FRIDAY. JUNE 7, 1957 V THE SUMMER SCHOOL WEEKLY PAGE 3 i ! Looking For Fun? By BILL CHESHIRE Are you looking for a little dancing, loafing or just plain socializing? Why not drop by XI ra ham Memorial and take advant age of the many summer activi ties there? GM is open weekdays from 7 a.m. till 11 p.m. except on Fri days, when they keep the doors open till midnight. For those who enjoy a bit of rug cutting, the . Rendezvous Room (its in the basement) pro vides dancing and socializing to juke box music every afternoon and evening. For those who have searched in vain for a pool room in the com munity, four billiard tables are available in GM's basement each afternoon and evening except Sundays. If you need a haircut but are a little shy on the green, drop by the GM barber shop, likewise in the basement, and have your ears lowered without having your wallet lifted. But all the GM facilities are not in the basement. Upstairs, the main lounge is open all day. There you may browse among the daily papers, magazines, etc., or just relax in an easy chair and watch TV. And best of all, it's on the house. Faculty -Wise UNC faculty members will teach this summer in a variety of positions off the campus. Among those to be away are Harold D. Meyer, professor of sociology and chairman of the recreation leadership curriculum, and Donald G. Tarbet, associate professor of education, both of whom will be visiting lecturers in the College of Education at the University of Colorado. Five members of the School of Education faculty will teach in five institutions outside the state this summer. Prof. Minor Gwynn will teach at Northwestern University; Prof. Samuel Holton at Bowling Green State University in Ohio; Prof. W. M. Jenkins at the University of Oregon; Prof. Gordon Ellis at Oreeon State: and Tarbet at Colorado. Church Schedules BAPTIST Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.; Serv ice 11 a.m.; Nursery for children, 9:45 a.m.-12; Supper Forum, 6 p.m. CATHOLIC Mass, 8 and 10 a.m. CONGREGATIONAL CHRISTIAN Church School, 9 a.m.; Service, 10 a.m. COMMUNITY CHURCH Morning Service, 9:30 a.m. (Forest Theater). EPISCOPAL Holy Communion, 7:30 a.m.; Family Service, 9:30 a.m., (Classes for children 2-5 during Family Service); Morning Service, 11 a.m. LUTHERAN Service, 11 a.m. METHODIST Morning Services, 9, 11 a.m.; Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Wesley Foundation, 5:30 p.m. PRESBYTERIAN Bible School, 9 a.m.; Morning Service, 10:15 a.m.; Nursery for all ages. . V . - .... ,' V t : , r ' I i A ' V - : ll illlftllifllltllH AND SUMMER SCHOOL BEGINS With Registration, Of Course Activities Council Plans Many and Varied Events If you have a miserable time at summer school, it won't be the fault of the Summer School Acti vities Council. They have assembled a host of activities for both summer sessions that should go a long way toward making the next few months entertaining and then some. Nola Hatten, chairman of the Summer School Activities Coun cil, describes their entertainment as "both educational and enjoy able." This would seem to pro vide worthwhile pastimes for those students who came to UNC this summer to learn, for those few who came just to have a good time and for those who intend to learn and have a good time doing it. Said Nola: "We will try to plan a very enjoyable summer for everyone here and we hope that G. H. Dedmond Named Auditor Gesse Henry Dedmond, UNC '50, has been named Auditor of the Student Activities Fund, ac cording to an announcement by Student Body President Sonny Evans. He replaces Harry Kear, who retired last June 1 after 16 years in the position. Dedmond, who was president of the UNC Student Body in 1949, received his B.S. degree in ac counting in 1950. Since that time he has spent three years with the United States General Accounting Office, work ed for a bank in Rocky Mount and engaged in the insurance business in Chapel Hill. Duties of the auditor include supervision of: some $300,000 from the Athletic Association, the financial books of the many cam pus fraternities and sororities and over $115,000 spent yearly by the Student Government. Evans expressed satisfaction with the recent appointment. Said Evans: "We are all very pleased and deem ourselves very fortunate to have an individual as auditor of the Student Activi ties Fund who so firmly believes in the cause of student self government." "We look forward to many years of tenure with Gesse Ded mond as auditor', he added. ) - r t - x,..J.' -j they will take advantage of the many, opportunities that will be open to them." Among these activities are: 1) Free flicks. These will be shown about once a week at Carroll Hall. During the year they will include such films as "Desert Fox" (That's this Mon day), "Jim Thorpe, All Ameri can," "The Jazz Singer" and others. 2) The Moonlight Seranade, a dance to be held on the 21st of this month. 3) The Watermelon Festival on July 3rd. (In addition to all the watermelon you can hold, there will be a dance at which a stu dent Queen of the Watermelon Festival and a faculty King will be crowned.) 4) The Hill Music Series. This series is provided in cooperation with the UNC School of Music and next week (Tuesday, June 11) will feature the Edgar Aldens in a production of violin music. 5) Excursions to Manteo for the festivities there in connection with the Lost Colony and Paul Green's play by the same name. 6) The Chanticleers, a male quartet. They may not be as well known as the Four Aces, but they are rumored to be more than just pretty good. They will present several programs during the first session. If you would like to help the Activities Council to conduct Professor, 4 Students Get Fulbright Overseas Grants Four Fulbright Fellowships for study overseas have been award ed to University of North Caro lina recipents recently. Charles Jefferson Thompson of Salisbury, a senior, has been awarded a fellowship for study in France. Now completing his A.B. de gree in -French, Thompson will study at the University of Aix-en-Provence in southeastern France. His special field of study will concern Frederic Mistral, a 19th century writer who won the Nobe. Peace Prize, and the "Feli bridge," a group which Mistral headed. Miss Mary Jean Smith of Orientation Named By Twelve Carolina women were selected to serve as women's orientation counselors to the 214 new women students entering JNC for the first summer session. Those named, were Caroline Brown, Pat Gregory, Ann Holt, Bobbi Madison, Andrea Stavley, Mary Alys Voorhees, Nola Hat ten, Ann Stallings, Martha Willi !ord, Ginny Dawson, Joan Schlitz md Pat Dillon. Through their services the summer school students will re ceive an introduction to Carolina as it is known year around. The :hairman of the Women's Orien tation Committee, Susan Mayhue, las expressed appreciation and complete satisfaction with the work these girls have done. Chairman of the Campus Ori entation Committee Jerry Oppen- Administration Announces Four New Appointments Two major appointments by the board' of trustees of the Uni versity of North Carolina and two appointments of department heads are announced. James Arthur Branch has been appointed as business manager of UNC to succeed Claude E. Teague, who has held the post since 1943. Mr. Teague will re tire July 1. Branch has been director of purchasing at the University since 1938. Prior to that time he was in the University accounting department. Chancellor Robert B. House has announced the appointment of Jerrold Orne as librarian fol lowing approval by President William C. Friday and the board of trustees. Orne, whose appointment is effective August 1, is currently director of libraries at the Air University, Maxwell Field Air Force Base, Montgomery, Ala. He succeeds Andrew H. Horn, who will become librarian of Occidental College at Los Angeles, Calif. Dr. Dan O. Price has been ap pointed as new director of the these programs and plan others, Nola reports that positions on the Council will be open to students who will be here during the summer. If interested, contact her at Mclver Dorm. Greensboro, graduate student in Romance Languages, has been awarded a grant to do special research next year at the Uni versity of Brussels in Belgium. Miss Smith, who has her mas ter's degree from the University, is working on her Ph.D. degree in French and will study "Influences Upon the Writing of French Men of Letters in Exile in the 'Low Country in the 18th Century." Benny R. Reece, who got his Ph.D. Monday, has been awarded a fellowship to study at the Uni versity of Munich in Germany. Reece, whose home is at Arden, is a classics scholar and will study paleography at Munich. Advisors Chairmen heimer announced the selection of six men who will serve as orientation counselors to fresh men entering Carolina for their first introduction to college life. The following men were named: Jim White, Gene McDaniel, Bill Michael, Craven Brewer, Sam Scott and Keith Smith. The work of these dual orien tation committees is year around. The committees have spent the spring semester planning for the fall orientation program. They must provide for summer school orientation for both sum mer sessions, administer the fall orientation program, and com plete the orientation year with mid-year orientation for students entering Carolina between the change in semesters. Institute for Research in Social Science. Although he has had a life packed with scholarly achievement, he is only 38 years old. He succeeds Kenan Professor Gordon W. Blackwell as head of the widely known institute July 1. On that date, Dr. Blackwell will become chancellor of the Woman's College of the greater UNC in Greensboro. Miss Christine Burton has been named to head the newly created Department .pf Occupational Therapy of the N.C. Memorial Hospital. The new department operates under the direction of the Re habilitation Committee of the Department of Preventive Medi cine of the UNC School of Medi cine. Violin Concert (li&J Turn Jtjmum By CORT EDWARDS Dr. and Mrs. Edgar Alden, violinists, will join with Dr. Schinhan, pianist, in a concert next Tuesday evening which will be given in Hill Hall at 8 p.m. The highlights of the program which is open to the public with out charge will be Purcell's Gold en Sonata: Telemann's Sonata in G (in Canon form for two violins): Bach's Sonata in C: Mozart's Thin , . in G. for violin nnrl vinln nrr Stoessel's Suite Antique. Both Mr. and Mrs. Alden are well known as violinists, having performed throughout North Carolina either individually as soloists, together as a two-violin team, or in various chamber or orchestral groups. Mr. Alden is now a regular member of the faculty in the Department of Music at the Uni versity since 1950, where he teaches violin, harmony and grad uate courses in musicology, and also acts as associate conductor of thf TTnmercifv BirmnlinnTi fVnt- estra. Prof. Jan P. Schinhan, chair man of the Organ Dept., teaches courses in folk music, harmony, comparative musicology and ad vanced composition. '- . 8559730 .

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