4The Daily Tar HeelMonday, April 3, 1989 OMEN T ITT o SUMMER AND FALL 1989 summer sessioii i WMST190 PRACTICUM IN WOMEN'S STUDIES Nesotiated WMST 199 INDEPENDENT READING & RESEARCH Nesotiated PHIL 46 PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN M-F 11:20-12:50 FOX, E. (WMST 46) FEMINISM (fulfills B.A. level Philosophical perspective & General Collese requirement) LSRA101 WOMEN, WORK AND LEISURE ' M-F 9:40-11:10 HENDERSON, K. (WMST 101) (fulfills B.A. level Social Sciences perspective) SOCI30 FAMILY AND SOCIETY . M-F 9:40-1 1:10 TBA WMST 190 WMST 199 SOC124 (WMST 24) SOCI30 PHIL 46 (WMST 46) SUMMER SESSION II PRACTICUM IN WOMEN'S STUDIES Nesotiated INDEPENDENT READING & RESEARCH Nesotiated SEX AND GENDER IN SOCIETY M-F 1 1 :20-1 2:50 SWEAT, R. FAMILY AND SOCIETY PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN FEMINISM M-F 11:20-12:50 TBA M-F 1 1 :20-1 2:50 ALWARD, L.L. (fulfills B.A. level Philosophical perspective & General Collese requirement) PAIL SEMESTER WOMEN'S STUDIES COURSES WMST 190 PRACTICUM IN WOMEN'S STUDIES Nesotiated Nesotiated WMST 199 INDEPENDENT READING & RESEARCH CROSSLISTED COURSES AFRI61 AFRICAN WOMEN TTH 9:30-10:45 DUNBAR, R.A. (WMST 61) (fulfills B.A. level Non-Western perspective) CMPL92 WOMEN AND WORK 1850-1900 TTH 2:00-3:15 FURST, L. (WMST 92) (fulfills B A. level Social Sciences perspective) ENGL 86 AMERICAN WOMEN WRITERS TTH 2:00-3:1 5 Wagner-Martin, L. (WMST 150) ENGL 87 SOUTHERN WOMEN WRITERS TTH 11:00-12:15 DAVIS, T. (WMST 87) FRCH 94A COURTSHIP & COURTLINESS FROM TTH 1 1 :00-1 2:1 5 BURNS, J. (WMST 94 A) KING ARTHUR TO QUEEN VICTORIA (fulfills B.A. level Aesthetic perspective) HBHE 1 61 WOMEN'S HEALTH AND HEALTH (WMST 161) EDUCATION HIST 58 WOMEN IN EUROPE BEFORE 1 750 (WMST 58) HIST 1 69 WOMEN AND PUBLIC POLICY IN (WMST 1 69) TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICA HIST 220 READINGS IN EUROPEAN (WMST 220) WOMEN'S HISTORY LSRA 1 01 WOMEN. WORK AND LEISURE (WMST 101) (fulfills B.A. level Social Sciences perspective) MHCH103 REPRODUCTIVE PHYSIOLOGY AND M 1:00-250 (WMST 1 03) CONCEPTION CONTROL PHIL 46 PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN MWF 12:00-1 2:50 TIRREL,L (WMST 46) FEMINISM (fulfills B.A. level Philosophical perspective & General Collese requirement) PSYCH 183 CONTEMPORARY SEX ROLES WF 2:00-3:15 MARGOUS, A. (WMST 183) SPCHCM56 GENDER AND COMMUNICATION MW 2:00-3:15 WOOD, J. (WMST 56) DEPARTMENTAL LISTINGS SOW0387 AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN'S T 7:00-9:30 PM JOHNSON, A. (sec. 47) HEALTH ISSUES SPCHCOMM THE POETRY OF THIRD WORLD M 3:30-6:00 MADISON, S. 1 7 1 WOMEN IN PERFORMANCE TTH 2:00-3:15 EARP,J. TTH 12:30-1:45 HARRIS, B. TTH 12:30-1:45 DE HART, J. TTH 2:00-4:30 BENNETT, J. TTH 9:30-10:45 BIALESCHKI, D. HULKA, J. Earn a Certificate in Women's Studies! Requirements: 3 credits WMST 50, 1 2 credits other courses Will appear on transcript. For more information come by the WMST office , Caldwell 207, or call 962-3908 Fair offers first-hand! Book at UN By SHERRY WATERS Staff Writer Carolina Contact gave high school seniors who have been accepted to UNC an opportunity to experience a part of Tar Heel country Friday. "It was certainly one of the most successful 'Carolina Fair Days' that weVe had," said senior Lana Lewin, who has been involved with the program for four years and is chair woman of the Carolina Cpntact Steering Committee. Lewin also said Carolina Fair Days are the best recruiting tool in getting the top all-around students at UNC. "One of the prime focuses of the program is to improve the quality of students the University accepts." Anthony Strickland, assistant director of undergraduate admissions and one of the coordinators for the Carolina Contact Program, said the general purpose of Carolina Fair Days is to give prospective students an honest look at UNC, leaving out no details. "We hope that by giving these students an honest point of view about Carolina, this will help to resolve any apprehensions that they may have." Carolina Fair Day began at 1 1 :45 a.m when about 200 students, visitors and parents registered and ate lunch at the Morehead Planetarium Ban quet Hall. After a brief speech from Gillian Cell, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, students toured campus and visited several academic departments. The program gave students an opportunity to talk with representa tives from the student aid office the honors program, career planning, housing, faculty and Carolina Con tact. Several campus organizations, such as the Black Student Movement, The Daily Tar Heel, student govern ment and the Yackety Yack were also represented at the fair held in North Banquet Room of Lenoir Hall. The prospective students had a good chance to get all their questions answered during the program. Cell said. They were able to see the personality that the University has established. "And students will be talking to people that they are going to be coming in contact with every day at the University," she said. Valerie Carr, a prospective bio medical engineering major from Raleigh, said she really enjoyed the fair. "It made my decision in coming to Carolina an even stronger one I know for sure that HI be attending UNC this fall." Lewin, who was directly involved with the program, said the fair depended a lot on time and commit ment. The undergraduate admissions office, working along with Carolina Contact, invited prospective fresh men who were in the upper third of their high school class to the Caroling Fair Days program. Carolina Con; tact chose qualified UNC students to help with tours and answer questions! "Carolina Contact is very selective in who we choose to participate in the program," Lewin said. "We select students from N.C. Fellows, honors-, Order of the Bell Tower, Phi Eta Sigma and other organizations such as these to help out in the program" Strickland said one student who attended the fair commented: "Unless Virginia makes me governor of Virginia, and unless Michigan makes me president of General Motors V 111 be at UNC next year." . - Collection of Southern folklore to open By LISA ANTONUCCI Staff Writer Today marks the beginning of a new dimension of research at UNC." The opening of the Southern Folklife Collection, with its nearly 38,000 sound recordings, places UNC in the nation's top three collections for folk music research. "It is impossible to state the importance of this collection," said David Whisnant, an English profes sor who teaches a course in country music at UNC. "It is a tremendous source which will surely attract researchers and graduate students from all over who are interested in this field." The collection was established in 1968 by Curriculum in Folklore faculty members who played sound recordings for their classes. The initial archives were built around the field archives of the late professor Arthur Palmer Hudson. Through the years, the collection was built upon by researchers, faculty and students. "Graduate students are continually adding to the collection," said Daniel Patterson, chairman of UNC's Cur riculum in Folklore and a Kenan professor of English. "Students like Andy Cahan, who is already 'published,' and Mike Casey, who is now the University's permanent, staff member in the collection these students have compiled significant work, and we get the benefit," Patterson said. Yet the UNC Folklore Archives are find- out in IMMUER WPOIRTiDMiriES tomorrow in the DTH. a minor part of the collection com pared to the John Edwards Memorial collection. Previously held at the University of California at Los Angeles and purchased by the UNC in 1983, it contains more than 26,000 sound recordings, as well as 12 file cabinets of periodicals, photographs, song folios and manuscripts. "UCLA thought the collection belonged in the South," Patterson said. "We really bought it for a bargain; it was worth 20 times more than what we paid." The Southern Folklife Collection is strongest in sound recordings. There are more than 14,000 78s ranging from 1906 to the 1950s. The 6,000-plus LP collection starts in the 1920s. The 45s collection is mostly mainstream country music from the 1950s to the present. When someone wants to listen to one of these sound recordings, a staff member will transfer the original onto cassettes which can then be used in the collection's audio studio. More than 2,000 of the LPs have already been transferred to cassettes and are available for use in the non-print section of the undergraduate library. "We have a two-part purpose with this collection," said Mike Casey, director of the collection in Wilson library. "As an archive, we want to restore and preserve the recordings and yet make them accessible to everyone who wants to use them." The variety of music represented is enormous and ranges from blues to ballads, country to cajun, gospel to Tex-Mex and zydeco. There is also a strong representation of musicians from North Carolina. Guitarist Doc Watson from Deep Gap, bluesrrian Blind Boy Fuller from Durham and bluegrass banjo innovator Earl Scruggs from Flint Hill are just a few of the artists featured. . "Historians have often used manuscripts to reconstruct history, but not everyone left behind a 'paper trail," Casey said. "One can also look at songs, interviews and oral histories to understand people's lives and history better." I Furthermore, some feel that UNC is making an important statement by supporting the collection. Whisnant said the University was recognizing "the worth of a culture that people tend to overlook. People were pre viously concerned with the 'elite' culture when the culture of 'real' people' is just as important. The collection places UNC at the top of this study of vernacular culture." A According to Patterson, the collec tion has brought more to the Uni versity than just a resource of information. "The collection has really been helpful to the graduate students in training them in archival procedure. The more they work there, the more they extend their knowledge," he said. "It's been a long time coming, a culmination of many efforts. It's time to celebrate let the rest of the world know we are here." i MICHAEL CHRISTOPHER PETER STEPHEN KEATON LLOYD BOYLE FURST This morning they were playing ping-pong in the hospital rec room. Now they're lost in New York and framed for murder. This was never covered in group therapy. "mm! I i vw.;W,.'.;...( V .A . ,..s;;:-:i-y.f - mm?. ) . 'f'.'-V-' . 'u..'. I k A' American Hoart Association See something newsworthy! Gall 962-0245; E 1 rNCZZlC i I i I i n r 1 1 3 L Four guys on a field trip to reality. IMAGINE ENTERlMiNT CHRISTOPHER W. KMGHT .HOWARD ZIEFF "THE DREAM TEAM" SS LORRAINE BRACCO "!TTSJ0N CONNOLLY DA1D LOUCKA mMW McHUGH cJON CONNOLLYDAMD LOUCKA CHRISTOPHER W. 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