more of the people coming through were
certain of what they wanted."
He attributed some of the reasons for
the higher percentage of rushees pledging
to the less formal rush system and the
relaxing of contact rules.
"People are also evaluating fraternities
more and making decisions concerning
fraternities," Llellewyn added.
?AU fraternities took in some pledges,
the figures ranging from 8 to 32.
NATIONAL SHOWS PRESENTS
"The Concert of the Year"
Jamas Taylor
Carole ling
Jo Mama
Tomorrow 8:30 p.m.J
: DORTON ARENA
Good Seats $4, $5, $6
ON SALE NOW
j Record Bar Stores
Raleigh, Durham, Chape! Hill
; Thefm's Record Store
These activities point toward the
official "Paris of the Piedmont Day" on
March 21. Activities already planned
include a kickball game between IUNC
and Devil May Care (DMC), a baseball
game with the Carrboro Clansman
Baseball ' Team, a performance by the
Royal Theater Group and the filming of
this performance by the Royal Film
Group.
Frank added "cooperation of Carrboro
businesses and townspeople has been
really good," and said that further plans
for the March 21 celebration will be
announced in the near future.
the entire group began to know the other
members.
The afternoon session began with
members introducing newcomers to the
symposium in the "feed the hungry"
technique. 'Transfer, teach, share what
you got from this morning's session," said
Sikes and Shultz to the group. "Get the
momentum as a community going again.
Incorporate the newcomers."
The rest of the afternoon was devoted
to analyzing group process dynamics and
roles within the group by participating ia
and observing groups in action.
Sikes and Shultz first explained the
general levels of activity in groups,
process and content, the ways a group
discusses things and what it discusses.
Other levels of behavior include task
behavior, or achievement of goals, group
maintenance behavior and self-oriented
behavior.
Participants then formed four groups
during which they participated in
"learning" discussions and observed
group process. Each group gave the other
groups feedback on what it had observed.
Laboratory methodology will again be
used in the workshop this morning during
the "Micro-lab sampler of verbal and
non-verbal experiences." The session
begins at 10 a.m. in the Carolina Union.
The symposium concludes with a
clinic on education innovation at 1:30
p.m.
"We encourage faculty members and
students interested in new teaching
methods to come to the sessions," said
Diane Gooch, chairman of the event. "We
hope they can come for at least part of
the symposium."
Campus news briefs
Witness successful
says coordinator
Recent activities of Washington
Witness II have been very successful,
according to Jerry Adams, coordinator of
the peace group.
The group has received over 400
responses to their advertisements in
various newspapers which are part of the
follow-up activities for their visit to
Washinton on Feb. 23. More than $1,000
has been contributed to the Washington
Witness effort.
Adams said he was concerned that
most of the group's support came from
people in the Chapel Hill area; In order to
widen their base of support, Chapel Hill's
Witness group will match funds with a
WitnesS group in Winston-Salem to run an
ad in the newspaper there.
Washington Witness II will send a
newsletter in the next few weeks
reporting on the D.C. trip to all those
who have responded to their
advertisements, Adams said.
The peace group has been contacted
by the North Carolina Committee to End
the War in Indochina which is sponsored
by prominent North Carolina educators
and businessmen. -
The two groups are jointly
encouraging supporters of peace to attend
the speech of David Schoenbrun Friday
at 8 p.m. in Wait Chapel at Wake Forest
University in Winston-Salem.
Schoenbrun, foreign correspondent,
television commentator and author of
"Vietnam-How We Got In, How to Get
Out," is currently chief correspondent of
Metromedia and associated with the
Columbia University graduate school of
journalism.
Fine Arts Festival
sets photo contest
Student entries are now being
accepted for the Fine Arts Festival Photo
Exhibit in Suite A of the Carolina Union.
The photos will be on display n the
North Gallery of the Union during the
festival slated for April 12-18.
The number of entrees will be limited
to five per person and should be no
smaller than 8 x 12 and matted. The
name andaddressjf the photographer
should be written on the back of the
photograpn with the title and name of
photgrapher again printed on the front.
Entrees must be submitted no later
than March 25 and only the best entrees
will exhibited.
Health committee
briefs candidates
Members of the Student Health and
Welfare Committee will be available at
noon today to brief all presidential, vice 1
presidential, Residence 5 College
Federation chairman candidates as to the -state
of their investigation of the Student
Infirmary.
The meeting will be held in the
cafeteria of the Basic Science building
next to Memorial Hospital.
Theatre of Deaf
to perform here
Tickets are on sale at the' Carolina
Union for the National Theatre of the
Deaf, to perform in Memorial Hall
Thursday at 8 p.m.
Called "a stunning form of new
theatre" by the New York Times, the
company has perfomed on Broadway, on
six national tours, and on two European ;
tours.
The program includes two one-act
plays. "Woyzeck" is an adaptation of ;
George Buchner's classic play about the
tragic figure of the common man. The
other piece, "Journeys," is a collection of ;
writing by children.
The National Theatre of the Deaf is a
unique form. It combines the strong and
graceful sign language of the deaf with
mime, dance, music, movement and
simultaneous narration.
Two narrators provide the spoken
words for the hearing audiences. The deaf
actors are drawn from all over the
country, and their talent in bodily
communication comes naturally from
their everyday manner of "speech."
Tickets are $2.25 and $1.75 at the
Union or the door.
The Duke University Union
Major Attractions Committee Presents
Singer-Composer
LAURA NYRO
Sat Mar. 6 Duke Indoor Stadium 9 P.M.
Tickets $4.00, S3.50 And S3.00
Tickets On Sale At All Area Record Bars
And Record And Tape Centers, And At The Door.
This Will Be A Blanket Concert.
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