Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 12, 1954, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE TAR HEEL Thursday, August 12, 195 i 1E)t Car leel TIIiVCSTOTILK IBOIT) HfwFj!' BY FRANKLIN J. MEINE J I r sv4 i i Editor. Arwkom Prof, et Ecycopfe J ; ' ' ' The official publication of the summer school of the Univer sity of North Carolina, it is published by the students eveiy Thursday during the summer sessions and is printed by the Orange Printshop of Chapel Hill. Editor Daniel Wallace Assistant Editor Franklin P. Jones Features and News Ellen Brauer Thoughts To Grow On "WE NEVER FEEL so free from blame as when we expatiate on our own faults in other people." Goethe "ALL TYPES OF CONFLICTS feed on fear. Freedom from fear is the best way to cure race prejudice. This means freedom from fear of war, from fear of economic inse curity, from the fear of personal loneliness, from the fear of loss of individual prestige." Clyde Kluck-hohn Cromwell said to Bellivere 'No one rises so high a3 he who knows not wmtner ne is going, and tnere is much truth in it. The student who is worrying about his future, anxious over examinations, doubting his fit ness for the profession, is certain not to do so well as the man who cares for nothing but the matter in hand, and who knows not whither he is going!" Pavlov. "ON THE FARM and on the fron tier there was comparatively little demand for those forms of learning associated with the traditional school. The young . . . received a most rigorous education, an education superior in many ways to that which they receive today. Certainly it was far more closely linked with life than anything to be found in even the most modern school." George S. Counts HE THAT HIDETH hatred with lying lips and he that uttereth a slander, is a fool. Proverbs of Solo- WITHOUT GOING out of the door One can know the whole world; Without peeping out of the window One can see the Tao of heaven. The further one travels The less one knows. Lao-tse THE HMI.-K. AND FLOOD FOReCASTIMG SSVKE OrrHC US. UJEATH sr. Bu'XAij AUTHORIZED BV LAW IN FO AMD REPOTli OP RIVERS." lb ADMINISTERED Tu?OOCH MORS THAU 8WVE. DISTRICT CENTERS LOCATE I OH TH6 fXlMCiPAL OF AMERICA. ! r fm wM .:'. , "gal fruon to mr almost ail w&riow com C) FRcH THE WCST WlS HTHOJGH U.'SIb) A ftp THEBtCUiHW CWWiift. rijculM- Hied couptts cuv h4oe hvi 3on' Such foemi have came to us from 1h per, of Soppho, Arvsrreon and JWaf.OOO Tht EprHvjUm'ion ot Spenser i one cS the qlorle ot EwU'sh literature O "SOCIETY IS A JOINT-STOCK company, m which the members agree, for the better securing of his bread to each shareholder, to sur render the liberty and culture of the eater." Ralph Waldo Emerson mom. "TAKE NO THOUGHT for the morrow. Live neither in the future or in the past, but let each day's work absorb your entire energies, and satisfy your widest ambition. "THE PSYCHE .is the object of psychology, and fatally enough its subject at the same time, and there is no getting away from this fact." Jung . THROUGH DESIRE a man, hav ing separated himself, seeketh and intermeddleth with all wisdom. Proverbs of Solomon Luxon Stresses Needs Of School Norval Neil Luxon, dean of UNC's School of Journalism, has issued a "progress report" in the form of a letter to all North Carolina news papermen. After eight months on his new job, Dean Luxon noted several changes which have been made. Most important are the new courses and rulings which go into effect this September. Journalism requirements are to be upped from six to eight courses, with four being mandatory; three courses will be offered for the first time; and a graduate minor in journalism has been approved. Continuing, Dean Luxon stressed the need of the School for books, equipment, and housing. He under lined the fact that "no school of journalism in a major university in the United States is as inadequately housed and as ill-equipped as is the School of Journalism of the Univer sity of North Carolina. My immed iate goal is to remedy this situation." Luxon concluded by asking for the aid, ideas, and criticism of all North Carolina newspapermen in planning for the future. Dean of Nursing Named By Board To Grad Program Dean Elizabeth Kemble, University of North Carolina School of Nursing, has been named to a seven-member Regional Committee on Graduate Education and Research in Nursing, to operate under the Southern Region al Education Board (SREB). Designed to advise on a $750,000 de velopment of cooperatively planned master's degree programs in nursing, the committee is headed by Dean Mar- jorie Bartholf of the University of Texas School of Nursing. ihe other schools of nursing at Southern universities represented on the committee are Emory University, University of Maryland, Vanderbilt University, and University of Ala bama. The University of North Carolina, along with Emory, Vanderbilt and Texas, has been given a gTant from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and the Commonwealth Fund to start a graduate nursing program during the 1954-55 school year. The Universities of Alabama and Maryland will share in the $750,000 in grants when their (Continued on page 4) Summer Activities Thursday, August 12 Free full-length movie, "The Mar riage of Figaro", in Carroll Hall at 8:30 p.m. Sponsored by Graham Memorial. Bridge instruction in Roland Par ker Lounge No. 1 and No. 2 of Gra ham Memorial. 2 til 3:30 p.m. Friday, August 13 Splash party at Kessing Outdoor Pool from 7-9 p.m. Grownups only, please. Square dance in the "Y" court from 8:30-11 p.m. Everyobdy come! Sunday, August 15 The Wesley Foundation, Baptist Student Union, and Westminster Fellowship meet at 6 p.m. Community Sing on Graham Me morial lawn from 8-9 p.m. Rollie Till man will act as MC. Plenty of free refreshments ! Monday, August 16 Free movies in Forest Theater at 8 p.m. "Grandma Moses" and "House of Seven Gables". Bridge tournament in Graham Me morial starting at 7:30. Wednesday, August 18 Vesper Services in the Arboretum from 7-7:30 p.m. I'll have you know that I' body's fool! Cheer up, boy. Maybe som bo adopt you. Ex. IT'S NEW nm SHO i E 117 E. Franklin St. Buy Gifts, Antiques or Furniture WE'LL MAIL FOR YOU Street Heads Speakers At Writers Conference James Street, Chapel Hill author, will be the principal speaker at the third annual News and Feature Writ ers Conference to be held at TTNC Saturday, September 11. - A tentative program released Tues day includes a symposium on "What Feature Editors Like in Feature Stories", a criticism of news stories, and a discussion of court reporting and libel laws. Registration for the conference will begin at 9 a.m. in Carroll Hall. Advance registration should be made with Secretary Stuart Sech- riest, University School of Journa lism, Chapel Hill. HAVING ROUB Try Our Noble Barnes Outline & an as a shortcut to understanding of the really tough courses. IHTIG1A 3 BOOKSHOP Open 10 A.M.-9 P.M. Monday thru Saturday
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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