Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 29, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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NEWS CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1961 Nine Negroes Seek Entrance In CH Schools , Names of nine Negro applicants for admission to Chapel Hill public schools will be revealed Monday when the transfer applications are presented to the local School Board. ; Six of the applications are for "Under the Black Mask" will be rising first grade pupils. Two are the Free Flick tonight at 7:30 in for the Chapel Hill Junior High Carroll Hall. July Fourth. Parties Planned. Campus Bulletin School eighth and ninth grades and one for the third grade of the Carrboro Elementary School. No prospective first grade pupils have been assigned to any schools for the coming year, said Superin tendent of Schools Joseph Johns ton last week. Therefore, he said, the transfer applications for the six rising first grade Negro pupils were technically invalid when they were submitted Monday of last week. The three newly-elected members of the School Board have indicated they would like to consider a change in the first grade assignment plan, which has maintained segregation except by transfer application of parents of pupils. Hie same day the transfer, appli cations were submitted, Chapel Hill's summer school was quietly integrated. Three Negro pupils from Northside School were ad- miHarl in cniYrrtir Onccoc of whit Carrboro Elementary School be- Activities Council-sponsored par cause it would have been economi- ty at Kessing Pool at 7:30. Details 9iiv imrwihiA t mwM North- are available on this page in the j . vr "X "The spirit and the life of the black man of the Belgian Congo relected in his works of art ', Haesaerts has subtitled this docu mentary. When it was awarded the Grand Prize at the first Interna tional Art Films Festival at Ber gamo, Italy, it received a special citation from the judges for its "ethnographic value . . . and its powerful and original cinemto graphic realization." The film examines in detail the Ba-Kuba. Bena Lulua, Ba-Mbala, and Ba-Yaka sculpture. These works are seen in the natural frame of native life, say critics, while authentic African music en hances their interest. The film is called a superb introduction to Afri can culture and its important con tribution to art. There will be a Band Concert next Tuesday night the 4th at 7 in Emerson Field and a Summer side with only three pupils, Super intendent Johnston said. "old-fashioned Fourth" story. Rabbi Rosenzweig will speak on Dorm Presidents Elected For Term "Old Tradition in the New World" at 5:45 tonight at the Baptist Stud ent Union center on E. Rosemary Street. A six-week Seminar in School Administration for Principals will be held at the School of Education here from Monday through August 11. Under the direction of Dr. I. E. Ready, director of the curriculum study of the State Board of Educa tion, the seminar will cover prob lems of educational leadership fac ing the experienced school princi pal. Musicians from the Raleigh-Dur ham-Chapel Hill area are holding a renaissance of old-fashioned "con cert on the green" music on the campus this summer. Edward L. Kottick of the Music Department will direct the concerts. The con certs are next Tuesday, the 4th; July 25; and August 8 and 15. Graham Memorial is open every night of the week until 11 and until 12 on Saturday. Facilities include ping pong tables outside, billiards downstairs, the a i r-conditioned Rendezvous Room downstairs, food and drink machines, the Informa tion Desk, the spacious reading. card-playing, and music-playing Two large parties are planned to entertain summer ses sion students and townspeople next Tuesday, July 4. The second annual "Ole Fashioned July Fourth" ob servance will be held on Emerson Field in the afternoon and evening, and a July 4th Party will be held at Kessing Pool starting at 7:30 p.m. . The "Ole Fashioned Fourth" has been organized by the Chapel Hill Chapter of the American Field Service Student Exchange Program. It hasl been planned as a joint affair for the townspeople and sum mer school students. Third Student Party The Kessing Pool party will be the third student party this session sponsored by the Summer School Activities Committee. The "Ole Fashioned" party will begin in the early part of the af ternoon with baseball games on Emerson Field between selected teams and all stars from local Jun ior League players. Around 5:00 organized games such as sack races, three legged races, tricycle races, and bingo games will begin and continue until picnic time. Fried chicken plates will then be served at $1.00 for adults. Band Concert At 7 p.m. picknikers will hear a band concert presented by Graham Memorial and the Summer School Activities Committee under the di rection of Ed Kottick. Following the concert, a forty- five minute fireworks display fea turing fixed ground displays and imported Oriental night shells will be held. parties, this one will feature free refreshments and a free combo. Clyde Benton, chairman of the com mittee, has told the UNC News that the Dean of Women has given per mission for girls to wear bermu- das to the affair. Picnic Tickets Bob Boyce, American Field Ser vice Chairman stated that the "Ole Fashioned Fourth" picknikers could purchase meal tickets in ad vance at Ledbetter-Pickards, Glen Lennox Pharmacy, or Sherman Williams Co. Proceeds from the sale of con cessions and suppers at the outing will be used in the AFS program, which locally sponsors a foreign student in the Chapel Hill High School. SIT-IN Trial of the white Duke student arrested for a backward sit-in last week has been post-poned until July 11. It was supposed to have been heard Tuesday in Recorder's Court here. The student, Ed Orton of Durham, refused to leave the Negro section of the Chapel Hill bus terminal grill when asked by By CHARLES IIEATHERLY The men's Interdormitory Coun cil is functioning this summer on a limited basis. The IDC is unable to plan and execute as many so- Sanders, Ed Yoder To Speak Monday cial activities as it does during the regular session because there is no allowance from either the Student Government or dormitory rent fees for this purpose. According to IDC president Doug Burkhardt, the council will assist in the planning of social ac tivities in the individual dorms, establish a dormitory court to try any violations of dormitory regu- A tvoical conference between an nations, and work with the Summer editorial writer and the paper's! Activities Board is planning camp cartoonist in making up the day's us-wide activities. Membership in editorial page of a city newspaper (the IDC consists of the president will be staged next Monday night in from each of the men's dorms and Howell Hall auditorium when Ed, the JUL officers. Burkhardt is Yoder and Bill Sanders of The summer IDC president and John Greensboro Daily News appear on; Fisher, Vice-president. Dorm President The following have been elected ns dormitory presidents: Bill Bur well, Lewis, John Fisher, Joyner; Lance McDonald, Aycock; Mike Ashburn, Grimes; and Don Stuart Whisonant, Manly. The remaining lounge on the main floor, and the; - The 7:30 party at Kessing Pool the proprietor. He was arrested by offices of the UNC News on the will run until 10:45. Like all Sum- local police officers for "trespass second floor. imer School Activities Committee ing." The Flowers That Bloom S a YMCA-YWCA summer program. Students, faculty and townspeople are invited to attend and ask ques tions on editorial page make-up or how a cartoonist goes about his work. Cartoonist Sanders joined the staff of the Greensboro Daily News undergraduate dorms, Winston and in 1939. His cartoons appear in 15 Ruffin, have not yet elected offi other North Carolina papers, in-'cers. eluding The Chapel Hill Weekly, The Women's Residence Council, snd dailies in Georgia and Ken-(organized for purposes similar to tucky and the UNC News). They the IDC, has announced that the are frequently reprinted in such following presidents have been papers as The New York Times. 'elected for undergraduate women's The Washington Post and The dormitories: Melinda Bangs. Spen Washington Star, and magazines icer: Nancy Barr, Mclver; Sandy such as Newsweek and Time. A na- Hoffman, Smith; Aggie Robberson, the of Kentucky, Sanders' only j Alderman; and Linda Tush, Nurs previous newspaper experience be- es Dorm. fore joining the editorial staff of j The Greensboro Daily News was, MODERATE as sports cartoonist on the Pacific; Apparently a moderate in the: Stars 4 Stripes in Tokyo. j South is any white Southerner who! Ed Yoder. an alumnus of Caro- can prove that he hasn't lynched' Una. was co-editor of The Daily , any crippled old Negro grandmoth Tar Heel in 1956 and winner of the 'ers during prayer-meeting hours. (Continued on Page 7) iCarl Rowan V Out for a walk recently on one of Chapel Hill's few "sunny and plexant" days, is Lois Bethal of Winston-Salem." Th-3 weather has been oppressive recent ly, but there are still pleasant sight3 around town. Lois will be a sophomore next year at Rollins College. i Photo bv John Clifford'
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 29, 1961, edition 1
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