i U 'I f - i mie of ficfal " student newspaper of . the University of ' North (Carolina at lapel Hill, Mfhere it is published by the Summer School every Tuesday and nursday. Printing is done by Colonial Press, Chapel Hill, N. C. ........ Walter M.-Dear II M. Wallace Pridgen Hollo Taylor ... Leo J. Northart, Rosemary Boney Donald wogg ..... .. ........ . Gloria Phillips 1..ZT " Stuart " Irwin. Tom Paramore, Jonas Kessing, Barbara Tuttle, Margie Garner, Reg Mallette. . .-..John Lineweaver, Mildred White, Larry Stith usinefs Manager ews I Editor xf cuiive Editors irculaticm Manager Dciety Editor ..... lews Staff . eveiv s- by Stuari Irving Staff oos Come First A front page story on the library heat situation says the iystom of humidification in the stacks "was not installed for jiomlort of the students" because the State didn't provide for such a comfort in the budget. The present air conditioning system is supposed to protect the books when it works. I Hie singular part about the heat Jrouble is that students would not have any ventilation in the stacks if it weren't for he books. The stacks are windowless and the air conditioner Was constructed for the benefit of the books. The students are lucky to have any air. Their comfort is supplementary to Ithe welfare of the books. ' AompUcqfed'Joke ' The Tar. Heel regrets, and apologizes for, the publication of a story which took a man's life in vain. ! We hope that the individuals who enjoyed the "joke" now realize the seriousness of the matter and the deep complica- jtions which such a prank involves. j We wonder, too, if the persons involved ever considered what the role of a student newspaper is. The Tar Heel is a Student publication, published by students, about students, to give accurate information about the University community. Pressing Problems by Rollo Taylor ' O.K., ; Dr. J. femrose Harland, here is the helping hand you have been 'asking for the last 20-bdd ! years. For those not versed in the higher arts, e.g., Greek and Roman Art, etc., Dr. Harland is Carolina's favorite professor and for as long as any one can remember almost, he has been holding his archeology in the original "Old Weir of the campus, 111 Murphy Hall. The good doctor is faced with trying to get students to take notes during his classes when there is no possible way a human being can write in the seats of his auditorium. Each quarter, he asks students to bring a slidge hammer, dynamite, or any des structive force with them to rip out the seats. Evidently there is a shortage of such materials for the seats are still there, tearing students' clothing, giving them acute posterior cramps, and caus ing general confusion. "; Nor is there Jxny ventilation. Students are sometimes warned to bring their -own oxygen to class. In summer, it is . reported that Central prison sends over its worse customers iot a week in the "hole". In winter, the radia tors are used to explain various forma of non-functional art, "i The portrait of hatchet-faced Queen Bloody Mary Tudor, which usually glares at those-entering Person Hall" Art Gallery, was discreetly removed some weeks ago for the sixteenth annual Art Exhibition of University student work. (May 27-July27) Williams burgish Person Hall seemed to begrudgingly lend its faded, dull grey walls to this splashy line up of enthusiastic modernity. A Carolina art student is "free to investigate formal expressive values "which can't be com municated in words," as one pro fessor put it. In spite of this, we see a strinkingly familiar element prevading in all of thevexhibited works. There is a dutiful at tempt to express all thought con tent in the fashionable abstract symbols currently termed the "cult of .unitellegibility." Carolina art students today shy away from conventional represen tation enjoying the blind, igno rant use of chaotic abstraction, and covering their canvases with numerous master artists. Their work is often termed "modern" and acceptable to the advanced thinkers, ranging from Georges Rouault to Pablo Picasso. In short, this freedom of investiga tion has led to a blundering type of copying of stylistic techniques, rehashed and weakened by pos sible misunderstanding of the intellectual language - employed "1C BasT ; i ?I1M5",A"y peting in attempts to recreate rjaintmff and senlntnrp. i- j , . something that is crossed between George Birline and David Hunt lev, advanced art students, o. the weird psychological studies tribute several investigations in f Jerome Bosch and the night oil and canvas, seemingly com- marish fantasies of Salvador Dali. "; The editor "of the - Marshall college Parthenon, campus newspaper, says all facutly mem bers should take a quiz in Eng lish. The college president calls the suggestion "unjust and un fair." Students at Washington Uni versity, St. Louis, have orga nized a system of car pools designed to boycott the St. Louis public bus and streetcar service. The plan proposed by the school newspaper, Student Life. According to the paper stu dents have been dissatisfied wilh increasing rates and poor ser vice of the transportation com pany. About 1300 cars, says Student Life, drive to and from the university each day. This bit appeared in the Daily Reveille, Louisiana- State Uni versity: "For the second time since the new student body of ficers were sworn in this spring, the Student Senate has can celled its bi-weekly meeting. The reason this time is that someone neglected to mail cards to the senators. "AIL of this .prompts this newspaper to wQiider, if these representatives are unable to keep track of their regular meet ings, how do they expect to keep up with the important business of student govern ment?" The American Legion has called for a congressional inv - - . - m . . t . ; ligation ot ..auegca, comni 'fiV'the faculty! of r Sarah ; L;Uv - rence college, N. Y. ... . . . . 11 . Striking DacK, a cot i spokesman declared, "The t: , cannot be told in the thr.. ? .of this college, in the wii? , paintings and sculptures of : students if it cannot be taugnt freely in the classrooms." Educated Lassie Jumps 'The Babe1 Great Neck, N. Y. An Austin lass with a Phi Beta Kappa key and an educated swing is the new queen of US women's profes sional golf as a result of having won the $5,000 Transcontinental Championship. Pretty Betsy Rawls, adding her new title to her National Open crown, said modestly, "The Babe (Mrs. Babe Zaharias) is still best. When the Babe's right; Inobody can touch her." Miss Rawls, who majored m physics at New York University, gave up textbooks for golf, and with her recent victory boosted her winnings to $9,510.03 to sup plant, the ailing Mrs. Zaharias winner. Students at the University of North-Dakota decided in a poll recently that most students "shy away" from classroom discussions. Said one coed: "The system of education that most of us went through in high school didw not provide opportunity for. training in free expression of opinion. T-O-D-A-Y Places On Campus U JbJjLli. by Frod Crawf ord (Ed. Note) This is the first in a series of orientation articles by a Tar Heel staff reporter. Craw ford is not employed by any busi ness establishment in Chapel Hill. Future articles will cover New East Building, Geology Building and the Phi Assembly, Graham Memorial, New West, the Mono gram Club, and 1 others. Tucked away in the quiet cor ner of the basement of , Lenoir Hall The Pine Room, is a cool haven of comparative peace and quiet where the tired, hot, and hungry can relax with cold drink, dairy products of all kinds, light salad plates, and low priced sandwiches of all kinds. 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