t
JYnesday, Sept 20,1961
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Page Three
w
eslev
R
e vises
.Back
Program
A revised Wesley Foundation
program, including new "dialogue
groups," is lined up for the com
ing year.
The customary several course
fellowship supper has been cut to
,a dessert course but several new
.courses. taught via . group discus
sion have been added.
Leading the groups will be Dr.
Sam Hill, chairman of the Reli
ion Dept.: Rev. Dewitt Mvers.
pastor of the United Church of back. Associate Professor (Foster
Christ; Sam McGill, former Dean 1 Fitz-Simons and Assistant Profes-
of Student Affairs: J. D. Phillips, sor Tommy Rezutto. Professor Fos
After Year Absence
T
wo
NSA R
eDresentatives
Elected To National Posts
Twenty-one Carolina faculty mem
bers have returned to Chapel Hill
from leaves of absence in and
throughout the United States and
the world.
These faculty members have been
on leaves of one-half a year up to
one and one-half years pursuing re
search, collecting material . f o r
books, stuying, an serving as visit
ing professors.
In the Department of Dramatic
Arts, two faculty members are
Law School faculty; and Dr. Harold
McCurdy, Department of Psycho
logy faculty.
. ' Last Sunday night approximate
ly 80 students met in the Fellow
Ship Hall of the Methodist Church.
A model of the proposed Weslev
ter Fitz-Simons returns from a
Kenan leave for the spring semester
of this year. He has been working
on a future publication- oeerfld
with choreography in the theater.
Professor Rezutto had a year's
leave to study toward a Ph.D. de-
Foundation Building was display-gree at 'Northwestern University
ed. Plans were announced for a!
Assistant Professor James B. !
working on a critical study of the
novels and short stories of Wil
liam Faulkner which deal with the
Sartoris, McCaslin and Snopes
families of the author's Yaknapa
tawpha series.
History Prof Returns
In the Department of History,
Professor Frank W. " Klingberg re
turns from serving as a visiting pro
fessor at San Fernando Valley State
College in Northridge, Calif. Pro
fessor Klingberg had a year's leave
of absence, and while at San Fer
nando Valley State, he did con
sulting work on the College's grad
uate program.
Professor William R. Mann
(mathematics) returns from a year's
leave during which he studied at the
University of California at Berkeley
on a (National bcience Foundation
faculty fellowship.
A one year's Guggenheim Fellow
ship gave Professor William S.
Newman (music) an opportunity to
Student Movement State Retreat Meriwether (English) has returned continue work on his "History of the
Sept. 23-24 at Camp Chesnut Ridge. from a year's leave. Professor Meri-ISonata Idea." Professor Newman
wether received one of 10 full year 'has planned a series of books on
fellowships granted to scholars in 'the sonata, one of which has al-
Tomatoes are the No. 1
crop in the United States.
truck ; English by the American Council of
'Learned Societies. He has been
-n
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
3. Food fish
5- Branchlike
XL Letter closing-
22. Arm joints
13. Copies
14. Music noto
15. Transgress
16. Setting'-suix
direction.
17. Siberian
Sulf
23. Compass
point
abbr.)
19. Tempted
2. springs 22. Comfort
eternal 22. Worth-
3. Birds
4. Impover
ished
5. Eliminate
6. Excuse
.Bachelor
of
. Medicine
Cabbr.)
8. Hawaiian
birds
9. Defrauds
10. Serf
20. Mrs. Smith,
Jones
less
24. Not a
copy
25. S
shaped molding-
27. Bitter
vetch
29. Conflict
21. Shade of
redl
S3. Areas !
34. Sun
37. Set of
boxes
- (Jap.)
C J ' PjErlHiEUbp
P A. ClEgf IE UR' Ulb
Q N Eplcjj R E NA
L A BZLJHI? FTTY
I C E FIOiOItPTSIS
C E PE BIpI A LEL1!!'!!
p .M1- EpCOPISjh
ZfZl JL I Bh T F Kjtg
B g I A NTlMlOO KY
iIIi3 Iel fIs
Tester dAy' Autcc
38. Pierce
C S9. Stockings
41. Combat
flier
45. Music
note
23. Baby's shoe 21. More
26. Robust parched
28. Quibble
29. More
prudent
SO. Lose weight
31. Pet
22. Old fellow3
(slang)
24. Chinese
measure
25. Conjunc '
tion f
Go. Exclania-
tion $
4.0. Prescript
tion tern)
(sym.
43. Preposition
44. Twin
crystals 3k
46. Epochs
47. Polite wore!
48. Caesar's
tunic
IOWJf
2. Cabbage
' 9-1
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ready been published.
Assistant 'Professor Ruth I. Price
'(physical education), dance teacher,
returns from a year's academic
leave which she spent travelling
throughout the Far East observing
native dance.
Four In Politics
In the Department of Political
Science, four faculty members re
turn, Acting Associate Professor
Andrew M. Scott, Professor David
G. - Monroe, Associate Professor
Robert R. Rupen and Kenan Pro-
year. Following that, he served as
Acting Chancellor of Woman's Col
lege in Greensboro.
Back From Bristol
Kenan Professor Everett D. Pal-
matier '(physics) returns from a
year's leave which he spent at the
University of Bristol, Bristol, Eng
land, on -a National -Science- Foun
dation senior post-doctoral research
fellowship. Professor Dorothy A.
Wood (psychology), has been on an
18-month leave during which she
travelled to South America.
In the School of Public Health,
Professor and Head of the Depart
ment of Maternal and Child Health
Sid S. Chipman has returned from
a year's leave which he spent at the
Higher Institute of Public Health,
Alexandria, Egypt. His teaching and
public health practice there was
sponsored by the World Health Or
ganization and the National Gov
ernment of the United Arab Re
public. ,
Professor and Head of the De
partment of Public Health Adminis
tration John J. Wright returns from
a year's Kenan leave which he spent
as a consultant with the Florida
State Board of Health.
Associate Professor
Associate Professor Elizabeth L.
McMahan, of the Department of
Public Health Education, returns
from a year's leave which she spent
doing advanced graduate work to
ward a Ph.D. in Education at Duke
University.
In the Department of Sanitary
Engineering, Professor and Head
JJamei A. Ukun returns from a
(Continued from Page 1)
demning "In Loco Parentis," the
theory whereby the university is
established as "paternal guardian
over the moral, intellectual and
social activities of the student."
The total Congress vote was 239
33 in favor of the resolution.
Soviet Condemned
Bills condemning Soviet action
in Berlin and recommending that
the film "Operation Abolition" be
taken out of circulation, among
other legislation, were approved
later in the Congress.
The Congress itself was pre
ceded by the Student Editorial
Affairs Conference, the Student
Body President's Conference, and
the NSA Coordinator's Confer
ence. More than 500 student represen
tatives from colleges across the
nation including most of the ma
jor U. S. universities met for
the 14th annual Congress begin
ning Aug. 20. The stated purpose
of the Congress is to allow stu
dent "leaders" from different
parts of the country to meet and
exchange ideas and programs
and also to create a forum for
the American student, through
his elected representatives, to
give his opinions on the major
problems facing the student.
The first seven days of the
Congress were devoted to discus
sion workshops, adoption of rules,
speakers such as 'Gov. Gaylord
Nelson of Wisconsin, Congress of
Racial Equality Director James
Farmer, and former U. S. Secre
tary of Health, Education and
Welfare, Arthur S. Flemming,
and Fulton Lewis III and Mike
Harrington, pro and con HUAC
and legislative committees and
sub-committees.
The last four days were spent
in legislative sessions and elec
tion of next year's officers. Har
riss and Patterson of UNC were
appointed to the National Execu
tive Committee and National In
t e r i m Committee respectivly.
These groups decide NSA policy
between national Congresses and
manage the implementation of
Congress declarations.
Two former Carolina s'r'ctents
also former NSA presfents
spoke at the Congress: Richard
J. Murphy, NSA prexy 1952-3 and
now U. S. Asst. Postmaster Gen
eral, and Al Lowenstein, 1950-1
and recently named Asst. Dean
of Students at Stanford. UNC is
the only university in the nation
which has had two NSA presidents.
George Johnson Jr.
Joins UNC Faculty
Dr. George Johnson Jr., native
of Wilmington, has joined the fa
culty of the University School of
Medicine. He will be an assistant
professor in the Department of Sur
gery. Dr. Johnson received his B.S. de
gree in Medicine at Chapel Hill in
1949, his certificate in Medicine at
UNC in 1950, and his M.D. degree
in 1952 at Cornell University. He
was an assistant in surgery at New
York Hospital, an instructor in sur
gery at Cornell, and has been a
clinical instructor in surgery at
Memorial Hospital since 1959.
'"Hjjwi"
fessor of History and Political year's leave which he spent on study
Science and Dean of the Graduate
School, Emeritus W. W. Pierson.
Professor Scott taught during the
and research in the Netherlands
under a National Science Foundation
senior post-doctoral fellowship. Pro-
past year at the University of Bo-jfessor okun conducted research on
logna, Bologna, Italy. He had a one ; oxygenation at the Research Insti-
year s r uibrigm proiessorsnip ana tute for Public Health Engineering
was attached to the University's ,TNO in The Hague and participated
Center for International Mudies m lectures at the technological uni-
there a center which is sponsored versitv in Delft
by Johns Hopkins University.
Professors Charles H. Burnett,
Professor Monroe had a year's 'a. T. Miller Jr., Carl W. Gottschalk
academic leave to serve as a visit-1 and Associate Professor John H.
ing professor in the Department of Schwab, all in the School of Medi
Police Administration at the Uni- cjne, return from one-year leaves.
versity of Indiana. Professor Rupen Professor Burnett, who is Chairman
served as a visiting professor at 0f the Department of Medicine, had
Columbia University during the;a Commonwealth Fund Fellowship
spring oi this year.
Kenan Professor Pierson has been
for study at the University of Lon
don. Professor Miller (physiology)
on leave since February, 1960. He served as Liaison Officer in the
served as acting chairman of the Naval Research Branch Office of tne
State Board of Higher Education Office of Naval Research in Lon
from February to September of that 'don.
1
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Open Till 10 P.M.
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CONSTRUCTION BEHIND SOUTH BUILD
ING Shown above is the construction of an air
conditioning unit for South and Steele buildings.
The unit will 'be housed in an underground vault
behind South Building, in background. The vault
will house 100 tons of air-conditioning equipment
of which 60 tons will be for South and the- remain- ,
ing 40 tons for Steele. The construction, started
in mid-July, will be completed in three weeks.
(Photo by Jim Wallace)
Napoleon as you will note
Kept his hand tucked inside of l:is coat
When his friends asked, "Mon Cber,
Qu'est-ce-que c'est haye you there?'1
He replied "C'est mon Swingline je tote.1
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