i y'y'y TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1958 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PASS TitlSS ""V' "y (ti' r- y y dVGiing E" 1 3 I 19 MB kF Urt iversiry vampus Y STUDY GROUP The Y Study Group on Campus S.;l problem will meet today n the Y f'r.binet room at 5 p.m. Iuu Scssoms will lead a discus- Of Course the Intimate Has AKU - AKU We've been plotting for weeks. Just make your ChrHmas shopping n orrier this year - and pal, we've : evorithing! THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 2!W East Franklin St. Chaprl Hill Open Till 10 P.M. sion on campus apathy. STATE STUDENT LEGISLATURE The State Student Legislature will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. In Gra ham Memorial. PLANNING MARRAGE? . Guaranteed diamond all stylet and settings by brokers repre stntativt.-20 to 40 savings. Tennj arranged. Call or writa today: . . JOHN RHOADES Box 1073.: : Phont' S-5857 O M t tflf, - '' r , - .. ,m )t V-nuv ' - "'""""" n Willi m. iiiiT.wiri iiiiji..ii1mji,ii, N - - I l jl Gosh fro sl! hov'd you catch on o quick? Catch cn to the fact that Coca-Cola U the hep drink on campus, I mean. Always drir.k it, you say? Well how about dropping over to the dorm and downing a parcne Coke or two with the boys. The man who's (or Coke is the man for us. SjGN 0p G00D TASTE DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. k ' V 1 v v ! '' ; Easing I if mmimm nnrl vmi wnnt n rmfnrtnm. r ( yy I P y Vii jiwwv wn w ....... w . - w I refreshing ride . ' 1 LIBRARY COMMITTEE The Library Committee will meet today at 7 p.m. In room 315 in the library, The meeting is open to any one who wishes to come. UNIVERSITY CLUB The University Club will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in Pi Hall, 3rd floor New West. Eight-millimeter movies of the University of Virginia game and of the UNC Homecoming; Queen's presentation wUI be shown. FACULTY CLUB- The workings of a university press Ciub y UNC press director Lam bert Pavis , at a . luncheon today at wiU be explained to , the Faculty 1 p.m. in the Carolina Inn. pavis will speak. on, "How a Uni versity, Press -Wxrks, and Why." Ho has been director of the UNC Press for the past 10 years. lie was previously en editor for Bobbs Merrill, Jlarcourt-Brace and Street and. Smith all. New York publish ing houses. . A graduate of the University of Virginia with A. B. and M. A. de grees Davis was managing editor and editor of the Virginia Quarterly Review for 10 years. . i CARIBBEAN CONFERENCE Natural resources of the Caribbean area will be discussed by Pr. J. C. P. Blaine at an annual conference to be beld Pec. 4-6 at the Univer sity -of -Florida's School of Inter American Studies. - Dr. Blaine, who is professor of transportation in the- UNC School of Business Administration, will participate in the ninth annual Con ference of the Caribbean in Gaines ville, Flft. He will be on a panel discussing agriculture resources Thursday, and the following day will talk on min eral and water resources. Trade relations with Caribbean na tions has been a special study area for Dr. Blaine for several years. A member of the UNC faculty for the past 20 years, he holds the mas ter's and doctor's degrees from here. His undergraduate degree is from the Queen's Univrsity at Kingston, Ontario, Canada. CHEM FEMS The Chem Ferns will tour the Ackland Art Center Thursday, Pec. 4 at 7:15 p.m. Following the tour refreshments will be served at the home of Joanne Johnson, 144 King St. PHILOLOGICAL, CLUB Thomas Patterson, associate pro fessor of Dramatic Art, will b the speaker for the philological Club. Patterson will talk on "Behind the Scene with Playwright and Pi- rector" at 7:30 p.m. in the Faculty Loungd of the Morehead Plane tarium. In his paper Patterson, who teaches courses in playwriting at UNC, will bridge the gap between the literary student of plays and the playwright-director. A native of Mississippi, Patter son was educated at the University of Texas, National University of Mexico, Yale University, and Stan ford University. PLANNERS CONFERENCE City and regional planning spec ialists from UNC and other, points in the southeast will gather in Nash ville, Tenn., Pec. 3-7 for an Ameri can Institute of Planners' regional chapter meeting. Philip P. Green Jr., Robert E. Stipe and 'Shirley F. Weiss will rep resent the UNC Pepartment of City and Regional Planning and the In stitute of Government at the meet ing. Miss Weiss, representing the Ur ban Studies Program, is chapter secretary-treasurer and will take part in business sessions, Stipe, who is a member of the executive com mittee and chairman of the chap ter's N. C. section, will also at tend these sessions. Green is professor of publis law and government and, like Stipe, is an assistant director of the Insti tute of Government.' CULTURE WEEK EVENTS The Executive Committee of the North Carolina Symphony ; Society Will meet Pec. 5 in Raleigh. The dinner meeting is to be held in the Manto Room of the Hotel Sir. Walter Raleigh at 6:15 p.m. 0 Shopping Ays TILL This meeting will be held in con junction with the events of Cultural Veek being observed in Raleish through Pec. 6.: The North Carolina Symphony Society is one of the or ganizations which annually partici pates in the week's program dedi cated to the arts. M. Elliott Carroll, state president of the Symphony Society, has an nounced that the Executive , Com mittee plans to complete plans .for the Orchestra's ' 14th . annual . tour which will begin in January JL959 and extend into May;, The .North Carolina Symphony is partially sup ported by a grant-in-aid from the state legislature. UNC SOCIOLOGIST University computer operations will be studied by Pr. Paniel O. Price of UNC in Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 2-5 at two national conferences. Pr. Pric vlho directs UNO's Institute for Research in Social Science, will first attend the Uni versity of Pennsylvania symposium on the relation of the university computer center to the community-at-large. Beginning immediately afterward will be the Eastern Joint Computer Conference. , Earlier this year Pr. Price was co-recipient of a National Science Foundation grant to study the use oi high speed computers in socio logical research and particularly their application in the study of rrigratiun. The UNC professor oi bociology is an advKer to the U. S. Government on plans for the 1930 census, , and is a director and treasurer of the Population Assn. of Amepca. UNC Symphony ram At 8 Prog The UNC Symphony Orchestra, Earl Slocum conducting, will give its first program of the season in Hill Hall today , at 8 p.m. i j The, major work to be played on this fifth concert of the Tuesday Evening Series is Edward Elgar's Enigma Variations." ; The rest of the. program wili consist of 'Choral and . Fugue" by J. S. Bach, tran scribed jEor orchestra by J. J. Abert; "Passacaglia for Orchestra" by Ralph. Punlap, a member of the orchestra; '.Fentasia on. Green sleeves''by R. Vaughan Williams; and Tschaikow sky's "Overture J812." . . . . . . ; ElgaiV "Enigma Variation," written in 1899, is "Pedicated to My Friends Pictured Within." This series 14 variations sketches in music ihe portraits . of 13 friends. The last variation is really the finale, but Elgar calls it the 14th variation" . because of the ill- luck attaching to the number," Some of the people represented in the music are the composer's wife, a pianist, an actor, a country squire, a violist, an architect, and a publisher. UNC Professor To Speak In Pas Strub Series Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pa., has selected Prof. John G. Kunstmann, chairman of the UNC Pepartment of Germanic Languages, to inaugurate its new Joseph Strub Lectures ta Mediaeval Studies.- Pr. Kunstmann will speak Friday night, Pec. 6, on "Some Unprofes sional Remarks on the Elijah-Epi- Of Course the Intimate Has The Littlest Angel 1 We've been planning for months to make your Christmas shopping mer rier .than ever. - and pal, the old barn is bulging with goodies! THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East5 Franklin Si. : Chapel Hill Open Till 10 P.M. sode of the Old High German Mus pilli." The series, named after the university founder, will be inaugu rated on the Puquesne campus in the newly-dedicated Rockwell Hall. Of Course the Intimate Has Lolita For months we've b?en plotting to make your Christmas shopping more fun than ever this yeiv We've tried fortune tellers and dawsinfi rods we even tried to'Dorrow- an IBM machine just so we could out-guess you and have the book you wanted most of- all! : O K pal - we've got it! THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East'Fraiiklia St. . Chapel rim Op.en Till 10 P3I. 3 Cook Books For Christmas V - i From ihe old stand-bys like THE JOY OF; COOKING to the gay little , cock books in the Peter, Pauper dallar gift editions, you'll find, our selection full of gift possi bilities. ; The Intimate Bookshop 205 East Franklin Street ; Open Till 10 P.M. 4 i 8f Si r : 1 seven consecutive dividend increases for our policyholders since 1952 have helped keep Northwestern Mutual agents OUT FRONT with low net cost life insurance and restriction free contracts. Investigate a Northwestern career by signing up for a Dec. 18th interview. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. U.1."1. 111 -"'-mil, ii iiiiiiiiii.-. I, I A Shopp u iil Vrt iritiiaJ LatJ MISS MARY ANN MOBLEY - : i . . . Miss America photo by High Point Enterprise Of Course the Intimate Has Doctor Zhivago For months we've been scheming to make your Christmas shppping this year the merriest ever - and believe us, we've really piled up the best books for .your choice! Come join the fun! THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East Franklin' St. Chapel mil Open TiU 10 P.M. Now Miss America Misses School Life Front Chapr! Hill to: I-way KNoviU.E $3-03 ThruJ,incr (no change) service RALEIGH $ .3 8 Convenient trips daily 5 Plus Tax From Chapel Hill to: 1-way CHARLOTTE 4L25 Convenient Limited service ,, WASHINGTON ............. $7.75 , Thru-Liner Limited service ; Pius Tax UNION BUS 311 VV. Franklin Sf: STATION Phono 4281 f (If I J I ' LsuuL-Sut.. CLASSIFIEDS t t THE NORTHWESTERN WAS THE first major life insurance com pany fo step down rates on all policies as the policy amount steps up. Phone -369lr Matt. Thompson, Arthur DeBerry, Jr. (chg.) FOR. SALE:: PORSCHE 1600 super, 1958 model, red, 8,000 miles, excellent condition. For- further details please phone Purham 7193. (1-6682-6) , RE WARP FOR RETURN OF ' Marion High School class ring Yellow gold with blue stone. In itials M. E. T. Return to Max Toney, 310 Manly, Phone 8-9115, (1-8581-4) , BRANP NEW PUPLEX ; APART ment. 1 bedroom, large Jjving mom, kitchen, dinette, and tile bath. Stove and refrigerator By CHUCK FLINNER "I used to say, "Oh if only I didn't have to go to school today, but now I miss it." ; Bea.Uj'.iful, . dharming Mary Ann Mobley would have been a senior this year at Old Miss but a slight delay is involved in the whirlwind life of being Miss America. Her pretty face hasn't been turned from an education, though. She intends to return to the University of Mississippi next year and con tinue her course of study in speech and English. She will also take edu cation courses to gain a teacher's ertificate. '' After graduation she hopes to use her - $10,000 scholarship for grad uate school. Her plans after that are uncertain, she says, but after grad school she believes she will know what she wants. The 21 year-old personification of pulchritude visited Thomasville for the Thanksgiving holidays. Each year for the past three years Miss America has kicked off the Christ mas season in the town of about 15,000 known as the "Chair City.'' The event involves a parade, a beauty pageant, a Miss America ball and other gatherings to fete the beauty and the season. The petite, 114 pound brunette met the press wearing an orange and green plaid Ban Lon knit sheath skirt and .blouson top with thre quarter length push up sleeves An orange scarf and was wrapped neatly at the throat. Her shoes were pf brown reptile. She were one larce bracelet and no other jewelry. Commenting on her extensive travels which have included 35 ! '"9 T'P - Mqke Stevens-Shepherd's YOUR UU-U LJ i i 1 I 1 W UU XI u A TRULY FABULOUS ARRAY Of FINfe GIFTS " FOR MEN OF DISCRIMINATING TASTE "Everywhere you go people are very nice. In the North some envy my Southern accent." she still en joys Southern food and loves fried chicken. Since becoming Miss Amei ca, "I had to get used to the fast pace I had to increase my Mis sissippi pace." The bright brown-eyed beauty is a sports girl. In high school she was a majorette, a member of the "pee wee" basketball team and went out for track. "At home (Brandon, Miss., 2500) everyone goes out for something." Her preferences are water skiing and tennis. "I'm not very good at them but I love them both." She hopes to improve . her knowledge of sports by learning how to ski on snow this winter, j She is now learning golf. . . Talking about dating she said, "I have never gone steady. Mother and Pad preferred that I did not, and I am glad I did not. -They asked me how ; I would know a certain boy was the right one if I did not go out with anyone , else. Of course, it is a personal matter." She was teased about dating a Wake Forest student in .Winston-rSalem, but she explained, "We met . at a debating meet and just dated, that's all." i - The matter of marriage proposals came up and she laughed. '"Most are from fraternity boys as a trick on someone. Some.- I guess,' are serious. I had one proposal from an II year-old; He broke open his piggy bank and. bought a gold ring witb a stone. It was taped to the letter he sent. He wrote, 'I don't have, tou eh money now, but maybe u.'hi; vmir reien is over I can af Prince Gardner Key Cases, Billfolds & Secretaires 2.95 to 12.50 Vacuum Cleaner Flashlights . - 3.50 Monogramed Handkerchief 5ets (box of 3) . 3.00 Universal's Topgrain Cowhide Luggage 29.95 to 49.95 Imported Leather Traveling Tie Cases . 4.95 Leather Trimme df Hand Hammered Metal Flasks . - 3.95 to 5.95 ... i . ... , 7 4 " 'i'. Pint and Fifth Size Bottle Guards ... 3.25 and 5.50 ---- - Visor Valets (Car Visor Carryalls) .. Plaid Outing Kit with Thermos - - 3.95 i t 4.95 4 : '1 9.95 u Instant Coffee Maker Kits ,- Fine Umbrellas wjtn Imported Handles 6.95 & 8.50 Imported Leather Men's Toiletry Kits 8.95 GIFT STOCKING HIMJS "I Bet You tan't Mugs li-.ljl- 2.50 "Old Mountain Dew" Jugs -- Etched Bourbon Decaliters 1.50 in 2.00 "Dennis the Menace" Other Party Napkins 1.00 Combination Cork Screw and Bar Too) 2.00 Assorted Bar Accessories Coaster Sets ' ; . . . Weighted Copper AsV Trays 1.00 up 1.00 up . i.oo THESE AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER WONDERFUL GIFT SUGGESTIONS . . , PLUS .OUH flORMALLY OUTSTAND ING SELECTION OF MEN'' CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS AND ACCESSORIES 4 4 OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS TILL 9 P.M. - r " ' l;.r ;r i - - -EtggSKS -SHEPHERD ' furnished: Call 8138. ' ' ' Chg states and over 60 cities,. she sajd ford. diamond."