Sunday, March 28, 1963 Page 2 THE DAILY TAR HEEL O "2 CimcmUs Chest Wffl;Donate To '.CPBerry ----- - - - - - - " One of the five charities to be aided by Campus Chest contri butions is the O'Berry center atGoldsboro. .The O'Berry Center is a state supported institution designed to provide Negro 'children throughout the. state maximum mental, social, spiritual,- physi cal and vocational growth. ?J Children sent to the O'Berry School are placed in one of three scchools when they arrive. If a child is placed in the Aca demic .School, he . learns to read and write, work arithmetic prob lems, and to draw and sing. If a child is not able to be placed in the Academic School, he is put in the School of Basic jTraining whera he is taught to the extent of his capacity to lake care. of himself. i The. children who successful- ay complete the academic pror gram are placed in a vocation- Jthis program will provide an op- land experience that will help jthem find a place in communi ty living. The - donation from the Cam pas Chest drive is dispersed in any-directions. Since tha budg- :t ' covers only the essentials, hie Tnrns,v anoc fnf liffla tras. . Part of last year's money pent (f the County Fair for ides ?and cotton candy, some em to buy refreshments for artieS )n the custodial wine , nd' some went for games and ecreational equipment. A small portion of the money gxris and scout uniforms lor the The! Campus Chest solicita- ions drive begins Wednesday. ii t j i r- m .1. J i j "it i ii i ii " ij. i. j ' " ' " iiirr mi a I J I i " - - :-::.-.::::-;.: w.v-: --.:.:-! :-v ' ! f-f:i:-x-:"---l VI, .' ? , 1 " i ' " 5 " " . V-J f j ? J - :- ---:-; ::.;.:: :.:.;.:.v; .;-:-:.:;.: ; . . 1 " v v.:.: ! i T , v T" ' L . t ' " " " , CAF30i J -. - , " ---v . I f : ... . ,, " m z - so ... ' 3 , , I - ' I S-:-,:-.-.-.v.-,.-.-.-.---. x-v.---:-: Wecrture Writers Meet Here April 10 mO- -nwjQflfr ykocac- A SMALL CAR zips through the maze of buses that parked yesterday in the More head lot bringing hundreds of children to the Planetarium for a look at the new Easter show. Photo By Jock Lauterer. The Buses Came Buses packed Morehead Plan- ress built by Herod the Great etarium parking lot yesterday, and one of the highest points Drivers sat on the stone walls ; in the city, to take the sequen- and -smoked, waiting for their tial photographs that make up human cargos to leave the the 330 - degree view. Most of Jack Wilson of Look Magazine and Bill Woestendiek, of the Houston Post, will be headline speakers at the N. C. News and Feature Writers Conference to be held here April 10. . Wilson is Washington corres pondent for Look and other Cowles publications. Woesten diek is former editorial direc tor of Newsday, Long Island, and a Winston - Salem newsman Piano Concert Tonight In GM Pianist Barbara Rowan -will give a concert at 8 tonight in Graham Memorial Lounge. The public is invited. Mrs. Rowan was a pupil of the late Egon Petri and, more recently, has studied the piano under Alexander Libermann. She has studied composition with Darius Milhaud both at Mills College and in France. in the 1950's. Bob Quincy and Pete Ivey, co chairmen of arrangements for the meeting of working news papermen and broadcasters, an nounced a full day of intensive lectures and discussions on mod ern trends and techniques in writing for mass news media. Julian Scheer, Director of Public Affairs for NASA in Washington, is in charge of the program for visiting national speakers. Scheer is a past chair man of. the News and .Feature Writers. t Professor Walter Spearman of the School of Journalism will speak on "1S65 Wrinkles in News- - Feature Stories. All sessions of the conference will be held in Peabody . The one exception will be the dinner meeting to be held in the ballroom of the Inn. Registra tion begins at 9 a.m. April 10. The conference is co-sponsored by the School of Journalism, Extension Division, News Bu reau and the N. C. Conference of News and Feature Writers. Planetarium. The busloads were here for the "Easter The Awakening" show just begun by the plane tarium. The show includes a panoramic view of modern Je rusalem. 1 The panorama, a surprise add ition to this year's program, was composed from photographs tak en Jast summer in Jerusalem. Roy K. Patterson, a Planetari um staff narrator, climbed to the top of the Antonia, a fort- I 1: FRANCE, AUSTRIA, SWITZERLAND, ITALY, CZECHOSLOVA KIA; DENMARK, GREECE, HOLLAND, YUGOSLAVIA, ENG LAND, GERMANY East & West Berlin SA a- TWA Jet Hotel Meals Air Transportation Only $1300 Limited Application Y3ICA Office the points mentioned in the bib lical narratives of the first East er are visible in the color pan orama. The basic script for "Easter the Awakening" . was re-written in 1962, but it has received ma jor revisions each subsequent year. "The new panorama-of Jerusalem is worth a trip to Chapel Hill, even if you have seen the spring program be fore," commented Planetarium director A. F. Jenzano. "It ap pears twice in the program; once when the narrator Doints out and describes the buildings i .-i - . . . -. . mm jues oi Historical interest, and again to open the program pageant, when it is cross-faded with the panorama of Jerusalem as it may have appeared 2000 years ago." 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