T5, 1955
CHAPEL HILL NEWS LPADER
SECTION i, PAGE 3
omen's News
"“k«fj
il’ li«h
mcy Winborne
Women's Editor
ais ih]
fill
Cradle Call
PIi5!!|3
■ 8®';
MISS BETTY JONES
♦
es-
{agement
,nnounced
ingagement of Miss Betty
if Chapel Hill and Lake
iaw,faugMer of Mr. and
falter Dewey Jones of
(faccamaw, to William
iardiner, son of Mr. and
orge'R. Gardiner of Sious
n, is announced by the
of the prospective bride.
:tober 1 wedding is plan-
Lake'Waccamavv.
Jones attended Peace
and the Woman’s Col
lie {University of North
Carolina and is at present em
ployed at Memorial Hospital. Mr.
Gardiner attended Iowa State
College,
Concert Series
Campaign Is On
James H. Davis, membership
Chairman of the Chapel Hill Con
cert Series, announced this morn
ing that the full-scale subscrip
tion drive for the second annual
season of the Concert Series would
get under way next Monday.
The tour concert subscriptions
will sell for from $5.50 to $7.50, he
said, depending on the desired lo-
Pressley Child
A son was born to Mr, and Mrs.
Bill Pressley of Tampa, Florida,
September 9. They have «ne other
child, Timmy, 2. Mrs. Pressley is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. j. E,
Hackney of Carrboro.
Joni Margaret Hogan
A daughter, Joni Margaret, was
born to Mr. and Mrs. tV. Vance
Hogan of 218 Vance Street on
Monday at Memorial Hospital, The
child s middle name is for her
mother. The Hogans have tw’o
other children, Judith Craig, eight,
and Vance Temple, th.ee. Mr.
Hogan is manager of Fowler’s Food
Store.
Van inwood Sparrow
A son. Van Linwood, was born
to - Mr. and Mrs. C. L. (Lindy)
Sparrow of Hillsboro Street on
Saturday morning at Watts Hos
pital, They have another child,
Lisa, age three. Mrs, Sparrow is
the former Tiillis Hackney, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hackney
of Carrboro. Mr. Sparrow runs the
University Trucking Company,
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY!
Friday, September 16
Dr. Fred G. Patterson, William
il. Campbell, Mrs. J. B, Tyson,
Paul Brosman, J, H. Atkins, Char
les F. Warren, Robert L. Holt, Mrs,
Fred Howdy,
Saturday, September 17
Dr. Robert Zeppa, Frank Yandle.
Sunday, September 18
P. D. Brogden, Mrs. M. L. Ja
cobs, J. B. Strait, Richard M. Win
frey, Mrs. Warren Barrett, Mrs.
Richard Fountain, Peyton W. Cox,
Mrs. Ham Wade,
cation in Memorial Hall where all
presentations will be given. Here’s
the program for the Series this
comign season: October 27—Ruf-
giero Ricci, violinist; December 12,
Bach Aria Group; Friday, February
24, ■ Mozart Piano Festival; and
April 27, Hilde Gueden, soprano.
BACK - TO SCHOOL SPECIAL!
Genuine Hand-Sewn
SnRORiTy
Loafers
MRS. ENGLISH BAGBY'S
DANCING CLASSES
(All Classes Begin The First Week In October)
■it
DOLL CONTEST WINNERS—Shown with the dolls they prepared for entry in the nationwide con- j
test sponsored locally by Belk-Leggett-Horton, the winners of the contest are (left to right) Vickie
Greolaeli, fashion doll; Evsjyn MsKnight, character doll (Bo-Peep); and Susan Greulach, baby doll.
News Leader Photo
Prize Winner Announced In Doll Contest
Vickie and Susan Greulach,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Greulach, have each won a first-
prize for their entries in the Chil
dren’s Federation Doll Contest
sponsored here by Belk-Leggett-
Horton.'
Evelyn McKnight, 13-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
W. McKnight, received first prize
in the character doll group for her
carefully detailed “Bo-Peep.”
Vickie, whose well - constructed
bride doll, complete with dainty
trousseau, won the blue-ribbon in
Estimated
770 Women
Enrolled Here
the fashion category; Susan, whose
original “Denise” was the only en
try in the baby doll classification;
and Evelyn, winner in the third
group, will be eligible for the na
tional judging to be held later in
the month at New York. In ad
dition, each girl will receive a
piece of luggage from Belk-Leg
gett-Horton.
Other prize winners were Nancy
Butler and Mildred Blakely, both
of whom will receive Lady Brux-
ton key -containers; and Alice
Pai’ker and Susan Doak, who will
receive Coro jewelry from the
local sponsor. Judges in the local
contest were Miss Sarah Umstead,
Pokey Alexander and Mrs. Nancy
Winborne. ,
Winning entries are on display
in the Belk-Leggett Horton win
dow.
.'HAPirifti toniiCA Hiri..n_Y Cwfli-rh
CL’L’Kto Qvtp Tme'Cfen Cqals,'at iH'r
’RANCH HOUSE
Airport Road Chapei Hin
CALL 9-6091 FOR RESERVATION
Fundamental Dance Education for Girls.
This includes rhythmic, folk, aerobatic and character dances,
as well as basic training in posture, lightness, balance, flexi
bility and beauty of movement, that serve as a basis for ad
vanced forms of the dance.
Kindergarten
Section 1: Mondays 2:15-3:15 p.m, (held at Little Red School-
house)
First Grade
Section 1: Tuesdays 2-3 p.m. (held at Mrs, Wettach's Kin
dergarten)
Section It: Wednesdays 3-4 p.m, (held at Little Red School-
house)
Second Grade
Section I: Thursdays 2:15-3:15 p.m, (held at Mrs. Wettach’s
kindergarten)
Section It Wednesdays 4-5 p.m. (held at Little Red School-
house)
Third Grade
Secti.c)n I: Tuestfays .3-4 p.m. (held at Mrs. Wettach’s kinder-
gj^en)
SeetifiB; III Mondays 4:15-5:13 p.m. (held at Little Red School-
house);
Ballet Classes
First Year—Thursdays 3:30-4:30 p.m. (held at Mrs. Wettach’s
kindergarten)
Second Year — Wednesdays 5-6 p.m. (held at Little Red
Schoolhouse) .
. Third Year—Thursdays 4:30-5:30 p.m. (held at Mrs. Wet
tach’s kindergarten)
Beginning Toe—^Tuesdays 4-5 p.m. (held at Mrs. Wettach’s
kindergarten)
Advanced Toe—Tuesdays 5-6 p.m. (held at Mrs. Wettach’s
kindergarten)
Folk Dancing for Boys and Girls (6-8 year olds)
Mondays 3:15-4:15 p.m. (held at Little Red Schoolhouse(
Social and Square Dancing Classes for Boys and Girls
Held at Chapel Hill Country Club—(October through April)
Fifth Grade—7-8:15 p.m. First and Third FYidays of each
month
Sixth Grade—7-8:15 p.m. Second and Fourth Fridays of each
month
Seventh Grade—8:20-9:40 p.m. First and Third Fridays of
each month
Eighth Grade—8:20-9:40 p.m. Second and Fourth FridajTs of
each month
High School Dance Club
Six dance parties held at the Chapel Hill Country Club. This
group is limited to 35 boys and 35 girls. Each party is plan
ned and conducted by a committee of boys and girls in the
club. Dates for the six parties are:*^ October 29, November
23rd, December 21st, February 25th, Mai'ch 30th, and Ap
ril 28th.
Total coed enrollment for the
UNC fall term has reached an
approximate total of 770, in
cluding 514 undergraduates.
This figure falls short of the
female enrollment for last year’s
spring semester by 248 women.
Mclver Dormitory houses 116
of the ladies, Alderman 115,
CaiT 65, Kenan 130, Smith 55,
Spencer 86, and the Nurse’s
Dormitory 203.
Fifty-five of the junior co
eds will be reclining for the
night at a height only two and
one half feet from the ceiling
on the top of double decker
beds.
WITHOUT
A
TRAINED SMILE
6,500 Students
Are Expected
We
ay
At University
IVirli the .start of fall cla.s-
s.e.s today, enrollment at I.INC
is expected to rise to more
than (i,r,oo men and women.
Last spring’s enrollment
was 5,927.
made to sell for 7.95 . .
One week only at just
AAA to B
m
Suede Euckos in black,
brcwn, grey, green, cocoa, and
vicuna.
Calf in Brown, Black or Red,
Official figures, showing a com
plete breakdown oil enrollment,
are usually available a week after
classes start.
Opening day found men in 14
of the 19 male dormitories sleep
ing three in a room. Coeds in
more than 50 dormitory rooms are
grouped in threes.
More than 1,300 freshmen and
600 transfer students received
their first glimpse of Carolina life
last week at fall orientation and
Fre.shman Camp.
At orientation assebblies, Chan
cellor Robert House urged ney
students to “find the way to ex
cellence in yourself, in your as-
socittes and in the subpect matter
itself. Here the real test comes
whether you are of university ca
pacity and spirit, or whether you
are not interested.”
Dean of Student Affairs Fred
Weaver told students of the im
portance of student government
as “the proving ground of charac
ter and leadership.” Weaver cited
the traditional presence on the
campus of the “indispen.sable con-
I dilion of learning: freedom of in
' quiry, freedom of expression, fr.oe-
1 dom to differ, freedom trom ortho-
! doxy, freedom of students to think,
I decide and act for themselves —
all under the influence of direct
ed studjq devoted teaching and a
noble tradition.”
Welcome!
So your summer was a fantasy of sun
shine and swimming. Or perhaps it was
marked by hectic weeks at camp. Or maybe, in
your special memory book you've recorded moonlight
and the beach. Perhaps your summer meant bright flowers
and happiness .... or perhaps you remember broken romances
and rain. Maybe your summer meant hard work.. ... or colorful
travel .... travel to the corner store or across the continent or
across the sea. No matter how the summer influenced your out
look .... whether it gave you a touch of continental ways, con
tentment, bitterness, achievement or frustration .... a whole
new world of experience will be yours in Chapel Hill. And J. B.
Robbins takes this opportunity to welcome you. Without a false,
strained smile: Welcome, one and all.
Wet mash is used to encourage
chickens to eat more.
of Chapel Hill
i 1..: