Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 28, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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5H Serials Dept. Box 870 Chapel HIU, N.C. Weather Cloudy and change of light rain. High in the low 50s. Not Worth It? See Edits, Page Two pffices in Graham Memorial TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Service I ... P Exam Schedule By action of the faculty, the time of an examination may not be changed after it has been fixed in the schedule. Quizzes are not to be given in this semester on or after Monday, January 15, 1961 The Official Class Roll and Grade Report will be prepared by the Data Processing Section and forwarded to the departments prior to the examination period. As in the past, the original copy will be returned to the Office of Records and Registration, the second copy (canary) is to be retained by the department, and the third copy (goldenrod) is to be kept by the instructor. Grade reports are to be handed in to the department office within 72 hours after the scheduled time of the final examination. The department chairman shall be responsible for-recording receipt of each grade report (the Form DR-1 may be used for this) and for forwarding it promptly to the Office of Records and Registration. In unusual cases, if it is clearly needed, an extension of the time limit, preferably not to exceed 48 hours, may be approved by the department chairman or the dean of the school concerned. The Office of Records and Registration must be given notice of the delay. (Faculty Council, May 6, 1960.) Machine processing of grades makes it urgent that all grades be turned in on time. All permits to take examinations to remove grades of "Exc. Abs." or "Cond." must be secured from the Office of Records and Registration prior to the exam. No students may be excused from a scheduled examination except by the University Infirmary in case of illness or by his Dean in case of any other emergency com pelling his absence. All 12:00 noon classes on MWF, Econ, 81 Mon. Jan. 22 8:30 a.m. All 2:00 p.m. classes on MWF, Econ. 31, 32 61 & 70 Mon. Jan. 22 2:00 p.m. All 9:00 a.m. classes on MWF Tues. Jan. 23 8:30 a.m. All 12:00 noon classes on TThs, all Naval Science and Air Science Tues. Jan. 23 2:00 p.m. All 9:00 a.m. classes on TThs Wed. Jan. 24 8:30 a.m. All 1:00 p.m. classes on TThs, Poli 41, Busi. 150 Wed. Jan. 24 2:00 p.m. All French, German & Spanish courses Numbered 1, 2, 3, 3x & 4, Phch. 61 Thurs. Jan. 25 2:00 p.m. All lliOO a.m. classes on TThS Fri. Jan. 26 8:30 a.m. All 8:00 a.m.' classes on MWF Fri Jan. 26 2:00 p.m. All 10:00 a.m. classes on TThS Sat. Jan. 27 8:30 a.m. All 1:00 p.m. classes on MWF Busi 160, Phys. 24 Sat. Jan. 27 2:00 p.m. All 11:00 a.m. classes on MWF Mon. Jan. 29 8:30 a.m. All 2:00 p.m. classes on TThS, Busi 130, Chem. 43 Mon. Jan. 29 2:00 p.m. All 3:00 p.m classes, Chcm. 11, ... . ; Busi. . 71 & 72, and all classes not otherwise provided for in this schedule Tues. Jan. 30 8:30 a.m. All 8:00 a.m. classes on TThS Tues. Jan. 30 2:00 p.m. Instructors teaching classes scheduled for common examina tions" shall request the students in these classes to report to them any conflict with any other examination not later than December 15. In case of a conflict, the regularly scheduled exam will take prece dence over the common exam. (Common exams are indicated by an asterisk.) Bluebelle Capt. The captain of the ketch Blue belle, which mysteriously sank in the Atlantic recently, was once a UNC student. Officers said Julian Harvey killed himself in Miami Novem ber 17 after survivor Terry Jo Duperrault, 11, was found alive. Harvey attended the University here from 1938 to 1940, completing two years of study. He left after his sophomore year. GMAB Schedule 3:30-5:00 Budget Committee WDHSE 4:30-6:30 Entertainment Commit tee RP 1 5:00-6:30 Petite Dramatique Grail 6: 30-7: 30 W:R.C Grail 6:30-8:00 JANUS TV Room TEACHING FOUNDATION Friday On Carnegie Board Consolidated UNC President William Friday has been elected to the board of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Mr. Friday's election was an nounced in New Vork yesterday. Mr s. Millicent C. Mcintosh, president of Barnard College, and New Phone Directories Out The . 1962 Chapel Hill telephone directories are. being mailed to townspeople, beginning last Sat urday. Mailings to the campus will follow the complete mailing of ap proximately 9500 books to regular subscribers. .j . . The new books are effective Monday, Dec. 4. Present direc tories - should not be discarded until that day. A major change for calling Memorial Hospital and ten medical .departments using a prefix is listed as" follows: - Once At UNC Terry Jo's parents, brother and sister went down with the Blue belle. Harvey's wife also died. The eleven-year-old girl saved herself by clinging to a life boat until rescued by a ship. She told the Coast Guard she saw Harvey abandon the ship, leaving her on the blood-stained deck aid the bodies of her mother and brother in the cabin below. 7:00-8:00 Christian Science Organ ization WDHSE 7:00-8:30 Dance Lessons RP 1, 2, 3 8:00-9:00 Student Athletic Council Grail 9:00-11:00 Drama Group WDHSE 9 : 00-1 1 : 00 Beanbirds WDHSE Howard F. Lowry, president of the College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, were chosen chairman and vice chairman of the board for 1961-62. The foundation, founded in 1905 by the late industrialist Andrew Carnegie, provides pensions for retired college teachers and their widows. It disbursed $1,202,608 in "MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 966 4131. "Switchboard - to all depart mentssuch calls can be trans ferred (if you know correct ex tension number, by dialing 9668 and then the three-digit extension number, you can call direct. Such calls, however, cannot be trans ferred)." Inside covers will provide long distance information including DDD (direct distance dialing) instruc tions plus a 1961-62 calendar. FG Varsity To Permni Policy Effective Today The Varsity Theater will follow the Carolina Theater's lead and begin admitting Negro students attending the University. The limit ed integration will become effec tive immediately. The board of directors of H. B. Meiselman Theaters Inc., which owns the Varsity, met in Charlotte Friday and approved the new policy. As at the Carolina, Negro stu dents will be required to show identification cards at the box office. The Chapel Hill Committee for Open Movies has been picketing the Varsity nightly for about two weeks. Mrs. Evangeline Darity, chair man of the Committee, said a special meeting; of the executive committee would be called for tomorrow afternoon. She said picketing would continue, at least until the executive committee meets. Andy Gutierrez, manager of the Varsity, said one of the .Meisel man corporation's major stockholders- had just returned from Europe, making it possible for the meeting to be called. Officers of the corporation and Mr. Gutierrez had told the Com mittee for Open Movies on sev eral occasions that a decision could not be made until the stockholder in Europe returned. The corporation directors did not take any note of the picket ing at their meeting. Mr. Gutier rez said their decision was based on what has been community acceptance of integration in other areas and the experience of limited integration at the Caro lina. Mr. Gutierrez said business at the Varsity had not been af fected by the picketing. There was no indication as to what affect the new admissions policy would have on picketing. When the Committee for Open Movies voted to begin picketing the Varsity, no specific goal was announced. Some sentiment was expressed in favor of continuing picketing until the Varsity had taken a step beyond the Caro lina in integrating. At the time, there was also strong sentiment for picketing both theaters. The Committee has called for com plete integration at both theaters by the time students at the Uni versity return from Christmas (Continued on Page 3) 1960-61 to 1,803 persons, the foun dation said. John W. Cardner is president of the foundation. WZLLZAM FRIDAY i if y. r ' . ' , . X'- fn -0 x4 U io CM Josh White, acclaimed by manyimorial or at Kemp's. as one of the greatest folk sing ers of this generation, will ap pear in Memorial Hall Friday at 8 p.m. Admission to the perform ance will be $1. Tickets will be sold only to the capacity of the Hall, so a ticket will assure a seat. White is a Graham Memorial presentation. Tickets may be purchased at the information desk of Graham Me- juuLMiMimjmn an rnf nifci " r f firr ni f 1 'TT" 1 1 " r " " t" T i1 ' M M i Campus Coeds who wish to fill the two vacancies in the sorority wom en's judiciary districts should call student government office for an appointment. Interviews will be held in the president's office Wednesday and Thursday. The Women's Residence Council will not meet tonight as sched uled. The Christian Science organiza tion will meet in Woodhouse Room GM each Tuesday at 7:15 for the rest of the semester. Yack photo- IDC Court Puts Student On Probation The IDC Court has issued four fines, three official reprimands and one probation in recent trials. Two students were each given reprimands and fines of $3 for throwing a firecracker from their room in Everett dormitory. A resident of Aycock dormitory was given a fine of $2 and a reprimand for firing a cap pistol during quiet hours. The probation, which extends to the end of the 1961-62 school year, was given a student for getting fire to a calendar on a wall. He was also fined $2. V- 9i m'j kwV:v . vmv:n Josh Friday At TTh Jrresenx Josh White reputedly is known throughout the western world as a perceptive artist and a versatile craftsman who can "electrify a sophisticated audience while re taining the power and simplicity of traditional singing," according to GM. His voice has a quality that is "as intimate as a caress." 'His accompanying guitar is '--' Briefs graphs will be taken tonight. An organizational meeting of the WAA Badminton Club will be held this afternoon at 4 in the Wom en's Gym. The WAA Basketball Club will meet Thursday afternoon ai 4 in me gym. All juniors interested in apply ing for positions on the Junior Class Cabinet arc urged to attend interviews in GM Roland Parker II Tuesday and Wednesday after noon (Nov. 28-29) from 2-4 and Tuesday night from 8-9:30. . All freshmen interested in en rolling in the Air Force ROTC for spring semester should contact the AFROTC department at Caldwell Annex prior to pre-registration which begins Nov. 30. Entrance examinaions for the Peace Corps will be given today and tomorrow at 8:30 a.m. at the Durham Post Office and in other cities throughout the state. Sen iors who wish to begin Peace Corps training in June after grad uation must take the exam on either of these days. PRESENTS PAPER Dr. William Pollitzer, of the Uni versity Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology .contributed a paper on "Hemoglobins, Haptoglobins and Transferrins in Man" at the Annual Meeting of the American Anthropology, contributed a paper adelphia. DEFERRED limited White 8;00 P.M. tt osli sensuous and brilliant," said GM officials. "His feeling for phrasing is flawless." White was born to a young Ne gro preacher and his wife in Greenville, South Carolina, and christened Joshua Daniel White in honor of the biblical warrior. Josh is now on a concert tour across the United States. "The gracious man with one foot on a ALUMNI REPLACE CONFEDERATES 1st Carolina Inn By CHUCK MOONEY It's one of the four Duncan Hines restaurants in Chapel Hill but it first established its reputa- j tion for good food just after the Civil War us thc Carolina Inn. The present building was built in 1924 by John Sprunt Hill; the first one was built in 1857 by Rich ard J. Ashe. Carolina Alumni gather there now replacing the Confederate vet erans who used to meet by the Ashe hearth drinking, singing battle songs and reveling in tales from Chancellorsville to Appoma tox. Named for Alumni The rooms in Civil W7ar days were reserved and named after members of the Ashe family; now they're named after the UNC Alumni who stay there most of ten. . . There are small plaques over thc doors featuring names like: "The Morehead-Morrison Suite," 203, the favorite of Uncle Mott and Fred Morrison," a member of the O. Max Gardner law firm in Washington, D. C. . . "The McKnight Room," 237, is usually reserved for Dr. Roy Mc Knight, retired Charlotte surgeon and former University Trustee, who has taken the DTH regularly since 1910. . Football Fan 1. "The William Room.1;220, . nam InteanpaltioiD. iAC.V.rtV."i.,y 5v Mr .kite chair, facing the microphone with eyes closed and a frown of deep concentration on his face, is be loved by millions of Americans." His songs are still "the people's songs, given life with deeply felt sincerity, biting cynicism, or bland impudence," said the GM statement. White will appear at the upcom ing World's Fair at Seattle, Washington. ed for Macon Williams of Lenoir, who hasn't missed a Carolina home football game in 25 years. "The McGrudcr Suite," 158, where retired USN Commodore McGruder and his wife from Jamestown, R. I., spend their win. ters. The Commodore says he comes here for the atmosphere and service at the Inn. Stage-coach travelers first prais ed the atmosphere and service of the Inn, built at the crossing of the stage-coach post-roads from Richmond to Pittsboro and New Bern to Salem in 1857. W Star of Bethlehem "Star of Bethlehem," the most cherished of all Morehead Planet arium presentations, will open tomorrow night ' at 8:30. It will be given through January 8. For the 13th consecutive Christmas season, the solemnity and beauty of the Biblical page antry of the Birth of Jesus will be presented in what is probably the largest single production by any planetarium in all the world. Noted author and newspaper man Burke Davis says "Star of Bethlehem" has become the state's most- popular Christmas scene,, aside from the family tree. "In no other planetarium could such a magnificent show be giv en, for none other has such ample space for such sumptuous colorful sets winch complement LL L CP asses By 19-3 By Joe DeBlasio . The IFC passed its controversial one-semester deferred rush amend ment last night at their regularly scheduled meeting hi Gardner Hall. The resolution, scheduled to be enacted- at the - beginning of the year 1964-65 was passed by .a vote of 19-3 with two houses ; absent. The required two-thirds majority of 16 houses. was met .and the amendment now replaces the pres. ent rushing articles of the ' IFC by laws. ' The motion was tabled at the last meeting because of indecision over the date of enactment. Those houses who asked that the amend ment be put up from : 1963-64 to 1964-65, claimed that it would al low more time , for adjustment. The admendment to the motion was passed after discussion. Most of the opposition to the amendment, proposed by a ten man Deferred Rush Committee, was simple opposition to deferred rush itself. Sevier and his com mittee were given . official con gratulations by the IFC as a body for their work. This vote culminates 12 weeks run of proposals and questions which led to the final vote. After deciding that the IFC court could use its descretion in cases involv ing extenuating circumstaces, the section involving penalties was passed. The inception of the idea . for deferred rush was formulated, at the Southern Pines IFC-Faculty Conference in May of last year. At this time the members of the IFC discovered the faculty was contemplating deferred rush ac tion if the freshman academic standing did not rise. Since the administration is large, ly governed by the suggestions of the Faculty Committee on Frater nities and Sororities, the IFC pass ed a motion favoring deferred rush last Spring and formed the com mittee to draw up a. suitable amendment. In Inn Donated Hill and his family donated thc Inn to UNC in 1935, long after.it had started serving students and faculty members, on the condition that its income go to the library and the North Carolina Collection. Under University management the Inn has been remodeled sev eral times since and now contains 128 rooms, 12 two and one-half room apartments, lobby, parlors, dining room, cafeteria, ballroom and function rooms. It provides parking, one-day laundry and valet service and a catering service for small or large affairs. the planetarium and its images." 'Mr. Davis calls it "half a dazzling lecture in astronomy, half a spectacular pageant. 'Star of Bethlehem' combines religion, science, history and philosophy as its contribution to the spirit of Christmas." It has been seen by more peo ple than any other Morehead Planetarium show. About 25,000 are expected this year to swell the total attendance in excess of 250,000 persons over the years. The traditional program's fifbt part will again be devoted to the appearance of the heavens almost 2,000 years ago, to "the Star," and to astronomical events known to have occurred about the time of the birth of Jesus. Only in the Planetarium is it (Continued on Fags 3) Tm m.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 28, 1961, edition 1
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