Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 17, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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LEATHER B v l 0 ' j -i- il l f X 'Njy 1 L t I I v - -J I I r 1 f ! I 1 1 I I n cgai If V V i iT I f ! II r I I I ' i i i I j yii ""- CUT RULE The proposed en won't v rk, Se editorial, pas two. lain t. 1 r-51 ill i"3 Cowip3.(t CP) Wire 5ervic n CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1956 Offices In Graham Memorial Foua paces this i::-- ! t ;!1 If ?! ic : I air on a bi i. NEIL BASS I ' .4 ! j3df cl Farty has Won the ! ic confidence. Now vc shall ! i keep their respect." So Lambeth upon his elcc spthairman for 1955-57 at last night. i c:l defeated Gardner Fol 3 as ia turn acclaimed i-nan after the withdraw- -dv Mf.aor. Ester Ballcntine was named ;rcrctar over Miss Anne f 1 Long got the nod for party j !-5 without opposition. i t . . Warren was awarded the bat-arm's post over Mike I i cooing Party Chairman d Bryan and recently elect J.:cnt body President Bob ? idd:ssed remarks to party U z, who stressed the need for e student participation" "to :.a strong student govern- ris presented an ingraved Ai? outgoiis party vice-chair-:'j Pat McBane. He also re- ii standing ovation by party ):rs. who called for a "joining It" of hands by both stu j:d administration, also re- I I standinj ovation by mcm- tti to the party advisory hee were Brandon Kincaid, I Brooks, Andy Milnor and FarrelL I Holmes was elected without i';onto supplant Benny. Huff Lesislature representative I jora Men's IL orman Young congratulated all party members "who were a part of the winning team." He also told members that he realized the many "problems" which were confronting student government. He cited the parking 1 Sh m Jm - - ii. problem as the number one exam ple. In closing his remarks, Young said, "Now we'll go to work." Young will announce plans for the coming year and appointments at next week's meeting. 1 7 Carter was picked as the Legislature whip for the ; assembly. At most 2 -or r ppsy ounseiors Approximately 200 applications Sept. 13-17. Counselors will not ror .Orientation counselors have have to be on campus until Sept. been received, according to Bill 13. McLean, Orientation chairman.. I -ft :? 1 X ' - i , 1 .f i I. 1 Sonny Hallford, new president There were only 190 at 6 cm. of the Interdormitory Council. yesterday but McLean said he recently said the , Orientation "was expecting 200" by the dead- counselor benefits in three ways: line, which was last night. (1) He renders 'valuable service Interviews for the positions will to ' tne camPus. (2) He gains ex start today, according to McLean, 1 perience through "working with and will last all week. Anv annli- new People and (3) He gains per- ronijA Music ogram To Presented Collegium Musicum, under direction of Gene Strassler, PEsent a concert of Baroque t tonight at 8 o'clock at Hill I' program will feature Caris oratorio "Jephthah," written j-Jr solo voices' and six-part j-s- Jim Pruett, tenor from Mt. iU sing the part of Jeph- the Israelite leader, p- Martha Fouse, soprano of P1 Hill, will sing Filia, Jeph- daughter. Miss Roberta Dix , - from Raleigh, will be the i'K and James Chamblee, of piton, is the bass soloist. The ."-5BS scored for the solo duet sunj by Miss Jan Saxon of ;Kt and Mrs. Jean Harper ,' a of Dry Fork, Va. p?'Je instrumental music to penned will include Benedet ;'ello's "Sonata in F Major" j cello and harpsicord; selec ffrwn the "Luenburg Organ 'zy and Loeillefs "Suite" j and harpsicord. These Y Performed by Miss Mary Carke, 'cellist from Wash- D- C; Miss Lillian Piber jPsicordist of Chapel Hill, Shannon, organist of j orks to be heard on the ly Evening Scries program i; .choruses from Marcello's Pctico-armonico" (choral on tht first fifty Psalms i ,, u'' IfClections are from the fi' I Uing, Miserere mei Deus, j scored for alto, tenor, bass, - -uu coniinuo. airs, uvi- cants who are unable to be pres ent for the interviews, he said, should contact Mebane Pritchett, chairman of the selection commit tee, at the Phi Delta Theta House for a new interview time. Old counselor manuals will be available in the student govern ment offices for study, McLean said. Student constitutions may be picked up at the Y Building, Gra ham Memorial and Lenoir Hall. Applicants for the counselor jobs, said McLean, are expected to have a thorough knowledge of the Honor Code, campus life and governmental systems. Orientation for next fall will te British Scholarships Will Bo Discussed Today Miss ' H. B. Lawrence, of the British Embassy in Washington, will be here today to talk with undergraduate and graduate stu dents about British universities and scholarship opportunities for American students to study in the British Isles. She will hold a seminar-type discussion on the subject in 108 Caldwell Hall at 3 p.m. All inter ested students have been invited to attend the meeting. Individual or group interviews with Miss Lawrence for other parts of the day may be arranged through the secretary of the Political Science Dept. 101 Cald well, telephone 9-1581. Cheerleaders Students interested in trying out for the cheering squad have been asked to meet in Roland Parker 1 of Graham Memorial Thursday at 7 P-m. ; No previous experience is neces sary to try out. The meeting wall be a short miroautiuij - sonal enjoyment and satisfaction. I s Are On few? W I m0 : I f 0 J. I J UNC Professors To Retire In July Six faculty members, who will retire July 1, are pictured to gether at the Old Well. They ire (left to right) Dr. W Carson Ryan, Kenan professor in the School of Education; Dr. Dudley D. Carroll, former dan of the Business School; Dr. William J. Mc Kee, professor of Education in Extension Teaching; Dr. Allen W. Hobbs of the Mathematics Dept. and former dean of the School of Arts and Sciences; Phillips Russell of the Journalism School, and Dr. Harry W. Crane of the Dept. of Psychology. (UNC Photo by Monroe Campbell) Miss Marcy Krafchick To Be Quarterly Editor Miss Marcelline Krafchick, of Philadelphia, Pa., has been named editor of The Carolina Quarterly for the year 1956-1957 by the Edi torial Selection Committee. She .succeeds Bill Scarborough, of Mt. Gilead. Miss Krafchick, a Sraduate student at UNC, is work ing on her master's degree in the Dept. of -Dramatic Art and is serv ing as a graduate assistant in that department She is also the publici ty director for the Carolina Play makers. - New Mai l box Placed At Lenoir Ha The campus has a new mailbox for students who don't get down town often enough to mail their letters. The new mailbox, sparkling with red, white and blue paint, is locat ed at the north end of Lenoir Hall. Pick-up times for, mail deposited in the new box is 11:30 a. m. and 5:30 p. m. on weekdays and Satur days and 5:30 p. m. on Sundays and holidays. According to J, Paul Cheek, Cha nel Hill postmaster, there have been a great number of requests from students for a mailbox nearer the dormitories. He added that the new box has been planned for about a year,ut that the Post Of fice has just recently acquired a surplus of boxes which permitted another one to be placed on campus. cn and Miss Joanna both of Chapel Hill, will L , 0la accompaniments. , s,er- graduate assistant in , sic Dept.. of Anolln. Pa., has inducting rehearsals of the nce the besinnint? of the "fr- This will be their first UNC Coed is Named President Of State Future Teachers Dept. Miss Barbara O. Bennett, jun: ior education major, has been el ected president of the Future Teachers of America Dept. of the North Carolina Education Assn. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. rr a Bennett Sr. of Chapel Hill, Route 1. she is studying elemen tary education and has been active in various campus groups, includ-. ing Town Girls Associaton (vice president 1955-56), Independent f Women's Council, and the greater) council of the Baptist Student Union. She was recently named presi j 4t,o Frank P. Graham chap- ter of the FTA here at UNC for the 1956-57 "school year, moving up from the vice, presidency. Since enrolling, Miss Bennett has worked as a student assistant at the Uni versity library. A 1953 graduate of Chapel Hill Hi2h School, she was awarded the Rotary Club Scholarship given by Miss Krafchick completed her undergraduate work at Beaver College in Pennsylvania where, during her junior and senior years, she was editor-in-chief of the lit erary magazine, The Beaver Re view, , and literary editor of the college year book. She also was President of the college chapter of Pi Delta Epsilon.L National " Honor Fraternity in Journalism, and found time to write and direct the annual origin al play at the college. ' During her senior year a prize of $200 was awarded Miss Kraf chick for receiving the . highest grades in her department. Her ability in creative writing brought her the annual Orchid Award, and in 1954-1945 she received Beaver College's first Fulbright Scholar ship. . As newly selected (editor of The Carolina Quarterly Miss Krafchick made the following statement: "I hope to strengthen the Quarterly as an instrument chiefly through which creative - writers on this campus can see their highest quali ty material published. There should also be occasional works by or about writers-who. have already attained considerable success. "I hope to institute a traditional cover design and format with which the Quarterly can be iden tified from year to year. If we can afford it, I'd like reproduced in each issue a painting by some one in the UNC Art Dept. I hope a lot of people will take an interest in the magazine and help me with it," she said. Planetarium Begins New Show Tonight "Things That Fall From the Sky" is the title of the new dem onstration opening tonight at the Morehead Planetarium and con tinuing through May 21st. The demonstration is about comets, meteors and cosmic radia tions that appear in the heavens periodically 7 " and create : wide spread interests To know , in ad vance the. characteristics of these phenomena enables one to accept their frequent appearances , with positive identification and intelli gent understanding. N With the opening of the new show, the Planetarium will-revert to its usual schedule of perform ances, which are nightly at 8:30 o'clock with matinees Saturdays at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. and Sun days at 3 and 4 p.m. Cancer Program "The Living Proof," an inter view with six persons who have been cured of cancer and rehabili tated will be shown over WUNC Television tonight at 8:30 o'clock. The N. C. Medical and the Orange County chapter of the" N. C Cancer Society are sponsor ing the film, in which H. V. Kal tenborn interviews the former pa tients. It was prepared by the American Medical Association. GM Director Candidate To Come For Interview By MONROE CAMPBELL The Graham Memorial Activities Board approved yesterday a recom mendation that the "strongest can didate" for the position of Student Union Director be brought here for further interviews with the board. . Howard Henry, assistant to the director of the student union at i Wisconsin University, was named the' "outstanding choice" for the position held - by Jimmy Wallace since his resignation last Spring by Exchange Scholarship The selection of the exchange student for the Carolina-Goettin- gen exchange scholarship will be Wisconsin University is connected a committee appointed by GMAB to select and screen candidates. The committee has just returned from the Assn. of College Unions National Convention at Purdue Un iversity where they interviewed 10 candidates for the job here.4 Dr. William H. Poteat, Jimmy Wallace, Sam Magill and Bob Young comprised the committee making- the s recommendation that Henry be brought here for further interviews. All expressed great de sire to obtain him for- the job. , "We would be extremely fortu nate to obtain one who has so much ability and experience in the field of student activities," Dr. Po teat said. Henry has been in stu dent union work 20 years and at of the Stray Interfratcrnity made today from 2:30 - 4 p. m. in the office of the Dean of Student Affairs. The winner will receive a scho larship . for two semesters at the University of Goettingen in Ger many from the student body of Goettingen. The scholarship in cludes tuition, matriculaton, room and board fees. The travelng ex penses to and from Germany will be paid by the Carolina Exchange fund. Students who ; are interested in the scholarship have been asked to contact the exchange committee in Dean Fred Weaver's office at 2:30 p. m. today. SEEM Noted Opera Soprano 1 To Appear Here Soon Signs: Huge sign 'on Battle Dorvi proclaiming the dorm to be the home of the "great" Jimmy Love. Local canines drowsing in the warm afternoon sun in front of the Library. Acquiring a tan for the beach this summer? MISS BARBARA O. BENNETT ...named to FTA post the Chapel Hill Rotary Club, in recognition of "scholarshp and ca pability of success in the future." Foreign Service A representative of the U. S. State department will be on cam pus .tomorrow to discuss with students the need for Foreign Service Officers at the 'entrance level. A group meeting will be heJd in 210 Gardner Hall at 2:30 p.m. Persons with backgrounds in Arts and Science, Business "Ad ministration, and Law may qual-i ify for positions in the Foreign Hilda Gueden, soprano of the Me tropolitan Opera,1 the Vienna State Opera, and La Scala, Milan, will appear in the final concert of the Chapel Hill Concert Series on April 27 at 8 p. m. The Vienese singer's perfor mance at Memorial Hall will be one of 25 in addition to her opera tic engagements, she will make on her fourth American tour. Already established as a ranking European star, Miss Gueden made her Metropolitan debut during the 1951-1953 season as Gilda in "Rigo letto." She followed with successes in "La Boheme," "Carmen," "The Marriage of Figaro," "Rosenkava lier," "The Rake's Progress," "Ara bella," "Don Giovanni," "Orpheo," and "Fledermaus." The soprano has appeared in the U. S. on such radio and television m.,,, vnrt WpmIH Tribune, said: 1 1 e w x xv a - v . with one of the largest student unions in the country. GMAB approved the granting of $255 to be used to pay the expens es of Henry and his wife for their trip here for the interview. HILDA GUEDEN metropolitan opera soprano Public Health Exams For Jobs Will Be May 26 Public health examinations for professional positions with the State Board of Health and the local health units will be given on May 26, 1956, as announced by the North Carolina Merit Sys tem Council. Applications are now being processed for the examina tions. Written examinations will be given for the following series of positions: nursing, bacteriologist, chemist, health education, labora tory, industrial hygiene engineer ing, nutritionist, photofluorogra phic, physical therapist, medical social worker, sanitarian, veter inarian, public health statistics, X-ray, psychiatric social worker, 1 and psychologist. . I Applications are also being ac cepted for the health officer, den tist and psychiatrist series and for the positions of pediatric consul tant, maternal , nd child health and. chief, accident prevention and communicable disease sec tions. These positions do not re- ' nni.a. o ti'ritfnn ovaminatinn Hrol examinations will be scheduled and announced later. The final date for submitting Tickets are now on sale for th? Erroll Garner Trio concert on Thursday at 8 p. xn. in Memorial Hall. Tickets are only SI and are on sale in Y-Court. They may also hz obtained at the Graham Memorial information office, the Chapel Hill Campus, and the Carolina Sport Shop. Representatives Greeks and the Council will sell tickets in the dormitories. Proceeds from the concert, spon sored by the Panhellenic Council and the DJC, will go to the Chapel Hill Recreation Center. Garner, a native of Pittsburg, has been on the roster of legendary jazz greats for almost two decades. When only- three years old, he amazed his family by playing a selection on the parlor room piano just as he heard it played on an old-fashioned player piano. He has continued to amaze list eners ever since then with his com pletely self-taught, distinctive and imaginative pianistics. Garner has been playing profes sionally ever since he was seven, beginning his "play for pay" ca reer on a -Pittsburgh radio station with a group called the "Candy Kids." The career of "Mr. Piano," as he is sometimes referred to, has been one of steady growth and Garner has become an important recording and concert artist. Ila has recorded on more than S3 la bels and has sold extensively on all of them. During his first recording session with Mercury, he cut over two hours of music without rehearsing and improvised it all on the spot. His concert stature is becomins world-wide. Since his debut .at Town Hall, New York, in Decem ber, 1950, Garner has appeared ia major concert halls throughout the United States and Canada. ..He is now being scheduled fur concerts in South America, Aus tralia, Europe and Japan. Garner also does excellent com posing, which is amazing, as h? cannot read music and plays by ear. He composes by tapping down a number that is then written down by an arranger. One of his com positions, "Play, Piano, Play," has won prizes throughout the world. Although Garner, now 33, has already made a tremendous dent in the music field, many of his fol ljwers feel that he has only scratch ed the surface of his own potential. programs as "The Voice of Fire stone" and 'Toast of the Town and is widely known for her many ' recordings on the London FFRR. Each season Miss Gueden returns to Vienna i sing at the Vienna State Opera, and since the war, she Ke0n nna r t tits f rr ? c 4-rk be invited to perform annually at , $2.50, and $3. a"r" 6 ;Iw - applications is. April 23, 1956. Of- Virgil Thomson, reporting on last .- H A . year s Salzburg performances m the . . , J UUUllllVU VA4 ATA 1 i It kJJ J vv- i Office, Mansion Park Building, Raleigh, or from any local health, welfare, or employment service office. Bulletins containing more complete information regarding examination data, salaries, and duties of each position may be "Miss Gueden was a delight both to watch and to hear! She filled the house with loveliness and warmth!" Tickets for this final concert of the current Chapel Hill Series are i i X - -- 1 on' sale ai uranam jueinuim, Kemp's", Ledbetter-Pickard's for $2, obtained from the Merit System OUice. Phi To DebarG N. G. Education Report Tonighi The Philanthropic Assembly will debate tonight the topic of the pro posals and conclusions of the North Carolina Advisory Committee oa Education. Debate on this recent and higblj controversial topic is expected to be heavy, according to Ethan Tol man, spokesman for the Phi. He has invited all interested persons to attend the meeting, to be teli at 8 o'clack, fourth floor New Est building and to participate in the discussion. An added feature of the meeting will be the historian's report bj Dick Iobst, Phi Alumnus and Lav.' studnt here on "The attack on Fort Fisher." Iobst said it would be "a fiery speech" that might not be appreciated by Yankees. The resolution of the evening calls for the Pfii to go on record as endorsing the proposal's and conclusions contained in the Ad visory Committee on Education's report. Members were urged to read this report, available at V.. i library, before attending the de bate. The resolution states, in part, that the Advisory Committee ca Education has found that the re posals embodied in their rep;rt seem to be the only ones that will prevent the destruction of edu:a- ' tion in North Carolina, and that ! the public school system is tl:? ' only practical way for educatir I children in the State.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 17, 1956, edition 1
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