Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 2, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 19G2 1 i Brantley to Speak To BSU Meetin u is CAROLINA BEAUTY ANN KLUTTZ perches prettily atop a wall on campus enjoying the sum mer sun. Ann is a junior from the Woman's Col- Student Again Denied Grand A'dm iss ion, Desp He A CL U The rejection of a student's second application for admission to Graduate School as a research assistant in Journalism brought Israelis Like By LOUIS ROSENTHAL "Next year in Jerusalem," was the farewell, Tuesday afternoon, as seven visiting Israeli students left the campus after a two week stay. While at UNC, the students were under the auspices of the Experiment in International Liv ing, a non-profit organization that sponsors summer student ex changes all over the world. Tuesday, before their depar ture, the Israelis met with their hosts for an evaluation session at the home of Miss Anne Queen, co-oixiinator of the visit. Some of their comments were: Ruthi. Hoffman "It was the personal contact that pleased me. But I wish that we could have net and talked with more Negro Concert Planned For Tucs. Night The Summer Session Band will hold its final concert Tues day at 8 p.m. on the lawn of Graham Memorial. The program is sponsored by the Graham Me morial Summer Activities Board with the cooperation of the UNC Music Department and the American Federation of Musi cians. Edward L. Kottick of the UNC Music Department will direct the musicians from the Raleigh-Durham-Chapcl Hill area. The general public is invited to at tend and should bring blankets far sitting on the lawn. lege and majors had a Jaguar when she "hit a charges last week from an American Civil Liberties Union representative that the student "was the victim of a political Hosts, Campus students." Asher Barnca " . . . The good will and effort extended by the hosts Yossi Godard " . . . The touch with others ..." Amos Proshan "The National Conference of Christians and Jews interested me a lot." (The, entire group expressed enthus iasm over this conference in Greensboro, at which they heard a former Greensboro city coun cilman, a Negro, speak on Negro problems in the South.) " Maya Kimowsky "The flexi bility of the schedule, and the hosts . . ." Ahron Daitch "I hope to re turn to study here." Itzhak Shain "As leader my job is to summarize ... I would like to thank especially Miss Queen . . . John Clinard . . . and Allen Ashby, the co-ordinator of the Greensboro trip." Earlier Tuesday, the Israelis recorded an interview to be heard on WCHL, Sunday after noon. The students also taped a TV interview with Professor Bod man. Both these programs will be rebroadcast this fall. After leaving UNC, the Israelis went to Trenton, N. J., for a three week stay with families there. They then have a free week, and several plan to return to Chapel Hill for a short time. After they left, the hosts gath ered at Miss Queen's home for a final evaluation. One host com mented. "I don't know about them uhe Israelis) but I had a wonderful time." The final comment made was the slogan of the Experiment, "To Learn to Live Together, by Liv ing Together." I 7 in interior design. She says she XKE last year but wrecked it cow." (Photo by Richard Mckee) decision of the University." The student, Fred Jerome, had applied and been accepted earlier in the spring by Dean Luxon of the Journalism School. This ad mission was then canceled after Dean Luxon learned that Jerome had failed ta answer a ruimtion before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. His second application was turned down because he had made false statements to Dean Luxon,' employers and Durham law enforcement officers. Not "Liberties" Case Dean Luxon said that the case was not a civil liberties case, and that the case "would never have reached the papers if he Jerome hadn't gone to the Ameri can Civil Liberties Union." Jerome contacted the ACLU in New York after the original can cellation to negotiate with the University on his behalf. Dean Luxon said that in an in terview with him here last week, Jerome admitted making false (Continued on Page 8) UNC Student Is Alliens Delegate UNC will have an official dele gate to the United Nations spon sored International Students Con ference in Athens, Greece. Kellis Parker, a junior from Kinston, will be the first full fledged Negro delegate form the U.S. to the month-long meeting, starling August 10. In order to go to the Confer ence. Parker had to raise over $1,000. This was done with the help of the- "Kinstonian to Greece" fund, formed by Kinston Negi-ces. In raising the money. Parker spoke to both Negro and white groups. in Kinston. and made sev eral radio appearances. . Russell Brantley, author of the novel, "The Education of Jonathan Beam," will speak at " the supper study of the Baptist Student Union today at 5:45 p.m. His topic will be "Literature as as Medium for Christian Prophe tic Witness." The novel, published this spring, was the center of a con- Monks' Vows Outlined By Y Discussion "Poverty, Chastity and Obed ience," the vows taken by Angli can monks, was the title of Mon day night's film and panel dis cussion in Carroll Hall, sponsored by the YM-YWCA. The panel consisted of Father James Devereux, S. J., a Jesuit priest studying at the University this summer; Mr. DeWitt Mey ers, minister to the United Con gregational Church of Chapel Hill; Father Joseph O'Brien, di rector of Episcopal student work at Duke; and Tom Davis, secre tary of the Y. The movie, a documentary film of monastic life, was criticized as presenting the monks' way of life as the only way to "lead the good life." Panel members felt this to be a vocation, and "not neces sarily a superior one." In medieval times celibacy was thought to be the only way for a man to toad a Ckrictlan lifo. "There was always the antithesis. Eve the temptress to Mary the chaste, and the life of chastity was best. "Today it is a matter of prac ticality. Roman Catholic priests do not marry, and thus do not have the distractions of a family. Protestants prefer a married preacher, if only because he has someone to help him." Men who are misfits and es- Gumpus Briefs FREE FLICK Tonight's Summer Cinema will be "All About Eve." Showing in Carroll Hall at 7:30 p.m., the movie stars Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, George Sanders, Celeste Holm, Marilyn Monroe and Ed die Fisher. A color cartoon and a Benchley short will also be fea tured. BSU SUPPER STUDY "Literature as a medium of prophetic witness" will be the topic of tonight's supper study at the Baptist Student Union at 5:45 p.m. FREE DANCING Free juke-box dancing will be on tap tomorrow and Saturday nights in the Rendezvous Room in Graham Memorial from 8 to 12. troversy raging around the treat ment of its plot, which concerns the adventures of a student at a Baptist College in the South. Brantley is director of communi cations of Wake Forest College, a Baptist-supported school. Pressure aws brought to bear on members of the Wake Forest Board of Trustees this spring to discipline Brantley because of al leged reflections on the College caused by his novel, but the Board refused to take such ac tion. Brantley's Thursday night topic was explained by Jim Cansler, director of the BSU: "Anyone who feels that a problem exists which he should speak against must choose his medium. Some people choose the ministry. Oth ers choose art or literature. Mr. Brantly chose the novel. Another case in point is Alan Payton's stand on apartheid in South Afri ca which he discusses in the book, "Cry the Beloved Country." The program is one of a series the BSU has been running this summer. On August 9, Dr. Sam Hill, chairman of the UNC De partment of Religion, will dis cuss "The Meaning of Genesis," a recent book by Ralph Elliott. The following week there will be an 'evaluation and prognosis discussion of the Southern Bap tist Convention which met in San Francisco in June. . capists from the world would be bigger misfits in a monastery. In answer to a question from the floor, members of the panel was not necessarily present. "Hu manitarianness is not always wanted," one of the men said. "I have heard some Africans say of Schweitzer that they are tired of his directing their lives." Believing in the power of in tercessory prayer, monks have chosen a restricted life. "There is asceticism present in every sect and religion, Protestant and Catholic and others." FILM OCIETY The UNC-Chapel Hill Film So ciety will show "The Navigator" Sunday night at 8 in Carroll Hall. Memberships are available at Y Court. BAND CONCERT A second lawn concert will be held by the Summer Session Band Tuesday at 8 p.m. on the Graham Memorial lawn. TLAY.UUvERS TRYOUTS Tryouts for three new one-act plays will be held August 9 at 3 p.m. in the Carolina Playmakers Theater. This summer bill of one acts will be prescntd August CD and 21. The casts of these three one acts will be presented August 20 15 men, 2 women, and a boy (10 to 12 years old). Both students and local resi dents are invited to tryout.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Aug. 2, 1962, edition 1
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