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 ! iocniwHH m a I w If I Ml A - - 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 5c 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 , Perfect symbol of tlie love you share Being with each other, doing things together . . . knowing that your affection is growing into precious and enduring love. Happily, all these cherished moments will be forever symbolized by your diamond engagement ring. If the name, Keepsake, is in the ring and on the tag, you are assured of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. The engagement diamond is flawless, of superb color, and precise modem cut. Your Keensake Jeweler will assist vou m making vour selection . . . He.s j - j in the yellow pages, under 4Jeweers-" REGISTERED Ke ep s ake' DIAMOND RINGS I I I mini iiiuili i .mn. 1.1 j. KOf'ALlT CROWN Rings from $100 to 510,000. Uliatntions enbrged to &y beaidr of detaiL Trade mark rtg. A. H. Pood Company, Inc.. Ej.t. 1S92. HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engage ment and Wedding" and new 12-page full color folder, both for only 25c. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book. r- ea I I Name. I I I City. Address. State. -Zip- I I I KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90. SYRACUSE. N. Y. 13201 i :

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