Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 16, 1951, edition 1 / Page 8
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FAUE EIGHT THE DAILY TAR HEEL. FRIDAY; NOVEMBER 16, 1951 II it Hi story: Praised " "South Carolina: A Short His tory," by the late David" Duncan 'Wallace, which has just been pub lished by the University of North Carolina Press, has been incorpo- ratedjnto the basic "Guide to the Study and Reading of South Carolina History," distributed by the South Carolina""" Historical " Commission, it' was learned here today. .' . The Guide is a syllabus for a course in reading or study in South Carolina history. Covering 30 aspects of the state's past, the Guide lists with page references those volumes which best illu minate each field of South Caro lina history. Cribbing Reveale At Cornell Duke Concert Series Slated GM Football The Graham Memorial football contest winner . last weec was Carl Gregory, 201 Aycock. The games for this week are: ' Yale-Princeton, Navy-Columbia, I enn-Army, Ohio State-Illinois, Michigan StateTIndiana, . Iowa Wisconsin, Michigan-Northwest- ern, Purdue-Minnesota, Tennessee-Mississippi, Maryland-N. C. State. Vanderbilt-Tulane, k , Alabama Georgia Tech, - LSU-Miss. State, ' Texas-TCU, SMU-Arkansas, Rice Texas A&M, California-Oregon, Stanford-Oregon Stats, Colorado Nebraska, Brown-Harvard. The score of the Notre Dame Carolina game will be used in case of a tie in picking the winners. Special to The Daily Tar Heel) Ithaca Nearly half of 322 Cor nell students who responded to a student council questionnaire ad mitted cribbing in classes or ex aminations. . The questionnaire recently was sent to 500 students at random. Of the 322 students who re turned the questionnaire, about 10 per cent admitted "cheating "frequently or . occasionally," the council said. An additional 37 per cent admitted cheating "once or twice." . - ' For purposes of the question naire, cheating was defined to in clude "cribbing, copying, giving and receiving aid such as signals and notes, and discussing and us ing information about an exam ination which had been obtained illegally." The council said that although 47 per cent of the students who admitted cheating, two-thirds of them disapproved: of it. Cornell has an enrollment 10,000. - - - Durham T h.r e e outstanding chamber music ensembles will appear at Duke University during the 1951-52 academic year under the auspices of the local Chamber Arts Society, Loren Withers, by the Quartetto Italiarib. The Hungarian Quartet wui mae fourth D uke appearance on Feb. 9, 1952, and the Mannes Trio will perform on April 5. T chairman, announced today. m l . 111 r-.-n rrr rne concert series wm ucu ... . . iuHav Dec. 10. with a concert ! was founded to stimulate interest Now entering its seventh sea son, the Chamber Arts Society in chamber jnusic and to bring noted ensembles to Durham. Membership in the society is onen to all interested persons, Withers said ; Information con cerning the group may. be obtain ed by calling Mrs. Elizabeth Ropp, treasurer, phone 7-9585. : Several C a r ohna football players are members of the Tar Heel baseball team. NORTH CAROLINA AUTHORS Belong 'on your shelf-and on you list! of Stores To Stay Open Until 9 THE FINER THINGS OF LIFE Francis Gray Patton, author of these gay and subtle sketches, attended the University of North Carolina, and is now married to a member of the Duke faculty This charming group of learned and human characters have delighted readers of the New Yorker and may remind you of someone you know...------ T...S3.00 THE RIDDLE OF EMILY DICKENSON Chapel Hill's own Rebecca Patterson presents a fresh, well documented, and startling approach to the retiring New England poet. Winner of the Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship. If poetry is your field, you'll have to read this. - $5.00 i SOUTHERN COOK BOQK Burlington's Marion Brown has gathered the finest and most comprehensive collection of Southern recipes ever to come oe 1 J ,1 n imn a-rf J ll 1 1 f 0"f 1 T"V O OaHfK 111 Band ( Continued from page 1 ) "Three Blind Mice" played, in a suitable mood to match the pic ture then on the "screen." The cardboard staff asks the co in a meeting yesterday morn ing, members of the Merchants' Association voted to keep their stores open until 9 o'clock at night during the first week of December and during the week of Dec. 18-24. At a later meeting on Nov. 27 in the Carolina Inn, the Associa tion will take up the question of making it a permanent policy Jto keep the stores open until 9 p.m. once a week. I J: tm ; W. - .. .. .-WL-. r , , .li-5ra.,.T?-. M i rHlfflHifcTM tween covers. A man could spend Ja wonderful lifetime eating his way through these ' dishes if he had an adventurous wife and a Southern Cook Book! r ..........$4.50 REDISCOVERING THE BIBLE This book, by UNC's Bernhard W. Anderson, has actually prov pn a he?t seller for us Which goes to show that when good scholar ship is combined with good writing, a good audience is waiting. We think you'll enjoy it too. $3.50 operation of the students in sit ing right behind each other, flipp ing at the right time, getting the right color up at the right time, and filling v up . the card section before half time. Claude McKin ney, head artist of the cardboard, stated, "More work has gone into this series than any other this year, and I hope x these stunts will be the best yet." On ihe Bargain Shelf j Inglis Fletcher Bennett's Welcome-....:.-$1.98 Howard W. Odum the Way of The South..$1.00 Elizabeth Coker, Daughter of Strangers..$1.00 3eiiy Smith Tree Grows in Brooklyn $1.00 James Street With James Childers - Tomorrow We Reap ..$1.00 Hope Chamberlain This Was Home... ...,...-...$1.38 In ihe Rare Book Section Rare books don't come in dozen lots, but as this is writ ten our Southern Section in cludes one pristine set of the American Historical Society's "North Carolina Rebuilding an Ancient J Commonwealth," plus several other really rare titles. Standard Titles North Carolina State Guide $4.50 Southern Part of Heaven $3.50 Thomas Wolfe' Titles priced from $1.49 to $2.45 Not within hundreds of miles of the Carolinas can you find so com plete q stock as at INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill, N. C. ""5" 8,1 I " i IS ....... ----in.ii ill n imni if ' - " mrirr . 1 By W. J. Ogburn. Jr. Don't put off looking at some of the handsome new caDinei ue signs Westinghouse is putting out - laoierrtorl n pnhflnce VOUr liV- . . . lAJiilv vvr - - ing room furnishings as well as to give you that easy-on-the-eye pic ture. See them today at OGBURN TTTTOKnrTTrRTT. Cr. si 9 W. Franklin Street, in Chapel Hill, N. C, Phone 5-841. Would you believe it? After all this time and all this progress in T.rifi inausirv . . . there are still folks who don't believe in televis ion. , Why that's liV not believing in automobiles or electric lights. Be cause no matter how vou slice it, TV is here to stay . . . a permanent, fixture in our way of lite. Maybe there are a lot of tilings nbnut television. But you can't deny it. It deserves a place in, your home ESPEC1AL.- t -r : Viovo nhilrlren. If VOU re ill U V VIA Xi- v,. prejudiced against a large number r iu .UAurc iuQt rpmember that a child's choice of television en- tertainment can De conuuucu supervised to include educational and lnstrucuve K v V. 'O A Vv r A-.-, ZD Imi ) jsw h V v. jT' jo'';.. jl - r.aa ..I -3- mmuvti fc ,-a;.a!y- ... ,, i. : j ts- . M fc4 W s4 o fir V - r With a large selection of ERECTOR SETS AMERICAN FLYER TRAINS CHEMISTRY SETS From The Gilbert Hall of Science Found at 0 -V 'i 5 I s tainmg programs. shows to Aiieic i.v.v..-- - . , . n noons Jin A children as well .. as adults i will I AU-.I benefit m umom w f 1, " "ZtCr . , ) itat tho TV SPl they've all been clamoring for. v Opposite Bus Station u, Don't pup ii on. s SUPPLY
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 16, 1951, edition 1
8
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