FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 2, 156 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE Three Zoology Professors At Research Meet The UNC Dept. of Zoology will be represented by three faculty members at the Atlantic Estuarine Research Society in Solomons, Md. today and tomorrow. Dr. Melbourne R. Carriker and Dr. Charles E. Jenner, .associate professors, and Rudolph Schel tema, graduate assistant, will pre sent papers at the meeting. The event, sponsored by . the Chesa peake Biological Laboratory, will center around "problems of the productivity of the tidal stretches of rivers." Df. Carriker will deliver papers dealing with the use of narcotics in oyster drilling and with the larvae of the hard clam. Dr. Jen ner and Dr. Scheltema will de liver reports concerning the ma rine snail, Nassarius obsoletus. Dr. Jenner has used specimens from various points on the East ern Seaboard in his studies. While at Solomons Dr. Carriker will confer with representatives of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Ser vice, sponsors of his current re search project. School Board Sets Program For Assemblv The program for the Delegate Assembly of the North Carolina School Boards has been announc ed by Dr. Charles E. Jordan, president, and Guy B. Phillips, executive secretary. Approximately 500 persons are expected to attend the meeting which will be held on November 17th at UNC. Featured speakers will include William Friday, president of the Consolidated University; John R. Foster, of Greensboro, president of the Odell Mill Supply Co.; A. S. Brower, chairman of the state board of education; and Ed win Gill, state treasurer. Registration will begin at 10:30 a.m. November 17th in the lobby of Carroll Hall. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS FALL BARGAINS IN DRAMA Cavalcade of Comedy 21 brilliant comedies from Jonson to Coward. A big handsome volume for long enjoyment! Published at $7.50. $4.49 Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Seventy-one lyrics, from such en during hits as South Pacific, Ok lahoma, and Show Boat. Published at $2.50. - Our Special $1.29 The Laughton Story, by Kurt Sing er. Sidesteps filmdom gossip for a sound readable picture of one of our great actors. Illustrated. Pub lished at $3.95. Our Special $1.29 The Shakespearean Scene, by Her bert Farjeon. A nice book of En glish criticism. Our Special $1.29 Show Business Is No Business, by Al Hirschfeld. The' artist-writer has plenty of fun with Broadway lunacies and so will you! Pub lished at $2.95. Our Special $1.29 THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin St. Open Till 10 P.M. FUEL OIL Gulf Solar Heat Plus srosene Phone BENNETT & i INCUKKOKAI fcU 105 E. Franklin . - - FREE Covering i Fall film series ' The Belles of St. Trinians will be shown tonight at 8 p.m. in Car roll Hall. Starring Alistar Sims, the movie is part of the Graham Memorial Activities Board -sponsored Fall Film Series. PHILOSOPHY LECTURE The Depts. of Philosophy at UNC and Duke will jointly sponsor a lecture by Professor H.L.A. Hart of University College, Oxford, at 4 p.m. Monday in Graham Memorial's Woodhouse Confer ence room. Professor Hart's topic will be "Knowledge and Action." WUNC-TV WUNCTV, the University's edu cational television station, Chan nel 4: , 12:45 Music 1:00 Today on the Farm Lambda Chi Will Honor The 'Lambda Chi Alpha will hold a banquet tonight in the Morehead Planetarium Dining Room at 6 p.m. in honor ' of J. Spencer Love, chairman of Bur lington Industries. After the conclusion of the banquet, Love will be initiated into the social fraternity as an honorary member. Love's initia tion will be, according to Lambda Chi Alpha members, a tribute to his outstanding contributions to ward the betterment of education in North Carolina. A Consolidated University trustee, Love is also a member of the Development Planning Com mittee, and has been a contribut ing donor to university facilities, such as WUNC-TV the Institute of Government, and the football team. ' " ' ' Love, attended the Harvard Business School and left it in 1917 ' - Kattsoff $ Book Out "Logic and the Nature of Reali ty," a new book by Dr. Louis O. Kattsoff of UNC has been releas ed by Martinus Nijhoff. Publisher, The Hague. In his book, Dr. Kattsoff, Pro fessor of Philosophy at U.N.C., critically studies linguistic move ment and attempts to lay the foundation for a metaphysic. He seeks and finds in the structure of logic a key to the structure of reality. 5 In the course of development, questions of the nature of uni versals, negative facts, meaning, events and others are discussed. Dr. Kattsoff, a U.N.C. faculty member since 1935, completed his A.B., A.M.' and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Pennsylvania. Another one of his bodks is, "A Philosophy of Mathematics." a text for courses in logic and the foundation, of mathematics published in 1948 by the Iowa State College Press. CLASSIFIEDS HI-WAY SERVICE STATION, ON the curve in Carrboro, has "U-WASH-IT" 0f. - Premium gas 31.90, regular gas 29.90. FRIGID AIRE FLAT-TOP, APART mefit style. Suitable for any room. Chromium-trimmed vinyl top. Only $100. 44" Walnut gate leg table, $45. Also large' radio cabinet, $5.' Phone 9-7593. ; WANTED CARRIER FOR MORN ing newspaper route. Car requir ed for route. Call 3721 for in formation.' 6161 i BLOGKSIDGE i t - St. Phone 6161 ' PARKING he Campus 1:30 Notes on Music 2:00 Big and Basic 5:45 Music 6:00 Children's Corner 6:30 News 6:45 Sports 7:00 Science Fair 7:30 Art Today 8:00 Know Your Schools 8:30 Prelude 9:00 VA Hosptial . 10:00 Final Edition WUNC WUNC, the University's FM ra dio station: 7:00 Intermezzo 7:15 Assignment Middle East 7:30 People Take the Lead 8:00 Let's Listen to Opera 10:15 News 10:30 Evening Masterwork Banquet Love Here to serve in World War I. During World War II he worked on the War Production Board and later on the Business Advisory Council of the Dept. of Commerce. In recognition of .his accumu lated experience and service in the business field. Elon College in 1951 and UNC in 1953 bestow ed honorary Ph.D.'s upon Love. Invitations to the banquet h'ave been extended to "everal Univer sity officials, including President William Friday, Chancellor Rob ert House, Dr. Katherine Car michael, Cecil Johnson, C. E. Teague, and John M. Morehead. An invitation was also mailed to former President Harry S. Truman, who is an honorary mem ber of Lambda Chi Alpha, and a personal friend of Love. Y-Night Committees Open For Membership ; According to Jim Itaugh, co chairman for Y-Night, membership on the following committees is still open: production, talent, publicity, program, reception and arrange ments. Anyone interested in organizing talent and helping to plan the pro gram is urged to fill out an appli cation in the Y office by noon Tuesday. Church Plans Student Supper Members of the United Student Fellowship have been invited to be guests of the United Congrega tional Christian Church at a cov ered dish supper at the new Par ish House at 6 p.m. Sunday. At the supper meeting the pro posed 1957 budget will be offered for the consideration of the mem bers of the church. The proposed budget has been prepared by the Finance Com mittee, with Philip P. Green as chairman, in consultation with representatives of each of the boards and comniittees of the church. Other members of the finance committee are: Mrs. B. A. Hoft; Hugh Hartshorn; Thomas Peyton; Eugene Stewart; Reid Suggs; and Preston J. Wisker.' m One of the major budget items to be considered is the continua tion of the Capital Improvements Fund. Mrs. William D. Basnight is in charge of arrangements for the supper sponsored by the Women's Fellowship of the church. This will be the first church-wide meet ing in the new building, now nearing completion. UNC StudcntElected To Accounting Group NEW YORK Richard James Tuggle. University of North Caro lina Student, has been elected a member of the American Institute of Accountants. This is the na tional professional society of cer tified public accountants. ; t Tuggle is a member of the North Carolina Association of .Certified Public Accountants. Plans Nov Underway For New Dormitories Plans for the building of three new men's dormitories and an ad ditional wing for Spencer Dorm are underway. Raymond WeeTcs of Durham, ar chitect for the Spencer addition, died last week. However, according to University Business Manager Claude Teague, "the architectual plans for this wing along with the plans for the : men's dorms are practically completed." "The con- Duke Univ. Tenor Performs Sunday Night John Hanks, tenor, will be fea tured soloist in the second pres entation of Les Petites Musicales Sunday at 8 p.m. in the main lounge of Graham Memorial. Assistant professor of music at Duke University, Hanks received undergraduate training at Okla homa University and Julliard, and his A.M. degree at Columbia in 1950. Since that time Hanks has sung in opera, concert, radio, TV, and oratoria in New York and other major cities. His musical career has also included soloist appear ances with the Springfield, Okla homa University and Juilliard, and New Haven Symphony Orchestras, and with the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C. This Sunday night's Petites Mu sicales program will consist of songs in English and Italian for voice with harpsichord, and a group of twentieth-century Eng lish songs for voice with piano accompaniment. The soloist's ac companist will be Henery " M. Cook. Sponsored by GMAB, the con cert is presented admission-free to the public. Deadline Is Monday For Sweetheart Candidates Men's dormitories entering can didates in the- Sweetheart of UNC Dorms Contest must turn in 8 by 10 glossy photographs of their entries by Monday, accord ing to Interdormitory Council President Sonny Hallford. The Sweetheart will be crown ed at the Nov. 14 meeting of the IDC. She " will receive a loving cup, roses and a ten dollar gift certificate, i In addition, her picture will ap pear in the 1957 Yackety Yack. Judges for the contest are Bob Cox of Town and Campus. Mrs. Kay Kyser and Dr. William Po teat ot the Philosophy Depart ment. 4-Year College Chartered At Fayefteville RALEIGH (AP) A new four year Methodist college at Fayette ville was issued a charter Thurs day and the chairman of the col lege's board of trustees said, "we are officially in business now." j The charter was issued at a ceremony in the office of Secre tary of State Thad Eure. On hand were Terry Sanford of Fayette ville, chairman of the new' col lege's board; Rev. Vergil Queen of Durham, trustee and president of the North Carolina Conference Board of Education, and Rev. W. L. Clegg of Raleigh, vice chairman of the college board. The 24 members of the board of trustees were listed as Jhe in corporators for the institution. The college is one of two authoriz ed last spring by a special session of the North Carolina Conference of the Methodist Church. A char ter was issued recently for a sim ilar college to be established at Rocky Mount. I The new Fayetteville college will be erected on a 700-acre site, already acquired, three miles north of Fayetteville on the Ra leigh highway. Residents of Cumberland Coun ty have pledged to raise some $2 million in the initial capital out- lo.r fnr the pnllpan anH annthr 2Vz million is in the process of beins raised among member churches of the conference. Rev. Queen is chairman of a ' committee seeking a president for the college. 'This post is expected to be filled in the near future. v tract has not yet been let," he said. Teague stated, It is hoped that this building program will be be gun before Christmas arid will be completed in about a year." The new wing of Spencer will accommodate 75 additional girls. Also, the dining room will be en larged. , The men's dorms which will face Navy Field will each accomodate 200 students. - ' v Last fall, the building project wa3 proposed after a request for a 2 million dollar government loan was granted by the Federal Gov ernment's Housing and Home Fin ance Agency. The loan will be paid back from the surplus received from a $30 increase in dorm room rent. The increase went into effect last year. GLASS CUTS (Continued from Page 1) .. draw up a proposal. The commit tee's proposal, supposedly, will contain recommendations of the student government committee. . This special committee will re port to the entire council this af ternoon at the meeing in Manning Hall, law school building. The council will then take ac tion, either negatively or affirma tively. YOUNG'S STATEMENT Concerning the proposed revis ion of the attendance regulation, President Bob Young said: "Four other students and I met with the committee ... to discuss the present class attendance regu lations and also discussed modifi cations we thought necessary. "The students agreed in prin ciple with a tentative set of regu lations that the committee had drawn up to discuss with us. "I feel the Faculty Committee gave the highest consideration to the comments we made. "I would like to-urge that the council approve the report Che committee has drawn up. "If the council should not see fit to approve this report, I feel we have done all within our pow er as responsible student leaders to find a satisfactory set of regu lations." v w if r-JaP yr - p-!, v,, ' P ' VY DON'T JUST STAND THIKI ' ta3:i STCI(lE! MME 25 f t t JfSy Sticklers are simple 'riddles with two-word rhyming 'PX V Kgr"V;..M answers. Both words musti have the same number of lg V ''' syUables. (No drawings, please!) We'll shell out $25 : fg f; Brtn - - for all we use and for hundreds that never see print. ' If Sittfn --- - So send stacks of 'em with your name, address, . i' . iV ' j: J (, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, m. V; ? I 000- : ' Mount Vernon, N.-Y. - ' X J 1 nn?P7naG A. T. Co. 1 I ! V , v. : K DR. WARNER WELLS . . . Lectures Next Week Last Medical Lectures Set For Next Week The last in a series of six post graduate medical lectures will be given at' Morganton and Ashsville Wednesday and Thursday by Dr. Warner Wells of the UNC School of Medicine. Dr. Wells will lecture in Mor ganton Wednesday. At 4 p.m. he will speak on "Radiation Sick ness" and at 7:30 p.m. he will talk on "Intestinal Obstruction." The same two talks will be given the following day in Asheville at 5 p.m. and 7:45 p.m. The two postgraduate medical courses are being sponsored by the UNC School of Medicine, the UNC Extension Division and the Burke and Buncombe County Med ical Societies. The two medical courses began in September. The Morganton lectures will be given at Grace Hospital and at the Mimosa Golf Club. The Ashe ville lectures will be presented at Memorial Mission Hospital. Last year Dr. Wells' translation and editing of "Hiroshima Dairy"- caused a sensation in the literary world. The book was a Japanese physician's account of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. For sev eral weeks the book remained on the nation's best seller lists. To date the book has been translated into seven foreign languages. : in Ebdl CLEAN ER, FRESHER, SMOOTH ER ! product or. (LhiMw U&Zir&HStnp Beta Xi Elects Pledge Heads The Beta Xi Chapter of the Kappa Psi Pharmaceutical Fra ternity yesierday announced the election of the following officers for- its 1956-57 Pledge Class: President, William Whitaker Moose; Vice President, Hugh Mer cer Clark; Secretary-Treasurer, Joseph Stevens Ferrell; Chaplain, James David Cooke; Social Chair man. Clayton Lyerl-y Dean. Other pledges include: Arthur Long Bradsher, Edward MePhail Britt, Randall Stuart Brown, Thomas Peete Davis, Edward Gar field Faulkner, William .Ronald Freeman, ' Charles Edward Hardy, Donald Rich Humphrey. Payton Donald Jackson, Charles Glenn Lasley, Charles Castello wrognim, uwrge wviu u.w , Gordon Lee OBnant Robert , Hunter fcnearin, uumon wwuu ( Shuford, Jean Willard McSwain, John Parker McNeil, John Caroll Smith, Jesse David Wall, William John Weatherly and Bobby Steve Wood. Thf Dal! v Sisters' . . kA ' IS Tonight S MOVie The GMAB free movie, "The nniw Sisters" will he orrsented VWilJ fMWJ " tonight in Carroll Hall at C and 10 p.m. This gay and bouncing musical starring Betty Grable and June Haver is the true life story of the famous dance team that was the toast of Europe years ago. Carolina Corsair By Don Tracy Here's a fine bouillabaise of love and treachery on the Carolina shore," as Edward Teach goes his piratical way. You'll enjoy every adventurous page! -Published t $3,50 Our Special $1.00 THE INTIMATE V'., BOOKSHOP; "'. '205 E. Franklin St. ; Open Till 10 Km: ' 9 f " I ' ' I f I rlWBni 1 I j fcivli..ijf vrU JO WHiN SMOKE FOLK get together, the chatter matter is fine tobacco. Naturally, that means Lucky Strike. Luckies' taste is worth talking about because it comes from fine tobacco light, mild, good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. As for the Stickler, you call the minutes of a smokers' con vention a Light-up Write-up. Speaking of light- ups, have you tried a Lucky lately? You'll say it's the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked ! amxrica's lwoino manufacture or CIGARETTES AFROTC Honor Squadron To Select New Members The Sabre Air Command, a re cently formed honor squadron of the Air Force ROTC, is beginning selection of new members, a spokesman for the group said yes terday. Membership in the squadron is open to freshman and sophomore cadets with. an acceptable average. Pledge chairman for the groa? urged that all cadets "Look their best and do their best if they want to be accepted into the honor squadron." .Group Studies Press Relations A study of relationships between, the press and the medical profes sion in North Carolina was describ ed Wednesday, November 1st, at thj weeky ,uncheon meeting 0f the Institute for Research in Social Science at the University of North Carolina. The audience included guests from the University's Division of Health affairs. The report, presented by Dr. Roy E. Carter Jr., of the UNC School of Journalism, dealt with ' a project aimed at improving re- lations between doctors and edi- tors by studying the attitudes and experiences of each group with lu c'-il FaH Bargains In HUMOR Wake Me When It's Over, by Ab- ner Dean. Bitter-sweet, verses and drawings about Love and Life. Pub lished at $2.95. Our Special $1.03 The Swiss Family Perelman, by S. J. Perelman. Wonderful off-beat travel book to end all travel. Pub lished at $2:95. Our Special ST.2? Bottoms Up, by Cornelia Otis Skin ner. The beloved monologist takes us to a dinner for obstetricians, to a whacky health bar, to Paris. Whatever she touches, sparkles with her own special kind of mag ic. Published at $3.00. Now $1.25 THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP u 205 E. Franklin St. Open Till 10 P.M. 5 1 var J L Nik ti

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view