SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1953 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGI THXEI Covering I he University Campus EGYPTIAN TO SPEAK "An Fjyptian Looks at U. S. Foreign Policy" will be the topic of an address ttf be given tonight at 7:30 by Hussein Nasser of Cai ro, Ecypt to the Layman's fellow ship of United Congregational Christian Church. The meeting will be in Parish House at 211 W. Cameron Ave. Nasser is an exchange student at UNC for one year from the Uni versity of Cairo. CANTERBURY CLUB The Duke Players will present I a play at tonight's meeting of the DUKE UNIVERSITY STUDENT UNION PRESENTS LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND HIS ALL - STARS IN CONCERT Tuesday, February 1 1 8:00 P.M. DUKE INDOOR STADIUM DURHAM Tickets $1.00 (Unreserved) $1.50 - $2.00 (Reserved) On Sale At Indoor Stadium Box Office Night Of Performance for 7 Civt Her Lovely Cosmetic Gifts For Valentine Exquisitely Styled By Helena Robenstein: Choose From White Magnolia, Heaven Scent, APPi Blossom, Moonlight Night, Fourth Dimension, And Fifth Dimension. Free Gift Wrapping We Will Also Wrap Your Gift For Mailing At No Charge. Just Another Of Sutton's Friendly Services. Whimsy, Romantic Or Humorous . . . Whatever You Want In Valentine Card, You'll Find It In Our Wide Selection. AMERICAN GREETINGS CORPORATION 0JIU DAILY ACROSS 1. A Slav 5. Drudge U Mist from falls 10 Tarts 12. Kxclama. tion 13. Kind of soup 14. Opulent 15. Done (anat.) 16 Greek letter 17 Gold (her.) 18 Weaken 19 Male " nheep 20 River (Ga ) 24 Fish 2V P.mbrace 29 Irregular 31 Gn I nickname 34 Greek island 3.V Close to 2C Latvian river iposs 37. Steward Recruit (US. Navy) 3 Keep 40 .KesMon Of a court 4 2 Chieftain l Arab 41 Depart 44 Accumulate Kind of telephone Netlike fabric I0VN 1 Otttnlt ' Lewi . CROSSWORD 2. Epochs 3. Over hasty 4. Near 5. Out looks 6. Game of cards 7. Senior 8. Greek letter 9. Hot drink 11. Thin stratum 13. The boat builder Uib. 18. Sea soned veal cutlet 21. Eliza beth Re grin a 22. Shield 23. Guido's highest note 26. Jewish month 27. Servile 2S. Huns out (colloq.) SO. Painful spot 31. Semitic local deity 32. Relieved l'- Hlv-t IURI DjJT A T t let IaY"! rf lo'ip m - -- 43 40 Canterbury Club. The supper meet ing will be held at 6 o'clock in the Parish House of the Presbyterian Church. i u WESLEY FOUNDATION Christopher Fry's "A Sleep of Prisoners" will be presented at a joint, meeting of the Wesley Foun dation and the Westminster Fel lowship tonight at 7 o'clock at the Westminster Hut. Included in the play are Charles Singleon, William Sharpe, Carl E. Hester III and Henry Justice. "A Sleep of Prisoners" was writ ten in 1951 and centers around four prisoners of war locked up in a church in enemy territory. The action of the drama comes primaily in a sequence of dreams in which each prisoner in turn demonstrates his own inner re sponse to events. ART LEAGUE MEETING The University Art League, whose constitution was "accepted Thursday by the Student Legisla ture, will hold its first meeting of the new semester tomorrow night in the Library Lecture Hall at 7:30. The purpose of the meeting will be to discuss plans for the blanace of the year, including a planned sidewalk art exhibit for the Spring and a series of lectures and films for the semester. ! Any student who is a member or interested in becoming a mem ber is asked to attend this meet ing, according to the Art League announcement. STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM The regular Statistics Colloqu ium wil be held tomorrow at 4 p.m. in Phillips Hall. Prof. R. C. Bose, a member of the UNC Statistics Department, will speak on fractional factorial experiments. TV PROGRAM " "Credo Guides to Thoughtful Living" will be a new series pre sented on WUNC-TV, channel four, beginning tomorrow at 8 p.m. The series will feature ministers and laymen who will discuss topics both timely and of significant con cern to church people. These will include problems of the home, the church, social relationships, the business world, and government. I MITCHELL SOCIETY Hans Ttohroach and John F. Saturday' Aniwer 33. Talm (Braz.) 38. Covered with flow, era, etc. (her.) 39. Wine re ceptacles 41. Yellow bugle 44. Exist 1 i w izzw- -rr- i. 17 Piii--! ill Dashiell will speak at the 542nd meeting of the Elisha Mitchell So ciety to be held at 7:30 p.m. Tues day in 206 Phillips Hall. Rohroach, visiting math profes sor, will speak on "Some Applica tions of Mathematics to Cryptan alysis." Kenan psychology professor Das hiell, will give a talk on "The Role of Vision in Animal Spatial Or ientation." New members will be elected at the meeting. . , , REVENUE COMMISSIONER James S. Currie, -commissioner of revenue in North Carolina, will discuss taxation and economic growth at a seminar in economics and business set for Carroll Hall Faculty Seminar Room Tuesday at 4 p.m. .' Faculty and graduate students in business administration and economics will attend, along with colleagues from nearby colleges and universities. - HOSPITAL GROUP V "All About Nursing" will e the title of Tuesday's meeting of the Women's Auxiliary of Memorial Hospital. - ' The meeting will be held in the Clinic Auditorium of the School of Medicine at 10 a.m. . STUDENT FUNDS' Heads of organizations which want to initiate aid from strident funds are requested by Student Government Treasurer Bob Carter to see him at the Student Govern ment office before Feb. 15. O tt O t C9 tfrt" T T T T T . 1 klenieinber with - I I -( r - - ' If Y Plans Summer Work Discussion (Continued from Page 1) students with information about types of work, contacts and appli cations, according to Mary Morgan, chairman of the Y committee spon soring the discussions. To conduct the discussions, per sons on campus who have taken part in the programs to be covered in the sessions will be on hand in the Council room oi the Y Building. . Discussion Leaders These people will include: the Rev.. Harry, Smith, who has attend ed various work camps; John Brooks, wrho attended an overseas work camp; Tommy Isley, who will discuss industrial and church work; Henry Sides, who will talk on. car avans; Tom Ray, w'ho has also at tended overseas work camps; Hol land McSwain, who will discuss in stitutional work; Jean Pierre Bois saviet, who will talk on the inter national stadent seminar; and Miss Anne Queen, of the Y staff. SERVE YOURSELF on b EVERY SUNDAY I V- If y E 1 5:3-7:3 P-M- At Tha RANCH HOUS HOME OF CHOICE HICKORY-SMOKED CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS DR. LOUIS G. WELT, profes sor of medicine of the School of Medicine, has been elected president - of the Southern So ciety for Clinical Research for 1958-59 After undergraduate work at New York University, he received his M.D. degree from Yale University School of Medicine in 1938, where he taught prior to joining the UNC faculty in 1952. Tar Heels CHOCOLATES 1 GIVE THE FAMOUS VALENTINE HEARTS (ContinKfd rom Page 1) substitutes and the Duke lead mount ed. Salz was the last to foul out with 1:16 to go. Salz and Brennan paced the Caro lina attack with 19 and 18 points respectively. Tommy Kearn's 15 was good for third and Lee Shaffer had 12. High man tor uukc Newcome with 21. Carolina mad? 24 of 74 shots from the floor for a 32.4 percentage. Duke hit 29 of 64 for a 4o.J mar. Carolina had 27 of 43 foul shots (f,2.8) and Duke had 33 of 43 76.8. The Blue Devils got the rebound ad vantage. 58 to 53. First Half The lead see-sawed back and forth with monotonous regularity in the first half. The Tar Heels were able to gain a substantial lead toward . . 1 A v the latter part ot tne nan. uui . 1 A tremendous Duke rally in tne ias.i three and a half minutes closed a ninp-nnint can to the 36-35 halftime margin. After five minutes of the first stanza the lead had changed hands three times and it sashayed seven more times before intermission. It was largely through the 12 points effort of sophomore Salz that the Carolinians were able to keep the Durham invaders on the move. That along with the fact that the Tar Heels broke a -ii-u ucuuiu at the 4:19 mark on a goal by Uren-1 nan and dropped in nine straight points t'o grab a 37-29 lead. But then Duke came roaring right back and held the Chapel Hillians scoreless while it racked up eight quickies to put things back on almost even terms as the half ended. The statistics were real close dur ing the first 20 minutes. Both clubs got 29 rebounds. Duke hit 13 of 33 from the floor and tlie iar neeis were good for 13 of 36. Duke was 9-16 from the charity line, Carolina was 10-18. If A VALENTINE MESSAGE TO , A SHY CHICK-A-BIDDY Wee Sleekit cow'rin' tim'rous beastie, though life be dull and dreams be yeasty, this missive tells you how you can hog-tie and brand yourself a MAN. Man (homo sapiens), though not, precisely speaking, roaring hot, still serves to put you through your paces and flaunt in other ladies' faces. He can be trained to fetch and carry, and speak, and beg, and even marry. But ere the creature can be taught he must, atas, somehow be caught. On thing there is about the male that makes a thoughtful girl go pale. Although his mind can grasp the far gyrations of th evening star, he's slow at . leva, and navar a nte possibilities. Unless you others raise a fuss he's only aware of brazen hussies. A wise and older dame opines the best reply is Valentines. Send scads of witty ones and gay, that say the things you dare not say, until the poky thing perceives that you're the love liest of Eves! vr meet a ing soul ? Largs variety of btautifvlly dacoratad haorti CHAPEL HILL H-C "You can't go wrong looking for a job these days" Vie assures you. , "Opportunities are great all over. All the good companies have about the same to offer." Do They? A lot of flot-sd-trusting souls think otherwise. They suspect that some companies have much more to offer than others, and they want to find dut which those are. Well help. We want to tell you how much the Bell Tele phone Companies offer in the way of advancement oppor tunities, training, pay and benefits, professional associates and working conditions. No matter what your educational background the arts, the sciences, business or engineering make a date to talk with a Bell interviewer when he visits your campus. You can also get information about the careers these companies offer by reading the Bell Telephone booklet og file in your Placement Office, or by writing for "Challenge and Opportunity" to: College Employment Supervisor American Telephone and Telegraph Company 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. i SUPER-WINSTON ' . rTODUCHONS PRESENTS ADAPTED FROM THE VOVL tlie One That Got Away CLASSIFIEDS LOST: GOLD RING WITH FAMILY crest engraved. Call 83073-Reward John B. Lewis RALLY SUNDAY 9 FEB., START Midway Drive-In Theatre. High way 70 West of Durham. Regis tration begins 1:30. rally 2. Pied mont Sport Car Club. i THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Open Till 10 P.M. (TjX liMJj BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES ; , - . i "" ( WE HAVENT )f. "h- AYE, BLYt, f H-H'0'0'0 ' W WJUOL frHE lookout is TrFtjG .. WINSTON. 1 X LIKE A Xl I fSff 4 C W,NSTON EASY DRAW,MG ONLY ONE WHO HASN1-! TASTES ( CIGARETTE ) l VOR COMES RHTJ V r nocn uK llD AH0y, THERE-ys I nD I CD f wiwlrC I I & J k ff- . C THROUGH TO YOU J V P MATBS, DIG THA T MEW &IUSH-PROOF BOX il'i: R. J. REYNOLDS T0IACCO CO., ' (lNJTOI-li..C. r r