PAGE FOUR
THE OEABLOTTX OOLLKOIAIT
MAY^ 1963
Examination Schedule
Last classes will meet on Tuesday, May 21. Examinations for classes meeting at 2:30 and 2:30 P.M.
are being individually scheduled.
May 23 8:30 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
May 24 8:30 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
May 27 8:30 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
May 28 8:30 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
May 29 8:30 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
May 23 6:30 p.m.
May 24 7:00 p.m.
May 27 5:00 p.m.
8:0Q p.m.
May 28
5:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
May 29 6:00 p.m.
FOR DAY CLASSES
Classes which meet at 10:00 a.m. Tuesday.
Classes which meet at 1:00 p.m. Tuesday.
Classes which meet at 10:30 a.m. Monday
Classes which meet at 1:30 p.m. Monday
Classes which meet at 9:30 a.m. Monday
Clsses which meet at 12:30 p.m. Monday
Classes which meet at 8:30 a.ip. Tuesday
Classes which meet at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday
Classes which meet at 8:30 a.m. Monday
Classes which meet at U?30 a.m. Monday
FOR EVENING CLASSES
Classes which meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday
Classes which meet at 7:00 p.m. Monday
Classes which meet at 5:00 p.m. Monday
Classes which m&st at 8:00 p.m. on Monday
Classes which meet at 5:00 p.m. Tuesday
Classes which meet at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday
Classes which meet at ff:00 p.m. Monday
Students
At Trade
By Joyce Pressley
During the 1962-63 Trade Fair,
held here May 4-U, Charlotte
College was responsible for the
Higher Education Booth.
The booth, designed in Ra
leigh, was assembled in the Co
liseum by Mr. Hutchinson, Bill
Thrift, and several others. It
consisted of several raised out
lines of North Carolina, on which
were graphs showing the num
ber of students in the past and
noting the expected rise for the
future. The names of all of
North Carolina’s junior and sen
ior colleges and universities
were also given.
included in the booth was a
model of the future Charlotte
College, showing how the cam
pus will look when it is com
pleted.
Charlotte College students
were responsible for manning the
booth during the one hundred
and twenty-eight hours that the
Fair was open to the public.
Among the hardest workers at
the Fair was Miss Mildred Eng
lish, who had to contact the stu
dents who worked at the Trade
Fair and to make sure that the
booth was manned at all times.
Those students who participa
ted were Becky Choate, Deloria
Purser, Ftob Newman, Judy Idol,
Pat Atkins, Doris Jarrett, Ge^n
Thornburg, Judy Morgan, Mary
Fisher, Reggie York, Susan Web
er, Joyce Pressley, AndriaPrut-
nick, Pam Barrier, Barbara
Blythe, Tommy Winstead, Bob
Andrews, Judy Smith, Judy An
derson, Beth Davis, -Patricia
Stallings, Beth Groom, Joe
Sabatini, CJiarles Boone, Susan
Proctor, Donna Cathey, Bob Al
exander, Judy Hardison, HUda
Gray, AUce Harrison, Baiba
Lukevics, Freddie Hossie,
Ronnie Webber, Morris Spear
man, Sharon Bush, Marilyn
Holmes, and Tommy Estridge.
Help
Fair
Botany'
Operations
Expanded
By Sam Lindeman
For those who have been mys
tified, the egg-shaped curbs in
our parking lot are meant as pro
tection for trees, to be planted
there in the fall. There will be no
planting now, because of the late
ness of the season.
The work on the new lake in
front is on schedule. The dam
is nearly finished; it only re
mains to rlear the land, dig out
the lake bed in spots, and put
in ground cover, which will pro
bably be rye grass. By Thanks
giving the lake should be fUling
from a spring, which will be
underwater by the time the lake
fUls. The purpose in planting
grass on the bottom is to hold
down the mud effects esperienced
by Duke Power Company at Lakes
Wylie and Norman. By the time
the lake Alls it will be a beau
tifully clear body of water and
an attractive addition to the cam
pus.
Planting in the Arboretum has
been completed until next fall.
Awards Are
(Continued From Page Three)
The Collegian.
The Bill Mitchel Award, which
combines scholarship and lead
ership, was made to two
members of the graduating class:
Thomas Click Dutton and Sandra
Louise Hodges.
There were three awards for
highest scholastic average: in
freshman chemistry, Roy David
Bauqpm; in freshman engineer
ing mathematics, Billy Ray Is-
ley; and in sophomore engineer
ing physics, Ray Everett Young.
THE AMBER HOUSE RESTAUJIANT
5625 N. Tryon St.
3 Miles from C. C. on N.
29th
Featuring
BLUE RIBBON STEAK — SPAGHETTI
Collegians Try Our Specialty
HOAGI BURGER
ServeT With Lettuce Tomato, FF and Cold Slaw
(A Me«l In Itself)
Plants displayed by Charlotte
CoUege at the Southeastern Gar
den and Flower Show have been
put in on the shores of the pond,
in a “Bog Garden” display. Dur
ing the summer, work vrtll go
forward on utilities and support
facilities, as well as on the
clearing and levelling of the
access roads. Plants and trees
presently in the Arboretum will
be classified , and tagged with
specimen names and numbers.
A cross file will be available
for the serious student of bo
tany.
Plans for next year also caU
for a second entry in the South
eastern Garden and Flower Show,
once again to be held at the Mer
chandise Mart. .The addition of
a greenhouse to the campus will
permit greater variety in the
second entry, with more forced
blooms and other stages in plants’
life cycles.
The new greenhouse will mea
sure fourteen by twenty-six feet.
AT THE 1963 TRADE FAIR, EDUCATIONAL SIGHTS WERE UFTED
TO THE LAMP OF KNOWLEDGE SHINING IN A CRYSTAL SPHERE,
A SYMBOL OF PROGRESS.
the particular beauty of each
season, further accented by re
volving spotlights.
In the center of a dancefloor
bordered by large white columns
hung a beautiful chandlier.
Spring Dance
Held May 11
The last social event of the
year was one to be remembered.
It was the beautiful Four Sea
sons Ball, held at Park Center,
Saturday, May 11.
The evening began at 8:00 and
terminated at 12:00.
The four seasons, spring, sum
mer, fall, and winter, were re
presented by four lovely gardens
against the waUs of Park Center.
The gardens were draped in blue
crqpe paper, giving the illusion of
looking out a picture window onto
COLLEGIANS
GO FOR . .
Open Kitchen
PIZZA
ISIt W. MOREHEAO^ ST.
PHONE 975-744»
SUMMER WORK
COLLEGE MEN
Lairgest Company In The Teaching Machine Field
Has Summer Job Opportunity For You. If Select
ed, Your Earnings Can Be In Excess of $1500 This
Summer.
Applicants Must Be:
(1) Exceptionally Neat In Appearance.
(2) Above Average In Intelligence.
Students Selected Will Be Eligible On A Local‘Level For:
(A) $2000 Cash Scholarship.
(B) Additional $1000 Cash Scholarships Awarded Weekly.
(C) To Win One of the Auatirt-Healey Sports Cars.
Pleasant and Instructive Work. All Cars Furnished.
For Interview and Furttier Information Report To
Room K - 317
11:30 A. M.
Promptly At 12:30 P. M.
Monday, May 20,
-or-
7:00 P. M,
$350 Per IVlonth Guaranteed Salary To Qualified Students.