Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 7, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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Cor T6-2 v YTn '4 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1962 IN 1x I SJ McGill Looks To 1962 Grads For New Leadership Atlanta editor Ralph McGill examined the present "confusion" of the young Southerner and found hope for new leadership from the graduating classes of 1962 in his commencement ad dress here last Monday. McGill, appearing with N. C. Gov.-Terry Sanford, Consolidated University President William Friday and University Chancellor William B. Aycock in a rain drenched Kenan Stadium, said ' that many young people in the South find it difficult to ration alize their religious beliefs with the actions of their political rep resentatives. - He felt that, ."Out of the gradu ating classes of 1962 .will come ... a new and better political leadership. I like to think that the day of the demagogue is dy ing." Some 2,200 UNC graduates re ceived degrees in the Univer sity's 168th annual commence ment exercise. Governor Sanford praised the "youth and. vigor" of the University's ideas "down . through the years." - , 1 Campus Briefs i FREE MOVIES Free movies will be shown for all new students tonight at the two downtown theaters at 9. Blue name cards are necessary for admission. COMBO PARTY The Lee Ferrell Combo will play Friday night at a Welcome Party on the lawn in front of Gra ham Memorial at 8. Refreshments will be served. There will also be free juke box dancing in the Rendevous Room in the base ment of GM. FREE DANCING There will be free juke box dancing in the Rendevous Room of Graham Memorial Saturday night from 8-12. CAMPUS SING A Campus Community Sing will be held Sunday night from 7-7:45, led by students in the Choral Workshop. FILM SOCIETY The UNC-Chapel Hill Film Soc iety will present its first program of the summer Sunday night at 8 in Carroll Hall. "A Night at the Opera" and "Fable for Friend ship" will be the two films shown. Memberships in the Society may be purchased at the YMCA. CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERT The UNC String Quartet with guest soloists will present a Chamber Music Concert Tuesday night at 8 in Hill Hall. SMILING NANCY WOOD waits anx iously as she watches that. line. of. men, registering for summer, school. It's also probable that Nancy is being watched as those men look forward to a summer of fun in the sun at Chapel Hill- Nancy is a 1D62 graduate of Chapel Hill High Indent Government To Hold Summer By BILL HOBBS Any persons interested in serv ing on the summer school Stu dent Government Board, the summer school honor councils, or as acting student government Secretary-Treasurer for the sum mer will be interviewed next Tuesday and Wednesday from 2 to 5 p.m. in the student govern ment offices on second floor Gra ham Memorial. Inman Allen, acting president of the student body for summer school and president of the reg ular session student body, said he would welcome applications for the positions from any interested student. He stressed that a person need not be a student at the Univer sity's regular sessions to apply. Students who will be here for both summer sessions are preferred, but this is not a requirement. Al len also said it was not necessary to have had previous experience in student government. Wants Active SG Allen, who was elected student body president on the University Party ticket after a heated cam paign in opposition to Student Party nominee Dwight Wheless, said this week that he hoped to make this summer's student gov ernment more active than in the past. He said, "If we are going to have an active student gov ernment, we will need active, in . , , - hi Position Interviews terested people to run it," in urg ing students to apply for the avail able positions. The Summer School Student Government Board consists of . seven appointed members, the acting Secretary-Treasurer, and the acting president, who also serves as chairman of the Board. The Board was established to re place the old Summer School Legislative Board in a bill which passed the regular session Stu dent Legislature last March. 'Shpreme Power' The Board meets weekly and has the "supreme legislative power in the Summer School Stu dent Body." It thus acts in the same capacity as the regular ses sion Student Legislature and can appropriate funds, establish com mittees, approve presidential ap pointments, and pass legislation "proper and necessary to pro mote the general welfare of the Summer School Student Body." The Board has a fund of approxi mately $700 from which it can ap propriate money, according to President Allen. The Acting Secretary-Treasurer for summer school receives and disburses all summer school stu dent government funds. Besides his financial work, he is auto matically a member of the Stu dent Government Board snd serv es as chairman of the Summer iHixp I t School and will be attending summer .school here and then going to Wilming ton College in the fall. Dirty clothes should also be fun this summer since Nancy plans to work as a secretary at the University Laundry in addition to her class attendence. School Publications Board. He is also enpowered "to oerform the duties of the Acting President in the event of his absence or in capacity." Temporary Treasurer Mike Lawler, vice president of the Student Body during the reg ular sessions, is presently filling the post as temporary acting secretary-treasurer, but will be un able to continue in the position. The summer school Men's and Women's honor councils have the same powers to try cases under the Honor Code as do the regular session Men's and Women's Coun cils. Each Council consists of seven members and a chairman. Men's Council chairman fcr both summer sessions is Grant Wheel er, the Women's Council chair man for the first session is Car olyn Pinion; Bev Haynes is Wo man's Council chairman for the second session. Allen's original appointments to the summer school honor coun cils, which he made last month, were not approved by the regular session legislature on the grounds that he had not held interviews for the positions. Ia addition to the appointed members of the two councils, any member of the regular session councils who is present in sum mer school automatically sits on the councils. ecteci Classes Begin For Summer A registration of 4,500 is ex pected today for the first session of UNC summer school, an in crease of about ten per cent over last year's first session enroll ment. Due to this increased enroll ment, Summer School Director A. K. King said Monday that Uni versity housing was the fullest that it had been in many sum mers. At that time there were about 75 rooms for women still available and a few scattered rooms for men. Of the 4,500 expected students, Dr. King stated that between 2,100 and 2,200 of these would be stu dents who were enrolled in the regular fall and spring semesters, About 900 others will be graduate and professional students, and approximately 125 will be seek ing re-admission as regular stu dents. ; The rest of the expected en rollment will be composed of "visiting students' who have been admitted to the summer school only. These will represent over 110 other institutions and some foreign countries. ' Fewer "Poor" Students "Far fewer poor students en roll in the two terms of summer session than in the regular nine month school term," Dr. Kin stated. "Students who come lwre from other institutions have to be in good standing, academical ly and otherwise, in order to be admitted to summer session" Woman's College will be most (Continued on Page 6) 'Best' Quarterly Has Six Stories The summer issue of the Car olina Quarterly, which its editor Jerome Stern calls the "biggest and best ever." is now on sale at local newstands for 50 cents a copy. This issue contains six short stories and contributions from 17 poets. Three of the authors were recently awarded prizes by the Quarterly editorial staff for outstanding work during the past year. Two prize winning stories by Leon Rooke are included and an award winning poem by Don Eulert. Also featured are selec tions by two "name" poets, Jud son Crews and David Cornel De Jong. The cover of the 72-page sum mer issue features a close-up photograph of the face of "Ho tai," the Japanese god of happi ness and good luck. Jim Cornel, UNC undergraduate in geology, was the photographer. Four of the writers are native North Carolinians or students at UNC. Rooke is from Roanoke Rapids and an employee of the 'UNC News Bureau, Kay Barn hart is an English major at UNC and now in summer school, Rich ard Rickert is a UNC graduate now teaching in Maryland, and Sally Nixon is from Stanley, n. a
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 7, 1962, edition 1
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