liptfjr PACE FOUR TH8 DAILY TAR HSSX THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1957 A!, t v. ' A -. .--VS. , Hr. .j..,... 2 -' .4- .J. s 1 f . ; ; ; - w , Comrniuee Hoping Por New Buildino 'Dramafiques' Is New FeaJuro Wife Amanda Realizing Ihe fast growing need presented before administrative for a new student union,, adequa'te officials and University Vice Pres- r i - 6'-: i 1 V t , , s. t ' 1 4 1 V FOR SO MANY PEOPLE ...and these are but a few r OK PJayed M eomoriai By EDITH MacKINNON The role of a student union in the life of the university commun ity is a multi-purposed and vital one. In addition to serving as the heart of grampus life and as the center of student extracurricular 'activity, the student union plays an important part in the education .al pprcgram of the college. Housed in its many-roomed in terior are meeting places for cam pus organizations, offices and rec reation facilities for hours of re "Jaxation and informal association. But the union is not just a - building; in its duties to the stu dent body it is also an organiza tion and a program. It creates a "tub around which the wheel of university "life rotates and func tions. Without it the wheel would case to function in rolling the university toward further prog ress. Serving then as a college com munity life center, the student union mast at the smetimc ful fill a role in thfe educational pro gram of academic life. The peo ple who participate in the opera tion of the union are engaged in a training program, whether they are consciously aware of this pro gram or not. The foundation of this program rests on the rock of preparation for future positions as citizens, leaders, and members of a world society. In a statement of ouroose. adopted by the general member-! ship of the Assn. of College Unions at the national conference, April, 1956, the student union was des i cribed as following: In all its processes it encourages self-directed activity, giving maximum op- f portunity for self-realization and lfor growth in individual socml I i competency and group effective- PArnonsnE YOUR ness. Its goal is the development of persons as well as intellects." This then is your student union, Graham Memorial, whkh this week celebrates jts 25th birthday. It is a union of which the Carolina stu dent body may be justly proud, a union which is consistent in its effort to serve the university com munity, and a union which strives to the limit of its ability to ful fill its role as a unifying, force in the life of the University of North Carolina. Happy birthday, Graham Mem orial! . Graham (Continued from page 3) other student organizations, Lam- oclh concluded more adequate fa- dlities will mean expansion of the .board's weekend entertainment program, an Cnding cf GM's pres I errt decentriaized program j which ; utilize different buildings on the campus, and a . larger program with increased facilities for people interested in GMAB. , In past years, when GMAB was known under the title "Student Union Activities Board," its ac tivities were increasingly ham pered and curtailed by the restric tions imposed on it by the present 25-ycar-old building, Lambeth pointed out., GMAB, in cne form or another, has been in operation since Gra ham Memorial was erected here 25 yearj ago. Today is Graham Me morial's birthday. So too Is it GMAB's anniversary 25 years of service and accommodation to the student body. - . ': ' . '- It ! . ' if i ,4 . i si .7 ill I'l If -a f -1 I X A 1 , i f GRAHAM MEMORIAL TODAY - ; .congeniality, rest and relaxticm for UNC student it in size and central in location, student leaders and administrative officials are looking to the future in the hopes of a new building. Continuing in a four year long drive to acquire funds for the building, the. Graham Memorial Student Union committee L. put ting forth an all-out effort to pre sent plans that will secure the necessary backing.- Financing the proposed new Union poses the biggest problem to the committee. Hojes now rest on the committee's prospectus to be Honor (Continued from page 1) until the last paragraph. The council found the second boy guilty of plagiarism and sus pended him indefinitely from scho61,: and the other boy was ac quitted. ' ' i: It seem-' that the students aye not aware of the ramifications of the word "plagarize.' Clearly, it means to' copy another's work and hand it in as one's own, but it also entails the use of ideas that be long to somebody else as one's own, with no credit given to the author of the ideas. The council reminds the students again, tljat whenever a student use another's ideas, he should either give the uthor credit or rework the ideas until they have become a part of his own thinking and exhibit themselves as such. ident and Finance Officer William Graham Memorial has added an- j and Patrician s other feature to its Sunday eVe- Meggs. ning entertainment program. The new feature is the Petite-Drama-tiques series which will be given at-8T.m. in the Main Lounge of GM. ' ' ' "Caligula," a play about the in- D. Carmichael'j- endorsement cf ; sane Roman emperor who ruled the student union program. SUPPORT Carmichael has promised to lend his support in getting a high priority-for the issue on the list of Consolidated University requests of the 1959 session of the N. C. Advisory Budget Committee. Included in the prospectus will be pictures of other student the world, will be presented April .7 as the first production in the series. It will be directed by Be tina Jinette, managed by Hope Sparger, and produced by Seamon Gottlieb. The cast will be as fol lows: Caligula Lloyd Skinner, Caeso'nia Page Williams, Scipio -Sam Baker, Cherea Taylor Wil liams, Helicon Ken Lowry, Cas- sius Bcle Ketler, Mereia George May 5 "Sweeny Agomstes by T. S. Eliot will be presented. It is to be directed by Nancy Stevens. At a date to be announced later, "An Evening of Tennessee Wil liams" will be presented under the direction of Page Williams and Taylor Williams. , . ' . . . , , , : Hill, Muciuj1 James Sebrest, Lu ieatures, statements of past lead- - T, T, T ' , . i , j cms Jack Jackson, Intendant ers and administration leaders, ,T - , ,T t Tt t .. .. , , Ted Parker, Mucius Wife Hope tatistics on needs for a new un- . . 0-, , 4 , t Sparger, Poet Darwin Solomon, :On, and possibly a suggested ar- j .. . .hitectural plan. j " DEADLINE A deadline . of April, 1953 has been set for5 the preontation oi .he student union committee's -report to the local administration, providing this report is approved (ically, it will then, appear before the N C. Advisory Budget Com mittee in July, 1959. YOU CAN BELIEVE By U. N. C.'s Frank Hanft Lenten Reading at $1.69 The Intimate Bookshop 205 East Franklin Street George L. Coxhead U.N.C. 142 Campus Representative NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY SEWING CLASSES Regular Classes ( Tuesday 2:00 PJA. Thursday 7:30 P.M. These regular classe.' are new scheduled for group sewing in struction by Mrs. Ethel Daniels, instructor. 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