Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 12, 1952, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
f i i Page Six The Dally Tar Heel Friday. December 12, 1952 Society Hears Local Doctor CINCINNATI, Ohio, Dec. 11 Dr. Ernest H. Wood of Chapel Hill, N. C. this week described the perfection of a new type of diagnostic X-ray tube. Called the "fractional focus tube," the new development al lows enlargements of X-ray pic tures without loss of detail. Dr. Wood spoke before the Radiologi cal Society of North America. Large pictures are valuable, Dr. Wood said, because they often give information to the radiolo gist which cannot be learned from conventional films. In particular, bone diseases may be better" ex amined by these enlargements. The new tube has not been thor oughly tested on other parts of the body. The society's meeting ends Sunday. BOOKS For The Kids At Home Meons Delight Delight DELIGHT THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin St. Open Evenings A Super Western That Really Deserves The Phrase t -r x- v 1 - mm mm iM)S? t& 4 rf break loose! ft DONNA REED ibil fatuj una A SCOTT-BROWN PK0DUCTIGIIrodaa4 4 HAEf J0 8KSI wtutM omcM iv m Hasans Today-Saturday ft Ml I SSX.!' ,- - - x:::,:::-x::-:-::x-:::-::;-:o:-:::-:::::::'::: ::r::;:::KS::K:::S M . . . i a X " T i v.-l " . x 15 1 i . itU o-LA.n crew OI ine giounaea. oaiierea ireiyinei, lonunai, wau'ior a mgn tide which would float the ship and save them. The 7.000 ton. 437-foot freighter, inbound from San Francisco, ran aground while on its way to pick up a cargo of lumber at Aberdeen, Wash. NEA Teiephoto. Chancellor House Goes Back A Few Years N. G. Progress Due To Looking 'Outward And Forward' Johnson Despite numerous handicaps due largely to bad government in its first century and a half, North Carolina has forged ahead to become one of the most pro gressive states. It is because, as Gerald John son said recently, it has always "looked outward and forward instead of backward and in ward." That view was emphasized by Chancellor Robert B. House in an address before the Fac ulty Club at its meeting this week. He cited some of the highlights in the State's history. In existence for approximate ly 150 years, North Carolina was ruled by the Lords Proprietors for the first 75 years and by the v Royalty Colony during the next 75, Chancellor House pointed out. Most of the governors dur ing that period were shiftless, : Hi 4 MANILAL GANDHI, son of Mohandas K. Gandhi, was ar rested in Johannesburg, S. Af rica, along with 37 others, six of them whiles, for taking pari in organized defiance of the race segregation laws. Patrick Duncan, son of Sir Patrick Dun can, former Governor Gf"-al of the Union of South Africa, was also among the whites ar rested. NEA Teiephoto. inefficient and dishonest, he said. "But the State has never had a poor governor since the State became free as a N result of the Revolutionary War," the Chan- cellor asserted. "Our governors since that time have been mag nificent public servants, and our public institutions as a whole have been well run." University graduates, he said, have played leading roles in the organization and functioning of most of our public and private institutions and other state agencies. It is a record in which University alumni can take great pride, he added. The present day University is touching the lives, in one way. or another, of 770,000 of its four million citizens, the Chancellor said. Ascribing the State's early handicap largely to its political boundaries, Chancellor House said that in the early years North Carolina was looked down upon by Virginia and South Carolina and regarded by those two states as "lazy and unprogressive." The State was also greatly handicapped, he said, because it had no important seaports or east-west trunk railways. The situation became so discourag ing between 1800 and 1860 that one-third of the population moved to other states. A great deal of the state's progress since the turn of the century must "be credited to the wisdom and foresight of our industrial leaders who have played a major role in giving . us diversification and in devel oping the State. For the first time our farms are not being mortgaged to New York banks. Our ancestors were not most ly rogues or shiftless people as some Virginians or South Car olinians will try to tell you but they were a conservative people made up of English, Scots and Germans in about HOME for the HOLIDAYS ' by GREYHOUND the pleasantfriendly way & a Buy on Extra Gift with the money you saye equal proportions. There was little immigration to this State after 1775." Watch Cardinals ST. LOUIS, Dec. 11 Enos Slaughter warned the National League to watch out for the Cardinals this summer after he had spiked rumors of his re tirement at a press conference here today. The venerable Card outfielder said he had no idea of quitting the game. "I've taken care of myself," he said. "My legs are good and I still have a lot of games left." Practice For Teachers Set In 19 Schools Student teachers from the sen ior class at the University will be allotted to practice teaching as signments at 19 schools through out the state during the winter term. The 34 student teachers, 26 wo men and eight men, will devote the entire winter term, January 5 to March 19, in residence in the community where they will be assigned. Twenty-one will practice at high schools, teaching in their chosen subject-matter areas, and 13 in elementary schools where they will work in one of the grades of their choice. This practice teaching consti tutes a full load of credits under the University system of schedul ing, and is a required course for all education students who have Phi Bete Prise Given Badger Prof PRINCETON, N. J., Dec. 11 The Phi Beta Kappa Senate tor day announced that the 1952 Christian Gauss Prize of $1,000 has been awarded to Jerome Hamilton Buckley, English pro- not previously taught under a state certification. f essor at Wisconsin. The prize is granted annually in recognition of the best book of the year published by an American university press in the field of literary scholarship or criticism. Buckley's book is "The Victorian Temper", by the Harvard Press. 1 DON'T FLUNK! BONE UP WITH A COLLEGE OUTLINE FROM TIM ATE BOOKSHOP Open Evenings THE I 205 E. Franklin St. FOISTER'S CAM If W(pX$ Up) IrVfiKo) g x. jT 11 J When Stanley Kramer wanted to make a here's war with a brand new twist and ' ' A VwVI movie about prizefighting, he made "The wait till you meet her I JA X s L ittwSl . ..... .... -c-'-r wst.-s .jn u i.namninn jitip or una otpjit. ttiovips. i ' COLLUCCI 1 ? ikmMui rmmm J When Stanley Kramer wanted to make a - n movie about The West, he made "High f ""ll Noon"- one of the very great westerns. "SS I irIs that didn t set away . . . Coke, the hot- COKE When Stanley Kramer wanted to make a movie on prison life, he made "My Six Convicts," certainly the best of its type. Now Stanley Kramer brings you EIGHT IRON MEN his kind of soldier story. EIGHT IRON MEN gives you the story of all G.Ls the humor and heroics, the horse play and the unheralded gallantry. Yes, And wait till you meet the eight great and gutty guys who dated her in their dreams . . . Sergeant Mooney, who could always spare a couple of stripes to save a buddy . . . Collucci, with his tall tales of the big girls that didn't get away . . . Coke, the hot head, and Sapiros, the clown . . . Small, the little man who wasn't all there ... Carter, who'd bat 1.000 in any man's league . . . Ferguson, too lazy to dream his own dreams . . . and Muller, whose sister kept them all in fruitcake and cheesecake.. There's not one phoney foot of film in this whole magnificent story. EIGHT IRON MEN is all true. It's all tremendous. And it's all tremendously exciting t MOONEY t CI CARTER -I. I r ...... -,,....-..., .. f t) - ") V V H C L DreamboatShe f r TC TO r $m. ' always showed up U . ymf X ''"W ir when they least ( -f & U respected her! V-fsJ FERGUSON e7 f : ff$i , ' MULLER immrKCHfW SMALL SAPIROS tVv(Vx - v. ; ' i-fl - , - " - ' LATE SHOW SAT. SUNDAY-MONDAY with Bonar CfdSeano-Arthur Franz- Lee lM-Bnkd Kisy-Nick Dennis-James Gri1!i Dick Moore-Bamey Phillips Mary CasSa-screen piay by HAM BE01I Adapted from the BroadwcTy Play "A SOUND OF HUNTING" - I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 12, 1952, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75