Page Four THE TAR HEEL Thursday, August 12, 105-4 Visiting Proffesor (Continued from page 1) Tennessee for 24 years and has been head of the department for 14. For five years he was on leave to thc Tennessee Valley Authority, where he served as Senior Social Science Analyst and Chief of the Program Review and Analysis Staff. Always having been active in wel fare work, Dr. Cole has been Chair man of the Advisory Committee of the State Welfare Department of Tennessee and President of the Knox ville County Council of Community Service Agencies. He has also made studies of various welfare problems including care of the aged in Tennes see, jail3 in Tennessee, and human relations and problems in the Knox ville area. Dr. Cole has written a number of books and is now working on several more. The Teaching of Biology stem med from hi3 undergraduate major in biology. Together with W. H. Combs he wrote Tennessee : A Political Study, and with H. P. Crowe, Recent Trends in Rural Planning. His Socio logy for Secondary Schools ran for four editions. It is now being replaced by Social and Human Relations. With Clyde B. Moore of Cornell he wrote Educational Sociology. Dr. Cole also edited and wrote eight chapters of Dynamic Urban Sociology, which will be out in September. At present he is revising TV A The Social Aspect, which has not been published and is working on another book on urban sociology. Besides all this, Dr. Cole was Presi dent of the Tennessee Conference of Social Work, helped draw up the civil service system of Tennessee covering health and welfare workers, and is a member of the County Planning rJoard. In his spare time, Dr. Cole loves to go trout fishing and also enjoys gardening. He owns a 178-acre farm, which his brother-in-law operates. Grad Students Get Jobs Eight students who have recently completed their graduate training in the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of North Carolina have been appointed as staff members to planning agencies in North Carolina and other states. They are A. C. Hall, Jr., of Ra leigh; Frank Skrivanek of Austin, Texas; C. Bickley Foster of Knox- ville, Tennessee; Burtis E. Lawrence of Houston, Texas; Donald E. Stewart of Chapel Hill; Jack Wolle of Sioux City, Iowa; Martin Rody of Chapel Hill; and Harry Coblentz of London, England. Prize Display (Continued from page 1) landscapes in the cases. Nesbitt used a rutted road through the Arkansas Ozarks for his subject, while Mervin Jules chose the Vermont countryside for his wood engraving, "In The Hill Country." Other artists represented in the dis play are Claire Leighton, Joseph Hirsch, Wanda Gag, Asa Cheffetz, Harry Sternberg and Jean Chariot. Carolina National (Continued from page 1) is carried by Station WAAM in Bal timore, is regarded as one of the most popular in the nation. It has on four national awards: The duPont. Pea body, Sidney Hiilrr.an, and Ameri can Civil Liberties Union. For the first eight months his pro gram was carried on the ABC net work. But somebody in high places evidently didn't like some of the thing3 Dr. Johnson said, because the network dropped the program with the excuse that in re-arrar.ging its schedule there was no room for it. There were howls of protest, es pecially from the Washington and Baltimore areas, when the network's decision was announced but the Balti more station has continued to carry the program and has said that it is happy to be able to present it ex clusively. A critic on the Saturday Review Dean Of Nursing (Continued from page S) programs are put into effect at a later date. Grant provisions cover instruction al facilities, student fellowships, re search, and a series of planning and evaluation conferences. The universities concerned and the SREB drafted the proposals for the regional development of graduate work in nursing the first such pro gram in the history of nursing educa- of Literature recntly said that Dr. Johnson has established an enviable imputation as a television commen- : tator despite the fact that he violates I all the generally accepted rules, lor ) he 'ha a voice that sounds like the ! mortgage and loan department; he reads his manuscript, and he sits ; when he talks". l Dr. Johnson says he is inclined to agree with this critic's views. Dr. Johnson thinks that television is now bad because "it's in its infancy and hasn't learned its stuff but it's steadily improving and some day will be very important. "One trouble now is that it thinks it's both a theatre and a newspaper. It's neither. Radio went through the same stage. "Television is awfully hard work. It gives you the jitters and a terrific nervous strain. The fact that you sit there alone (at least he's alone in his program) and can't see your audience or get audience reaction is a terrific handicap. "Some people chew their finger nails and evince other signs of ner vousness just before they go on their programs. In my case the attack of jitters comes right after the program has ended, for I begin to wonder what I've done wronp. And it doesn't take long for my wife, who accompanies me to the studio and who watches my every movement, to tell me how well or how badlv I did that time. She's a good critic, too, for she doesn't spare my feelings a bit". 'The intellectual ferment of the South is startling," Dr. Johnson said. Fowler's Food Store West Franklin Street WHERE SERVICE IS A SAVING For Summer Parties We Have a Complete Stock of Delicious Party Beverages and Especially Fine Snacks SHOP IN OUR AIR-CONDITIONED STORE FOR DELIVERY SERVICE PHONE 9-416 Cfjoose gour Reason SAVE MONEY ON BOTH FALL AND SUMMER APPAREL 456 pair of fall flannel slacks (all shades ex cept oxford gray and brown) on Ic sale. Pay regular price for 1st pair, pay only lc for second pair. 41 imported Shetland sport coats reduced 50 to 21.25. 62 baby cord suits reduced to 21.99. Large reductions on large group fall suits. Group co-ed summer sportswear reduced. See our many new fall items already in stock. Jfiarotrs Clotfjmg Cupboartr 163 E. Franklin St. ''In Chapel Hill for instance, every body seems to be writing a book , r on the verge of writing one. The Uni versity Pres ranks high all over country as one of the best and tr. are other good university preFF Duke. Oklahoma and Louisiana ?ta:. "The South is still not .!.. r.- t -well for booksellers, however, u:--the exception of Texas. Lost and Found YMCA authorities remind thosa who have lost articles duri.-.g t: . summer school to keep checking the " " items are sometimes .-! in being turned in by the many ;. partments and o'f.ees. Next Reading Set The next meeting of the (.''rr.m jro- . Drama Reading Group has been s. : for August 22 at 8 p.m. in the assem bly room of the library. Oscar Wilde's "The Imporuir.o- of Being Earnest" will be 2 cad at thi, session. Copies of the script are ava:!..: thru Mrs. Stella Lyons at her a stand in the Chapel Hill I'.,-' ( ,:- THURS. FRI.-SAT. THE LlON-HEARTED Legions Marc; into History WARNER J liwn I in fflCMRD AND THE jRUSADEl CincmaGccp: Z- -j: At ' TfirH y sir waltlk ! ' WL V lv SCOTT'S ;' WarnerColor Stereophonic Sousd nun REX VIRGINIA ,sr- HARRISON-MAYO f GEORGE LAURENCE SANDERS-HARM

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