Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 5, 1952, edition 1 / Page 4
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i i ' f I i Page Four The Daily Tar Heel Sunday, October 5, 1952 New Hospital Committee Offered By Y By Alice jrane Hinds A new opportunity for service, offered by the Y.W.C.A., is the Hospital committee, placed under the Commission of Social Respon sibilities, which will function under the chairmanship of Rose mary Scovil, Greenville, S. C. The purpose of the committee is to assist the hospital staff wherever aid is needed. Routine work, such as answering the tele phone and tabulating tempera tures, is done to aid nurses on desk duty. Personal services for the: patients and other miscellan eous duties are rendered by coed committee members. The girls, working two at a time, donate one evening a week, from 6:30 to 8:30, to hospital work. There are also girls placed co call to conduct tours through the hospital for visitors. These tours take place during the after noon. Enthusiasm already has been shown by coeds. Between Sep tember 24 and October 1, 53 hours of" volunteer service were given. A navy uniform adorned with a. special insignia is provided for the volunteer workers. The uni form, a sleeveless smock made with an apron effect, is to be worn avjer a white blouse and a solid color skirt. Men's Glee Club The Men's Glee Club will meet tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock in the Choral Room of Hill Hall. Stray Greeks ' The Stray Greeks will hold a meeting tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock in Alderman parlor. Cosmopolitan Club The Cosmopolitan Club will meet "at 4:30 today in the Ren dezvous Room of Graham Memo rial. All international students as well as North American students are invited. Lost Wallet Ralph Ashworth, 327 Joyner Dormitory, lost a brown billfold Friday night up town. Anyone haviilg(- information on such an item i$ asked to contact him at his room. Shoes, Bag Found A woman's handbag and a pair of shoes were found late Friday afternoon on Cameron Avenue at Pittsboro Street. The owner may obtain the items from Mrs. E. B. ' WC Alumnae Woman's College alumnae will meet tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the: Horace Williams Lounge in Graham Memorial. FROM A DISTANT Z..SDE..JQTV DEEP CORNERS OF YOUR HEA... COME ITS POMNKR, WONDER AUD MAGNBZmx. m IT! IT LIGHTS UP THE SCREEN LIKE A RAY OF SUHSHIHE!" JOURNAL-AMERICAN V .s' V Warner Bros. V VG?0URlADY0F fl v 6MDlllffl ' x Xlx eou , JF kVARNERCOLORjr cT" f .-o JAMES OHANLON t A . "A RARE EMOTIONAL TREAT! PROFOUNDLY STIRRING !" DAILY MIRROR "INSPIRATIONAL! IMPRESSIVE SPECTACLE!" DAIY NEWS i THURSDAY " 11 f and yarstty I FRIDAY r J I! l IF ' Admission I jjjjl I Matinee 74c Night 1.00 Children 25c Plans Announced For Point 4 Contest Special to The Daily Tar Hmx NEW YORK, Oct. 4 Plans for a nationwide contest on the Point 4 Program with prize awards totalling $1,800 were re leased today by the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U. S. A. The contest will open November 1, 1952 and close midnight March 31, 1953. It is open to all North Americans between the I Inter-Faith Group Names Lecturers ages of 15 and 23. Both students and young people not in school are -eligible. ' Prizes will be awarded to two groups consisting of high-school-age contestants, 15 to 18 years, and college-age participants, 19 to 23. Names of winners will be announced about May 15, 1953. Essays should be on the subject, The United States and the Un developed Areas." Basic purpose of the contest is to stimulate in terest of young Americans in the Point 4 program and our relation ship with the economically less developed countries of the world. Contest instruction leaflets will be sent upon request by the Point 4 Essay Committee, National Council of Churches, .79 E. Adams St., Chicago 3, 111. Blood Students interested in form ing a campus chapter of the American Red Cross are asked to attend an organizational meeting in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial tomorrow. The meeting will be held at 4 p.m. Mrs. Nash Will Lead Discussion On Dating "Desirability, Delights and Dangers of Dating" will be up for discussion tomorrow night when Mrs. Arnold Nash, marriage coun selor here, speaks in Lenoir Hall at 6:30. The program is sponsored by the YMCA and is planned for freshmen. Those planning to at tend are asked to get their trays at Lenoir and be in the south dining room by 6 o'clock. Ed Ste vens will entertain at that time and he wjll be followed by Mrs. Nash at 6:30. Announcement was made yes terday of guest speakers this year, sponsored by" the Inter-Faith council. President Jim Haney re leased the schedule. Dr. Arnold Flaten, authority on art history and religious inter pretation of art, will speak Oct ober 15-16. Scheduled to lecture here Nov ember 15-17 is Dr. Eddy Asirva tham, theologian and political scientist from India. Dr. Asirva tham is currently teaching at Bos ton University. Prominent Jewish journalist and free-lance writer, Will Her berg will be on campus Decem ber 1-2. Dr. E. Harris Harbison, an au thority on .Tudor history at Prin ceton, will be on campus the lat ter part of this quarter or during the winter quarter. Dean of the Graduate School at Princeton and a chemist of note, Dr. Hugh Taylor, will speak the latter part of January or in early February. During winter quarter the Inter-Faith Council plans to spon sor a series of lectures by Chan cellor Milford, of Lincoln Cath edral, London, England. Other speakers will be schedul ed throughout the year, Haney said. -SUAB- (Continued from page 1) Forum, Charles Yarborough, Carolina Traynham and Bruce Marger; Office, Ellen Wood, Ber nie Hileman, Keen Oliver, Nancy Burcham, Helen Faust and Betty Lou Wannamaker; Tournaments, Etta Rose Mann. Student-Faculty, Jan Carter, Tish Rodman, Nancy Harne, Louise Sommerville, Kit Wallace, Alice Chapman, Janice Zurczak, Helen Faust and Betty Lou Wannamaker; Receptions, Billie Bruce Dobbs, Gwenn Wait, Jane D. Kelly, Donna Overholt, Ann Gaiton, Thelma L. Souder, Pat Bohnenkamp, Nancy Murray, Kit Wallace and Louise Sommerville. Committee meetings for the coming week were announced yesterday. They are Dance Com- mitee at 4 o'clock Monday in the SUAB .office; Special Services at 4 p.m. Thursday; Forum at 4 p.m. Monday In Roland Parker Lounge No. 1; Film at 4 p.m. Monday in the Grail Room. Members of other committees are asked to stop by the SUAB office daily to check on their com mittee operation. The chairmen of all committees will meet together weekly to discuss their prospective pro grams. A luncheon meeting of the chairmen has been called for this week at 1 p.m. on Thursday in the upstairs dining room of Lenoir Hall. In The Church Unitarians Meet Tonight In Gerrard The Unitarian Fellowship of Chapel Hill will meet tonight at 8:30 in Gerrard Hall. "The Chal lenge of Unitarianism" will be the subject, and George Weitz of Charlotte will be the leader. Weitz, president of the Thomas Jefferson Conference and . presi dent of the board of trustees of the Charlotte Unitarian Church, will discuss objectives and appli cations of Unitarianism, along with the basic principles of the denomination. He will lead a gen eral discusison afterwards. Lutheran Students of Holy Trinity Luthe ran church will participate in a Bible discussion this morning .conducted by Dr. Walter Nau, professor of romance languages at Lenoir-Rhyne college. Dr. Nau is a popular speaker throughout the N. C. Lutheran Synod. He spoke last night to a group of townsfolk and stu dents on "Sun-Crowned Heirs." He will assist at the service of Holy Communion during the re gular worship service today. "Academic Freedom and You" will be the topic of discussion when the Lutheran Student asso ciation meets this evening at 6:15 for a fellowship supper and discussion forum. Joe Hall will lead the discussion, based on ob servations made by Dr. George Forell and published recently in a student study booklet. Christian Science Christian Science services and. Sunday School sessions will be held today, and each Sunday, at 11 o'clock in New West Building. The topic of the lesson-sermon today is "Reality.", Episcopal The Rev. Baker J. Turner, rec tor of the Church of the Holy Trinity, Fayetteville, will speak on "Revival of Orthodoxy" at the meeting of the Canterbury club tonight. The meeting, held in the Parish House, will open with a 6 o'clock supper. Student ministers of the pre ministerial group read Evening Prayer in the chapel every week day afternoon at 5:45. A preaching mission will be conducted here November 9-11 by the Rev. Charles Martin, canon of the National Cathedral and head master of St. Alban's School, Washington. The mission is held under the auspices of the student congregation of the Chapel of USF Meets Today At Nicholson s The United Student Fellowship will meet this afternoon at 6 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Vir ginia Nicholson, 234 McCauley Street. Dinners will be served for 25 cents each. The meeting is pri marily for the Congregation Evangelical and Reform students, but anyone who wishes to attend is welcomed, Mrs. Nicholson said the Cross. Presbyterian The Rev. Charles M. Jones, pas tor of the local Presbyterian Church, is on a year's leave of ab sence to work with the Save-the-Children Foundation in Kings port, Tenn. He will be in the pulpit one Sunday each month. Arrangements will be published soon regarding the preaching and pastoral work of the church that J Mr. Jones can not handle. Speakers for the month of Oc tober have been announced by Mr. Jones as follows: Dr. Thomas D. Schafer. Duke Divinity school, October 5; Dr. R. J. McMullen, Chapel Hill resident, October 12; Mr. Jones, October 19, and Dr. Thomas D. Schafer, Duke Divinity School, October 26. World Communion will be ob served at the 9:45 a.m. service today. A regular worship pro gram is planned for the 11:00 a.m. service. The Sunday night group will discuss "The Christian and War" tonight at 7 o'clock. The leader for the period is Claude Shotts, general secretary of the YMCA. FREt DESIGNING . 'FREE PROOF '-,,-FREe DIE -i it J If CLASSIFIEDS BALLET TEACHER WANTED. PRE ferablv for afternoon or night work. Vacancy open. State qualifications and salary. Write Box 1525. Burlington, N. C. (1-0453-6) FOR SALE: VERY FINE MAPLE dinine and bedroom furniture. Phone 50504. Durham. N. C. CHARGE (x) , ri r-rn re3 ES3 EZ3 C3 13 8233 E3 E2S3 E23 BSSI ES53 O E3 E3 ETJ 1 tf I IM P ERSOMT fl COLISEUM IN RALEIGH WILLIAM HEAL REYNOLDS COLISEUM N. C State College P. O. Box 5905 RALEIGH, N. C. 7 ; 4 Enclosed is $ for... tickets at $. .each Price: $3.00... $2.50 $2.00 $1.50.. Name , ' Address Mon. Eve. Oct. 20 - Tue. Eve. Oct. 21 -Q Wed. Eve. Oct. 22 Thur. Eve. Oct. 23 Frid. Mat. Oct. 24 Frid. Eve. Oct. 24 .. Q Sat. Mot. Oct. 25 3 Sat. Eve. Oct. 25 Q City State Phone No FOR THE SAFE RETURN OF YOUR TICKETS PLEASE INCLUDE 2Sc FOR INSURANCE AND POSTAGE fl I fl 1 D sfl LaMarick's Cold Wave Special! LaMarick Custom Creme Oil Cold Waves . . . Na tionally famous profes sional permanent. $12.50 Value $5.95 LaMarick Deluxe Creme Oil Wave for softer, long er lasting permanent. . $15.00 Value t $6.95 LaMarick Super Deluxe Creme Oil Frigid Cold Wave . . . new, natural looking permanent. MR. FRANK IN OUR RALEIGH SALON $25.00 Value $9.95 Each Permanent Wave Includes Personality Hair Cut O Shaping, Tapering. O Thinning . O Reconditioning Shampoo O Scientific Test Curls Oil Neuiralizer Helene Curtis Creme Rinse Setting Free Consultation on All Work We feature only professionally and nationally advertised prod ucts, or products by nationally known manufacturers such as Fashion-Wave by Helene Curtis, Roux, Breck, Clairol, Revlon, Flexa-Wave and LaMarick Frigid Cold Wave. All permanenis individually priced and opened before you. This is tor your protection as our customers. Request this al ways in your beauty salon. BELK-LEGGETT BEAUTY SALON Phone Durham 29201 HUDSON-BELK BEAUTY SALON Phone Raleigh 3-1726 LaMarick Shops Tfiag (SOOT mum au Every terrored second swept her closer to desperation in heartbreak . . closer to murder . . . closer to a v clash with the secret woman in her husband's life! 7 ' - N . J. A : -lll ''.-'';.;':";" --iiv':::"t if . "'""TTiiiiyii"iri)iiii!ijiiiii i'iiiiihiii ihiiiihiipiipi i i n urn ,onp V i JOSEPH KAUFMAN presents MumJr T yd Mtarii flUtfHP iJ J Wf t-Jl Vm,, -- liir-hii m Co-Siarring JACK PALANCE (Waller Jack Palanski) Former U. N. C. Football Star Class 1S41 i in jj I i ,.1 f ll J n ri irliinfo Co i 7) J T-O-D-A-Y and Monday IT 7 irstty
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1952, edition 1
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