September 17, 1968
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Page 9 -
Center
Six Programs Provide Activity
By MARY BURCH
DTH Staff Writer
"I think that both more
foreign students and American
students will actively
participate in the programs of
the International Student
Center because we've had a
chance to plan and to
organize," said Danielle
Withrow, ISC co-chairman this
year.
Last year was the first year
that the International Student
Center in Carr Dorm was in
existence. Established last
September it is the only
student center in the world
completely owned, operated
and financed by students.
"The goal of the
International Student Center is
to promote an understanding
and reciprocal exchange of
ideas between foreign and
American Students," said Miss
Withrow. "This year we will
have 60 students, 30 American
and 30 foreign students, who
will live in the dorm. There are
about 350 foreign students on
campus altogether."
Orientation for the
international students began
Saturday, September 14, under
the leadership of Mary
Sitterson, chairman of the
international orientation.
"The foreign student goes
through basically the same
orientation as the entering
freshman or transfer student,"
noted Miss Withrow, "but the
center provides an additional
reference group contact to help
orient the foreign student to
America as well as to UNC."
The Orientation committee
compiled an orientation folder
of information for the
1 Oth Anniversary
Features Faculty
The largest faculty artist
group ever to exhibit in Chapel .
Hill opened its first group show
Sunday at the Ackland Art
Center. Two sculptors, one
potter, and seven painters
exhibit 40 works.
New on the local exhibition
scene Is the variety in scale
with shaped canvases reaching
16 feet height; the variety of
material, spun alumninum
amber pi exiglass, spun
fiberglass, chrome, acryllics,
enameled steel, ceramics, and
blown glass; and the color,
form and medium.
The show is the headliner
exhibition of the 10th
New Text By Prof
Luther H. Hodges Jr.,
formerly of Chapel Hill, and
Dr. Rollie Tillman Jr., UNC
professor of marketing, are
co-authors of "Banks
Marketing: Text and Cases," a
new textbook.
Published by
Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.
of Reading, Mass., the book is
designed as a supplementary
college text for students in
marketing, finance or banking,
and for use in the banking
industry's internal education
programs. It is one of the first
studies in its field.
Using case histories of 13
Worth Walking for!
A
incoming foreigner. Included in
the folder are maps of Chapel
Hill and North Carolina, facts
about the state and the
University, a booklet on the
honor system, a general
orientation handbook for
student coming to the States
and a handbook put out by the
Student Center.
"The idea of putting out
our own handbook came from
the international center at the
University of Michigan," said
Miss Withrow. "The handbook
gives information which
Americans take for granted,
but information which is
essential to the foreigner."
The handbook, which was
designed last year by an
American ISC resident Bill
Smith, takes as its theme
"Humanity above all nations."
It is hoped that in the future
this theme will become the
theme of the center.
On Sunday the international
student, in addition to the
orientation program for any
incoming student, attended an
International Convocation and
International Dinner
Discussion. Today Focus, a Christian
graduate student, faculty, and
staff organization at UNC, will
conduct a guided bus tour of
UNC, Chapel Hill, Duke and
Durham. The tour will begin at
Carr Dormitory where the
students will be met by the
guides and will end at the
home of Professor and Mrs.
F.P. Brooks for a covered-dish,
supper picnic.
On Wednesday, the
international students are
invited to the first weekly
meeting of the Cosmopolitan
Club. The purpose of the club
Anniversary year season at the .
Ackland. XvX
New artists Exhibiting for
the first time include sculptor
Gene Kangas, potter Paul
Magennis, and painters Dennis
Zaborowski and Mary Beth
Wiebe.
Kangas works in plexiglass,
spun alumninum, fiberglass,
chrome, and mirrors, and also
exhibits blown glass.
Magennis has fired ceramics
on exhibition; and Mary Beth
Wiebe shows three canvases
and one construction painting.
Guest artist Keith Crown,
who served on the summer
faculty, is included in the
banks and a management
consulting firm, the book
covers the concept,
organization and coordination
of bank marketing; product,
location and promotion
management, and marketing
research.
Hodges, now executive in
charge of NCNB's Charlotte
offices, held a similar post in
Chapel Hill last year. A 1957
UNC graduate, he was an
instructor on the business
school faculty for a year before
joining the bank's staff in
1962.
nticipates Fruitful
is "to promote international
understanding, provide cultural
exchange, and establish
personal rapport and firendship
through its functions."
The club holds weekly
meetings on Tuesdays and
Wednesdays which include
dinner and a program of
international interest often a
film, slides or a discussion
centering around a particular
.country or area of the world.
"The purposes of the
Cosmopolitan Club and the
International Student Center
are very similar," said Miss
Withrow. "We are both
working toward the goal of
international friendship and
reciprocal exchange of ideas.
We hope our programs for the
coming year will compliment
each other."
The ISC programs for the
coming year reflect the
planning and organization the
Center has accomplished in its
first year. Most of the
programs last year, when the
Center was under the
chairmanship of Steve Mueller,
were on a spontaneous basis.
Mueller noted the Thursday
night Professor speaker
program, the summer student
rate travel abroad program and
the Experiment in
International Living this
Summer as the Center's most
successful programs.
The Center hopes to
continue these programs along
with the following newly
established programs:
CAMPUS INTERNA
TIONAL AWARENESS
PROGRAM 1968-69: The
will present a 20 week program
divided into three colloquia of
Show
Art
showing with six watercolors.
.. . This is ..the headliner show
of the season, sendoff for the
Ackland's 10th anniversary
year series. Works are for sale
through inquiry and price list
at the Museum office.
Display Here
A 196 scale model of the
world's largest building (in
volume), the Vehicle Assembly
Building at Kennedy Space
Center, Cape Kennedy, Fla.,
will be shown here in an
exhibit of the National
Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
Sponsored locally by The
Morehead Planetarium, the
model will be on exhibit
through September 29.
The complete display is
about 9 feet tall. The 5Va-foot
building model rests on a
display stand.
Eight" color transparencies
are featured on each tf the
four sides of the display stand.
These depict activities
concerning spacecraft
development and mission
control at the Manned
Spacecraft Center, Houston;
launch vehicle development,
Marshall Space Flight Center,
Huntsville, Ala.; lunch facilities
at Kennedy Space Center, Cape
Kennedy, Fla. and the Apollo
mission to the Moon.
The McGaDiard Bldg.
six or seven weeks each to
increase international
awareness on the campus. The
three colloquia chosen, "The
Middle East Crisis," "Latin
America Our Disgruntled
Friend" and "Africa:. Another
United States?", will be
presented by films, seminar
discussions and speakers.
"It is the aim of each
colloquium to synthesize the
geographic, economic, social,
cultural, historical and political
factors of the area discussed,"
said Miss Withrow.
INTERNATIONAL ART
FESTIVAL: A collection of
international art, both national
and local talent, including
paintings, drawings woodcuts,
crafts, and sculpture will be on
display on campus. A number
"We want
framework for
and graduate
to provide a
radical faculty
students to
co-ordinate radical activity on
and off campus," according to
a member of the UNC chapter
of the New University
Conference, which will hold
it's first organizational meeting
October 1 at 7:30 p.m. in
Carroll Hall.
The member, who explained
he spoke for himself and not
for the entire membership,
defined the basic purpose of
the organization as an
educational one.
"Radicalism must have a
Utopian ideology that rests on
rm
You still have a few days to come in and
get some refreshments and meet some peo
ple and walk out with some of our special
Old Well checks. As usual, there won't be
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of items will be on sale and the
International Bazaar will have a
display booth of items that will
be for sale during the Bazaar
INTERNATIONAL FILM
FESTIVAL: The ISC, in
cooperation with the Graham
Memorial Films Committee,
will sponsor a three-day
International Film Festival
showing award-winning
international films.
INTERNATIONAL FUN
FAIR: Tentatively planned for
May, the International Fun
Fair will be a weekend of
international games, booths
and refreshments in front of
the ISC.
INTERNATIONAL
WEEK1969: 1-Week will be a
campus-wide effort by many
clubs and organizations to give
the campus and the Chapel Hill
community an opportunity to
become more aware of
international affairs. The
Cosmopolitan Club will
NUC Blows Off
a realistic social criticism," he
urged.
He said NUC will be a
means .of co-ordinating the
efforts of radicals in analyzing
current issues with the hope of
developing some kind of
resolving ideology.
The local chapter was
organized over the summer by
former members of Concerned
Faculty and Vietnam Summer.
The group, numbering about
20 faculty and graduate
students, is an outgrowth of
the national organ created last
March.
The purpose of the national
group is to organize local and
regional chapters similar to the
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Member of the
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sponsor their international
dinner, the Banquet of
Nations, and an international
talent show. Exhibits, films,
discussions and speakers will be
programmed throughout the
week.
An idea by co-chairman
Doug Morgan, this program
would be an intensified model
United Nations. The games
would consist of hypothetical
situations which would enable
participants to express a
variety of ideas and outlooks
of particular nations in
international affairs.
"We are really pleased with
the response to the Center and
the programs and we hope that
more people will drop by the
center to participate in our
programs and to meet the
students. It is a mutually
rewarding experience for the
American student as well as the
international student."
one here. There are presently
about 25 local chapters.
The national organization
also plans a national meeting
and the publication of a
newsletter and occasional
position papers.
In a national NUC
statement it was written that
"it is not enough to be radical
downtown or in Washington.
Our radicalism must extend to
the campus and the
classroom."
"WTe believe in a university
which exports radical
graduates, radical opinion, and
the radical example of the
internal democracy," the
statement said.
any service charges if you keep a balance
of $100 or more.
So why not drop in tomorrow? at our
Chapel Hill office. We're ready for'you., v
9
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