Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 8, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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J iV 3 .VOLUME 4 CHAPEL HILL, N. C FRIDAY, JUNE 8. 1956 NUMBER r 1 Party 'a ! IV i Si ff 'V ' " ' . V.; i - 1 f t i Dancing at Party Tonight Enrollment Of 3,000 Expected This Term South Building Lawn To Be Site Of First Summer Fun Summer School fun gets underway at 8 p.m. with a big Welcome Party on the South Building lawn. The party will be held on the side of South Building that faces the Library. All Summer School students have been invited and a large crowd is expected to attend, according to Miss Nancy Lattimore, chairman of the Welcome Committee of the Summer Activities Council, sponsors of the event. Refreshments will be served at the South Building steps. As part of the program, a dance combo will be on hand to provide music for both slow and square dancing. The dancing will take place in the latter part of the evening in the Y Court or in the parking lot beside the Y Building. By way of providing for the people present tc meet one another, everyone will be grouped according to the state they are from, with North Carolina having sev- PU'HIMJI'IJ-U-II IL .IIBIMMPIMI 111141 illllHH U lllIHIUIIIUIM l WW1'"""" f MI UIHU J. WIIIHMIIR I UllJMia r -v i . . ; i ''v. ' ' As Well As Refreshments A Summer School enrollment of approximately 3,000 is antici pated in the University, Director Guy B. Phillips has announced. This will exceed slightly the enrollment of the first summer term of last year. - - 1 Students registered for the first six-week term yesterday and will begin classes today. This session Bells To Toll Classes And Coed Curfew South Building and class room bells will ring a dozen times a day Monday through Friday for students to change classes. A warning bell and late bell will also signal curfew hours for coeds every night. With classes beginning at 7:30 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m., noon, and 2 p.m., the bell will ring at each of these class starting times and will also signal the end of each class an hour and 20 minutes after it has started. Students who have noon and 2 p.m. classes will have from 1:20 p.m. until 2 p.m. for a short lunch period. A warning bell will ring at 1: 50 p.m. for the 2 p.m. class, as well as at 7:20 a.m. for the day's first class. To signify closing hours for coeds, the bells will ring at 10:45 p.m. and 11 p.m. every Monday through Thursday and 11:45 p.m. and midnight Fridays and Sun days. Coed hours for Saturday night extend to 12:45 a.m. and 1 a.m. Sunday. Tfye bells will also beckon stu dents to classes two Saturdays during each summer session. Regular classes will be held in all departments tomorrow and June 23 this session and July 28 and August 18 next session. ends on July 12, with final exams scheduled for July 13 and 14. First day of classes for second term is July 17, with registration scheduled for July 16. Second term, classes end August 20 and final examinations will be held the following two days. Registration for credit will be permitted today, tomorrow, and until 4:30 p.m. Monday, but be cause of the additional cost, a flat service fee of $2, with no excep tions made, will be charged. Phillips reported an increase in the number of inquiries and applications from students not now on the . campus. Approxi mately 100 more students pre registered for summer studies than in 1955, he said. The holders of 51 scholarships, including 16 Du Pont Fellowships and 35 teacher grants, will be in attendance. Special emphasis has been placed on course offerings for teachers and professional workers, Phillips said. eral sections. After the members of each group have become acquainted with each other, the states will visit each other so that its mem bers can become better acquaint ed with the members of other states. During the evening various important personages' will speak, Miss Lattimore said. Other members of the plan ning committee 'besides Miss Lattimore are Dick Shulman, Bobby Hoover, Billy West, Gene McDaniel, Joe Hagedorn, Jerry Oppenheimer and Neal Smith. Directories To Be Issued Student directories will be issued not later than the end of the second week of Summer School, according to a spokesman for the YMCA, which compiles and issues the directories. The directories will go on sale in Y Court as soon as they can be compiled. A price designed to cover only the expenses of print ing the directory, will be charged. Activities Council To Hold Meeting Monday There will be a meeting of the Summer School Activities Coun cil Monday, at 4 p.m. in the Roland Parker Lounge, Graham Memorial. All interested students have been invited to attend, .the meet ing. Organizational plans will be discussed and a permanent chair man will be elected. Ed Hennes see has been serving as temporary chairman. Several projects and commit tees were instituted by the coun cil at the first two meetings, held during the spring semester, and work is already underway. A social committee has, been set up with Jess Carroll Jr. as chairman, M. L. Matthews Jr. as assistant chairman, and John Riebel as advisor. Several ideas are under con sideration at the present time, including a Chinese swim dance at Kessing Pool, a community sing, a Bermuda sing and picnic, a golf tournament, the establish ment of a miniature golf course 'Crisis In Public Schools To Be i Topic For Series Of Lectures "The Crisis in Our Public Schools" will be the general topic for a series of four addresses dur ing the first session of Summer School sponsored by the Chapel Hill Ministerial Association, the University YMCA and YWCA. Paul Green, playwright and author, will introduce . the series on Monday at 8 p.m. in Carroll Hall. He will discuss "The Moral Perspective." Rev. Maurice Kid der, rector of the Church of the Holy Family and president of the Ministerial Association, will in troduce Mr. Green and preside at the question and answer period following the address. Author of 'The Lost Colony," "The Common Glory" and "Wil derness Road," Mr. Green has been interested in showing through his series of outdoor dramas the growth and develop ment of American democracy. His play "In Abraham's Bosom," which received the Pulitzer Prize, dealt with the situation of Ne groes in the South. This week Mr. Green was awarded an honorary degree at the Commencement ex ercises at the University of North Carolina. The second address in the se ries on the crisis in the public schools will be given on Monday evening, June 25. Dean Albert L. Turner of the Law School of North Carolina . College in Durham will discuss "The Legal Perspective" and will examine the various decisions of the U. S. Supreme Court on the subject of segregation. The third session on July 2 will concern the recommendations of the Pearsall Advisory Committee on Education and their possible effect on the public schools. On July 9 the concluding ad dress of the series will be given by Dr. Frank Porter Graham, former President of the Univer sity of North Carolina and now a member of the staff of the United Nations. Dr. Graham will discuss "What Is the Future?" at a practical location on campus, and a Jimmy Capps "Our Best To You" broadcast and blanket party. Another idea that was pro posed was a beach caravan, but this is still in the tentative stage. A watermelon festival commit tee was also named. Bob Marrow was appointed chairman and Ray Jefferies is the advisor. The festi val will be held July 4. There will be plenty of watermelons, a variety show, a crowning of the Watermelon Queen and King, and a square dance. Ray Linker was named Sum mer School Weekly editor and Miss Martha Decker was ap pointed advisor. What's Going On Friday, June 8 Y Cabinet Meeting, Y Cabinet Room, 5 p.m. Planetarium Show, "From Pole to Pole," 8:30 p.m. daily. Saturday. June 9 Planetarium show, "From Pole to Pole," 11 a.m., 3, 4 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday, June 10 Planetarium shows, 2, 3, 4, and 8:30 p.m. Lawn Party for Lutheran stu dents, 300 E. Rosemary, 4-5:30 Study on "Comparative Faiths," Presbyterian Lawn, 6 p.m. Monday, June 11 Summer Activities Council, Roland Parker Lounge, 4 p.m. Summer Chorus, Hill Hall, 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 12 Try-Outs for "Goodbye My Fancy," Playmakers' Theatre, 4 and 7:30 p.m. r Open Y Meeting, Y Cabinet Room, 4 p.m. Wednesday, June 13 "Goodbye My Fancy" Tryouts, Playmakers's Theatre, 4 and 7:30 p.m. Thursday, June 14 "April in Paris," Carroll HalL 8:30 p.m.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 8, 1956, edition 1
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