Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 19, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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T"T" NEWS CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1962 Campuswide Party 3500 Enrollment Expected Set For Tomorrow It won't be dull this session. The few short weeks will be studded with combo parties, con certs, two plays by the Caro lina Playmakers, free flicks, a isummer session band concert plus the usual activities avail abl at Graham Memorial; free .dancing, bridge on Thursday nights, table tennis and chess. A lawn party, sponsored by the Graham Memorial Activities Board, will be held to welcome new students on the G. M. lawn from 8 to 12 p.m. tomorrow night. A watermelon slicing will be held at nine and the Check mates will be there the entire evening. Tryouts For the dramatically inclined, tryouts for a Playmakers' pro duction, "Th Enchanted," will be held tomorrow at the Play makers' theatre from 4 to 7:30 .p.m. "The Enchanted" will be produced on August 8 and 9 and the Playmakers will also produce three original one-act plays August 20 and 21 which were written by first session students. Tryouts will be August 10. Karen Duke, a folk singer," will appear at Hill Hall on Wed nesday night. Admission is free to students with ID cards. Free flicks will be held each Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall. Admission is free to students. The first free flick will be "The Great Ziegfeld." Other movies on this session's summer cinema program are "Grand Hotel," "All About Eve," "Gentlemen's Agreement" and "Broadway Melody." Two Concerts Two summer session band con certs will be held on the G. M. lawn. The first will be held Tuesday night at 8, and the second on August 7. - The music department has en gaged Gustav Leonhart, organ ist and harpsichordist to per form on July 31 at 8 p.m. in Hill Hall. On August 14, another or ganist,, James Holmes, will per form at 8 p.m. in Hill Hall. Folksinger Duke To Appear Here 1 Karen Duke, a guitar-playing balladcr who sings a variety of music from traditional folk songs to Mozart, will give a con cert here Wednesday night at 8 in Hill Hall sponsored by Gra-. ham Memorial. Miss Duke sings a wide reper .toire of folk songs of America, .and other countries. She is also, a professional model, and has had experience in opera, musical comedy and summer stock. She began playing the guitar as a hobby while she was in her teens, after being raised in a musical atmosphere that included two singing grandmothers, one of whom played the guitar as well. Her father is John Duke, a professor of music at Smith and a widely-known composer. Miss Duke's experience in opera includes performances in her father's opera "Lovelock," and appearances with the Opera Guild in Schroon Lake, N. Y. She has also toured in the road com panies of "Can Can," "Silk Stockings" and "Mr. Wonderful." If if . -x" 'A :. v 1 -W CAROLINA BEAUTY CAROLYN PINION paints 'hi, how yawl" in modern style to both new and returning students for second session summer school. Carolyn is a junior nursing major from Arlington, Va., and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Art is her favorite hot by, she says, but she also likes skiing and tractor driving. (Photo by Richard McKee). Second Session To Begin Today "Approximately 3600 students will attend classes at Carolina's second session this summer," Dr. A. K. King, head of the Summer Session Dept., estimat ed Tuesday afternoon. This is an increase of roughly 13 over last year's second ses sion . enrollment of about 3160 students. Where do they all come from? About 800 of them will be visit ing students from over 100 other colleges and universities. The largest number, of course, will be from Woman's College. There will be about 3 men stu dents to every 2 women, as op posed to the 6 to 1 ratio during the regular session. Two-thirds of the students registering here second session will be undergraduates. The other third will be graduate stu dents. Close to half the total en rollment will be made up of regular undergraduates who at tended Carolina last spring. Of the 3600 students, approxi mately 300 will be attempting to make themselves eligible to re turn here this fall. The remainder will be either attempting to graduate early or to pursue special objectives. "It is a mistaken idea that most undergraduates are here trying for re-eligibility," Dr. King said. "Most of them are trying to get out earlier or to renew teacher certification. Many of them are veterans com ing back to finish their educa tions, and many of them are married girls returning for the same reason. The number of marginal students is small ia comparison to the total number of students." Foreign Students Now On CaniBiis ... - Israeli Students Seven Students Visit Carolina Two groups of foreign students, each studying the South and its educational system, arrived there yesterday for stays of two days and two weeks each. Thirty returning delegates from the International Student Confer ence in Quebec, Canada, are here for two days in their only Southern stop on a National Student Association sponsored tour of the Eastern United States. The students represent more than 20 different countries in Europe, Africa and Latin America. Last night the group attended an introductory meeting in Graham Memorial and heard Roger Foushee speak on the tradition of the University and its student government. This morning they will hear Dr. Dan Price of the Institute for Re search in Social Sciences speak cn the economic and social factors which are responsible for the contemporary Southern Society and its educational system. Chancellor Aycock will greet the delegates at lunch in the Carolina Inn, which will also be attended by faculty members and NSA repre sentatives. The experience of a Southern Negro in politics will be the to?ie of v . r f.on's dCLisMiwi. led t-y C. EKvood Boulware of North Caro lina College. The group will leave for New York Friday morning to return to their own countries. Also arriving yesterday was a croup of seven Israeli students for a two-week stay that will include trips to Raleigh, Durham, and Hanging Rock State Park in addition to their activities on carr.pus. The group's visit is being planned here by the YMCA and sponsored by the Experiment in International Living. While on campus, the group will live in dormitories, attend some typical classes, visit in local homes and take part in various other campus activities. A folksing on the Graham Memorial lawn and several meetings with students and faculty members have also been planned. r Arriving Yesterday Group Plans Two Week Stay
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 19, 1962, edition 1
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