Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 16, 1951, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FI FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1951 .THS DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE FOUR : : : : ' . . I i ' Alumni Meet To Be Held fSlgma Nu,s -.- The Psi Alumni chapter of Sig- a Nu will hold its first meeting .'?is weekend at the chapter ouse. ; ; "A" business Session will be held morrow morning at 11: 30 clock to draw up and adopt by- Vws for the alumni chapter. Fol lowing the meeting buffet lunch will be served for alumni and quests. . . ' Tomorrow night a party will be : 'given' m" Honor of the visiting ' alumni. . The Psi alumni chapter was es tablished in October, when 36 alumni attended the organization al 'meeting. Officers elected at -. that time were President P. B. Edmundson of Goldsboro ana Secretary-Treasurer G. L. COx 'liead of Burlington. . Members of the executive com mittee are W. A. Dees, Jr., Golds boro; R."E. Perry, Charlotte; J. S Ficlslin, ' Greenville; and John Ferebee " of Elizabeth City. Mr. ErrsKoo ie . rnmmsnder of Psi ; , tcicu M .,. chapter...,. Pledge Officers Are Elected Pledge classes of five social elprtpri officers this week. ' ' .Alpha Tau Omega pledges elected. President Frank Hart, Honolulu, Hawaii; Vice-presidsnt, Charles Motta, Fair Lawn, N. J.; Secretary-treasurer Tom Adler, Leonia,;.N. J.; and Social Chair man Ted Bondi, Genesee, N. Y. .v; New. .pledges of Alpha Tau Omega are Mike Seawell of Jack son and Duke Widoff of Chicago, ill. ' 4 Officers - of - the Lambda Chi Alpha pledge class are President Jamie "Wilkes, Vice-president Bob Aldridge, Secretary - treasurer Charlie Strange, and Social Chair man Billy Oliver. : Elected., president of the Phi Delta Theta pledge class was Jerry - Dubose, Hartsville, S. C. Othpr officers are Vice-rresident Lawton Gresham, Charlotte, Sec retary Bill Baker, Tryon, and Treasurer Sandy Darin, Orlando, Fla. . ., K,rKUon .wU-Vua ,.T"- k Dental Seminar Will Be Tonight "The Application of the Basic Sciences to the Field of Denistty" will be the topic discussed at the Dental Seminar to be held in the auditorium of the medical build ing tonight at 7:30 o'clock. Participating in the discussion will be Dr. William Straughn, assistant professor in the bacterio logy department; Dr. C. Bruce Taylor, assistant professor m the pathology department, and Dr. G. Fred Hale, Orthodomst from Raleigh.' Special- invitations are being extended to the students and fac ulty of both the Dental and Med ical Schools, but all interested persons are welcome. The Sem inar is being sponsored by Xi Psi Phi Dental Fraternity. Lester, Botto Are "Presidents Tau Chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha and Alpha Delta Chapter of Alpha Tau Omega announce their of ficers for the coming year. Jim Lester of Roanoke, Va., has been elected to lead Pa Kappa Alpha! Other officers are Vice President Gene Hardin, Burling ton; Treasurer Benny1 Lee, Kan napolis; Interfraternity Council Representatives Bob Upton, VentorN, J.; and Walt House, Tarboro; German Club Represen tative Dick " Futrell, " Hertford; Dinipg Room Manager Howard Broughton, Hertford; House Man ager Jim NeelyvHigh Pointy and Historian Carroll Berry, Hertford. Chapter officers of "Alpha Tau Omega are President Larry Botto, Brandenton, - Fla.; Vice-President Don Carroll, Chapel Hitf; Secre tary Raleigh Tremain, Alexandria, Va.; Treasurer Bryan Broadfoot, Black Mt.; Historian Jimmy Craig, Greenwood, Miss; and I.F. Craig, Greenwood, - Miss; and I. F. C. Representative Per,e Alexander, Daytona Beach, Fla. Shaw And Carolina Students Will Meet A group of 10 University stu dents will go to Raleigh Sunday afternoon to take part in a,de Dutation urogram at the Blood- worth branch of the YMCA. Tho vpsners service at 4 o'clock V will be conducted by the Carolina . , , . , ,u 1 .., .:ii t, TiMr Trnro and fill Coeds Enter Mademoiselles AnnualContest Joan Erskine of Selrna, Ala. and Gina Campbell of Miami Beacii, Fla. fiave been selected to serve on Mademoiselle's national ' Col lege Board. As College Board members, they will represent Carolina and report to Mademoiselle on campus Hfp. Thev will complete three -.. y assignments in the fields of writ ing, .editing, fashion or art, m competition for one of 20 Guest Editorships to be awarded next June. , Winners of the Guest Editor ships will go to New York for four weeks next June to help write, edit or illustrate Made moiselle's 1952 August , College Issue. Their transportation will be paid to and from New York and they will receive a regular salary for their work. In addition to their work "''on the magazine, Guest Editors will interview v outstanding men and women in their chosen fields, visit fashion showrooms, publishing houses and ' advertising agencies, and will be Mademoiselle's guests in a round of party and theatre going. , . Pi ?hi, Chi 0 Choose Pledge Class, Officers' Alpha Chapter of Pi Beta" Phi and Epsilon Beta Chapter of, Chi Omega announce , their pledge officers for fall 1951. Pledge officers of Chi Omega are President Sally Bet Cunning ham., Winston-Salem; Secretary- Treasurer Grace Gordon, Leaks- ville; and Social Chairman Peggy Sears, Raleigh. Bish Fox of Charlotte Has been elected to lead the pledge of Pi Beta Phi. Qther officers are Vice President Dee Breslow; Rahway, N. J.; Secretary Mack Haywood, Greenville, S. C; Scholarship Sara Rose,, Chapel Hill; and Historian Dee Kline, Macomb, 111. New Pledges of Pi Beta Phi are Elizabeth Waldock. Sandusky, Ohio; Mere-Lyn Lunch, Winston- Salem; Jean Gould, Gastoma; and V.r Gifts, Tour Await Of Maid Of Cotton Contest The 1952 Maid of Cotton con test finals - won't . be held until Jan. 3, but that day will be a second Christmas for the 20 lucky girls who are selected as finalists. There will be a bag filled with cotton gifts waiting for each of the candidates. , - Included in the -assortment of gifts to be presented to the Maid Cotton finalists are cotton gloves by Dawnelle; shoes and matching neckwear in giddy plaid gingham by Westport; cotton cosmetic .travel kits by Dorothy 'Gray; cot ton handbags by Colony; Guate malan cotton skirts by Bates; a set of matching terry towels by the Cone Export & Commission fn a splprt.inn of fine cotton vv"t ... . handkerchiefs; and a cotton fab ric gift by Avondale Mills. The 20 girls who come to Mem phis Jan. 2-3 for contest finals will be selected early in Decem ber, by a preliminary judging committee from the applications and photographs of Cotton Belt beauties who have submitted, en tries. Entries now are being received at the National Cotton Council, Box 18, Memphis, Tenn. To be eligible to become Maid of Cot ton, a girl must have been born in a cotton state. She must be be tween the ages of 19-25, must never have been married, and must be at least 5 feet 5 inches tall. Contestants will be judged on the basis of beauty, personal ity, and background Any girl 'who meets the four practice to win yourseli a carton oi PHILIP MORRIS. DAILY-CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. At a distance 5. Fly aloft 9. Baked piece i of clay 10. Monster . 11. Artificial waterway 12. Go 14. Jewish month ' 15. Music note 16. Norse god 17. Printer's - measure DOWN 21. 1. Moorish 22. kettledrum 24. 2. Paddle-like process 25. 3. Like a wing 4. Set free 27. 5. Work out 6. Srshaped 28. -molding 7. Constellatioii29. 8. Disclose ' 31. 11. Military life 13. Fresh-watet 32. tortoise 34. 19-Middle. 37. 18. Indian of Mexico 20. Consumed 22. Wages 23. Satisfy 25. Narrated 2fi. Slim (Law) vX V I3 I4 VA" M7 8 j X , J - " 1 f y J . . r-yV :-r- ,771 Winner contest requirements is eligible. She need not be sponsored by any group or organization. Contest deadline is" midnight, Dec. 1. ; Tmmrrlijitplv, aft.PT the 1952 Maid of Cotton is named, she will . begin a six-month international tour as the official goodwill and fashion representative of the U. S. cotton industry. She will visit more than 40 cities in the United States, Europe, and Canada. Other countries probably will be added to her schedule before the itinerary is completed. The Maid will be .presented an all-cottcn wardrobe by 30 leading designers to wear on her tour. At the close of her cotton journey,' she will be nr--,TvW a npw 1952 Ford con- vertible by the Memphis, Tenn., District Ford Dealers. Wesley Foundation Has Party Tonight Square dancing and refresh ments will be featured tonight at the Wesley Foundation's party, to be held in the Wesley Lounge of the Methodist Church at ,8 o'clock. All students are invited to at--t.pnd. according to Publicity Chairman Gerald Parker. On Sunday at the regular dinner meeting, Dr. D. D. Holt, pastor of the Trinity Methodist Church in Durham, will be guest speaker. His topic will be "Under standing Ourselves." ThP dinner meetings are held at 6 o'clock and are open to an University students, . oinht oVlork! Gsi in some Taut Harbors Malt beverage Thrice ' - (mus.) Draws . aimlessly Body of water Afloat , Birds of prey Perishes Disembarks Furnish Yesterday's Answer 39. Thick cord 42. By way of 44. Sheltered side temporarily VS ! A ilKLM & iHlo oTp Alwmyli ?C A DIG Ajjli. Ajs .1L iil.A c B am sip oon a ul Ticsflgj? 12(1 S EE KSl,js C EIMT m v r?V Customers' corner The men and women of A&P are proud of their reputation for efficiency. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 16, 1951, edition 1
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