Friday, October 2, 1970
Students Have
Chance To Work
With Retarded
The Murdoch Committee this year will
again offer students a chance to work
with mentally retarded children.
The committee, which works through
the YMCA and YWCA, consists of
student volunteers who work at Murdoch
Center, a state home for the mentally
retarded. ,
The committee's service has been
reorganized this year. There are now four
areas of service: recreation, teaching,
child management and special aid, which
involves proficiency in a field such as
nursing or physiotherapy.
Areas in which students can
participate include: working directly with
the cottage parents in the cottages,
working in the childrens' psychiatric
unit, working in the .Unit for Blind and
Multihandicapped, working as teachers
aides or child management training and
instruction in industrial arts and arts and
crafts.
Products of the Murdoch Center
include the red, blue, yellow, green and
white barrels displayed by the Y in
Activities Mart and at the Y's Recontre
du Monde during orientation week.
Students should go the Y for more
information about the center.
Today Last Day
For Pass-Fail
Singer Touch & Sew (5) slant
needle sewing machines.
Equipped to zig-zag,
buttonhole and fancy stitch.
Guaranteed. 39.95 each.
3 Brand new bedroom
sets Double Dresser, w
mirror, chest and double bed.
39.95 per set.
Also 3 living room groups.
Unclaimed Freight
1005 E. Whitaker Mill Rd.
Raleigh. 9-6 M-F. Sat. till 5
FINE
BINDINGS
And other hard-to-find books
for scholars and collectors.
The Old Book Corner
137 East Rosemary Street
Opposite Town Parking Lots
J Carolina
NOW PLAYING
2:30-4:40-7:00-9:00
Warner Bros, unlocks
all the doors of the
sensation-filled
best seller.
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TECHNICOLORS-FROM WARNER BROS.
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TARHEEL
CAR WASH
Discount with
Texaco Gas
426 E. Main
Carrboro
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UCews liureau
Research and training grants awarded
to UNC have climbed to more than S2l
million, according to UN'Cs Dean of
Research Administration George R.
Holcomb.
-The S29.023.051 awarded UNC during
1969-1970 is a 5Vz per cent increase over
the S27.5 million awarded the previous
year. It included research grants and
contracts totaling S18,772,051 and
training grants totaling SI 0,25 1,000.
The state's only American Medical
Association approved School of
Radiation Therapy Technology will
graduate its first class here today.
The school, located in the Division of
Radiation Therapy at N. C. Memorial
Hospital, offers a year of intensive
training in the use of modern radiation
therapy equipment.
The graduates, Karen Tucker and
Calvin Wilson, are qualified to assist the
radiation therapy physician in treating
camcer patients with such equipment as
Cobalt, Betatrons, Linear Accelators and
Treatment Simulators.
The School of Business Administration
will launch a unique program for the
younger executive this spring called the
Young Executives Institute.
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Brief Around Th
The five-week program is designed to
provide advanced management training
for younger administrators in
manufacturing firms and service
industries.
Dr. Richard Levin, professor of
Operations Management, will direct the
institute. Enrollment is open to
executives, 26-35, with five years
managerial experience and a college
degree.
Nathan Hershey, research professor or
health law, will give a banquet address at
the Oct. 8-9 Conference on Community
Health Care in the Carolina Inn.
A professor in the Schools of Public
Health and Law at the University of
Pittsburgh, Mr. Hershey will speak on
"Are Health Professions Becoming
Obsolete?"
The meeting in Carrington Hall is open
to the public.
Dr. Christoph E. Schweitzer has
assumed his duties as chairman of the
UNC Germanic Languages Department.
The Berlin native replaces Dr. Herbert
W. Reichert, who will begin a four-month
leave of absence Feb. 1 to complete two
research projects.
Prior to joining the UNC faculty,
Schweitzer taught at Yale, University of
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served as chairman of the German
department at Bryn Mjwt.
Dr. Frank GoIIey cf the University of
Georgia will discuss "Principals of
Environmental Planning in a seminar
Thursday at 1 1 a.m. in room 201. Coker
Hall.
He is executive director of the
Institute of Ecology and professor of
zoology at the University of Georgia.
Wives of international students and
faculty at UNC will-be guests of honor at
a 10 a.m. coffee today at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Rupert Hanny, 411 Clayton Rd.
in Chapel Hill.
The coffee will initiate the seventh
year of the English Conversation Class for
nearly 50 foreign wives. For
transportation call Mrs. Donald Hayman,
chairman of the class, at 967-3381.
Professor Wins
Dr. William Hardy of the UNC English
department received the 1970 Lamont
Poetry selection for his bookTreasury
Holiday."
This award has been given annually for
17 years by the Academy of American
Poets to an author of a first book.
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UNCs Department of Botany 1U
hold its first seminar on Monday. Oct. 5.
at 4 p.m. in Room 201. Ccker Hail.
The seminar, entitled "The lorn
Blight -Helnunthosporium Maybis versus
Homo Sapiens, will be conducted by
UNC Botany Professor Paul C.
Mar.gelsdorf.
Dr. Floyd A. Fried, a highly regarded
surgeon from the University of Chicago,
has joined the UNC School of Medicine's
Department of Surgery as associate
professor of surgery and chief of the
Division of Urology.
Fried has also conducted intensive
investigations into some areas of urology
for which her received a VS. Public
Health Service grant and a Scheweppe
Research Fellowship.
Nealy 300 North Carolina elementary,
secondary, and university modem
Poetry Award
nine volumes will revolve around one
poem, "Looms."
In regard to his work, Dr. Hardy said,
"Poetry isn't a making of a product...It's
doing something that leaves a record, a
footprint of something in a way."
Hardy feels that his work really isn't
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Pace Seven
Urtgujfe instructor Uf meet for
oenference bepnnmf Saturday. Oct. 3. at
the CaroUru Union.
The conference, a joint annual meeting
for N.C. chapters of the American
Associations of Teachers of French.
German. Spanish, and Portuguese. iU
begin with registration at a.m. and end
with a luncheon at Chase Cafeteria.
Dr. Jacques Hardre. 3 UNC French
professor, was the only United States
representative to attend a meeting of the
Executive Council of the International
Federation of Teachers of French List
week in Menton. France.
Hardre. ho also helped to found the
Federation, has been on the UNC faculty
since 141 during which time he has been
chairman of the UNC Department of
Romance Languages and president of the
American Association of Teachers of
French.
poetry but a tentative record of a subject
that is likely to change. He wants to "do
what I can't."
Producing poetry is a lengthy process,
he said. Hardy is still working on a poem
which he started in April. 1964, plus he
has eight more volumes to go in
"Looms."
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