Friday, November 8. 1968"
THE DAILY TAB HEEL
Pace 7
At IFC Meeting
It raits EDiscMss i&wr I
ZJ7ET
Twenty Picks
By BRYAN CUMMING
DTH Staff Writtf
Results of the
Student-Faculty-Fraternity
conference were discussed at
the Nov. 4th meeting of the
Interfraternity Council. Initial
plans for a symposium next
spring were made, and the
winners of the 1967-68
Fraternity Awards were
announced.
The Student Faculty
Fraternity Conference was held
for the first time in seven years
at the Betsy-Jeff Perm 4-H
over the
THIS IS THE
TRUE STORY
OF THE
SELF-CONFESSED
BOSTON
STRANGLER.
1 !
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- - s
BOSTON
STRANGLER
Tony Curtis
Henry Fonda
George Kennedy
Mike Kellin Murray Hamilton
RotftFryr Richard Ftoischw
Edward Anhalt C&otd Frank
PnyiK)r Color bv 0Lui
NOW THRU WED7
FEATURES:
12:40 - 2:43 -4:58 -7:04 -9;1
SMA
'5W
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Center in Reidsvillp
weekend of Nov. 2-3.
Each social fraternity sent
two representatives to the
conference. Additionally,
non-fraternity participants
were present, including Dean
of Men James Cansler, Director
of Student Aid William Geer
and Student Body President
Ken Day.
IFC President John Callan
called the conference "a
terrific success." It was
organized by Stewart Rosen,
president of Tau Epsilon Phi
house.
The recommendations of
the conference covered several
areas, which were discussed in
depth over the weekend.
In the area of fraternity
membership, the conference
recommended a modification
of the rule of strict silence. In
the sphere of relationship with
the University, it was
recommended that classes be
held in fraternity houses.
Regarding fraternity
selectivity, the conference
drafted a policy statement
regarding the admission of
Blacks in fraternity rush. The
statement said that the IFC
would not tolerate racial,
regional, or religious
discrimination.
At the Nov. meeting of the
IFC, this recommendation was
Intram
urals Ban
To Be Discussed
By LARRY HAMILTON
Special to the DTH
Chancellor J. Carlyle
Sitterson will meet next
Tuesday with several of his
advisors to consider lifting the
ban on physical education and
intramural activities, according
to Ashley Thrift of the
Intramural Office.
Thrift along with Murray
Pool, intramural director of Phi
Delta Theta, met with Dean
Cathey Tuesday morning as
"concerned students who want
to know what can be done."
Thrift said Cathey "is very
concerned about the problem
and feels the program is a vital
part of the students' activity."
Cathey told the two
students the problem will be
studied carefully this week in
light of concern to return the
program balanced by the need
to conserve water.
Max Saunders of the UNC
Physical Plant estimated the
QFM?
You don't know about QFM? Why, QU1K FOOD
MART is Chapel Hill's only downtown market Not
only do we have a large stock of domestic and
imported BEERS, WINES & CHAMPAGNES, but
also
GROCERIES
ICE
MIXERS
MAGAZINES
SNACKS
HARDWARE
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE!
Still
curious about QFM? Stop in to see
112 W. FRANKLIN ST.
us at
OPEN 'TIL 11:30 EVERY NITE
water in University Lake at
200 million gallons (100 day's
supply) as of November 5.
Both Thrift (a 1968 UNC
graduate and now special
student) and Murray met
earlier last week with Dr.
Jamerson, head of the P.E.
Department, to discuss the
possibility of resuming
activities.
Jamerson then sent a
"feasibility report" to Dean
Jones, Assistant to the
Chancellor, and Tuesday's
meeting was arranged, said
Thrift.
"We approached Dean
Cathey as students Tuesday
morning," he continued. "We
wanted to know what was
happening and what we as
students could do to help the
situation."
They presented their ideas
to the Intramural Managers'
Association Monday night and
received their endorsement.
The administration placed
the ban on physical education
activities Oct 2, due to the
water shortage.
Nurses
Attend
Workshop
Head nurses at N.C.
Memorial Hospital are
attending a two-day workshop
designed to present new
personnel involved with
nursing services and to
promote better nursing care.
The sessions, sponsored by
the Education Committee of
the Head Nurse Group at
Memorial, were planned by
Mrs. Peggy McGee. The
workshop is titled, "The Head
Nurse The Coordinator and
Determiner of Nursing Care."
About 35 head nurses,
assistant head nurses and senior
nursing staff cnembers are
attending the sessions, which
opened Thursday at the
Holiday Inn.
not acted on.
In the area of fraternity life,
the conference recommended
that each fraternity house be
granted the right to, determine
its own visiting agreements.
Instead of considering this
recommendation, the IFC
decided to extend the overall
hours for visiting, moving the
daily hours from 12:00 noon
back to 10:00 a.m.
Another topic discussed at
the IFC meeting was the
symposium plan for next
spring. The tentative dates are
March 10-12.
The theme of the planned
symposium is "Identity." The
program will include a movie, a
speaker, and discussion groups
with faculty members over the
three days. The proposed
speaker is Dr. Kenneth
Keniston, from the psychology
department at Yale University.
IFC president John Callan
announced the winners of the
1967-68 Fraternity Awards.
Chi Psi and Phi Kappa Sigma
were winners of the R.B.
House Award.
The members of the
Panhellenic Council were
present at the IFC meeting to
discuss the formulation of a
Sorority-fraternity mixer
policy. It was determined that
each house would decide its
own policy for mixers, and
that sorority houses would pay
a certain percentage of the
expense.
Wtafe special atocwt
IB)
if
We must be bragging too much about
Beechwood Ageing.
Because we're starting to get some
flQv Km,t. it Like. "Beechwood,
Beechwood ... big deal." And
Beechwood Ageing is so hot,
why don't you tell every
body what it is?"
So we will.
First, it isn't big wooden
casks that we age Budweiser .
we
El
in.
But it is a layer of thin
wood strips from the beech
tree (what else?) laid down
in a dense lattice on the
bottom of our glass-lined
brewing tanks. This is where
wunnot
Budweiser.
iascr seen
IREWED AND CANNED BT
f . CZ I C
let Budweiser ferment a second
time. (Most brewers quit after one
fermentation. We don't.)
These beechwood strips offer extra
surface area for tiny yeast particles
to cling to, helping clarify
the beer. And since these
strips are also porous, they
help absorb beer's natural
"edge," giving Budweiser
its finished taste. Or in other
words, "a taste, a smooth
ness and a drinkability you
will find in no other beer at
any price."
Ah yes, drinkability. Thafs
what's so special about
Beechwood Ageing.
But you know that.
ROCK, FOLK, JAZZ GROUPS! Enter the '69 Inter
rnlleeia'te Music Festival, co-sponsored by the brewers of
Budweiser. Write: I.M.F., Box 1275, Leesburg, Fla. 32748.
ID),
1
KING OF BEERS
ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC ST. LOUIS . NEWARK . LOS ANGELES . TAMPA . HOUSTON . COLUMBUS
Davis Gibson Good Chansky George Hurder
UNC-Virginia UVa. UVa. UVa. UVa. UVa. UVa.
Clemson-Maryland Clem. Clem. Clem. Clem. Clem. Clem.
Duke-N.C. State State State State Duke Duke Duke
Wake Forests. Carolina Wake Wake Wake Wake Wake Wake
Auburn-Tennessee Aub. Term. Tenn. Tennl Tenn. Tenn.
PennSt-Miami State State State State Miami State
LSU-Alabama Ala. T-SU Ala. Ala. Ala. LSU
Southern Cal-California SC SQ SC SC Cal SC
Harvard-Princeton Har Princ. Har. Har. Har. Har.
Oregon State-UCLA OSU OSU OSU OSU OSU UCLA
Florida-Georgia Ga. Ga. Ga. Fla. Ga. Ga.
Ohio-Bowling Green Ohio Ohio Ohio Ohio Ohio Ohio
Kansas-Oklahoma Kans. Kans. Kans. Kans. Kans. Kans,
Arizone-Air Force Ariz. Ariz. Airz. AFA Ariz. Ariz.
Yale-Pennsylvania Yale Yale Yale Yale Penn. Yale
Michigan State-Indiana MSU MSU MSU MSU MSU MSU
N. Texas St.-Texas (El Paso) NTS NTS NTS UTEP NTS NTS
Texas Tech-TCU Tech Tech Tech Tech Tech Tech
San Diego St.-S. Mississippi South South SDS South South SDS
Muskingum-Heidelberg Musk. Musk. Musk. Musk. Musk. Musk.
91-44-5 87-48-5 : 84-51-5 84-51-5 81-54-5 81-51-5
.674 .644 .622 .622 .600 .600
The progressive-minded staff missed out in - the
Presidential race, so is trying to recoup in the football polls.
The liberals appear to have the edge on the college gridiron
this season if nowhere else, because offense, which tries to
move forward, is far ahead of the defense, whose purpose is
to remain unmoving or push the opponent backward Thus
this is the highest-scoring year in major college history. Last
week's top pick was Montana-Montana State. Final score:
29-24, State. Muskingum won again, beating Denison to
bring its record to 4-2-1. This week's crucial selections
include Auburn-Tennessee, LSU-Miami, LSU-Alabama,
Southern Cal-California and New Mexico
Highlands-Southern Colorado, which we did not pick
because Highlands doesn't circulate its schedule east of
Santa Fe. Most improved prognosticator is editor Hurder, a
pointy-head, pseudo-intellectual whose closest connection
to a football team is that he was once in jail in Bear
Bryant's hometown. Hurder is now tied for last after
holding the cellar position alone for six weeks.
Applications Available
For
Applications for the
Colombian Exchange are now
available in the ISC lobby. Two
UNC undergraduates will
receive a full scholarship
books, tuition, room and
board, spending money, Nov.
21 deadline to turn in
applications, etc. for a year's
program at the University of
Antioquia in Medillin,
Colombia.
The students will have
complete freedom to study the
courses they choose in any part
of the University. They will
find their professors with
varying backgrounds doctor
ates from the best universities
of the U.S. and Europe, to
those who seem much like the
unprepared graduate
instructor.
Medellin, the city in which
the UNC students will live, for
the most part where they
choose, is Colombia's second
city with a population of about
700,000. But Medellin is really
not quite a city, it is an
oversized town in a stage of
transition: physically,
culturally, economically. To
our students the present
conservatism and the past
ultra-conservatism will be both
fascinating and repelling.
omoian
Medellin, the seat of the most
conservative Roman
Catholicism in all of South
America, is also the site of the
largest textile manufacture and
other big business. And so the
extremes are brought into open
conflict as the people live both
in the authoritarian past and in
the dynamic modern world.
The UNC students will find
within the student body of the
University of Antioquia a
strong regional pride, even talk
Study
of the "Republic of
Antioquia", with a conflicting
will toward national unity.
There will be much talk of
Capitalistic Imperialism and
Marxian economics. But,
probably the most outstanding
and exciting aspect of the
student body of the University
of Antioquia is their flare of
rallying and violent strikes
when, their .power is
questioned.
Rascals, Kallabash
Highlight Weekend
The Rascals and The
Kallabash Corporation are the
two big events sponsored by
the Carolina Union for
Homecoming Weekend.
The Rascals will perform in
Carmichael Auditorium on
Saturday night at 8 p.m.
Student tickets will be on sale
at GM information desk until 6
p.m. Saturday night at $2.50.
At the door all tickets will be
at the General Public price of
$3.00.
This singing group has been
in popular demand since their
first recording, "I Ain't Going
to Eat Out My Heart
Anymore" in 1965. Since that
song, The Rascals have received
golden records for "Good
Loving" and "Groovin' ". .
On Friday night the
Carolina Union is presenting a
free dance at the Tin Can with
the Kallabash Corporation
playing.
HEM
AN WHO HAS IT MADE
HAS PLYMOUTH
TO-PROVE IT.
iJKXij&teft . :v".- . . . . . ::::
v? X X -
For the man who wants to be perfectly correct, perfectly
assured, perfectly at ease, Plymouth makes the difference.
Shown is a handsome dress boot with antiqued brass buckle.
At better stores everywhere.
PLYMOUTH Shoe Company, Middleboro, Mass.
YOUNG MEN'S SHOP, Hillsborough
F0USHEE MEN'S SHOP, Roxboro
WRIGHT'S CLOTHING STORE, High
SATER'S, Danville
Point
MOREHEAD COLLEGE
Homecoming Activities
Friday
Combo Party
WITH
"Prince Paul anj
His Swinging Imperials'
9:00 P.M. 1:00 A.M.
Saturday
You Asked for it,
ii
A Rideless Hayride'
After Concert
Music Darkness Warmth
Graham Social Room
MIXERS
k l- ft ji " t
W A) ' y ,
- sf: V r :r vf ,
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