Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 22, 1952, edition 1 / Page 3
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PAGE 3 rientation For Unirsity Employes S o Begin n Sept. ari IM XAMS THE DAILY TAR HEEL, THURSDAY MAY 22.1952 CoG O tiafed 13 S oriel. PI by Diane Dewey Orientation of new coeds entering the University in the fall will begin at noon Thursday, September 18, and continue through September 24, which is the first day of classes. Approximately 300 new girls are expected. Smith and TCarr dormitories, formerlv ooru- pied by nursing students, will be Way Union Gives if yne univ. Radiq Station (Sieial to The Daily Tar Heel) DETROIT, MICIL, May 21. Approval of the gift of FM Radio Station. WDET to Wayne Univer sity by the Automobile Workers International Union CIO was given here recently by the De troit Board of Education. The Union offered the land, ra dio tower, transmitter, studio building and studio equipment free and clear of any conditions. The value of the gift is approxi mately $125,000. Dr. David D. Henry, president of the University, .told the board, "The University's operation of WDET will have four important results for the University and the community: first, it will enhance- the training opportunities of students majoring in radio education; second, it will make pcsible . bringing to the com munity man' educational and cultural programs, both from the University directly or from re sources available to the Univer sity; third, it will greatly enhance the public interpretation of the University's work; and finally, it wilt be "an important asset in de veloping plans for educational television for the Detroit area. "We plan at once to participate in the educational tape network of educational FM stations and hope in the near future that there will be direct regional and opened to undergraduates. The job of the Women's Orien tation Committee, headed by Saralyn Bonowitz, is to plan the program that each new coed will follow on her arrival at the Uni versity. Each member of the committee will assume responsi bility for one day during the orientation period. The commit tee will help direct the new girls into campus activities and guide them academically and socially. An extensive card filing . sys tem will be used for the first time, in which each girl will list ac tivities 'that she is interested in. These lists will be compiled by a central board and be sent to the various organizations for ref erence. . Orientation activities will in clude campus and library tours, the Chancellor's reception and dorm coed hours. During this time the leaders of some of the organizations will give informal talks. A highlight of the orientation program will be a lawn party given jn the court facing Mclver, Kenan and Alderman dormi tories. The coed ball, held for both new and old girls, is sched uled later in the week. Student advisers are request ed to live in the dormitories dur ing the quarter. These advisers are students chosen by the orien tation committee to help the new girls in becoming acquaint ed with the campus. Other members of the Orienta tion Committee are Carman Nahm, representing the Women's Honor Council; Babs Wooton, Orientation Chairman last year; The University is cooperating with the Treasury Department in adopting a payroll-savings for bonds plan, Chancellor Rob ert B. House said yesterday. Each employee in the Uni versity is eligible to participate by signing a payroll deduction authorization and all employees will be solicited for the purpose of joining the bond plan. An employee may designate any amount, not less than $1.25 per pay, as his deduction for bond purchases. An employee may change the amount of his de duction at any time and shall have the right to withdraw from the plan at any time. All expenses coincident to solicita tion and administration of the bond plan will be paid by the University. , The purpose of the bond plan is to encourage our University employees to save a small por tion of their earnings for them selves, to provide for our em ployees a method of preparing for future expenditure such as childrens education, vacation or sickness and to provide a safe investment in America, House said. The bonds pay three per cent interest compounded semi-annually and the bond will be mailed to your .home by the issuing bank in approximately 10 days. -at- UNICORN Book Shop over Sutton's Drug Store OPEN 9 to 6 FRIDAY 7 to 10 Bargains In Books national educational network, of-i Anna Beason, new president of ferings for the community." The union will continue to op erate the station until Wayne's application for transfer of the li cense is approved by the Federal Communications Commission. There are more than 290 to bacco auction warehouses in North Carolina, the nation's lead ing tobacco producer. the YWCA; Betsy Norwood, pres ident of the Women's Athletic Association; Nancy Ripple, presi dent of the Independent Coed Board; Virginia Hall, president of fhe Women's Resident Council; Dee Kline, chairman of advisers; Pellen Speck, chairman of advis ers last year, and Betty Denny and Marcia Harrer, advisers from the Dean's office. r A V ' - - r ' - rt' ' 4 .. . i. - r,r,r ToftDTPn BiT.nT "ROB BOUGHTON (left) stands by as Tom Martin (second from left), field director of the Eisenhower Vol. unteers for Northern California,, gets aetition 9ture from rancher Fred Vannucci and his wife in Yolo County. Since Ikes name is not on the California June primary ballot, petitions are being obtained calling, on the state's delegate .to nominate .Ike, Campus Interviews on Cigarette; Tests No. 42... THE; PORCUPINE 0" mi the r ( "Thev picKed on sgp- , i . tried to neeaie tin , .-"V..- '-:... w.Wtii 1 vl?- & ; & 'li He's listened to the weak thread of so many shallow claims he's fed-up ! His point is there's a thorough test of cigarette mildness. Millions of smokers throughout America concur. - It's the sensible lest... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments ! Once you've tried Camels in your "T-Zone" (Tfor Throat, -T for Taste) you'U see why... . Ms-' YAW After ail the Mildness Tests . . Off& t 4 at thr convention, t ? - ':.-. - ' - IV . -u-iereair. , iUW""n, a nice nte
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 22, 1952, edition 1
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