Septemberl
Section II Pasre 10
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Former Tar" Heel Newsman Name
Journalism. School Finishes Third.
d
In Sixth
The School of Journalism
finished third this year among
the 47 accredited journalism
schools competing in the sixth
annual William Randolph
Hearst writing contest.
UNC has finished among the
top three positions in the na-
I I1L10 STUBOTS! I
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ottli
Annual Hearst Competition
tional contest five out of six
years since the program be
gan, in 1960. The School won
the gold first-place medallion
for 1963-64, and the silver second-place
medallion last year.
According to Journalism
Dean Wayne A. Danielsoiij the
Bill Colville
Don Ingle
Alvis Bobbitt
Students Parents Friends
from
Next to the University Motel
0
emember . .
better with Coke, After
Coke, After Coke . . . .
UNC School .and its students
have won over $15,000 from
Hearst Foundation Writing
Awards.
Twenty students have won
more than $7,000 in awards in
the past six years. The Jour
alism School receives a
matching grant for each award
won' by one of its students.
"UNC's Journalism School
has finished in top places na
tionally every year of the con
test except one," Danielson
noted. 'That's as consistent as
any school in the nation."
This year Curtiss Moore, a
senior from Raleigh, won $250
as fifth place winner in a final
write-off to determine over-all
winners from students award
ed two or more grants in the
seven-month competition pe
riod, October through April.
Earlier, Moore won $300 and
a second place for bis spot
news coverage of three violent
tornadoes in Eastern North
Carolina for The News and
Observer. He also won $150
for fourth place in the general
news writing competition for a
story on the escape and cap
ture of two patients from a
Raleigh mental hospital.
The other seven members of
UNC's winning writing team
included Ed Freakley Jr. of
Ft. Monroe. Va., retiring edi-
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ftoggo
UCILCI
Willi
tor of the UNC Journalist;
Fred W.Thomas of Concord,
editor of The Daily Tar Heel;
retiring Daily Tar Heel editor
Ernie McCrary of Lenoir;
Fred Harwell Jr. of Washing
ton, D.C.; Ernest Robl of Dur
ham; Andy Myers of Sea Girt,
N.J., and Charles Stover of
Roanoke, Va.
Freakley won $100 for a sev
enth place in general news re
porting with his Tar Heel
coverage of the controversial
appearance of Communist Her
bert Aptheker just off the
UNC campus. His report of
the Rinaldi murder trial
brought him a tie for 14th
place in the same category.
Thomas won $125 for fifth
place in the investigative and
interpretative writing category-
Cast Needed For Production
Of Musical Tinians Rainbow'
Director Tommy Rezzuot has
announced that approximately
torty actors, singers, and danc-
ers are needed for the Caro
lina Playmakers opening-of-the-season
production of Har
burg and Lane's musical hit
"Finian's Rainbow."
Tryouts will be held Friday;
Sept. 16 at 4 p.m. and 7:30 in
Memorial Hall (on the UNC
campus), with production dates
set for Oct. 15, 16, and 17.
"Finian's Rainbow" has de
lighted audiences for years
with such songs as "How Are
.1
( 404 W. FRANKLIN ST. 169 E. FRANKLIN ST. )
v y
Assistant Professor
A former Tar Heel news
man and alumnus of the Uni
versity has joined the School
of Journalism faculty as an
assistant professor.
He is Donald Lewis Shaw,
formerly a science writer for
the University of Wisconsin
Medical School in Madison. A
Waynesville native, he has
worked as a reporter for the
Burlington Daily Times-News,
the Asheville Citizen and the
Asheville Times.
Born in Raleigh, Shaw
spent most of his earlier years
in Waynesville. He is the son
of Mrs. Luther Shaw and the
late Dr. Shaw, who was as
sociated with the U. S. De
partment of Agriculture in
Waynesville.
Shaw received the A. B.
and M. A. degrees in jour
nalism from UNC and receiv
Things in Glocca
"Old Devil Moon'
Morra,"
"When
I'm Not Near the Girl I Love",
and "That Great Come-And-Get-It
Day."
. This antic musical fantasy in
which a leprechaun rubs shoul
ders with a Southern senator
in a place called Missitucky
requires a large chorus of both
Negro and white singers.
All students, faculty, towns-1
people, and anyone within a
commuting distance of Chapel
Hill are invited to tryout.
C
A
ed his Ph.D. in mass com
munications from Wisconsin
in August. He will teach cour
ses in news writing and in
functions and responsibilities
of contemporary journalism.
He also will work on re
search projects which the
Journalism School is conduct
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Of Jour ma mm
ing in co-operation with the
University's Population Pro
gram. .
The 29 - year - old jour
nalist was named to Phi
Beta Kappa and Kappa Tau
Alpha scholastic honoraries
at UNC and won the Sigma
Delta Chi award for .outstan-
.::
.FlRE;S'
CHAPEL HILL; N.C.
juunnoooocooocnnw
AR
i ii i i . .
. . TTo IS a
runs &cuuar -member
of Sigma Delta Chi,
Passional fraterrnt- and
Pi Kappa Phi, social frer
niShaw is married to thejor
mer Use Feichter of Waynes
ville. They have three chil
. nHAin r. mil - -
dren.
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