Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 8, 1970, edition 1 / Page 7
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pacs Seven ID) raFocipaotts Name October 8, 1970 e by Evans Witt Staff Writer W 1 Thirty UNC students have been chosen to visit Toronto. Canada in fh. to-m -m - , - 1 vii v y- Toronto Exchange program. The participants were chosen from 150 applicants by a committee of former exchange students after a series of nterviews last week. Those chose; were: Elinor Allcott, nda Anderson, Mary Elizabeth Ayers, eggy Baggett, Miice Barefoot, Jinny artel, Celia Benton, Edith Davis, Bill ebuys, Todd fcngstrom, Diane Gooch. y.Ialcolm Croome, George Hopkins, Vincent Kapp, Dottie Lambert, Jeff lilliker, Andy Hunter, Melinda Beer Contest j The fifth' annual fraternity f'beer-chugging" contest will be held friday at 3 p.m. at Phi Delta Theta louse. ) Sixteen fraternity teams have signed ip to compete. Two teams will compete t one time in a single eUmination process. Each member will drink one eer. j For the final round, each fraternity tiember will drink two beers. Kappa Alpha fraternity won the contest last year. "Last year almost 500 people watched he contest," said Tom Wood, Phi Delta f heta member. I Phi Delta Theta is located at 304 S. Columbia Street. Lawrence, Cecil Miller, Elliot Moffitt, Cathy Myers, Britt. Nicholson, Susan Oldham, Pam Pittard, Carolyn Ross, Al Smith, Charles Sneed, Chris Vaillancourt, Hank Van Hoy and John Westail. Co-chairmen of the program, Judy Hippler and Bill Sowers, said diversity, to represent the multi-faceted nature of the University, was the primary criterion in the selections. They also urged those applicants who were not chosen for the exchange to participate in as many of the activities on the campus when the 30 students from University of Toronto are here Nov. 19-22. A reception for those not selected for the exchange is planned. Miss Hippler said the exchange welcomes any suggestions on program format, topics, or speakers for the UNC portion for the exchange from those who were not chosen. "We urge those applicants who were not accepted and who will be sutdents next year to apply again, keeping in mind , that one's former application will definitely be a positive factor in your favor," Sowers said. , The 30 UNC students chosen will visit' in Toronto during semester break to be reunited with their counterparts there who had come to Chapel Hill. "We sincerely regret there are not funds to send every applicant to Toronto, but it is our financial reality that only 30 may be selected," Miss Hippler said. 'MViVMVAViViVAVAViViViViViViVftWi'iV1y.w Campus News Briefs 1 UNC News Bureau Dr. Joe Ludlow of Dow Chemical Company will discuss "Herbicides in The Environment" at a seminar today at 1 1 ,a.mf'in Room 201, Coker Hall. Interested persjons are invited. t r I X UNC's 149 James M. Johnston Scholars will be honored at a banquet Friday at the Carolina Inn. Johnston Scholars from the UNC Campuses in Chapel Hill, Greensboro and kc. State will attend the banquet. I The first class of James M. Johnston Scholars entered the University this fall, the students were selected in the spring luring the Distinguished Scholars Weekend of the UNC Faculty Committee 6n; Scholarships, Awards and Student Aid. I Four Woodrow Wilson Fellows who eceived 1970 grants for graduate study ire now enrolled in the UNC Departments of English and History here, j The four studnets are among 200 Woodrow Wilson Fellows to receive Irants totaling $420,000. They are: Heinrich R. Bettich of Durham, Beverly Dianne Miller of Fayetteville, Kevin Joseph McGovern of Philadelphia and Walter Lee Williams of Pittsboro. ( Representatives from 12 North Carolina school systems will be at UNC during October and November to interview prospective teachers, according tWSchool of Education spokesman, j Interested persons, particularly (January graduates, may apply at the ,fteacher Placement Bureau, 103 Peabody Hall, to reserve time for the interviews. jThe telephon number is 933-2072. I The first interviews are scheduled Tuesday, Oct. 20, for the jWinston-SalemForsyth County Schools, 1 Winston-Salem. Wednesday, Oct. 21, Representatives of the Edgecombe County jSchools, Tarboro, will interview interested candidates. Especially needed fare- primary, elementary, special feducation and English teachers. Chatham County Schools, Pittsboro, will interview j prospects on Thursday, Oct. 22; Durham j County Schools, Durham, will meet candidates on Tuesday, Oct. 27. Also scheduled this month: Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, Charlotte, Wednesday, Oct. 28; and Wake County Schools, Raleigh, Thursday, Oct. 29. Dr. John E. Wilson of the Department of Biochemistry in the School of Medicine will speak about the brain in a seminar next Wednesday. The speech, "Changes in Brain Macroraolecules During Behavior," . will be delivered at 4 p.m., in room 128 of Wilson Hall. Coffee and tea will be served preceding the lecture at 3:45 in the first floqr lobby of Wilson Hall. Three UNC professors have translated nearly 100 Croatian poems for "The Bridge," a literary review published by the Association of Croat Writers. Drs. Vasa Mihailovich of the Slavic Languages Department, and Ronald Moran and Charles David Wright of the English Department worked on the issue devoted to "Postwar Croatian Poetry" for more than a year. , : . Croatia is one of six republics in Yugoslavia. More than 23 per cent of all Yugoslavians are Croats. Three linguists from UNC will deliver papers at the fourth Southeastern Conference on Linguistics (SECOL IV) Oct. 16 in Atlanta, Ga. Dr. Maria Tsiapera, chairman of the. UNC Department of Linguistics and; non-Western Languages; Lloyd Anderson, linguistics instructor, and Charles Ruhl, a Ph.D. candidate at UNC will speak. . A workshop dealing with tenant-manaeement relations in public housing will be held at UNC Oct. 12-13. The workshop is sponsored by the Community Action Training Center of the School of Social Work and is funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, through the N.C. Division of Community Planning, Department of Local Affairs. Denis Levertov, writer in residence at UNC, will give a reading of her poems at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Gerrard Hall! The public is invited. Miss Levertov's most recent volume of powmes is "Relearning the Alphabet," published in March by New Directions. She has published seven books of verse since 1957. The National Science Foundation has awarded UNC a grant of $124,900 for research entitled "Alternative Strategies for Southern Development and Poverty Reduction." Overall goal of the research is to contribute toward a formulation of alternative plans for economic development and the reduction of poverty in the South. Directors and managers from leading outdoor drama companies in the United States will attend the eighth annual Managers Conference Oct. 16-17 in Chapel Hill. The conference is sponsored by the institute of Outdoor Drama at UNC. Dr. Sam Seldon, first director of Paul Green's "The Lost Colony" will discuss the early days of American outdoor historical drama Friday, Oct. 16 at a dinner at the Holiday Inn. Mrs. Pies Harper, organizer of the Texas Panhandle Heritage Foundation in Canyon, Tex., .will explain the promotional activities involved in starting and publicizing Paul Green's musical history 'Texas" at 2 p.m. Friday, Oct. 10. Methods of improving production quality will be discussed at 10 a.m. Sat., Oct. 17, by Dr. David Weiss, scene designer for several dramas, and? Dr. Christian Moe, author of "Creating Historical Drama." I Bag D3edD teeOcsves M I I V -1 1 i.',- i ?rs ' " fi" A &q Red just -for men ? "That's unenliqhtened, we stormed Surely youvd heard of Women ( fjomm?Ourrkerdesiqners blushed- trfiey lead vefy sheltered lives) women, m siqhed. Liberated, equal, independent unshackfej, brave and qlorious women. Who says they dorit desewe iD ovJn an equally-funky red pen? Why voith their orsnqe-dotted-qreen'Stnped-putple-paistyd qear, -they're every bit as funky as rmri And vjhoys they dorit have the same nqht to a soft tip penthais reffllabfe? -They cant afford throwavjays, either. -They're just as short of bread. . St7 A)e pointed out, women are, some what difFertntlheir hands 2re usually smaller- So hoti about a wtso-biq 3iq Red they can really qeta qrip cn ( And their hands are already -full- bo hovJ about puttinq their pen on a necklace That did it Our desiqners )ire - all choked up- , r f So novo -there's a&qRed-lhr bmen. Who says you carii buy 3 swJinqmq 4 S70 The Par Pen Company Janesvffle. Wcorn.uA. s V"
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 8, 1970, edition 1
7
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