Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 14, 1957, edition 1 / Page 3
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THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1957 THI DAILY TAR HEEL i 5 , Special Round Of Activities Planned By GM . In honor of its 25th Birthday celebration, March 11-April 1, Graham. Memorial has planned a i special schedule of activities. The schedule is as follows: t March 14: Jazz Club Jam Ses sion, 8 p.m., main lounge. Spring ' Film Serie., "Open City," 8 p.m., Carroll Hall. March 15: Free Flick, "Unchaiq ed," 7:30 and 10, p.m., Carroll Hall. March 16: Free Flick, "The Crimson Pirate," 7:30 and It) p.m., Carroll Hall. March 18: Jazz records played in the main lounge, 7-9 p.m. March 19: "Free Flick, "New Faces," 7:30 3and 10 p.m., Carroll j Hall. Dance lessons, 6:30-8 p.m., ! Rendezvous Room. I March 20: Bridge lessons, 4:30-6; P-m.. Rendezvous Room. March 21: Graham Memorial and the English Dept. present Dame Edith Sitwell, 8 p.m.. Hill Hall.; Bridge lessons, 7:30 p.m., Victory i Village Day Care Center. March 23: Free Flick, "Black board Jungle," 7:30 and 10 p.m., Carroll Hall. Combo, 9-12 p.m. . March- 25: 25th Anniversary Open House, 8-10 p.m., main lounge. . : March 26: SEC presents- Henry Hull, 8 p.m., Memorial Hall. Dance lessons, . 6:30-8 p.m.. Rendezvous Room. s March 27: Bridge lessons, 4:30-6 1 10:30 the school band struck p.m.. Rendezvous Room. ' i up a familiar tun and the cere- i , i t J. s 4 .v.S j 4 0 4, SO LONG AGO ...the ape o mechanization had iwt arrived in 1924 Classes Were Called For Christening In 1 Off 936 By SUE ATCHISON "Eleven o'clock classes will not meet this morning." At least that's what you might have read had you been reading the January 29, 1932 edition of the Tar Heel. Eleven o'clock classes were called off that morning because at , , ; . , with (Author "Bftrefcot B With Chtk te.) ADVICE ON ADVISORS ., Recently I made an extensive tour of American cam puses, interviewing students and selling mechanical dogs, and one of the most frequent complaints I heard from .undergraduates was, "My faculty advisor doesn't really .care about me." ' Everywhere I went I heard this same cry. (Indeed, at one university I found 15,000 students jammed in the field house chanting it a cappella.) But I am bound to ay, dear friends, that you are wrong. Your faculty advisor doe care about you. The trouble is, he doesn't knnin you. And no wonder! How do you expect him to know you when you see him once or so a semester? Oet to be friends with your faculty advisor like, for example, Alpine R. Sigafoos, a sophomore in timothy and silage at Texas A. & M. Alpine R. Sigafoos appeared one night in the living quarters of his faculty advisor (whose name, by a curious coincidence, was also Ahpine R.' Sigafoos ). "Good evening, sir," said Student Sigafoos. "I am come so that you may get to know me better and thus help me solve the vexing problems that trouble me." t fv . 4m 2 : I !r "And what are .tho.se three packages you are carry ing?" asked Advisor Sigafoos. ;' 'This," said Student Sigafoos, holding up the first of the three packages, "is a carton of Philip Morris Ciga rettes, which come in long size or regular, and without which I never stir.- It is, sir, a smoke beyond compare full of fresh, natural, unfiltered flavor that delights the taste, salves the soul, and turns the whole world into one long vista of peace and greenery. Try one, sir." "Thank you," said Advisor Sigafoos, lighting a Philip . Morris Cigarette. lie puffed appreciatively for an hour -..or two and then said, "And 'what is in the other packages you are carrying?" , , "I am rather a complex fellow," said Student Sigafoos, "and I don't expect that you will get to know - me. in a hurry. So," he said, holding up his second pack age, "I have brought my bed-roll." "I see," .said Advisor Sigafoos, not entirely pleased. "And what, is this third package?" . I "Well sir, I know that occasionally you will be busy with other matters and will therefore be unable to spend , 'time with me. So I have brought along my gin rummy partner, Walter M. Handzlik." . " In the next two years Advisor Sigafoos, living cheek-by-jowl with Student Sigafoos, got to know all of the lad's personality traits, his hopes, his fears, his drives, " his. quirks, his aspirations. t the end of that time, ' armed with true understanding, Advisor Sigafoos con cluded that Student Sigafoos's basic trouble was that he was not really college material. So Advisor Sigafoos got Student Sigafoos a job with the North Star Hockey Puck Corporation where today he is head of the puck-packing department and a happy man. Advisor Sigafoos is happy too. He has time again to ' pursue his studies of Trichobatrachu robuHhiH, the hairy frog. At night he plays gin rummy with Walter M. Kandzlik. : - Max Shulman, 1957 Our iri- If tuJent and In faculty ton and la anybndy ele m ' Itwking for a aterelhenrl of n mtokr i to try nr rMtornl I'hilip Morris, made by lite $ptnor of this column. monies dedicating Graham Me morial to Edward Kidder Graham, president of the University from 1914-18, began? Dr. Louis Round Wilson, the executive secretary, of the building committee, presented the building to Mayne Albright, president of the student union, while pleased alumni proudly viewed the memorial to a man who-j left the university so much spirit, j Work began in 1922 on GM which was built to provide "a Chapel Hill home, to non-frater- ' nity men." The original plans -for the building called for a center ! seetion with a wing on either end. Due to a lack of funds only the center section of the building was ever built. VOTE QUESTION In 1921 GM "faced one of its f iri-t, critical issues getting the stu dents to vote for a three dollar a year maintenance fee. C. T. Wool len, then business manager of the University, after careful study had decided three dollars per stii- j dent per year was what would be needed to run the student uniohVj The question, however,' was, whether the students would vote in favor of the iasue. The election results were: 806 for the proposal and 74 against it. Graham Me morial was in business to stay. Facts from the dedication pro gram seem to uphold the faith the organizers had in their plan. Dur? ing the first three months over 19,000 persons used the game room and everything from ex hibits, meetings dances--and teas, to a faculty .pool tournament were held in the building. . . v VISITORS - -, That first year in operation GM had as visitors such ' personalities as; Norman Thomas, Socialist-party leader; Dr. Warren K. Moore head, noted archaeologist; the Ra leigh Male Chorus; South African Quartet and Helen MeGraw, con cert pianist. Th r o ugh the years slight changes have been made in GM, but today it ha.? the same spirit as the day it was dedicated. To day more than ever it fulfills one f of its original purposes that Of! providing a meeting plate for stu dents, faculty .and alumni. MEANING OF GMAB: G MA B 1 s O r g a n i z a t i on For Providing Interest By WALTER SCHRUNTEK I "Presented by GMAB" is almost a catchword on the campus of UNC. But what exactly does it mean? What is GMAB? And how does it affect the Carolina stu dent? Defined, GMAB is the Graham Memorial Activities Board. It is that organization whoa; task it is to provide a student recreational and activity program at UNC. It is a student organization; a com posite of dance, movie, recreation, reception and outting committees which determine the programs and activiti3s available to the students and student body of UNC. In carrj'ing forth with its pro gram to promote student interest and provide recreation and enter tainment, GMAB extends its func tions to areas as varied and di verse an the interests of a univer sity of 7,500 students. EFFECTS The effects of. GM activities on the student is manifested daily through its promotion of such campus "traditions" as the Film Series, Free Flicks, Free Bridge Lessons, dances, etc. Its effect on the student body is best illustrated by its sponsor ship of dances and combos in the Rendezvous Room of GM; and more spectacularly in such presen tations as the recent Mardi Gras and the upcoming "Sound and Fury" production, which is organ ized and paid for through GMAB facilities. GMAB, designed to benefit the student body as well as the indi vidual, is financed by a portion of student fees roughly $3 per stu dent per semester. It is fully , a student organization, OTHER HELP Besides carrying out its various programs, GMAB also extends ad ministrative and financial assist ance to other organizations and groups which invite speakers to the campus throufhout . the - year. By promoting its purpose to fur ther student interest in activities and campus organizations, the ac tivities board helps the student by adding to the meaning of extra curricular exDeriencen provid ing an opportunity for group, con tact and the subsequent exchange of ideas. UNIQUE POSITION , As a function of the Student Union, GMAB today finds itself in a unique and perhaps' enviable po sition among other similar' organ izations throughout the country. According to Tom Lambeth, pres ident of GMAB, the Carolina or ganization is '"perhaps the strong est union regionally, and one of the strongest in the nation. It practices a very high degree o'f student control over itrf programs as contrasted to others." - . He accentuated his remarks by pointing out. that the only profes sional assistance available to- the student union here is its director (a post unfilled at present) where as' other schools usually have two or more professional advisers to its programs. Looking forward to the day when a new union building will be constructed to house the ex panding functions of GMAB and (See GRAHAM, Page 4) Birthday Honoring GM To Be Monday GM will hold its 25th Anniver sary Party Monday night from 8-10 p.m. in the Main Lounge of Graham Memorial, according to Misj Linda Mann, GM director. All administration, faculty, and students have been iavited to the open house. Birthday cake and punch will be i :n V t serveu, ana piano music wu played throughout the patty by Cecil Hartsoe. Mrs. William Friday and airs. Gordon Blackwell will serve from 8-9 and 9-10 p.m. respectively. "I hope that everyone will come, even if it is just for a minute," Miss Mann said. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 14, 1957, edition 1
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