Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 4, 1955, edition 1 / Page 4
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FRIDAY, MARCH 4,-1 553 THE DAILY TAR HEEL ticipation in Greek Week and ac tivities during the year. rniti Campus -MM . Prate CAEIHART KITS & SPEAKER BAFFLES at Records & High Fidelity tart Xi A ff n A A vv-eeK im arcin 1 i Z m, I ,1 ",f ' ; " - - - ' i 5 -wjrr j,-- - .--- ; . a? ' - i v Vi f wi f v ' V i'1- Si?. ' : A Vi - & lifted Gene Autry To Appear At Coliseum Gene Autry, above, famed star of movies, radio and television, will present a varied program of entertainment when he brings his "Melody Ranch Gang" to the William Neal Reynolds Coliseum at North Carolina State College for shows at 2:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Saturday, March 19. What Goes On Here Friday's WUNC 7 p.m. Children's Circle 7:30 Carolina Sports Review 7:45 International Echos With George Feyei 8 Kidnapped 8:30 Let's Listen To Opera 10 Local, State and National News Followed by Resume 10:15 Sign Off. FACULTY CLUB Arthur J. Altmeyer, former Commissioner for Social Security of the Department of Health Ed ucation and Welfare and now vis iting lecturer in the School of So cial Work here, will be speaker at the Faculty Club Luncheon to be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Carolina Inn, COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan Club will meet RUNOFF CORRECTION Runoffs for offices to be filled by the spring elections will be held on April 5 rather than April 15, as was reported in yesterday's Daily Tar Heel. HOWES RECITAL Arthur Howes, founder and di rector of the Organ Institute at Andover, Mass., will be here in an organ concert in , Hill Hall Tuesday at 8 p.m. Howes' concert here will be the third in the reg ular Evening Series presented for the public by the University De partment of Music. Graham Me morial Student Union will co sponsor the event. HUDSON SPEAKS Dr. Arthur Palmer Hudson, Ke nan Professor of English, and sec retary of the North Carolina Folk- Veazey, Stevens Chair Events For 55 Week The pledge classes of Carolina fraternities will begin a round of . activities on March 14 as Greek Week begins on campus. ' Greek Week is the week of activities which was instituted ; ; here to replace the traditional . . u. ... . f ! Hell Week. Hazel's Wrath Discussed In Law Review Research on court decisions con- pledge trainers' reports and will j then judge the est pledge class on the basis of scholarship, par- j Equipment 207. E. Franklin . St. Chapel Hill. N-C. PRESENTS Co-chairmen for this year's event are Burt Veazy, ATO from Raleigh, and Jack Stevens, Chi Phi from Asheville. The activities for the first night, Monday, March 14, will include cerning insurance policy "wind- j exchange dinners among the ra. storm clauses as connected with . , , , Hurricane Hazel is one of the lead- ; Unities' pledge cjasses. On Tues ing articles in the North Carolina day night each class will be host Law Review, February isue, which to two faculty members at din has been published. ner. On both Monday and Tuesday John L. Rendleman. Salisbury, a . nights coff ee breaks win be held law student here and author of the I, , . , . lrt . . . . . by the sororities for the fratern- article, has examined the existence of many court decisions and inter- ty pledges. i-i! a 1 r 1 preiauuns on me meaning or stunt nigtlt will be held by the wiuutauim clauses, ana nis ar- , , , , . tide deals with the subject in de j Pdge classes on Wednesday night tail. He points out that recovery j in Memorial Hall. - i.:i-.inHM 1 il: i ui wumMUMii lUM imigi-s on'WOe- Thnrcrfov nftsrnnnrv nil nlprtf . . u.. j vu j w v. vs a m tr O classes will participate in a Fi"eld AUTHENTIC UNIVERSITY SLACKS M' SHORTS ther the ..wind is the "proximate cause" of the loss or whether the damage by wind alone can be as certained. The North Carolina Law Review is a publication of the UNC School of Law The quarterly issue also includes s survev of North Carolina Supreme Court decisions for the 1954 sprin? term and an article bv Wallace C. Murchison, attornev at law of Wil minston, on the income taxation of partnerships and partnership income under the new Federal Re venue Code. Sunday at 4 p.m. in the Rendez-1 'ore Society, spoke on "North uaroiina tsauaas 01 uie iviuiuci ous Lover" at N. C. State College vous Room of Graham Memorial. The program will include a dis cussion of courtship customs in .Tuesday night. foreign lands. Thomson Visits Business Frat Jim Thomson, Chicago, 111., ex ecutive secretary of Delta Sigma Pi, international business and pro fessional fraternity, will visit the Alpha Lambda Chapter here to morrow. Thomson will address the Caro lina Chapter at a dinner session at the Ranch House Friday night at 6:30 o'clock and a reception, in his honor will be held at the fra ternity house immediately follow ing. A fraternity spokesman said ail alumni were invited to attend the reception. WESTMINSTER SUPPER FORUM Rabbi E. M. Rosenzweig, direc tor of B'Nai B'Rith Hillel Foun dation here, wrill speak at a West minster Fellowship supper forum Sunday on "What Does A Jew Be lieve?" Supper will be served at 6 p.m. at the fellowship hut at a cost of 50 cents. The program will begin at 7 p.m. COLOR PRINTS A collection of 0riginal signed color prints will be on display at the Person Hall Art Gallery from Saturday to March 27. The exhi bit, planned by the Color Print Society of New York, will include original woodcuts, lithographs, etchings and engravings. Among the artists represented in the ex hibition will be Adja Yunkers, Seong May, Gabor Peterdi, Maxil Ballinger, Irving Amen, Alfonsas Dargis, Danny Pierce and Emil Weddige. Ceramic Group Has Exhibition A collection of ceramic works, the results of a hobby carried on here by a group of Chapel Hill wo men, is now on display at More head Planetarium. Included in the display are in teresting ceramic ornaments, dish es, wall and mantle pieces, and chess men, which a class of some 25 Chapel Hillians have fashioned and baked during recent months. The Chapel Hill Ceramics Group, organized in September of 1953, has Mrs. J. B. Scholes, a former student at New York State College of Ceramics, as teacher. The group now is faced with disbanding un less a replacement can be found for Mrs. Scholes, who will be leav ing Chapel Hill this summer. JUST RECEIVED- Ivy Walk Shorts, unpreated, with back strap 8.2 khaki chino 4.95 cotton baby cords 4.95 suntan and black watch poplin 5.95 polo shirts from 3.95 JTOton'S Clotfjins Cupboarb Day, which is to be held at Woollen Gymnasium. Excnange dinners will be held on Thursday night. A clean up project will take up Friday afternoon for the fratern ity pledges with a banquet wind ing up the week's events on Fri day night in Lenoir Hall. Trophies will be awarded for the Field Day activities and for the best pledge class. In order to have judging for the best pledge class, each pledge trainer will pre sent a report of his classes to Ray Jefferies, assistant to the Dean of Student Affairs. The committee planning Greek Week will choose three judges who will read the l ju n mrf Made like Expensive Slacks Tailored with Slim Leek Back Strap and Adjustable Buckle Low Hip Fit e Best Talon Zippers e Quality Fabrics If) WAIST SIZES 28 42 ALREADY CUFFED INSEAMS 29-34 $4.95 DAILY CROSSWORD fmBtru r liiii ri " irirr- 'in -: '-n--&-- TSUI JAZZ CONCERTS at the Saddle Club DURHAM if EVERY SATURDAY AFTERNOON 2-5 $1.25 Per Couple Beer Set-ups ACROSS" 1. More secure L Impress deeply, 11. By oneself 12. Work 13. Hems in ' 14. Walk slowly - 15- Birds &4 a class 16. Underworld -: god 17. Neuter . pronoun 15. Dry; as wine 19. Paddle-like process 20. Scotch river . 21. Melodies 23. Gull-like bird 24. Agitated . 27. Poker stake 38. Italian river 29. Affirmative reply - 30. Travel back . and forth 31. Ignited . 34. Samarium (sym.) 35- The cony of Africa (var.) 26. Hindu garment 37. Joyce j Kilmer's j famous ; poem 39. Oil of rose petals 40. Book of maps 41. Type of. leather 42. German river ' 43, Mountains (So. Am.) DOWN 1. Medieval stories 2. Living 3. Predicts 4. Remnants 5. Property (L.) 6. Killed 7. Scotch-type caps 8. Warp-yarn 9. French writer 10. Make believe 16. The , blues (colloq.) 19. Back 20. Laid waste 22. Frost 23. Unit of weight 24. The morning1 star 25. To bury (podt.) 26. A lever 30. Antiquated 32. Sultan's decree "aLjE)T GjO--. c 5t o a n e vpKTs 3I L. R 1 Tluii I M A TE I" C EjaiE ' AC S!Fm c I R CIL' AlPlTr ,M e C L 1 ngs ,j.1c'l' S URfT"" HHU S T E felH- A N N as "oplilsL ..Oiei!i.l I Yeitrdy't Aawt 33. Wearies 35. University officer 36. Stupefy 38. High priest 39. Man's nam 2. 3 V S b 1 & . 10 1 l: Il!L!L 11 24 ZS 2b IllZlll vj 77?, 9 zzzzzJ71 "I M I m I I LI L ABNER By Al Ccpp Victory Village News (Continued from Page 1)' The Board also approved the job application of Mrs. Maxie Haire for teacher of the two-year-old class. Her duties will begin in September. A leave of absence for the 1955 summer period was grant- ed to Mrs. Sue Mahoney by the board j The Student Wives Club, which took on the volunteer task of making a number of curtains for the community cen ter last month, was gratefully recognized by the board when it rescinded a fee charged to the club for their use of the center for a Valentine dance. At the last meeting, it was announced that 56 children were enrolled in the nursery. Forty of these on a fulltime basis and 16 part-time. 1 """- THIS DON'T ANS WE" R 'H cake: thet, daisy mae.'.M V V, 11 1 i lMM MiKAfcutiy K NOSV GIT ""L X OUTA HERE- )- 1 1 f WHO cAfM.ur- 1 ir T7T",Lc?rI?IIT,T'TT i""- t" I J : II rfJiv- J crvr'cvT . .-- . 7fT' V . GIVE 'Z 1 A I B-BOT- K MAW, SUM -A PROPER 1 TREMENJUS A TEA AW' A s dunt.- ) . T rxxLt S 7v .5 : unmam mi m POGO 1 eat A copy ofcap'h wtMBrz AWU.TACli yOU HOW TO 6y Walr ICcIIy W2 IT TO 5V PiiOvcv ef urts MisePj) j rr wmt cum FAR BHOi&u. WULP OF SOWS w i His WAY TO wen?? of you? pxo ri ve was euor at rwtct'ourof S4 5: OP THg WCSU THAT'S A
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 4, 1955, edition 1
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