Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 24, 1958, edition 1 / Page 3
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C WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, Henry Spends Time Tackling Two Jobs Graham Memorial's first profes--;hh.,1 director, Howard Henry, ! is at least two big tasks to tackle ! ere. Firt. of course, Henry is famil i .--iin fiimsolf on the operation ..iul personnel within the Univer sity student union. This particular Mk is probably easy for him since I. e had experience as assistant di rector of the spacious stulent i-Mion at the University of Wis- nrivin. Hue of the real problems that II. nry stepped into whwn he as v;inud his new duties July 1 '.s t'i- work and planning for a new .student union building. So far, ll.nry has had relatively little time to consider the needs of a i i w building. II said this week that he will ! uin working out specifications .Iter meeting with the guilding nuivnittee of Graham Memorial's Pn.it d of Directors. This commit t last spring outlined the r.on- r.i needs to bo included in a 11 1,1 J new studenr union building. While he wa- with the Univer- - y of Wisconsin's student union. U.N.C.'S FAVORITE READING A PIECE OF LUCK, by U.X (Ys i .vn Frances Gray I'atton. A fine and thrilling collection of a favo rite instructor's het short stories. Published at $3 00. Our Special $1.00 RCMEMBRANCE WAY, by Chapel Hill's own Jessie Render. A sensi ive and enlightening novel, laid in North Carolina, that belongs on rvery Chapel Hill bookshelf. Pub lished at $3.50. Our Special $1.49 SOUTHERN PART OF HEAVEN, by William Meade Prince. This true story of a Chapel Hill boyhood has sold nearly a thousand copies in our shop alone. It must be good! Published at S3. 75. Our Special $1.93 The Intimate Bookshop 205 Et Franklin Street Open til 10 P. M. fQ) Flexo-Florescent Desk Lamp $7.25 $1.00 Floresccnt Tube FREE Limited Supply A nr n Is The For Place Gifts For Room Needs Come To Muggins Beautiful Store of Exciting Useful And Unusual Gifts. H9 Ilenry was directing nearly. 530 part-time and full-time employes. Here there are no more than :20 students on the Graham Memorial staff. Besides his personnel work, Henry was in charge of reserva tions for the thousands of cljb meetings held both in the Wiscon sin University's student unbn building and elsewhere on the campus. uincr mines mat came under I T T ........ ' .i : ... . . 1 nniiv s uirecuon in Wisconsin in cluded overseeing public areas of the student union building not in-'I eluded within the operation of other departments. Although Ilonrv wnuhi not rlis- i cus to any great extent the stu dent inion needs here, he did n,.:nt ...t .. i. : . i r pwuu inn inn- mi imiii; fAtimpif mi j Graham Memorial's limited facili- ? ties. Henry saw a definite deficiency r in a building that had to close up ninrf nnnrt fnr civ U'nplf c cri t'n) o t i n i j " vear book pictures might be made. i" : ;.u t ; ..4. jcmpoyos Henry (hat work ! positions arc good opportunities ; for students, commenting on n usual good group of potential workers. Already expressing a fondness for Chapel Hill. Henry said he ap preciated the hospitality sho.vn him. his wife and 4 children. Prof. Robert Getty, Given Paddtson Post Hotert .1. deity and Mrs. Getty have arrived here, where Getty is Paddis Professor of Classics. Refore coming to Chapel Hill. Pro fessor Getty taught at the Univer sity College in Toronto. The Gettys, presently staying at the Carolina Inn, have bought a home in Chapel Hill and will bo moving in soon. Getty is an internationally-known I atin scholar and is vice-president of tho American Philological Assn. A native of Londonderry, Northern Ireland, he was graduated from Queen's University. Relfast, jmd Cambridge University. He tau?ht at the University of Aberdeen, Uni versity of Liverpool, St. John's College, and the University of Toronto. Lb Ml ft - ' " - - ; .V" ...-:.-..:. v - T. . . f .-' . " : . .T -'V- - , I'--ljj g ji - V p. - i fcMlHn. I...l.lt.,.l i'v X v'' x -W 'Wvf I . DIRECTOR AT WORK Graham Memorial Director Howard Henry looks over some of the sound equipment which comes under his two fold job. Insurance Conversion Allowed Korea Vets More than fC.".000 Korean conflict veterans will soon be able to eon vert their previously r.oa-converti-ble tvrm GI insurance to permanent GI policies, according to a report from the Veterans Administration. The affected term GI policies art identifiable by te letters "RS" which precede the policy numbers, the VA explained. Beginning next January, a new statute (Public Law 35-8) will pro vide the thousands of "RS" policy holders with three options: 1. To convert Utelr "RS" term pol icies to permanent plans for GI insurance. 2. To exchange their "RS" term policies for a ' limited convertible" term policy carrying a lower premi um rate, but which after Sept 1, KU A 1. I . , , J nJtl0ns f Phillips Russell's latest .-x.u.i null1 jum-u llltrll OUIII birthday. ' 3. To kep their "RS" term poli cies at the currently established premium rates, which increase every five years. The maximum amount of the new type insurnace will be limited in each case by the face amount of the veteran's present "RS" policy. VA listed the types of permanent insurance to be available under the new law as: ordinary life, 20-pay life. 30-pay life, 20-year endown- mcnt, endowment at age GO, and en- W7son Library Closes Kitchen To Public Use The kitchen facilities of of the Li brary Staff Room will no longer be available for public use. The Uni versity Administration has directed that charges cannot be made for the use of these facilities. Their use must be restricted be cause they belong in part to the staff association. Charges for the use of the kitchen have been applied towards the employment of help to clean trie kitchen after each use rnd 'for a fund to replace broken equipment. Organizations using the Library Assembly Room will be permitted to bring refreshments into the Room from the outside. CO Z LU Q. It c2A 13 MS TUAT 1 I i5 o o o a. r 'k -, rTss; ; 7u i y- e " THE DAILY dowment at age 65. The new typo policies like the "RS" policies they may replace will not yield dividends. 1 Only "RS" policyholders will be affected by the new law. Complete information about the conversion or exchange of "P.S" insurance will be available at all VA offices by ree. J, 1033. Russell's Book Translated In 4 Tongues Japanese and Malayan readers will soon have access to transla- book,' 'Jefferson, Champion of the Free Mind." The U. S. Information Agency has notified Russell that its Bok 4 "si - v-.v.v '.-V..- PHILLIPS RUSSELL . . . Jefferson Biographer Translation Program has selected the work for publication in Japa nese and Malayan editions. A Spanish edition, has previous ly been brought out; in Argentina, and a German one in Vienna, Austria. Russell, author of noted biogra phies of Mrs. Cornelia Phillips Spencer, Benjamin Franklin, John Paul Jcncs and Emerson, is a for- mcr newspaperman and professor emeritus of journalism at UNC. "Jefferson, Champion of the Free Mind" is written as a series VVWATWOM'TTIU GOTTA STAY I AWAKE. TAR HEEL Better Reading Is Possible Through Course Improved efficiency in reading and studying is the purpose of the reading program here. Applications for the program are now being received in Room 03 Peabody Hall from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. through Friday. The reading program is a volun tary, non-credit course opea to all University students, graduate and professional, as well as undergrad uate. The course is offered every hour of the day from 8 a.m. to 3 P.m., Monday through Friday. Classes will be arranged to fit the individual schedule. Instruction will begin, Oct. 6 and continue until the Christmas recess. Carolina To Plajf Hcsf To High School! Press The University will be host to sev eral hunderd high school newspaper and yearbook editors and staff mem bers Saturday, Oct. 4, at the Seven teenth Annual North Carolina Schol astic Press" Institute. Plans for the institute were drawn up by Acting Director Chris Folk of Charlotte in the absence of Director Walter Spearman, who has been on leave from the University during the past year to study at Harvard on a fellowship from the Fund for Adult Education. Spearman returned to the University this fall and will serve as director of the institute. Saturday morning will be devoted to group sessions nad panels on va rious phases of newspaper work, in cluding news writing, editorial writ ing, feature writing, sports, writing and advertising. Ending the one-day session will be a banquet Saturday evening in Lenoir Hall with Greensboro Hu morist David Morrah, frequent con Intercollegian Is Sponsoring Photo Contest A contest for college student photographers is being sponsored by The Intercollegian, a magazine published by the National Student YCMA-YWCA. Theme of the contest is student life and education in America, and $850 in prizes in equipment and cash are olfered. The deadline for entries is Nov. 1. Prize-winning pictures will be published in The Intercollegian and exhibited at the YMCA-YWCA National Student Assembly in Ur bana, Illinois, Dec. 28, 1958, to Jan. 3, 1959. For complete contest rules and an entry blank students may write to Intercollegian Photography Con test, 291 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. 1 The first prize winner will re ceive $150 and first choice of a piece of equipment, and second prize winner $50 and choice of one piece of equipment. Third through fifth prizes will be equip ment, and sixth prize will be a 3.5 Flash Flex Capacitor Flashgun, courtesy Burleigh Brooks, Inc. Honorable Mention awards will al so be made. of short vignettes, each illustrat ing a facet of Jefferson's thinking. Russell's book was published two years ago. GRAHAM AT t MEETING Willard Graham, UNC profes sor, will be in New York City Thursday and Friday attending, a meeting cf the . Committee on Ac counting Procedures of , the Amer ican Institute of Certified.. Public Accountants. If i' 3! I p TH, IS JUST fCVIN' TO OffCUM fttBRAb count aaozzz I ' - ' 7 w . 7 7"'' r 'i&cwm ws eyes t COLINTSY GOTTA lggf overii ! . - ! UNC CHESS CLUB ! There will be an organisational meeting of the ITXC ChJs Club tonight at 8:15 in Roland Parker I and II at Graham MenoriaL. Anyone interested ,in partici pating in UNC chess activities has been urged to atteiid. r STEERING COMMITJBE The Steering ComnUttee of Can terbury Club will . met Thursday at 2 p.m. in the Parish House of the Episcopal Chu?ch. All mem bers of the Sieving Committee are urged to attend. PRE-MED MEETWG There will be ,?u meeteing. on Oc tober 2 at 5 p.ihv'in Gerrard Hall for all pre-mecji students or other students interested in volunteer work at hte hospital. ' " tributor .to the Saturday Evening Tost and author of several volumes of humor, as the chief speaker. ' The institute is sponsored each year by the University's School of Journalism, the University Exten-. p ion Division, The Daily Tar . Hri,; student newspaper, and the . N. C. Department of Public Instruction f IP i v If if 4 SPIKE SPrGENER . . . SPI President Two Instructors Added By ISII The UNC Naval ROTC unit-has added two new assistant professors of Naval Scitnce. to its staff, Lt. Ronald D. Bartlett and Lt. (j.g.) Ambrose A. Clegg Jr. Lti Barlett, who will teach naval operations and shipboard naviga: tion, is native cf Sauna, Kansas.. He reentered the. Naval Reserve in 1943, attended Navy Preflight school at the UNC Campus in 1844, and become a regular Navy officer in 1955. During this time, Barlett completed his AJ3-. degree in psychology at Kansas Wesleyan University. His last, position was patrol plane comirnanderand sur vival officer with an airborne .early warning squadron at Patuxent River Naval. Air Station, Lt. Clegg holds a B.A. degree from St. John's University . kx Biooklyn, N.Y., find an M.A. dfr gree from Ccliiibia . UaivenSity, where he also took a professional diploma in school administration and did work toward a doctorate in education administration. He attended tl Officer Candi date School at Newport, R. I., and was commissioned in the Naval Reserve in 1955. Lt. Clegg , report ed to Chapel . Hill after- a three year tour of ; duty , with the Alaskan Sea Frontier Command as an operations officer. During his last year in Alaska he', was , president of the Kodiak and Aleutian Islands Historical Society. ; N u ca v iteAjr zips AW WM B?AfKl ' but-::: LU C3 onfur f MEPE COtAESX ;f lYOl'fcBUDrxJ J 1 1 ( if CATHOLIC STUDENTS AND FRIENDS . A Parish Dance with a 12-piece orthestra is being sponsored for Catholic students arid friends. The dance will be held from 3 to 12 p.m. in Weidenger Hall of the Saict Thomas More Church. The -admission will be $1.5a per couple to be paid at the door. YOUNG DEMOCRATIC CLUB The first meeting of the YDC will be held tonight-at 8 p.m. in the court room of the Law School. State YDC presidential candi dates will speak and present their platforms. The floor will be open fox questions after each speaker. Ai short business meeting will fol low the speakers. The meeting will be conducted by George Coggin. UNC-YDC President. WUNC-TV PROGRAM SCHEDULE Wednesday, September 24 8:45 Morning Music. 8:55-Morhing News. 9:00 United States History. 9:30 Physical Science. 10:00 World History. lf):30 Mathematics. li:00 Elementary French. 1:15 Facts of 'Medicine. l:45r Heritage! 12:15 Mid-Day News. 12:30 Today On The Farm. 1:00 Play. Period. 1:30 Music In The Air. 2:0Q-r-Sqience and Nature. 2:30-N. C. Museum of Art , Presents., 3:00 Art of . the Theatre. 3:30 Methods for Modern Teachers. 4:00 Career Opportunities. 4:30 Sign Off. 6; 15 Friendly Giant. 6:30 Repor.t 7:00 Russian History. 7:45 Education of the Gifted Child 8:30 Sunday SchooL. 9:00 Concert Hour. 9:30 Film Feature. 10U)0 Final Edition. 1Q;05 Tomorrow On Channel 4. 10:07 Sign Off. UNC CARDBOARD UNC cardboard will meet this CLASSIFIEDS RUBBER STAMPS UDE TO OR der. Ledbetter Pickard, Stationary store. 157 E. Franklin St. -: ,rl ! rmrf'1 t v r V Enroll Now!; Typewriting Course Septl 24 Nov. 11 Shorthand! Course Sept. 24 Jan. 16 Afternoon & Evening Classe; VtQiVSrW'LASSES (Located' oyer; Sutton's Drug Store) ; Chapel Hill No rth Carolina . ISvfe, rrariklm'.SrV ' -:- Phone 92681 DAILY , ACROSS v , 1. Mining ex cavation. 6. Flaccid ; 10. Seraglio,; 11. Winglike 12. Armadillo ' 13. Food igran 15..Pliilippinet capita) . 17. Bristle 1. , VoTCtfJC . - rock " CROSSVORD 4. Danger 5-Type . measure 6. Chou . En- 7. Tsroijtie4 8-Boya . 9. Feijrj, IS. Mother- lesa( carves 14. Most do: mes&cated 20. Shem; (var.) .18, Music ate 21. Stitch, ; la.Flrmis'h 24; Sulistde seaport 28. Northeast. . (abTsr.) 27.P.ec?(atto!i, areas. 31. Greettne;.. : ; (slang ' S2. Cuckoo Malt kila t. yar.) 34. Ovum 36. 'Western . university itbbr.) 3d. Tjny .brook.. il.Fjoiitr&Uoh (Chin.) vessels (Brit) 4T.R1V4C (It) 48. Ore .vein 49. Cost. 50. Tortoise , 51. Borders . DOWK 1. False . 2. Mulberry . cloth . 3. Algerian 21. Orb 22. Quatod IS". L at PACi.fHE Gam pus afternoon at 4 p.m. at its office in Emerson Stadium. Object of the meeting will be to plan the year'a program. The meeting will open to old and new members. DENTAL DAMES The Dental Dames will meet next Monday night at 8 p.m. in the Library. A get-acquainted social hour will follow the business meeting. These semi-monthly meetings are open to all wives of dental students. The University School of Nursing utilizes classrooms, hospitals, out patient and community facilities to provide students with a broad back ground in professional nursing. There needn't be. You ctn get a head start on your savings pro gram by beginning now, whttt you're in college. Life insurance offers you a combi nation of protection and savings, and by starting your program now. you will have the advantage of lower premiums. See your Provident Mutual cam pus representative for more infor mation on a variety of plans., "which may be tailored to your indi vidual present and future needs. PETER V. VANSTORY henry Mcpherson; LARRY THORP 119 N. Columbia St. Smith Bldg. Phone 9-9071 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company c Phifadelohli-im NEED TYPEWRITING AndOr SHORTHAND? I 23. Bur mese native 23. Bushel , . (abbr.) 2S.Yesv . (dial) 29. Ante-. . lop- 30. Nay' 35. Low "spirits 37. Behold 1 1:'4 2lrJNk: Tsslitrlsjs Aaiwtr 44. Sorrows 46. Mr. Mack, emcee 40. Femala 42. Neat 43. - - upon si tlme; 43. Hebrew, letter i 21 77ft '7 4 VA. 4W 'JO rj 1 21 3d.. 45 VXX sr TT "r T" "t" ml 1;1 Mr rrr u 1 1 vi u 1 it 1 At 1. - jj i i 1 l-,...i'y..... It
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 24, 1958, edition 1
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