FAG3 F0W1
TIXD TAB HHTTL
SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1945
W 'EEGEITEEN MORE BJkYB TILL VALEmmE'S BAY
- BANZmER'S
Scsquicentennial
Recordings To Be
Produced Monday
The 'addresses delivered before 'the
joint session of the general assembly
in the hall of the House of Represen
tatives Monday night, January 25, at
a celebration of the 150th anniversary
of the opening of the University, will
be heard: from recordings in Gerrard
hall Monday at 4 p.m.
The addresses were made by Victor
S. Bryant, chairman of the legisla
tive commission on the Sesquicenten-
nial, Governor R. Gregg Cherry,
President Frank P. Graham, and
President Clarence A. Dykstra, of the
Universitv of Wisconsin. President
Dykstra was introduced by Dean R.
B. House. All of the addresses were
recorded, and the address by Governor
Cherry was broadcast by WPTF of
Raleigh. -
' Members of the faculty, students,
and the public are invited to attend.
- The total time required for hearing
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X
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Stores To Close
Saturday Nights
To save coal and electricity, . the
stores of Chapel Hill will close at 7
o'clock Saturday nights, beginning
February 3, Carrington Smith, presi
dent of the Merchants'" Association,
announced today.
Glider Flight Show
Has Been Postponed ;
The Glider flight show which the
Army Air Corps was slated to conduct
at the Horace Williams Airport to
morrow, for CAP members has been
postponed until further notice, Dean
F. F. Bradshaw announced yesterday.
The announcement was originally
made at the CAP meeting on Wednes
day night scheduling the flight for
the above date, but since that date it
has been concelled.
the recordings will be approximately
one hour and forty minutes. The se
quence of addresses and the approxi
mate lengths are as follows: Mr. Bry
ant, 12 minutes, 4:00-4:12; Governor
Cherry, 20 minutes, 4:12-4:32; Presi
dent Graham, 13 minutes, 4:32-4:45;
Dean House; 2 minutes, 4:45-4:47; and
President Dkystra, 53 minutes, 4:47
5:40.
DR. HART
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and we have a "lovely'
selection of appropriate kinds
o send to Wives, Husbands,
Mothers, Fathers, Sisters,
Brothers, Good Friends
Children. Old Loves, New
Loves, True Loves, and
Hope-to-Be Future Loves
Come in and make your se-
. -
lection while our line is most
complete.
WED., FEB. 14
Valentine's Day
Ledbetter-Pickard
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xxxxxxxxxxxx
(Continued from first page)
Pat Hughes, Kay Ferrell, and Sa'm
McEachern served on the program
committee for the meeting. The at
tendance committee was made up of
Emily Aliton, Travis Hunt, Tharon
Young, and Fay Puskin.
Sa'm McEachern presided over the
hour, which closed with the singing
of "Hark the Sound," led by Betty
Don Sweat.
UNC
(Continued from first page)
McCune Lindsay, Professor Emeritus,
Columbia University. ' .
Included in a statement from the
judges was the following: "In
awarding this signal honor to
Howard Odum, the judges recognize
in him highly distinguished service in
that part of the nation where the
problems of race and of a function
ing democracy are most complex, and
where the social imagination, moral
and , intellectual integrity, the efficiew
and- self-sacrificing effort which he
has exhibited, constitute for our
democratic hopes a sure foundation.'
Dr. Odum will receive the award a
public ceremonies on February 12 a
the Broadway Tabernacle in New
York City.
LILIENTHAL
(Continued from first page)
democracy" in his book "TV A Dem
ocracy on the March," which appeared
in 1944 and emphasises the project as
an example of democratic planning
and action as a means of progress in
' an age of machines and technology by
unified development of resources.
Playmakers To Hold
Third Experimental
'. Tryouts for the year's Third Bill of
Experimental Productions will be
held at the Playmaker Theater, Mon
day, January 29 at 4 p.m.
Everyone interested is invited to
try for a part in one or more of the
three one-act plays which are to be
presented Thursday, February 8 at
7:30 p.m.
There will be comic as well as seri
ous parts, for a variety of plays have
been submitted by members of the
playwriting class. Student authors
whose scripts are now being consid
ered for production are Randy Brooks,
Frances Cheshire, Jim Crutchfield,
Ruby Dougan, Hazel Harris, Lib John
son, Ann Osterhout, Shirley Pic, Jane
Grey Sanderlin, Phyllis .Sullivan and
Peg Caudill.
SPECIAL
(Continued, from first page)
attract, daily, groups of civilian and
military students and visitors from
Chapel Hill and other towns.
Qf particular interest to students
of sociology and anthropology and to
officers and men in the services as
well as to art lovers, the show will
continue through January 31.
After that date, its sponsors, The
Museum of Modern Art in New York,
will continue to circulate the exhibit
throughout the country.
Sunday Roundtable
Program Announced
RENAISSANCE
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204 W. Main
Durham
( Continued from first page )
man, "Leonardo Bruni and Renais
sance Historiography; Urban T.
Holmes, "The Venetian Embassy to
Paris (1492); C. C. Rice; "Five Por
tuguese Etymologies"; James Howell,
"Typical Confidence Men in Renais
sance and Restoration Drama"; Al
lan H. Gilbert, "The Composition of
Milton's 'Paradise Lost'."
Afternoon Session, 2 p. m.
D. W. Robertson, Jr., "The Concep
tion of Catharsis Most Commonly
Held During the Renaissance"; Mary
Francis Gyles, "Nero Fiddled While
Rome Burned"; Elizabeth Parks, "The
Imagery of Vaughan and Traherne
Compared"; Edith Buchanan, "The
Comic in Spenser"; Almonte C.
Howell, "The Synagogue: A Book of
Poems in the Vein of Herbert"; Wil
liam Wells, "Spenser's 'Muiopot
mos ; r'auhne Wiggins, "The lma
gery - oi "Faradise . .Regained and
'Samson Agonistes' ": Robert B
Sharpe, "Sam Johnson's Execration
and Chapman's Invective"; Lillian
Ardizoni, "Hall's Chronicle as a
Source of Shakespeare's Richard II."
Evening Session, 7:30 p. m.
A symposium on the subject of re
naissances their conditions and
causes, presided over by Professor
Gilbert. Messrs. MacKinney, Coffman,
Friedlaender, Taylor, Holmes, Wells,
Talbert, Howell, and others will par
ticipate. Participation open to the
audience. ,
New Senior Class
The newly-organized senior class
will meet Monday at 5 p. m. in Ger
rard Hall for the purpose of taking
orders for invitations. President
Charlie Hackney announced that this
would be the last opportunity the
seniors would have to secure the
cards. !
"Conscription Prelude to Power
Politics" will be the subject discussed
on the Carolina Roundtable of the Air
this Sunday.
This program, broadcast each Sun
day afternoon at 1 o'clock over sta
tion WRAL, Raleigh, is produced by
the department of Radio Arts of the
University in cooperation with the In
ternational .Relations club and the
Southern Council on International Re
lations.
Dean Francis Bradshaw of the
University faculty and Dr. Charles
A. Ellwood, nationally known sociolo
gist, will be the speakers on this week's j
Roundtable. Both men are well quali
fied to take part in such a program.
Dr. Ellwood taught sociology at the
University of Missouri from 1900 to
1930 and ,at Duke University since
1930. He has served, for one year
each, as president of the Sociplogy So
ciety, the International Institute of
Sociology and the International Con
gress of Sociologists. He has also
written many books on the subject of
sociology and religion. '
During the past few months, Dr.
Ellwood has made a series of addresses
in all parts of the nation, opposing a
postwar program of universal mili
tary service.
The other speaker of the Round
table, Dean Bradshaw, is particularly
well known to University students. He
is now Dean of the "War College and
before the war was Dean of Students.
An outstanding philosopher, Dean
Bradshaw has won national acclaim as
an analytical thinker on all problems
of current events.
CLASSIFIED
. Advertisements must be paid for in advance
and turned in at. the Tar Heel business
office, 206 Graham Memorial, by 1 o'clock
the day preceding publication. Fifty cents
($.50) each insertion.
LOST A silver Marvin wrist watch.
expansion band, Roman numerals,
"JD" engraved on reverse. Reward.
Please contact Jerry Davidoff, Box
631, Chapel Hill, or leave at YMCA
Information Office. Thank you.
GENTLEMEN'S SUITS AND TOPCOATS
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EXHIBITION'
TUESDAY, JANUARY 30
. COLLEGE SHOP
MAIN STREET
Vincent Bosworth, Representative
IMPORTANT .
ALSO SHOWING
LADES' TOPCOATS, SWEATERS AND .TAILORED BLOUSES
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Honeycutt Heads
CAP Intelligence
The regular Wednesday night
meeting of the Civil Air Patrol was
highlighted by the appointment of
Mr. A. W. Honeycutt, superintendent
of the Chapel Hill high school, who
was named intelligence and personnel
officer for the group.
Others who received organization
appointments included James Todd, j
executive officer, Mary Phinny Camp
bell, adjutant, and Gerald Kirkland,
property officer.
GM Financial Post
Open To. Applicants
Since the resignation of the pres
ent financial director, Turk New
some, of Graham Memorial, ppU
cations are now" in order for the
position.
These applications may b se
cured at the office of the director at
Graham Memorial. They must be
filled out in full, signed by the ap
plicant and returned to the office
at Graham Memorial by 5 p.
February 5, 1943.
SPECIAL 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT
on
DIAMONDS and JEWELRY
TO MEN IN UNIFORM
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211 W. Main St. Durham, N. C.
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ENJOY THAT AFTER-DINNER SNACK
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