Page 2 ' THE TAR HEEL Thursday, July 8, 1965 $88,500 Grant Is Awarded For Urban Household Study A time and motion study of ways members of a typical urban household use commu nity facilities in their metro politan area is the subject of a series of studies projected by the Center for Urban and Regional Studies here. Chancellor Paul F. Sharp has announced plans for the two - year pilot study under an $88,500 grant from the Na tional Institutes of Health.- Designed to enable urban planners to make city plans more directly sensitive to ac tivity patterns of urban house holds, the study will use a sampling survey technique to define "time - budgets" and "circulation patterns" of households of different income groups in varying locations in the city. The development and testing of survey instruments and their application to a test met ropolitan area is projected during the next two years un der the pilot study. Special attention will be giv en to patterns in the use and duration of visits made to health and medical care fa cilities. The extent that time and ef fort spent in getting back and forth to these facilities affects US &a2S mum midiown CHAPEL HILL since 1922 75c STUDENT SPECIALS DAILY vm mrn itn ii.i 1 1 1 1 lim -1 ! liars flew at the Intimate On the Front Table-Paperbacks No matter where you're going when term's over, you won't find another bookshop like the Intimate, not another assortment of used quality paperbacks at such very fair prices as those on the feature table this week. Don't miss your chance, chum. Stock up on good reading while it is handy and tempting! In the Text Dept. Study Aids The Intimate has the largest selection of study aids of any college shop in the South. What's more, they really succeeded in making those tough facts stick in your mind. If you want to save money and get the same results, ask for used copies. In the Old Book Feature Case THIS WEEK ART If this is your interest, hurry over. This display went out Monday, but it was full enough, of choice bits that you'll probably still find treasure. STARTING MONDAY USED EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY One thing you have to hand to Everyman's Library. The binding may be frugal, and the text be set in Victorian Illegible, but the gand old series contains a lot of titles yoii can't find elsewhere. Here's the library of a chap who set out to collect these editions and now we've piled them into the case at 69c each. On the Bargain Shelves If you haven't discovered our bargain corner yet, it's high time to start looking. Here you'll find a whole wall of books, shiny and new, offered at about half their original price. Don't miss the very handsome picture book of Athens, now priced at only $3.49, or Inglis Fletcher's WICKED LADY, now down to $1.98. Browse in Air-Conditioned Luxury at The Intimate the use of these facilities will be considered in the study. "With the trend toward short ening work week, the use of liberated time will result in constant changes in household time-budgets," said F. Stuart Chapin Jr., director of the study. How and where this time is spent clearly has im plications of great importance in city planning, he added. "If living patterns are in for a period of considerable change, we must re-examine underlying concepts of plan ning and locating community facilities," he said. Not only is the time - bud get showing increases in free time for working adults, but the whole pattern of activities is constantly shifting for young people and for the elderly as well. Cities can no longer lo cate and "freeze in concrete" community facilities without more direct and continuing in vestigations of these changes. In this connection, Chapin advocates a continuous sam pling study to monitor activity changes as an "advance warn ing net" of the shifting needs in planning for these facilities. The Center for Urban and Regional Studies, a facility of the Institute for Research in Social Science, was established at the University in 1957 un der a Ford Foundation grant for urban studies. Chapin is director of the Center. Associated with him in the NIH study is Henry C. High tower, formerly with the Pitts burgh Regional Planning Asso ciation. Both have teaching appoint ments in the Department of City and Regional Planning. 3 Bookshop Duke Musician Suffers Attack During Concert Dr. William Ernest De Turk, associate professor of pharma cology at the Duke University Medical School, died of an ap parent heart attack while per forming with the Triangle Symphony Orchestra in Hill Hall Tuesday afternoon. He was 49. De Turk, a french horn play er with the orchestra, was tak en to Memorial Hospital and was pronounced dead on ar rival. One witness said De Turk collapsed from the top row of a platform soon after intermis sion. He fell behind the plat form and was obscured by a crowd, the witness said. De Turk was a former mem ber of the Nashville (Tenn.) Symphony. He received his doctorate from Vanderbilt University in 1948. Wight Quits Welfare Post James A. Wight, Orange County Director of Public Wel fare, is resigning from his po sition to join the University's School of Social Work. Wight notified the County board of Commissioners that his resignation would be ef fective Sept. 1. He told the board that he wanted to work toward his doctorate and that he felt that the pressure of his work at the University would help him achieve his goal. He will lecture in public assistance and social welfare. LATE RESERVATIONS Coeds who have failed to make reservations for the sec ond summer session may still reserve rooms at the Dean of Women's Office, 202 South Building. VILLA TEIPESTA LUNCHEON 12-3 p.m. 75c to $1.95 Sandwiches Salads Homemade Soup Spaghetti Lasagne Cannalonl "Fine Choice of "The Popular Hickory Smoked Barbecue Raviola Nicoise Spaghetti Italienne Combination Seafood Platters Southern Fried Chicken ENTERTAINMENT - ELLEN . . . And The Arts Vinson Three UNC musicians will be presented in recital at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hill Hall. Martha Gibbs, a soprano, will sing "Sheherazade" by Maurice Ravel. Miss Gibbs is a 1964 graduate of UNC and a pupil of Dr. Wilton Mason. Her accompanist will be Wil liam Robinson, a rising sen ior piano major who is a pu pil of Dr. William S. Newman. Sue Guerry, a rising senior organ major and student of Dr. Rudolph Kremer, will add works by Bach, Francois Cou perin and Jehan Alain. Michael Kelly will conclude the program with selections from J. S. Bach, Ellis B. Kohs and Frederic Chopen. Kelly is a rising junior piano major and is accompanist for the Glee Club. An evening of short movies will be the offering of the Pres byterian Student Center at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Film Festival "A Movie," by Bruce Com er, is an American - made spoof on the movie - like re ality of modern life, assembled from newsreels, daily papers, junk heaps and such. Conn eirs a sculptor and painter. "Autumn Fire" is an early experimental film which at tempts to give poetic dimen sion to hearing and seeing. This silent, American - made film is by Herbert Weinberg. "A Moment is Love" is the first film by the maker of "The Connection," Shirley Clarke. This is an experiment in color about what it is like to be in love. "Dom" is a Polish film pro ducer by the Kadar Unit of Warsaw. It conveys the im pression of a woman who awaits her husband at the end of the day. "The Smile," by Serge Bour guigen, is a French film by the director of "Sundays and Cy bele." The smile ;is that of a child who is a novice in a Buddhist monastery. Summer Cineman In spite of this column, "Mu sic Room" was the film of the night at Carroll Hall last Thursday. The company which delivers the movies got its wires crossed and delivered DINNER 5:30-9:30 p.m. $2.50 Veal Parmigiano Prime Ribs of Beef Roast Leg of Lamb Your Choice Served with Spa ghetti, 2 vegetables, tossed salad, hot rolls & butter. Imported Wines" PINE ROOI Place To Meet, Snack, or Dine" mmi m mb .cafetebia Specializing In- Rare Roast Beef Charcoal Broiled Steak Broiled Lobster Tails Pizza Sandwiches of All Kinds Homemade Pies Baked Daily the wrong film, sot the avid freak followers of UNC were doomed to disappointment or to wait another week. "Freaks" will be tonight. Art Exhibit An exhibition of gravures by one of the leading artists in the field, Cyril of New York, will open at the Rialto The ater in Durham on Sunday. "Cyril" is the professional name of a young New York woman whose work has been acquired by such purchasers as the Victoria and Albert Mu seum in London and the Bib liotheque Nationale in Paris. She will be in Durham for the opening of her show. Area artists are invited to see her work at the Rialto, and to meet her at the theater early in the week. Arrange ments should be made through Maggie Dent at the Rialto. Area Theater Lerner and Lowe's "Briga doon" will open Monday at Durham's Triangle Theater for a six-night run. The musical concerns two present - day American men who lose their way in Scot land and come upon the 18th century village of Brigadoon. Wishing to stay because of love interest, the men are forced to leave but later rediscover the village. Heading a c?st of 30 are Alex Burke, Charles Hoye, Kay Dewell and Mary Jane Wells. The singing and dancing chor uses are professionals who are coming to Durham for this week from Roanoke and the Mill Mountain Playhouse's pro duction of "Kismet." Director James Albright, who is also a New York danc er and choreographer, direct ed "Kiss Me Kate" here last . summer. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m. Tuesday will be UNC Stu dent Night, with a 50-cent re duction in ticket price. "Rainmaker" by Richard Nash will play through Sun day at The Barn in Greens boro. Dinner begins at 7 p.m., and curtain time is 8:30 p.m. The Barn is on the Stagecoach Trail near Interstate 40. For reservations dial 292-2211 in Greensboro. "Tennessee Williams' "Sum mer and Smoke" will open at Raleigh Little Theater Tues day. Jean Vinson protrays Al ma, the idealistic daughter of a Mississippi preacher and his insane wife. Curtain time is 8:15 p.m. COMPLETE CARRY-OUT FOOD SERVICE Open: Mon.-Fri. 6:45-11:00 Sundays J 4:00-11:00 Closed: Saturdays 119 E. Franklin St. Open Till 9 P.M. IL

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view