Page. 3 THE TAR HEEL Thursday, August 22, 1963 Final Exam Schedule I. The examination schedule for the second session of summer school is as follows: THURSDAY, AUGUST 23 Class Exam Period 10:35 8 to 19 a.m. 2:00 Jl to 1 p.m. 7:33 3 to 5 p.m. FRIDAY, AUGUST 39 Class Exam Period 9:99 ; 8 to 19 a.m. v 12:09 ., 11 to 1 p.m. P.M.'s and others not otherwise provided for: .', 3 to 5 p.m. All permits to take examinations to remove grades of "Exc." 4"Abs." or "Cond." must be secured from the Office of Records and Registration prior to the exam. New Faculty Appointments Announced By Chancellor s Promotions for University facul ty members "were announced to day by Chancellor William B. Aycock with the approval of President William C. Friday end , Hie Board of Trustees. Promoted from associate pro fessor to professor effective July i; are: Alec T. Stewart, De partment of 'Physics; Melvin A. Chambers and Claude Piantodosi, School of Pharmacy; John A. Ewing, Morris A. Lipton, and George D. Penick, School of Medicine. Eloise R. Lewis, as eociate professor, School of Nurs ing, has been promoted to pro fessor, effective September 1. 1 Promoted from assistant pro fessor to associate professor, ef fective July 1 of this year, are: "Herbert W. Fred, 'Department of 'Music; Lewis P. Watts Jr., In ' stitute of Government; James L. Btiannon, Albert W. Jowdy, and George H. Cocolas, School of Pharmacy; Allan W. Downie, Edward 'B. Glassman, Harry Gooder, and Daniel T. Young, School of Medicine. Harvey E. Archer, research associate in hospital administration, and Dwight L. Clark, clinical profes sor, School of Dentistry, have al so been promoted to associate professor. Promoted from instructor to assistant professor, effective " July 1, are: Edwin Louis Brown, Department of Classics; John Danhouse Martz HI, Depart- ment of (Political Science; Vasa !D. Mihailovich, Department of Germanic Laiiguages; Hallo well Pope, instructor and research associate, Department of Sociol ogy and Anthropology. Henrik Van Dam, research associate in the Department of Physics, has been promoted to assistant pro fessor effective July 1. Also promoted to assistant pro fessor, effective July 1, are in structors: Marianne S. Breslin, Wallace A. Clyde, Joachim D. Geratz, Carl (B. Lyle Jr., George H. fcpooner, and Richard I. Walk er, School of-Medicine; Mar garet A. Brown, Carol S. Lowry, and" Martha C. Davis, School of Nursing; Khatab M. Hassanein, School of Public Health; and William W. Taylor, School of Pharmacy. - Nine new faculty appointments to the University were also an-. J Bounced this week by Chancellor ' William B. .Aycock. New appointments are Dr.. Duane Francis Taylor, as pro fessor in the School of Dentistry; Dr. .Newton Underwood as pro fessor, Department of Environ mental Sciences and Engineer ing, School of Public Health, be ginning September I; Gerald D. Bell as a member of the De partment of Sociology and An thropology beginning September 1; Dr. Sang-Il Choi as assistant professor. Department of Phys ics, ; beginning September 1, formerly a research associate at the University of Chicago. Also, Dr. William Emerson Hatfield, as assistant professor, Department of Chemistry, begin ning September 1, formerly re search associate at the Univer sity of Illinois; Dr. Fred John Heinritz as ' assistant professor, School of Library Science, be ginning in September; Hipolito Vincent Nino as assistant pro fessor, School of Medicine and director of Clinical Chemistry Laboratory, formerly director of Chemical Laboratory, St. Jo seph's Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y. Also Ellis Lawrence Rolett, M. D., as assistant professor, School of Medicine as of July 1, assistant professor, Department of Psychology, beginning Sep tember 1, formerly a Carnegie Fellow at the University of Texas. LADIES, LADIES! THE CO ED CORNER is having a Summer Clearance Sale to end ail sales. Just look at these bargains. DRESSES A fantastic collection of stylish and colorful dresses in all sizes. These dresses formerly sold for as much as $16.95, but now are only ... $7.88 SKIRTS You name it, wraps, A-lines straights and cullottes in a wide array of colors and fabrics that formerly sold for as much as $14.95 have been slashed to only $5.00 & $7.C0 BLOUSES In all the popular collar and sleeve styles. These fine tradi tional blouses were priced ? to $5.95 but are now only . . . 52.99 THE HUB of CHAPEL HILL Profs Traveling Abroad By BONNIE PLEASANTS The sun will never set on UNC professors this year. It will find 22 professors and one instructor at work from Maine to South America, and from Hawaii to England. Arthur Murray Whitehill of the School of Business Administra tion iss in the Pacific. He is spending a year in research at the University of Hawaii. - Not far beyond and also doing research is Ernest Craige. He is at the Institute of Verology in Kyoto, Japan. Craige, of the School of Medicine, was granted an Alan Gregg Fellowship for medical study, Edward G. McGavran, dean of the School of Public Health, is visiting India. His trip was made possible through a Ford Found ation grant. William Adolph Terrill is in Ankara, Turkey. Terrill is work ing with the department of busi ness management of the Middle East Technical University under the guidance of Cornell Univ. He is from the School of Business Administration. Greece Gets Classicist Greece will have a UNC facul ty member soon. Henry Rudolph Immerwahr of the classics de partment is going there in the spring of 1964. William Edmund Lassiter is in West Berlin 1 doing medical re search. Lassiter is in the School of Medicine. John W. Thibaut is making advanced studies at the Sorbonne in Paris. Thibaut, chairman of the department of psychology, had a choice between two grants to pursue this work. David R. Hawkins, "a staff psychiatrist at North Carolina Memorial Hosptali, is working with medical men in France and Great Britiani Three, other men have recently arrived in England to do research work. Phillip P. Green, Jr. of the Institute of Government ' is there on a Fullbright Scholarship. Walter L. Smith of the statis tics department is doing re search. SUPER SAVINGS! During THE HUB'S Final Summer Clearance. ' - This is your last chance to get the greatest savings ever-on top grade, traditional men's clothing. -SUITS- Custom tailored men's suits that are designed for a perfect fit every time are now going for the unheard of price of . . . $29.88 SPORTCOATS In many interesting colors and patterns, these coats that were formerly priced to $39,95 are now starting at . . . $17.83 DUESS SLACKS Still a, large selection of your fav orite dacronwool and dacroncot-, ton slacks available for back-to-school. .Prices start at. a low, low . '. . $6.99 THE HUB of CHAPEL HILL A National Scholarship Fund Fellowship provided money for physicist Wayne A. Bowers to pursue research at Cambridge. Wood Returning Home Ernest H. Wood of the School of Medicine is returning to the United States soon. He spent the past year at St. George Hospital Medical School in London. Another professor will go to Britain next spring. Victor A. Greulach of the botany depart ment will do research in British laboratories. George C. Hamm, chairman of the department of psychiatry, is winding up a year of research in genetics. He has traveled through out Europe and the United States this year. Seymour Walter Wurfel of the Law School is making a study of the legal environment in Colum bia. Virgil Iron Mann of the geology department will make a study of mineral deposits of the Sierra Nevada Province this fall. Other professors are working closer to home. Donald B. Hay man is a visiting professor of Political government at the Uni versity of Kansas. Milton S. Heath, Jr. of the In stitute of Government is acting as assistant to the director of the Federal Power Commission. S. Sheppard Jones is a visiting professor of political science at the Naval War College. Others Work Stateside A staff recently established for mental health planning in North Carolina is directed by Harvey Liss Smith. Smith is in the Social Research Section, Division of Health Affairs. Daniel O. H. Price, director of the Institute for Research in Socal Science, is in Palo Alto, . California, making advanced stu- A SPECIAL BACK TO SCHOOL Our Own Make Vz-Slee ve DRESS SHIRTS In white, blue, maize and a larger selection of Ox ford and Madras stripes. An excellent opportunity to complete your summer wardrobe for a 1 i m i t e d time only. 147 East Franklin Street . Students Charges Invited 3 dies in the behavioral sciences at Stanford University. ; Michael Kalen Berkut of the School of Medicine is a bioche mist with the Medical Research Branch of the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission in Washing" ' ton. J Louis Gordon Welt, School of Medicine, is completing a year's work this month at Duke Univer sity under Dr. James Wyngaar den. ; ; Ancel Mewborn of the mathe- ' matics department is working oil constructing a correspondence H course for mathematics teachers to keep them up-to-date. He is the head of a five-member writ- ing team working for the Minne- sota State Department of Educa tion. : " ' ' The project is being supported ' by a grant from the National Sci ence Foundation. Milton's Pre-Fall ; FROGSTRANGLER Have a summerfall buying ball with the following below cost items. . As an added attraction the Jam mers will be in concert Friday from 5:30 to 7:30 and we'll be open till 9:00 p.m. Free dollar hatbands to all customers after 6:00 p.m. nothing to buy. 78 imported Far Eastern Batik sport jackets mas sacred from $35.00 to way below cost $10.99. 37 imported India Madras sport jackets slashed from $35.00 to below cost $14.99. . 48 imported car coats just in time for Back To School . i . regularly to $50.00, at below cost $19.99. 123 pairs shoes including $25.00 leather lined cor dovan loafers and leath er lined imported Eng lish shoes, formerly to $25.00, all at one below cost price of $999. 18 straw hats formerly to $7.95 at below cost crazy $.99. ' 217 sho rt point collar . shirts, fine single needle tailoring, some short sleeves, some long . ; sleeves formerly to $7.95, all at below cost $1.99. 538 short sleeve dress shirts in button - down and English tab collars, regularly to $6.95, Frog strangler price, 1 for $3.00 or 3 for $3.50. FROM OUR ( Lady Milton Shop 96 belts formerly to $3.0(? at below cost $.39. 387 skirts, including wool shetlands and flannels, dacroncottons, import ed madras, imported ba tik, formerly to $22.95, at below cost $4.99. 298 of our famous Lady Milton shirts, regularly to $10.95, now 1 for $4.00 or 3 for $10.00. Our cupboards are chock full of smart different fall arrivals. " Clothing Cupboard Downtown Chapel Hill E ' i IT i X i -J -.5 'A