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C3 VOLUME 4 CHAPEL HILL. N. C FRIDAY, JULY 20. 1956 NUMBER 6 1 memmg smm mem, e4 'Untamed1 Next . . . Five Free Movies Set For Students Free movies are continuing on the agenda of the entertainment sponsored by the Summer Activi ties Council. These films are of fered free of charge each Thurs day at 8 p.m. in Caroll Hall, Aug ust 2 being an exception. "Untamed" starring ' Tyrone Power and Susan Hayward is the exciting drama of empire build ing in Africa at the last half of the 19th century. This film will be presented on June 26. A se lected short subject entitled "The Pilgrims" illustrates their strug gle for freedom modified by au thentic sets and period costumes which bring the Pilgrims to life. On August 3, "On the Riviera," a musical comedy with Danny Kaye and Gene Tierney, will be performed on the film screen. For those enjoying light entertain ment, this is-a movie worthwhile. Depicting the disaster of the high seas, "The Sinking of the Titan ic," reveals the last hours of the world's "safest, fastest," pas senger liner. The westward surge of the white man into Indian territory is Contracts For Newest Dorms Still Not Let Contracts for the building of three new men's dormitories and an addition to Spencer women's dormitory at UNC have not yet been awarded. And University Business Man ager Claude Teague says it's be cause "The plans have not been finished yet." "It takes a good while to draw up plans," he said, "and after they have been finished, they will have to be looked at by several people and then resubmitted." "We keep telling them (the architects, George Watts Carr and Raymond Weeks, both of Dur ham) to get the plans finished," he said. Teague also said several dif ferent contracts had to be let. "There are separate ones for the heating, wiring and equipment, etc." for both the new dormitories and the Spencer addition. The men's dormitories, which will house approximately 700 male students, will be constructed on the side of the hill behind Kessing Pool. The Spencer addi tion will ' accommodate between 70 and 90 coeds. The buildings were proposed last fall after a request for a $2 million government loan was granted by the Federal Govern ment's Housing and Home Fi nance Agency. Teague made the request under authorization of the last General Assembly. The loan will be paid back in 30 years, Teague hopes, from the subject of "Broken Arrow" which stars James Stewart, Jeff Chandler and Debra Paget. This is an adult Western which gives insight into the often neglected Indian point of view in the con troversy. This tragic and beauti ful film will be offered for pres entation on August 9. With this movie is a short entitled "William Shakespeare," which traces the course of the bard's life and con tains excerpts from "Romeo and Juliet," "Henry V," and other favorites as they would have ap peared in Shakespeare's own theatre, "The Globe." An all star cast bespangles "Call Me Madam" which is an adaptation for the screen from the Broadway classic. The music of Irving Berlin, the song styling of Ethel Merman, and the chore ography of Donald O'Connor and Vera Ellen total to an enjoyable movie which will be performed on August 16. Illustrating vividly the poverty-ridden populace of India in their native habitat is a short subject "Farmers of India The Middle Ganges Valley." surpluses received due to a $30 increase in dormitory room rent per person. The increase went into- effect last fall. Church Schedule A list of the various churches and youth organizations of Chap el Hill, as well as the times their services are held, is given below. BAPTIST: Sunday School 9:45 a.m.; Church Service 11 a.m.; Fellowship 6 p.m. COMMUNITY CHURCH: "A Modest Story of the Acts of the Apostles." Forest Theatre 9:30 a.m. EPISCOPAL: Chapel of the Cross: Holy Communion 8 a.m.; Family Service 9:30 a.m.; Morn ing Prayer Service 11 a.m.; Can terbury Club 7 p.m. CHURCH OF' THE HOLY FAMILY; Holy Communion 8 a.m.; Family Service and Church School 10 a.m. LUTHERAN: Sunday School 9:45 a.m.; Church Service 11 a.m. METHODIST: Church School 9:45 a.m.; Church Service 11 a.m.; Wesley Foundation 6 p.m. PRESBYTERIAN: Church Services 9:45 and 11 a.m.; West minster . Fellowship 6 p.m. SOCIETY OF FRIENDS: Sun day Service 11 a.m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: Sun day Service 11 a.m. CATHOLIC: Sunday Mass 8 and 10 a.m. CONGREGATIONAL CHRIS TIAN: Sunday Service 11 a.m. ft ' - DEAN LEE Lee Named New Dean Of B A School Dean Maurice Wentworth Lee of the School of Economics and Business of the State College of Washington has been appointed Dean of the School of Business Administration at UNC, effect ive September 1. This announcement was made by Chancellor Robert B. House, following approval by the execu tive committee of the board of trustees. He succeeds Acting Dean R.J.M. Hobbs who has headed the UNC School of Business Adminis tration since 1954. Dean Lee is 44 years old, a native of Chicago, and a graduate of the Illinois Institute of Tech nology and the University of Chicago, receiving his Ph.D. from the latter institute. .He has taught at the University of Chicago, Illinois Tech, Utah State, and has been acting dean at Washington State at Pullman since 1947. .He is chairman of the com mittee on standards of the Ameri can Association of Collegiate Schools of Business. Initiated as the UNC School of Commerce in 1919, the School of Business Administration is one of the nation's most modern business educational plants. It was reorganized in 1950 under Dean Thomas H. Carroll, now of the Ford Foundation. Dean Lee ranks high in nation al business administration circles. He is a member of the American Economic Association, the Royal Economic Association, and the Western Economic Association. He has written many publications, among them being, "The Tax Structure of the State of Wash ington," "Economic Fluctuations," and "Tourist Expenditures A Pilot Study." Enrollment 2400 A Summer School enrollment for second session of approxi mately 2400 students is antici pated in the University, Director Guy B. Phillips has announced. This will exceed slightly the enrollment of the second summer term of last year which was 2271. UNC Officials Ask $16 Million for Permanent improvements of School Officials at the University of North Carolina recently asked the State for $16,160,134 for per manent improvements, including a new pharmacy building and three new dormitories. The requests were presented to the Advisory Budget Commission, which is making a tour of State institutions to hear budget re quests for permanent improve ments for the 1957-59 biennium. A $1,740,000 request for hous ing for married students is the largest item. The report included a list of 18 permanent improvements re quested by the University. The list, in order of priority, is headed by a $1,575,000 request for a new pharmacy building. The present pharmacy building, Ho well Hall, would be remodled and used for the School of Journalism. This was the second item on the list. It would cost $162,000 to re model building, and equipment would cost and additional $60,000. Starlight Ball To Be Held On July 28 The dance committee of the Summer Activities Council has announced the plans for the second campus-wide dance to be held for students attending sum mer school here on campus. "The Starlight Ball," theme for the dance, will be held July 28 on the tennis courts. Music will be furnished by Bill Langley and his Star-Dreamers. Anyone interested in helping with the plans for the dance is asked to contact either Earl Dawkins or Edna Faye Pugh, co chairmen of the committee. Those serving as committee chairmen of the dance are Marcia Warford, chairman of decorations, and Norris Bell; chairman of refreshments. ' The dance held on the tennis courts last session was said to be a success by all those attending. Everyone attending the second session is invited to make their plans now to attend this second tennis court dance. New students of campus asking other students those ever popular questions, "Where are you from?" and "Do you know so-and-so?" Unsuspecting male student beating hasty retreat from Old East, new home jor 30 high school girls here Jor drama course. (CflllPUS W SEEN MORE ITEMS LISTED Other items on the list include: addition to Peabody Hall, $776,779, and equipment, $90,000; new wing to the nurses' dor mitory, $175,000 (with matching federal funds anticipated); new 'physics building, $1,200,000, and equipment, $400,000; housing for married students, $1,740,000; intramural fields and tennis courts, $200,000. ALSO SOUGHT WERE: Additions and betterments to the Dentistry Building and the division library, $4,500; renova tion of the ground floor of the School of Medicine, $25,000 (with matching federal funds antic ipated); Woollen 'Gymnasium, $18,000; library, $14,380; Venable Hall, $211,725; improvement to the ground floor of the School of Dentistry, $60,000; Davie Hall and the greenhouse, $36,000; Peabody Hall, $4,650; and Radio Station WUNC, $24,600. Three new dormitories, one with a kitchen and dining room, $1,733,000, and equipment, $275,000; School of Public Health, $1,000,000 (with matching federal ; funds anT3STpate3); an "addition" to wing A of the nurses' dor mitory, $200,000; annex to Hill Hall, $398,000, and equipment, $100,000; and a division library enlargement (Health Affairs), $329,000. Housing for ambulatory pa tients and relatives of inpatients, $500,000; Studnt Union Building, $1,092,500, and equipment, $150,000; wing on the School of Medicine, $925,000 (with match ing federal funds anticipated) ; T-wing for the N.C. Memorial Hospital, $1,680,000, and a dor. mitory for in Health Affairs, $1,000,000. Bever Fined For Trespass Dr. Christopher T. Bever, Asso ciate Professor of Psychiatry in the University Medical School, was fined $50 and court costs by Judge William S. Stewart after pleading nolo contendere to a charge of trespass in a special session of the Chapel Hill Re corder's Court last Friday. The warrant charging the mis demeanor alleged that Dr. Bever trespassed on the property of his next door neighbor at 105 North Boundary Street on Tuesday evening, July 10. It was known that police had been investigating the case for a period of several days before the Tuesday night incident, when Dr. Bever was arrested by Chapel Hill patrolmen as he ran from the neighbor's property back to his own home next door. It was learned from an official source that Dr. Bever ' has re signed his post here.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 20, 1956, edition 1
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