THE DAILY TAR HEEL Friday. May 20. I9e Page 4 THE GIFT OF THE CLASS OF 1966 to the University is this - memorial to Thomas Wolfe, UNC '20. The memorial depicts a - sculptured angel and will be placed in front of the library. I Senior Gift Wins 1 Accepted Design The Buildings and Grounds Committee of the University approved Tuesday the plans for the gift of the Class of 1966. The gift is a memorial to Tho mas Wolfe, 1920 graduate of the University and author of "Look Homeward Angel." The memorial is a sculptur ed angel, about five feet long, set in bronze. It will be set in the grass area directly in front of the library, tilted slightly upward. People leav ing the library will be able to catch sight of the angel as they descend the steps. There will be some shurbbery added to provide a sort of niche for the angel. The sculptor who submitted the accepted model is R. W. Kinaird of the U.N.C. Art De partment. John Harmon, senior class president, said that the full cost of the project will be ap proximately $1700 (seventeen hundred dollars). About $1500 of this will come from the class funds money raised from the sale of Homecom ing Mums and Cokes at Ju bilee. Harmon hopes that the rest can ba obtained through private donations. The lettering on the model is not complete. The full in scription on the final angel will read "0 lost, and by the wind grieved, ghost come back again Thomas Wolfe - Class of 1920 Presented by the Class of 1966." The class officers comment ed that they did not wish to give the conventional class gift, such as bench or an air conditioner in an office. They hope to have a presentation ceremony next fall on Uni versity Day after the installa tion of the anael this summer. Vice - president of the Class of 1966, Armistead Maupin, feels that the angel "captures the spirit of nostalgic gran deur that characterizes Wolfe's work. The bronze angel is the only memorial ever erected to Wolfe at his Alma Mater and we felt it was time to tell him he could come home again." While at the University Wolfe served as editor of The Daily Tar Heel and was an outstanding Playmaker. H i s home was in Asheville, N. C, and the sculptured' angel will be facing west towards that city. Over Half Americans Have Nasty Insomniac Tendencies Do you have trouble sleep ing? If so, you are among the 52 per cent of Americans who, according to a survey, have occasional or frequent difficulty achieving the bliss of slumber through the night. The true chronic insomniac is irritable and restless, tense throughout the day. He uses up more energy than he should when he sits, stands, eats and talks. Fretting too much, his emotions on edge, by the day's end he's ex hausted but his mind will not let him fall asleep or pass a restful night. Dr. Francis C. Wood, Chief 'of the Department of Medi cine at the University of Penn sylvania, observes that many people have trouble falling asleep at night. His solution: an aspirin tablet. Volcanoes In Local Area's Distant Past HILLSBOROUGH E. P. Allen and W. F. Wilson, mem bers of the geologic staff of the N. C. Department of Con servation and Development's division of mineral resources, think they have found proof that a volcano or volcanoes erupted and deposited molten lava over a wide area in cen tral Orange County and are responsible for a famed min eral spring. That lava, which they say flowed during the Paleozoic ear, about 400 million years ago (as geologists reckon time is now being classified as amygdaloidal basalt and Allen and Wilson believe it might be of economic value if used for roofing and roadbuilding. This discovery of lava - type rock was made by the geolo gists while engaged in a geo logic - mapping and mineral resources study of Orange County. Altered amygdaloidal basalt flows have been located in at least seven bodies in the cen tral section of the county. Three flows are located just east and south of Efland. Three bodies crop out on the east and south sides of Hills borough and a seventh body occurs just west of New Hope Church. Their mapping operations re sulted in the discovery that on hillsides, springs are rather common just above outcrops of the massive basalt. The best known of these springs is the old Occoneechee mineral spring. Glee Club Names Officers mMlMMi Hit Hi a Uri . V.--Jh, UNC Professor Kenan To Review Grad Exams The UNC Men's Glee Club, which leaves for Europe on June 15, has announced new officers for the coming year. Paul Wyche, a rising senior from Hallsboro. was elected president. Vice president is Bob Dilks, a rising senior. He will serve as chairman of the music and ic committee selects the mu sic which the club sings. Ted Hayes was elected se cretary, and Dick McPhatter was elected treasurer. Bill Reel and Gary Scott will be librarians. Public relations director will be Lee Faulker. Earl Had den will be concert tour man ager. Alvin Tyndall will remain as tour director until the Euro pean tour is finished on July 18. The club is still $3,000 short of the necessary funds for the European tour. Hadden said contributions may be sent to Hill Hall. Checks should be made pay able to the University of North Carolina for the Men's Glee Club. Scott College Aids Drive For Rheumatic Diseases C. Hugh Holman, Kenan Pro fessor of English at the UNC has been elected to the new ly created Graduate Record Examination Board, which is charged with the responsibili ty for reviewing the GRE pro gram, planning research stu dies for its improvement and development, and advising the Educational Testing Service on the operation of the program. The Graduate Record Exa- Exam Schedule All 10:00 a.m. clashes on TThS WTed., May 25, 8:30 a.m. All 8:00 a.m. classes on TThS Wed., May 25, 2:00 p.m. All 12:00 noon classes on MWF, Poli 41 Thurs., May 26, 8:30 a.m. All 2:00 p.m. classes on MWF, Econ 70 Thurs., May 26, 2:00 p.m. All 9:00 a.m. classes on MWF Fri., May 27, 8:30 a.m. All 12:00 noon classes on TThS, All Naval Science and Air Science Fri., May 27, 2:00 p.m. All 9:00 a.m. classes on TThS Sat., May 28, 8:30 p.m. All 1:00 and 1:30 p.m. classes on TThS, BA 150, Phil 21 Sat., May 28, 2:00 p.m. " "" " ' - All 8:00 a.m. classes on MWF Mon., May 30, 8:30 a.m. All 10:00 a.m. classes on MWT Mon., May 30, 2:00 p.m. All 8:00 a.m. classes on MWF, Mon., May 30, 8:30 a.m. All 10:00 a.m. classe son MWF Mon., May 30, 2:00 p.m. All 11:00 a.m. classes on TThS Tues., May 31, 8:30 a.m. All Fren., Germ., Span., and Russ., courses No'd 1, 2, 3, 3 Fr. and 4 Tues., May 31, 2:00 p.m. All 11:00 a.m. classes on MWF Wed., June 1, 8:30 a.m. All 1:00 and 1:30 p.m. classes on MWF, BA 161 Wed., June 1,2:00 p.m. All 3:00 p.m. classes, all classes not otherwise provided for in this schedule. Phar 30, Phys 25 Thurs.. June 2. 8:30 a.m. All 2:00 p.m. classes on TThS, Econ 61, BA 71 & 72 Thurs., June 2, 2:00 p.m. 'Common Exams IKE This is Jaguar for Men. After-shave and cologne combined. Lusty. Powerful. Potent. Comes on stronger. Stays on longer. After-shavecologne, $4.50. Soap on a rope, $2.50. JT " - - H ! f h: ' f - f HIGH POWERED OFFER! m Action-packed racing car scenes! By today's most popular racing artist. Walter Gotschke! Four of them! Handsome 11 x 13 full-color lithographed prints! Each suitable for framing! Each a collector's item. A $5.00 value, only $1! Send Jagua- boxtop attached to a slip of paper with your name and address (clearly printed) and $1 check, or money order (no cash, please), to: Jaguar-Yardiey, Box 10O9N, Radio City Station, New York, New York. Offer expires Sep tember 30, 1966. Offer void in states or localities where prohibited, taxed, licensed, or otherwise restricted by law. JAGUAR FROM YARDLEY initiation is the most widely used and most important sin gle test for admission to gra duate study in the United States. The new Board of six teen members has control of the program. The newly created board is sponsored by the Association of Graduate Schools and by Schools, each of which appoint ed four members to the board. These appointed members in turn elected an additional eight members. It is as such an elected member that Professor Holman takes his place on the Board. While he was dean of the Graduate School at Chapel Hill, Professor Holman parti cipated in some studies of the effectiveness of the Graduate Record Examination and ser ved on a committee of the Council of Graduate School to study admissions. Presumab ly it is this experience and his earlier experience as a chairman of a large graduate department in the University which led to his election by a group of his former gradu ate deanship colleagues. Umbrellas? At 3 p.m. yesterday a cur ious group of enthusiastic stu dents gathered in front of Bat tle - Vance - Pettigrew dorm to take part in the filming of "The Invasion of the Umbrel la Man." Producer, director and cam eraman, David C. Knesel was the man in charge. He was filming a short movie to com plete the requirements for his RTVMP major. Bystanders looked on in dis belief as half a dozen men wearing heavy overcoats and waving umbreallas wildly in the air chased another "nor mal" man around McCorkle Place. Only whsn they saw that the little man waving his arms had a movie camera in one hand were they able to figure out what was going on. Knesel said afterwards that the movie had conformity as its theme. "All these men with umbreallas and overcoats chase him around on a nice sunny day until he finally gets his umbrella and overcoat and joins them." "The filming was just great," Knesel said, "I only hope the film comes out O.K." Over 100 students from Scott Residence College, (Parker, Teague and Avery' ) and its sister residence halls, Alder man and Mclver, are partici pating this week in the May fund-raising drive for The ?. C. Arthritis Foundation. The students mailed letters yesterday to the faculty ask ing for contributions oi i Saturday has been designated as "tag day" and the students will be in x toun uuu town all day giving out te tags for contributions. Mrs. Kerr Scott, wife of the man for whom the residence college was named, is the hon orary chairman of the X. c. Arthritis Foundation. The students hope to ra:.- $500 this week. Bob Farris, Governor of Scott Residence College, said that he is hoping for a good response from the campus to fight arthritis, the nation's number one crippler. Please don't zlupf Sprite. It makes plenty of noise all by itself. Sprite, you recall, is the soft drink that's so tart and tingling, we just couldn't keep it quiet. Flip its lid and it really flips. Bubbling, fizzing, gurgling, hissing and carrying on all over the place. An almost exces sively lively drink. Hence, to zlupf is to err. What is zlupfing? Zf-fift is a flfusrfafo lDC Zlupfing is to drinking what smacking one's lips is to' eating. It's the staccato buzz. you make when draining the last fe deliciously tangy drops of Sprite from the bottle with a straw. Zzzzzlllupf ! It's coipletely uncalled for. Frowned upon in polite society. And not appreciated on caipus either. But. If zlupfing Sprite is absolutely essential to your enjoyment; if a good healthy zlupf is your idea of heaven, " well . . .all right . But have a heart. With a drink as noisy as Sprite, a little zlupf goes a long, long way . SPRITE. SO TART AND TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T KEEP IT QUIET. rp fnirprTnrF . -: - JIM . w; m p - e ? ... Coronet scores high in any class. Art . . . Coronet's beautiful lines and graceful styling draw looks everywhere you drive. Math . . . take the 383 cu. in. V8, add four-on-the-floor, and you've got the swingin'est car on campus. History . . . Coronet's a success story of record-breaking sales. Speech . . . Coronet says a lot about you even when it's standing still. Then comes Logic . . . Coronet's low price makes sense to just about any budget. How about you? Like to make the grade? Enroll at your Dodge dealer's now. As Pam points out. the Dodge Rebellion wants you. DODGE DIVISION CHRYSLER V7V MOTORS CORPORATION 303

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