Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 8, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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S3S i ..... i CHAPEL HILL, N. C. THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1961 Over 7,000 Expected This Summer ' t' U OVER -7000 students are expected to attend this 'UNC Summer Session, the largest in the session's long iTiistory. Dr. A. K; King, Summer School director said Tues day that his office expected an enrollment of "over 4,000" for the first session and "about 3,000" for the second ses sion. , . ' ' . . King said that -the pre-registration rate of regular . UNC students was up 5 per cent from last year and that the visiting student rate was up I . .... MlllC 1300. A teacher in the history and phi losophy of education, Dr. King re ceived his Ph.D. from the Uni versity of Chicago in the Depart ment of History with a minor in education. King will deliver the opening wel come at the orientation meeting to night in Carroll Hall at 7:30 p.m. Attendance at this meeting is re quired from all new students at Carolina. Orientation Meet In addition to Dr. King's address, an explanation of student govern ment during summer sessions will be given by Summer School Stu dent Body President Hank Patter- 17 per cent. Visiting students from over 100 other . institutions besides UNC will be here this summer. To at tend the summer session they must be in good standing at their own schools. .. 225 Professors Teaching this diversified group will be 225 professors and about 150 instructors and graduate as sistants. The first sessions students will learn from 140 teachers of pro fessorial rank, about 56 instructors, and 25 graduate assistants. About 90 professors, 45 instruc tors ,and 20 graduate assistants will minister to the academic needs j of second session students. Linda Moose of Albemarle, a mem ber of the graduating class of 1961, bids a pictoral farewell to Carolina . . . and a "hello" to incoming summer school students. Miss Moose, a cheerleader last fall, appears to be enjoying the beauties of Chapel Hill in the summer. (Photo by Eugene Darrow) 8 Campus Bulletin In addtion to the coursese of instruction offered by these teach ers. the summer session will hold over 20 special programs and in stitutes. Among these are several pro grams for undergraduate research, the annual School Week, the Sum mer Institute for High School Tea chers of Science and Mathematics, several special education programs, and programs in music and dra matic arts. All or these are listed in the Summer Session Record. Director King Summer School Director King has been associated with UNC since 1925. From mat year until 1941 he served as an instructor and professor. In 1941 he added the duties of a General College Ad visor to his curriculum. He was named Associate Dean of the Gra duate School in 1945, and has serv ed as director of Summer Ses- Chambers Speaks On South 2,000 Students Graduate The Blair Ellis Combo will be featured on a Summer Activities Council sponsored program to morrow night from 7:30-11 in front of Graham Memorial. ry c i- i i 1 1 rree ruresnmenu ium.4 wm stark and overwhelming necessity South because you are North Caro be served and there will be no ad-of the South .. Unoir Chambers linians, or because you live in oth- ."To free the young is to free, "This is the South, and all cf you the whole South . . . That is the have special knowledge of the mission charge. The program is the first of the summer lor the Activities Coun cil under the chairmanship of Clyde Benton. There will be no free flick to- told more than 2,000 UNC gradu ates-to-be in the commencement ad dress Monday night. The awarding of degrees and Chamber's speech ended three days of commencement activity. Alumni reunions and concerts were fea- J a. t I r-y . Mill VI It? UilU VVil.Vi T V 1 I V. CI E!S n dr?n, h?i?,eSf 00 Meet" tured throughout the Saturday ing in Carroll Hall. The prozram iit,.. - r itiuiuin v wr-i ii hi r - - - win stan next inursaay with a showing of "Brandy for the Par son" in Carroll at 7:30 p.m. The free flicks are sponsored by Graham Memorial and will be shown in Carroll every Thursday from now until August 17. They are a continuation of the regular UNC free flick series. The Summer Choral Workshop will open Sunday and run through Monday, June 19 in Hill Hall. ' .-I Joel Carter and the UNC String Quartet will perform in Hill Hall next Tuesday night at 8. The pub lic is invited. On Sunday morning William G. er bouthern states, or because from Chapel Hill you have known Southern life. But this is also the United States of America, and the people of the South are people of the United States. Southerners are Americans .... South's Influence "Wherever you go, wherever you live, you will never escape the in remainder of the American peo ple. More recently, the rise of the Negro race into a broader con sciousness of its American citizen ship . . . have added fresh pres sures to the more than hundred years of pressures that have push ed Southern life back upon it- 'Quiet Revolution' "Time, education, communica tion, economic growth, business, the tides of population, war, in ternational responsibilities, the Pollard of Oak Ridge, Tenn.. izavei n, nr m n.,th ' ih ri,.Lr,-,rt ....;,.., i- the baccalaureate sermon m Me- tion of lhe Southern states to the 'eyes of young writers of the South- 1 -u V. j lu ?J piwsi-ni. united States, and the relation of amount to a quiet revolution, and highlighted the Monday afternoon. the United sta(es to tne Southern 'not always a quiet one . . . states, create a major condition of j American life "Do such changes as these mean, then, that we are marching to- activities. Then Monday night the 200 de- dium for' the commencement nro-l "The ,ong P!itical struggles of, ward the end of Southern distinc Zm rnrnfL7?; v ! the latter 19th Century and of thejtiveness? ... I think not. For the folg Virginian-Pilot, spoke on "The!20th. ,Sentury T'S' I South and The Nation." He wen a' variably around Southern themes P inter Pr;, Viic ,-,..;t that were unlike those in other . uti.v. 1 AJl 1113 U4I the integration issue. son. The Honor System will be out lined for new students by either Billey Riley or Al Pollard. This Orientation meeting will fol low a hectic period of registra tion in Woollen Gymnasium. All students who have not pre-register-ed must secure a permit to regis ter and then get their class tickets in the gym between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. today. Regular UNC students may ob tain their permit to register from their academic dean or General College advisor. Visiting students should pick up the permits in the Lobby of Woollen Gym. Students who have already pre- registered can pick up their class tickets in the lobby of Memorial Hall anytime between 9 a.m. and 8 p.m. today. Air Conditioning Classes begin tomorrow morning. Studying students wishing to es cape the heat can use the air con ditioned facilities of several camp us buildings. All of Peabody Hall is air-conditioned; there are air con ditioned areas of the library, the Ackland Art building, Carroll Hall, the new Physics building, and Aber nathy Hall. Another comforting feature for male students is the male-female ratio during the summer months. Where regular UNC male students must suffer under, the burden of competing with six of his fellows for every girl, the summer session male will have only one competi tor per female. On this happy note, the 1961 Summer Session opens. Photographer Speech Exerpts Following are excerpts from Mr. Chambers' address. ". . . . Because you are univer sity men and women, and are sur- parts of the United States . . . "The inevitable effect of ;'U such forces was to drive Southern life inward and to isolate Southern thinking from the thinking of the INEFFICIENCY REASON life being aware of itself: he has rounded by friends of this institu-' So long as national States exist awareness of himself, of his fellow 'tion. I ask you to think for a few 'and fight each other, only ineffi- man. of his past, and of the possi-, minutes about the land where this ciency can preserve the human i bilities of his future. Erich Fromm university lives I race.Bertrand Russell time will never come when the South does not have something of its own to contribute to the greater community of which it is inescap ably a part .... Full Participation Any photographer interested in taking pictures, for. ttie UNC News should call either Sua Clotfelter or Bill Hobbs at or at the office phone 942-235ri Anyone interested in writing (news or features) of. in any other phases of putting out a newspaper is urged to contribute his services to the UNC News. An asst. business manager is needed, also. There will be a staff meeting for all students who have previously expressed interest in writing for the News and for all other prospec tice writers at 5 next Monday af- -iTt hni eiJ-uifi lll interested, should call either ??Uu T- luUlLu.CreaSei'Clotfelter or Hobbs at one of the the work of its scholarship and the influence of its understanding and its own realization of the deep necessity in lifting the South into full and complete and proud par above phone numbers. GOD Don't you know that God is Pooh ticipation in the life of the nation." ; Bear? Jack Kerouae V V
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 8, 1961, edition 1
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