Friday, June 21. 1357
THE SUMMER SCHOOL WEEKLY
Page 3
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What's Going On
' Friday, June 21 ,
Planetarium show, "Science
Fiction," 8:30 p.m.
"Moonlight Serenade". Dance,
Tennis Courts, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, June 22
Planetarium Show, 11 a.m.,
3 p.m., 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, June 23
Planetarium Show, 3 p.m., 4
p.m., 8:30 p.m.
Wesleyan Foundation, 5 p.m.,
Methodist Church.
Canterbury Club, 6 p.m., Epis
copal Church.
Presbyterian Westminster Fel
Hollywood Anyone?
, One can never tell where
, Hollywood talent scouts may be
lurking. Ava Gardner was dug
out of an eastern Carolina sand
hill and Andy Griffith was found
, in a hardware store in Chapel
Hill.
Now the Summer School Activ
ities Council wants to give you
' the chance to begin a meteoric
. rise to stardom. To this end, they
have arranged a talent show to
be held in connection with the
annual Watermelon Festival.
Anyone interested in the pos
sibility of a Beverly Hills ad-
dress is urged to contact Andrea
Stalvey, who lives on the third
floor of Alderman.
The show must go on!
- Panhel, IFC Councils
Give Funds to Nursery
4
The Panhellenic and Inter
fraternity Councils of UNC have
, . recently presented checks total-
ing $395 to the Chapel Hill Re
creation Center and to the Victory
Village Day' Nursery.
Sallie Price, Panhel president,
and Tucker Yates, IFC president,
4 presented .the checks. The Chapel
Hill Recreation Center received
$150 and the nursery received
$245.
The nursery keeps children of
married UNC students during
; class hours.
" The money was raised at a
,,. concert featuring Richard Maults
l by and his orchestra and co
sponsored by Panhellenic and the
IFC.
8' ..
(Photo By Bill King)
BERTHA AKIM
Visits Carolina Campus
lowship, 6 p.m., Westminster Fel
lowship Hut.
Baptist Student Union, 6 p.m.,
Church Dining Room, Baptist
Church.
Monday, June 24
Planetarium show, 8:30 p.m.
Summer -School Activities
Board, 5 p.m., Roland Parker
Lounge No. 1.
Bridge, 7:30 p.m. Rendezvous
Room.
Piano Clinic, recitals . by four
outstanding NC students, 8 p.m.,
Hill Music Hall.
Tuesday, June 25
Planetarium show, 8:30 p.m.
Piano Clinic, Lily Keleti, 8 p.m.,
Hill Music Hall.
Free Flick, "Captain January,"
8 p.m., Carroll Hall.
Wednesday, June 28
Planetarium show, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, June 27
Planetarium show, 8:30 p.m.
Film Series, "Hasty Heart,"
8 p.m., Carroll Hall.
Friday, June 28
Planetarium show, 8:30 p.m.
Bridge Winners
Are Announced
Delores Abrams and Frank
Scott, both graduate students,
scored 157 of a possible 264 match
points (59.5 per cent) to cop first
place in the students' division of
Monday night's master-point
bridge tournament at Graham
Memorial.
The next highest score in the
tournament was rated by Nancy
Thanington and Jerry Shields,
who tallied 156 of the possible
264.
The one-point margin of vic
tory was determined at 3 a.m.
Tuesday.
In third' place were Ray Nors
worthy and Willis N. Pence.
Fourth place was won by Mar
garet Rowland and Mrs. Arlene
Campbell. Winning fourth place
North-South were John Warlick
and D. A. Ivey.
Fifty players participated in
Monday's tournament. Of the 25
couples, 15 were student com
prised. According to a spokesman
for the group, this week's crowd
outnumbered that participating
last week.
I anganyikan Visitor hndls
The Mill As Hot As Africa
By MARY MOORE MASON
Bertha Akim smiled broadly
and said in perfect English, "Yes,
I am the only woman from Tan
ganyika, East Africa, to ever visit
the United States. And," she
continued, wiping her brow, "I
think that it feels hotter here
than it does there."
Miss Akim, a member of the
Wanyakysa tribe, was a visitor
of the Y on the' Carolina campus
Monday and Tuesday.
She arrived in America last
July on the Bernard Van Leer
3,302 Students
Enrolled Here
This Summer
A total of 3,302 students are
enrolled at Carolina for the first
term of the 1957 summer session
to top last summer's registration
of 3,140, according to Director of
Admissions Guy B. Phillips.
This summer's first term enroll
ment is one of the heaviest since
1948, when 4,493 were enrolled.
According to Phillips, the 1957
figures show an increase in stu
dents at the General College and
graduate levels.
Enrollment of out-of-state stu
dents has increased over last sum
mer by 100, and of foreign stu
dents by 16. North Carolina stu
dents here first term number
2,726. Of the principal states
represented, Virginia has 117 stu
dents; South Carolina, 60; Florida,
50; New York, 42; Georgia, 37;
Pennsylvania, 29; West Virginia,
24; and New Jersey, 22. There are
35 foreign students enrolled.
One hundred fifty persons are
currently attending the University
for non-credit instruction in addi
tion to the 3,302 regularly enrolled
students.
Of this 150, 20 are enrolled in
a 12-week Dental Assistant Pilot
Training Program; 55 in a six
week College Chemistry Instruc
tors Institute; and 75 in a four
week program for public health
nurses in the School of Public
Health.
Registration for the second
term of summer school will begin
July 15.
Coed Judy Dockery
Reported Improving
The UNC coed who was injured
in an automobile wreck recently,
Judy Dockery, is reported to be
"much improved."
Her mother, Mrs. J. S. Dockery,
has reported that she hopes to be
able to take Judith home from the
hospital soon.
Miss Dockery suffered a slight
concussion, severe bruises and a
broken jaw bone in a wreck in
Kentucky June 1 which took the
life of Nancy Kiser, a rising
senior at Woman's College.
From Rutherfordton, Miss
Dockery "had no major breaks or
cuts, but has been in much pain
and is still quite uncomfortable,"
her mother reported.
When . the accident occurred,
Miss Dockery was traveling with
other students to Yellowstone
Park to work for the summer.
and Atlanta Foundation scholar
ships to . attend Mount ' Holyoke
College in Massachusetts.
"The first time that I saw' the
snow fall, I thought that when
it fell on me it would turn me
to ice," she laughingly remi
nisced. '
Bertha went through the first
six grades in Tanganyika, a U.N.
trust territory of Great Britain,
after which she went to Uganda
for high school and then to
Makereie College, affiliated with
London University, for her higher
education.
She summed up the problem in
her country by saying "When the
British came in they condemned
everything they found there, but
they didn't provide people with
anything to take its place."
Comparing Westerners, she
said, "English people are more
reserved than are the Americans;
it is 'difficult to see what the
Briton's point of view is."
Miss Akim expects to return
to Tanganyika in a few weeks.
There she will teach in the train
ing school where she was teach
ing before she visited the U. S.
According to her, a very small
percentage of her people can
read. Consequently, the people
are not able to read the British
published papers which publi
cized American race problems.
"The Mau Maus," she said as
she got ready to leave, "in Kenya,
which is near us, were rebelling
against the Westerners who
weren't playing the role of
Christian that they set for them
selves. ' However, the mission-
Chorus Wants
More Members
Wanted students, faculty and
townspeople to sing in the Sum
mer School Chorus.
The chorus, which began re
hearsals last week, is under the
direction of Thomas E. Sibley,
a graduate student from Al
bemarle. Sibley said, "Anyone, even if
they plan to be here only one ses
sion, who would like to sing in the
chorus may do so by merely com
ing to the rehearsals."
He also added that there are no
voice tests to be taken nor any
other prerequisites.
i
The rehearsals will be held each
week on Tuesday and Thursday
at 4 p.m.
Sibley, after serving two years
in the army, completed his under
graduate studies at UNC, and is
now a first year graduate student
in the Music Dept. He plans even
tually to teach in an elementary
school.
Lost and Found
Having trouble finding your
Summer School Weekly?
If you have been making like a
big game hunter in order to find
out what the scoop is on campus,
your tracking days are over.
Copies of the Summer School
Weekly can be found in neat little
piles every Friday at Y Court, the
library, South building and the
lobby of Graham Memorial.
aries have done much good in my
country, and have given the peo
ple an idea of the good side of
Western civilization."
Deadline Set
For Entrants
In Contest
Attention dorms, sororities and
fraternities. The deadline for en
tering sponsors for the Water
melon Festival Queen contest is
noon, Monday, June 24. No late
entries will be accepted.
Contest chairman Judy Davis
asks that the entries be turned
in, with a charge of $3 for each
entrant, to the Office of Student
Affairs on the second floor of
South building. A dorm may
sponsor more than one girl.
The sponsors' pictures will be
posted in Y-Court from June 28
through July 2. Votes will be a
penny each.
The three highest will be se
lected, from which the students
and faculty will choose a queen
by casting free votes on Wednes
day, July 3, in Y-Court. The girl .
with the highest total will be
crowned Queen at the Festival
Wednesday night, with the run-ners-up
as her court.
The Watermelon King will be
chosen from the faculty by the
Summer School Activities Coun
cil and will reign with the Queen
over the festivities of the, gala.,,
evening.
Music Clinic
(Continued from page 1)
Europe, both as a recitalist and as
soloist with leading orchestras.
Her program includes: " Bach
Liszt, "Prelude and Fugue in A
Minor;" Mozart, '.'Sonata in D
Major;" Chopin, Sonata No. 3 in
B Minor"; Kodaly, "Szekely Re
serves" (Hungarian Lament);
Bartok, "Rondo;" Dohnanyi,
"Ruralia Hungarica;" Strauss
Dohnanyi, "Fledermaus Valse."
The four outstanding' North
Carolina high school pianists and
their teachers are Eleanor Smith,
pupil of Fletcher Moore at Elon
College; Sandra Lundin, pupil of
Charles Vardell of Flora Mac
Donald College; Linda Waldrop,
pupil of Edwin Gerschefski, dean
of music at Converse College;
Robert Vernon Fulk Jr., who is a
Morehead Scholar, pupil of Mrs.
Sam Troy of Wilmington.
Eleanor Smith's program will
include selections from Bach,
Mozart, Haydn, Grieg, Godowsky
and MacDowell. Sandra Lundin
will play selections from Bach,
Beethoven, Schumann, Mac
Dowell and Chopin,
Linda Waldrop will play three
Chopin etudes and his "Scherzo
in B-flat Minor." Robert Vernon
Fulk Jr., will complete the pro
gram with Schumann's "Allegro
affettuoso," first movement from
Concerto in A Minor.
The audience has been invited
to attend a reception for the per
formers and visitors presented by
the Music Department, the Ex
tension Division, and the Summer
Activities Council immediately
after the program in Graham
MemoriaL