Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Sept. 18, 1963, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page 2 School Curriculum Beefed Up (Continued from Page 1) sire for band training. "This is not half the mini mum number for a band,” said Or. Oiompson. "The Spirit of 76 is all right, but only in its place." Otherwise, Dr. Thompson ex ecuted the Citizens Committee’s recommendations item for item: —Home economics. Last year no home economics was taught in Chapel Hill Senior High. This year (Mrs. Stella Johnston has been hired to teach four sec tions of home economics to Chapel Hill Senior High girls. —Mechanical drawing. Last year there was no mechanical drawing offered at Chapel Hill Senior High, though it was offer ed at Lincoln and at Chapel Hill Junior High (now Phillips Jun ior High). This year instructor Lawrence Isbel has been hired to teach two sections of me chanical drawing in Chapel Hill Senior High. —(Business. The business de partment at Chapel Hill Senior High has been doubled. Last year there was one commercial teacher at Senior High. This year there are two full-time commercial teachers teaching business courses and a brand new course for college-bound students called “Notehand-Typ ing.” —Special Education. Last year there were no special education classes at either Lincoln Junior- Senior High or Chapel Hill Sen ior High. This year Mrs. Marilys Mitchell and Mrs. Nancy Bit trich have been hired for special education classes at Lincoln Junior-Senior, and Mrs. Sarah Whitty has been hired for a similar position at Chapel Hill Senior High. —Guidance. Last year there was only one guidance counselor for the entire Chapel Hill school system. This year Mrs. Rebecca Shepard (last year’s counselor) is guidance counselor at Chapel Hill Senior High, Mrs. Vivian Edmonds is guidance counselor at Lincoln Junior-Senior, and Mrs. Lucille Renaldi is at Phil lips Junior High. * —Physical Education. Last year there was no physical ed ucation program at Chapel Hill Senior High. This year there are two sections of physical educa tion, directed by Coach Robert Culton. Coach Culton’s full-time schedule at Phillips has been eased by the hiring of Alan White and Mrs, Patsy Wright. Mr. White will assist Coach Ful ton in football and basketball, end will take over coaching baseball so that Coach Culton can coach tennis. Robert Hart, a University trackman last year, will also coach cross country and track as well as teach social science at Phillips. Presenting Plymouth and Valiant for ’64 ON DISPLAY | FREE 19” ZENITH TV SET ] Fnin A mr crnTFMDrD OATH Register at Yates Motor Co. from Sept. 20 through 27 for TV Set to be r KID A1 , olj i llj IvJL 1j Llt Z U 1 ll : given at drawing at 6. 00 p.m. on Sept. 27. You need not be present to win. 1n:1964...the best all around compact is still... FOR I964...GETUPAND GO Plymouth VAUANT/184 style The'ftevfVaffant confidently invites you to com- one of the lowest-priced automobiles you can if this is the year you picked to buy a'new car, choioe.’ fciare its looks and liveliness, ride, roominess and buy in America today. So come on down and you picked a beautiful year, for a very beautiful t P compare come save Jp. and you, reHabHity-and low, low price tag-with any other drive the beautiful new Valiant and see why it’s Reason: Plymouth. The low-priced performance ?° co^ se ®-^P come **JL* SSSSSSSS SEM —ir,dgoßymouthl ■—-U«M See Valiant/64 style here: SE eiplymovtu;bere, .„ YATES MOTOR CO. 419 W. Franklin Street * Chrysler - Plymouth - Valiant Phone 942-3121 Diversified Occupations. Aaron Conn has been hired as Industrial Cooperative Training coordinator for Chapel Hill Sen ior and Lincoln highs. This now enables the schools to offer high school junior and senior boys on the-job-training in both the sales and trades aspects of Diversi fied Occupations. —Art. Dr. Thompson is now in the process of hiring an art teacher for Lincoln and Chapel Hill Senior High. In addition, full-time clerical assistants have been hired for school principals. "We not only have taken care of the vocational side, and other areas related to a good high school program such as physical education, art, music, and spec ial education," said Dr. Thomp son, "but we have also strength ed the academic sections for col lege-bound students by reducing class sizes. I feel extremely sat isfied that we have done our part for the people. Now it’s up to them to do their part.” By this Dr. Thompson meant that such a program as has now been installed in the school can "maintain itself for a period of not more than two years. En rollment will increase, but I don’t believe the State will in crease its numbers of positions paid for by Federal and State agencies." (Home economics. Diversified Education, Industrial Cooperative Training, etc., are paid for by Federally subsidiz ed vocational agencies.) Dr. Thompson said that by careful planning in assigning students to schools on an equal basis according to class size, he was able to use Legislative “windfall” from the State with out Chapel Hill’s having to pay any more from its own funds. But this can be misleading, Dr. Thompson said, if it is not also understood that maintaining and broadening the dual vocational academic curriculum can only be'achieved by local effort. “I won’t be satisfied until we can train children to make a living in every field a high school can train them in,” said Dr. Thompson. AT HAVERFORD David M. McConnell Jr. of 756 Christopher Road, Chapel Hill, is one of 130 freshmen who began orientation week activi ties Sept. 17 at Haverford Col lege. A June graduate of Chap el Hill High School, McConnell was active in Student Council, basketball, director of the band, and was President of his class. The Weekly’s Classified Ads work around the clock for you. —Dental Center— (Continued from Page 1) Dental Research Center will be part of his responsibility. Dr. Bawden came to the School of Dentistry in 1961 and is at pres ent associate professor in the De partment of Pedodontics. The purpose of the center is to conduct basic research in the cause, prevention and control of dental disease and conditions such as tooth decay, soft tissue and bone infections about, the teeth (peridontal disease), can cer of the mouth, cleft Relate and lip deformities, facial aftd teeth deformities, hemorrhagic and other general body diseases involving the bone and soft tis sues of the mouth. Research will also be directed to the improve ment of dental materials and various operative procedures. The Selective Committee ap pointed by Dr. Brauer considered potential candidates from all sec tions of the United States prior to recommending Dr. Bawden. Dr. Bawden was born in 1930 in St. Louis. He received hLs pre-dental training and doctor of dental surgery at the State University of lowa, graduating in 1954. Following graduation from dental school he served in the Navy as a dental officer with the Fleet Marine Force in Japan and Hawaii. After completing his military duty, he entered private practice for several years in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, and left private practice for graduate study at the State University of lowa from which he received his master of science degree in pe dodontics (1960) and a doctor of philosophy degree in physiology (1961). He came to the UNC School of Dentistry in 1961 as assistant pro fessor of pedodontics and was promoted to associate professor in 1962. a position which he con tinues to hold. Dr. Bawden pres ently has a three-year NIH Re search Grant for $42,300 relating to "Placental Transfer of Cal cium and Fluorine in Sheep.” He is a member of Omicron Kappa Upsilon (Honorary) and Delta Sigma Delta professional fraternities. He is a member of the North Carolina Dental Socie ty, the American Dental Associa tion, and the International Asso ciation for Dental Research. Dr. Bawden is married to the former Shirley Susanne Stevens. They have four boys, Steve, Mi chael, Timothy and David. HICKEY TO SPEAK UNC football coach Jim Hickey will be the guest speaker at to night’s meeting of the Chapel Hill Rotary Club. The dinner meet ing begins at 6:30 at the Caro lina Inn. Coach Hickey will be introduced by Bob Quincy, pro gram chairman. Mr. Quincy is sports publicity director for the University. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY —Pete Ivey’s Town And Gown— (Continued from Page 1) weeks of shop talk and lectures. Louis H. Pilie of New Orleans, a CPA and partner in Peat, Mar wick, Mitchell & Co., began his speech, not with statistics and words about raws upon rows of figures in account books, but on the need for the accountant to look on others as human beings. He stressed the “yearning for status” that CPA’s run into and the need to recognize it. “In the hearts of each of us re sides a God-given yearning, a hunger, for recognition and stat us/’ he said. "As social beings, we depend upon relationships with others for growth. We fear rejection, we need and work for happiness through acceptance by others. We seek self-expression, achievement.” But others are constructed in the same mold, said Pilie. CPA’s in their work must know that— that a -human relations require ment is essential to personal suc cess. Technical proficiency is not enough, he said. That old Golden Rule still works, and especially for watchdogs of the treasury. Mr. Pilie gave another quota tion, from a philosopher, who was stressing the notion of lead ership and what it takes. He said: “I’d rather see an army of stags led by a lion than an army of lions led by a stag.” • • • Where he got the saying from is not known, but the late Cecil Sheffield of the Winston-Salem —Housing Shortage Critical— (Continued from Page 1) is yet, but it’s just about equal to World War II,” said Mr. Wadsworth. “The real bad thing is the prospect for graduate women and men. There are no living spaces within walking distance of the campus, and they are out of luck, unless they have bicycles, cars or horses.” Mr. Wadsworth said that at the moment roughly 700 men are seeking permanent living space, about 600 of whom are tempor arily quartered either in Avery or Stacy dormitory basements, or in doubled-up dormitory rooms. Fourteen men’s dormi tories have been placed on three men-per-room footing, including Joyner, Winston, Conner, Alex ander, and dormitories in the upper and lower quads. Battle- Vance-Pettigrew has four men per two-room suite; Old East and Old West are already id triple occupancy except for the smaller rooms. Rooms in the University’s two newest dorms, Craige and Ehringhaus, each with a capacity of about 700, newspapers had a repertoire of casual witty phrases that were astonishers to all within earshot. One day a subscriber asked, as they sometimes do, whether the paper would be published that day as usual. Sheffield re plied indirectly: “We are still in business at the same old stand,” he said, “in the same haphazard manner and with the same obsolete equipment.” * » * Once Shes sat quietly all after noon at his desk, and just be fore quitting time he announced in (he tones of a town crier: “Five minutes to five, AU ashore that’s going ashore.” He once accompanied the com pany business manager to the bank, helping to carry bags of change and currency. As the two men halted at a tratiic light, Sheffield annotmced in military voice: “We will now divide into squadrons of fours. Half will proceed in an easterly direction and the other half will proceed in a westerly direction.” Once a cub reporter who didn’t yet have a permanent desk and typewriter was assigned to oc cupy temporarily the desk of William S. Howland, the execu tive news editor, who was in Ral eigh at the moment, covering the Legislature. Mr. Sheffield noted the cub reporter at the editor’s desk, and asked solemnly: “Are you taking Brother Howland’s place, or are you standing on your own bot tom?” have not been tripled, nor have rooms in Avery, Parker or Teague. Mr. Wadsworth said that the shortage would be eased slight ly by the end of the Fall Se mester, but that three-man rooms would still be in use in men’s dorms during the Spring Semester. “We could use another 900- man dormitory right now. We could take one and fill it today, and we could use a 100-girl dorm right quick, too,” Mr. Wads worth said. As usual, the University au thorities are requesting towns people wherever possible to rent rooms to students. More towns people have been doing so. '“Realtors and landlords have been very helpful, but the Town is near the saturation point too,” MV. Wadsworth said. His office is serving as a clearing house for local rooms and apartments, and it maintains a complete file of rental living space. Integration Group To Meet Tomorrow Citizens United for Racial Equality and Dignity (CURED) will hold a fconstitutional meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. at the Second Baptist Church 6n Graham Street. The group will adopt a constitu tion and then view movies of ra cial strife in Danville, Va. VIEW OF COURTSHIP “A Christian View of Court ship” will be the topic of the Rev. David B. Lewis's sermon at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Orange Methodist Church. Sunday School meets at 10 a.m„ and MYF meets «t 5:30 p.tn. charles liopkins of chapel hill ■ designer-craftsman m ' * moves directly downstairs | to a much larger studio in amber alley —near the rathskeller. ■ «jr —Chamber Os Commerce Meet— (Continued from Page 1) ests of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Community; to advance the ag ricultural interests of the Coun ty; and to develop a unified pub lic spirit in all, whereby we may put forth a unified effort in aid of our community to make it a more beautiful, more prosperous and a better place to live.” Chamber membership will be available to, any individual, group, corporation or business in terested in the Chamber’s com munity program. Two categories of membership are expected: business-professional and indi vidual. A greater degree of fi nancial support is expected from Wednesday, Sept. 18, 1963 business-professional member ships than from individuals. Members of the steering com mittee scheduled to attend to morrow’s meeting are Chancel lor Aycook; Ira Ward, executive secretary of Orange Savings and Loan: Ted Danziger, committee chairman; Doug Powell of Cen tral Carolina Bank and Trust; T. L. Kemp, president of the Chap el Hill-Carrboro Merchants Asso ciation; George Spransy, presi dent of the Carrboro Chamber of Commerce; Crowell Little, Sion Jennings, Orville Campbell, Joe Augustine, Dr. A. Dwight Price and Mayor Sandy McClamroch.
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 18, 1963, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75