SUNDAY NOVEfABER 11, 1956 THE DAILYTAR HEEL PACE THRE? jt S v i " ,.J.-"iw Ve- ' r 1 ,-5. f tit-- - - rkx.5 . ZSS V ;a ; 3 " V;bv,' Hv V Air,-'' " V . vys Vv - x - - 1 " :. ; '-.. .5- I . ,v v. n ' v s t I i t. V.i What Goes On Here? The Carolina Playmakers, 'in their upcoming production of G. B. Shaw's "Androcles and the Lion present some antics between the lion and Caesar, with Androcles looking on. Left to right they are John Sneden of Tenafly, N. J., Dick Newdick of Agusta, Me., and David Small of Morehead City. The play -will be given here Wednesday through Sunday in the Playmakers' Theater. UNC Superior Freshman Program Termed Successful By Officials What success has been achieved in the University's novel program for specially gifted freshmen? Now in its third year, the pro gram includes 25 unusually talent ed first-year students who are en . rolled in a unique curriculum of high scholastic standards to match their abilities as sup3rior students, according to University officials. The program is considered one endeavor to answer the pressing national educational dilemma: what can be done to give students of special talents the advantages of a small liberal arts college and at the same time furnish the op portunities that a large universi ty can afford? One sidelight achievement noted is that more students of superior abilities appear to be entering UNC each year. In a report to the UNC faculty it was stated, "It is gratifying to note that the number of such excellent students in en tering classes seems to be increas ing from year to year." The University also announced changes in the program based on an analysis of the experience of the program during the first two years. TESTED SCHOLARS Selected on a basis of superior aptitude and achievement, as de termined by tests and by recom mendations from their high school principals, 25 freshmen each year are given extraordinary attention befitting the talents of better students. The 25 freshmen are taught in a group in three principal sub jects during the first year: Eng lish, mathematics, and social sciences. The program will be con tinued into the sophomore year, beginning with the present class to the extent that the 25 will take a course in philosophy and a spec ial course in history. Main aspects of the program are: 1. The 25 freshmen are taught in a group in three main disip lines. 2. Specially selected faculty NOW PiAYING June Alison Joan Collins V V-2 '-- finnncita m" I lie uunuoufc ua ONcMASCOPE and METROCOLOR U'M'M"VI'"MF."-"1 II M-G-M's V j GIRLIE SHOW- J FUN-FILLED GIRLIE SHOW- W IH MUM t . AW v r.XS im This Is a picture that grabs you by the throat and shove you into the shell-ripping, blood-drenched, screaming heat of war. Here is the hell behind the glory ... the real guts and smell of battle! This is the story they didn't tell of the heroes who stood up under fire, and the few who belly-crawled outl The ASSOCIATES and ALDRICH Co. presents JACK PALANCE EDDIE ALBLK1 feSSSft V" Li 7 UNCNursing Students Present Highlight is Of Four Year Course Leading To BS Degree the program included Misses Pa- Anne Hancy .Raehat! HumpJirics. ..s.1. bhi ... Sa.l Booe'. antl Martha I',ntz LKMARViN ROBERT STRAUSS RICHARD JAECKEL- BUDDY EBSEH tmm mm m - WLLM 1 HUB sssssfisss : sr& -Robert aldrich NOW PLAYING members teach the group. 3. The 25 students "learn more" in a given period of time than the average class; they take on more assignments and cover more ground; therefore, they advance faster. 4. The instructors consult with one another to provide an integrat ed oneness in the several subjects taught. Although the three chief sub jects are English,, mathematics, and social sciences, students may substitute Greek or Latin for mathematics. The 1956-57 class is taught by Prof. Edward A. Cameron of the Mathematics Department, who is chairman ofthe Universtiy's com mittee on Provisions for Superior Students; Kenan Professor Rich mond P. Bond of the English De partment; and Assistant Professor George V. Taylor of the History Department. In addition to the basic courses in which the 25 are kept together, the students also are enrolled in certain classes with other students. Besides this, ten of the students . are together in a special class in chemistry for top-ranking students, taught by Professor E. C. Mark ham. Among attainments of the two preceeding classes have been "en largement of the intellectual hor izon" and maintaintenance of high morale, it was stated in a report to the faculty. One professor told of his ex perience with the special group and compared it - .with " average classes. He said, "Having taught the freshman course in social science for the past four years, I am convinced that these students gain enormously from the ability to proceed at their own Tate oi speed, to enter into topics more intricate than those ordinarily covered in the course, and to stim ulate the interest ot one -another by questions and . challenges to throw out at a higher level of so phistication." INTEGRATED As an example of integration of subjects, the students may be stu dying the Renaissance period in history at the same time they -study Shakespeare in English! They may also "learn of the usefulness of calculus and trigonometry in the development of industrial so ciety, thus combining; mathemat ics and social science. Another phase of the program consists of out-of-class social oc casions for the students and facul ty. The 25 students of this year were chosen from a list of nearly 100 entering freshmen. They were top students in their high' school classes. They were given ' three tests: the ACE Psychological Ex amination which tests general ap-. I titude, the Cooperative English Test, and the' Cooperative Alge bra Test. 21 TAR HEELS , Twenty-one of this year's group are from North. Carolina.. The oth er four freshmen are from Louis iana, Massachusettes, Tennessee, and Virginia. Sixteen of the group are graduates of high schools in ... . By-RAYUNICER , Except for, one small blunder, the show presented by WUNC-TV Friday, night on the highlights of the School of Nursing was much of a success. True, most of the people in the presentation were amateurs, and acted accordingly, but they got their point across. And one could tell that a lot of time was put into the planning of the hour long show. The show presented the out standing things that student nurses do while they are here taking the four-year course leading to the degree of bachelor of science in Nursing. A view of the graduate programs in nursing was also de scribed. Describing the typieal life of a student nurse, scenes in the operat ing room, in a patient's room, in a nursery, and in other hospital and related places were shown. The presentation showed that a lot of work went intohe writing of the script, which was prepared by nursing students, members of the nursing staff, and radio and television people. Mrs. Eloise R Lewis, associate professor in sur gical nursing, wrote mos.t of the script, wtih Hugh Downing mak ing revisions and giving assistance on the technical side and the nursing students advising jhere possible. . The cameraman was off a lit tle from time to time. In fact the one blunder mentioned above was the fault of the cameraman. The camera was focused on the back of a patient who was supposed to be getting a back rub from a stu dent nurse. From the front the scene was perfect, but when the Newspaperman To Talk To Press Club Monday Charlotte newspaperman Kays Gary will be guest speaker Mon day night before the Press Club. . The club, composed mainly of journalism majors, will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Dr. Nor val Neil Luxon, dean oi the School of Journalism. Charlie Johnson, a senior from Lenoir, is club president. Gary, who received his A. B. in journalism from UNC in 1M2, is how feature writer and colum nist for The Charlotte Observer. Last year he won the Ernie Pyle Award given by the Scripps-IIow-ard-Ernie Pyle Memorial Fund, for his feature stories. ! camera .moved in close and around to the back, it could be seen that the patient's back was clothed and that the nurse's hands were a few .inches from the back. It would have been a good shot if the ac tors had been prepared for it, but the cameraman goofed, or just wasn't thinking. Besides Mrs. Lewis, Dr. S. B. Alexander, assistant administrator in the division of Health Afairs, Biostatistics Head . Going to French Confab Dr. Bernard G. Greenberg, pro fessor and head of the Depart ment of Biostatistics of the)Uni versity School of Public Health, will attend a conference at Sevres, France Nov. 12-23. , The workshop and conference is on planning research in nursing at the International Center of Schol arly Studies. . The conference is sponsored by the Florence Nightingale Inter national Foundation and the In ternational Council of Nurses, which is affiliated with the World Health Organization of the United Nations. The three-member faculty of the conference is composed of Dr Greenberg; Dr. Fraser Brocking ,ton, England; and Mme. A. Levy Schoen. of France. and other, prof essioiial. .health people, took an active part in mak ing the show worthwhile. Dr. Alexander narrated the second half of tne program, which con cerned the. graduate programs leading to the degree of master of science in service administration and teaching in psychiatric nurs ing. . Student nurses taking part in London, Mary Ann Keater, Shirley Hobbs Valentine and Mrs. Margar- Guenthner, Ann Page, Sara Usher, et Kistler V?M- By appointment purveyors of soap to the late King Gorge VI, Yardiey & Co., Ltd., London Musical Tonight . rWillis Stevens, pianist, will be presented in GMAB's .third pro gram of ,Les Petites-1 Musicales at 8 p.m. today in.the main lounge of Graham Memorial. Stevens, instructor of music at Salem,, College, will -interpret se lections by Bach, Beethoven, Cho pin, and Schumann. There. is no admission charge for the .program, and students and townspeople have been invited to attend. . -this state. 'Preparatory schools produced seven of them. Two were graduated from out-of-state high schools. Of the 25 students, nine of them are Morehead Scholars, and two are National Merit Scholars. One of them is a Brooks Scholar. It has been a practice to invite new faculty members to participate in the program each year. Pro fessor Cameron is the only one who has remained with it from the beginning in 1954. Other fac ulty members who have taken part, in addition to those already named, are Kenan Professor of Philosophy JJyerettVW. Hall, As sociate ' Professor of. History and Social Sciences James E. King, Kenan Professor of English Will j iam S. Wells .and Assistant Pro- fessor of English Peter G. Phialas. Mw...for limited time osily! r 'cyapim r w deCop(ky l Th VOYAGETTE de CORDAY i Qoas where you go . . . gives I you a generous supply of your favorite Corday eau do toilette in a refutable golden cylinder that is absolutely leakproof. Travel with it. Ift a wonderful gift idea I tool But Ivgrryl Now is the time! tAU DI TOILETTE for travl ... for your drsr , ymitt purs . . . for gift . . . (ACTUAU SIZE) .each m iTOUJOURS MO), FAME, ZIOANE. JET ...each $OQO FJIT FO JSNTUEMEfi .... TOUJOUR! TOL POSSESSION, ch 2-60 C3 n n rMUJU i M DRUG STORE 1 pin, 10 Fed. 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