Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 17, 1959, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE .THUED A HOUSE, NO A HEARSE Hot Piano Brings Fire Department . i mvAiih m:ai. uim:k x -!i,:.iti ns (if a hearse burning , p. mo n 1ne Ixjth on Sunday He fraternity court areas will . Lie!..! by t!. ikc Court un- m;m,hip ()f C,i vy Poole. ' . 11 hearsi- luirned in little :3) Sunday burning at 6 o'clock Sunday morning, i Not only was the hearse burned but i and street traffic was blocked. The climax of the Germans week- it was also damaged by some of the end appeared to be the hearse inci- .t v i t aroiiiw: ""i 1'iior to that, bi fratern- a i a is the m etie of a piano ITALIAN FOOD ANTONIO'S With Th Charlie Culbroath Quartet featuring Charlie Cotbreath Alto Harrison Register Gtlit Ron Altlenbury BaSS Crowe Drums MON. thru FRI. 6 P.M. 104 W. Franklin Phono 7045 J dent Sunday afternoon. The hearse had been seen during the weekend j 0je being driven around Chapel Hill with several people in it. The name Phi Kappa Sigma was written on the side of the hearse. Shortly before 5:30 p.m. the ve Ircle was driven over the &tone wall in front of little fraternity court and .set afire by an unknown per son. The fire department sent one truck to the scene of the fire after being called by someone from Kap pa Sigma fraternity. Capt. G. S. Baldwin of the fire department said Monday, "The entire interior was burned; the steering wheel melted." peeple there. Cover iiiiq niversiry campus Dollar Days! Friday & Saturday CLASSIFIEDS POOL TABLE: TOURNAMENT type, practically new, 6x3'. Will deliver in Chapel Hill. Phone 3(K)1. $50. WAITERS WANTED, PART-TIME or full-time. Tar Heel Sandwich Shop. LI IE INSURANCE IS MADE TO order for impatient young men. Let a Northwestern Mutual agent assist you in creating an estate. Phone 93(fll, Matt Thompson, Arthur DeBerry, Jr. Capt. Baldwin estimated, "500 peo- were laughing and shouting there." When a wrecker came to pull the vehicle away, one fraternity man who had climbed into the hearse after the fire was extinguished, was asked to get out; he objected. Fin ally the three police officers at the court "picked him up bodily and put him in a (police) car," Sgt. G. R. Creel said; however, the fratern ity member was charged with dis orderly conduct and resisting arrest mainly because "he was cursing." A party atmosphere was reigning throughout the 100 and 200 blocks of West Cameron Avenue during most of Sunday afternoon. People were standing in the yards and sitting cn the porches; a hi-fi was also heard throughout the district. When the hearse was dragged off, things seemed to quiet down. Earlier in the afternoon at 3:23 three fire trucks arrived at the 200 block of West Cameron Avenue on the report of a fire at Pi Kappa Phi fraternity. This was a false alarm. Immediately after the trucks arrived, the black hearse, which had been parked next to St. Anthony Hall, pulled off. The false alarm and the noise from the hearse brought a large number of people to the sidewalks, ENJOY BRADY'S GOOD FOOD TILL 11:45 EVERY EVENING Every evening you can enjoy Brady's delicious food till 11:45 p.m. Choose from the regular menu till 11:30; Sandwiches and snacks till 1 1 :45. En joy a late dinner or late snack tonight (if lirady j s. V Brady's Restaurant Durham Highway -:- Chape I Hill I mm wj. WIW ,mmmf urn u n - fm mmi j. i i i mini i mi i nm mui l ill ir- i Vl-- - n ' T I M. rm i mm t igi.m m rjj ' -T1.1r . T..T. .ll0MlmiamaamMuaa Prom trotter She's the queen of the campus, and of course she favors you know what . . . the cold crisp taste of Coca-Cola. She knows that anytime, everywhere, Coke U the real refreshment. We don't say that the seertt of her success is Coca-Cola . . . but it helps! HE REALLY REFRESHED... HAVE A COKE! EcttUd under authority of Th Coca-Cola Company by DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. The second fire which occurred in the parking area of big fraternity court was reported at 6 a.m. Sunday. Three trucks attended this fire be cause "of the number of lives invol ved and the closeness of the houses in the fraternity court," Fire Chief J. S. Boone reported; Ray Jefferies, assistant to the dean of student affairs, was also called to the scene. He said that a piano nad been burned ana mat about four people were standing around the charred piano. However, he noticed about 20 or 30 people standing near the fraternity houses in the court. Both Jefferies and Sam Magill, as sistant dean of student affairs, agreed that this was not the best Carolina weekend. Investigation and handling of the three incidents will be left to the student government, they said. Concerning the events Sunday and the weekend in general, Tucker Yates, president of the Interfraterni ty Council, made this statement: "The Interfraternity Council wishes to take this opportunity to apologize for the ungentlemanly conduct of certain fraternity men during the past weekend. The IFC Court, un der the chairmanship of Grey Poole, is in the process of investigating the incidents in which these actions oc curred. Upon completion of such investigation, definite corrective measures will be taken." PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Wadit Saleh, research associate at the Duke University Parapsycholog ical Laboratory, will speak to Psy chology Club members tonight at 7:30 in 102 New West. Waleh will speak on Parapsycholo gy," which includes extra-sensory perception. UNIVERSITY ART LEAGUE The University Art League will hold a special meeting today to I Raleigh News and Observer, will j participate in a meeting of the ' i- a- - a i t t- . i a. v i in i a ' J f r ' - 1 T - A. 1 speak to the UNC Faculty Club at the Carolina Inn today at 1 p.m. "An Alumnus Looks at the Uni versity" is Daniels' topic. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM A joint UNC -Duke Physics Col loquium will feature speaker Dr Johft Ward of the University of Mi-1 discussions ami on the topic, "Theory of, the Weak Interaction." The colloquium will be held Wed- lowa Academy of General Practice in Iowa City, Iowa, today through Friday. I Dr. Ross, a professor and chair man of the UNC Medical School's Department of Obstetrics and Gyne cology, will take part in three panel "Office Gynecology," "Threatened Abortion' and Ectopic Pregnancy." Dollar Days! Friday & Saturday make plans for the second annual' nesday at 4:30 p.m. in the Duke English Department Begins News Lefier The UNC English Department has ! total of 1.0H2 grants, some two-thirds Sidewalk Art Show. The meeting will be held in the lecture room of Ackland Art Center at 7:30 p.m. NCPA-APHA A mass meeting of the NCPA APHA will be held today at 3 p.m. in Howell Hall .A discussion of the role of the detail man in pharmacy will be featured. STUDENT WIVES Student Wives will meet today at 8 p.m. in the Victory Village Nurs ery. Mrs. Thell Jernigan of Theirs Bakery will talk on cake decorating. COMMENCEMENT INVITATIONS Commencement invitations may be ordered from the Order of the Grail Feb. 18-20 and 23-24. Orders will be" taken in the Y Building lobby from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Orders will be on a cash basis only. Seniors may get additional in formation from Charles Huntington cr Denton Lotz. LIBRARY COMMITTEE The Library Committee will meet today at 7 p.m. in the Library. FRENCH FLICKS The following French films will be be shown in 215 Murphey today at 4 p.m.: "Paris Through the Cen turies" and "La France Accueille Une Reine." FACULTY CLUB Jonathan Daniels, editor of the Physics Building. DR. ROSS "Dr. Robert A. Ross of UNC will Interested in Evolution Then you'll want to read IN SEARCH OF ADAM Only $1.98 at The intimate Bookshop 205 East Open Franklin Street Till 10 P.M. come up with another "first" a volume 1, number 1 Graduate News Letter which furnishes news of the department, its faculty and its alumni. Sam G. Barnes, assistant profess or of English, is editor of the News Letter which will be an annual pub lication. An enlightening feature of the newsletter is a resume of a speech made by Robert M. Lester, execu tive director of the Southern Fellow ships Fund. He pointed out that UNC ranks highest in the South in the number of Ph.D. degrees in humani ties awarded in a period covering 1948-55. The statistics showed that the University awarded 576 degrees from 1948 to 1955 with 139 of these degrees in humanities. A total of f.6 doctoral degrees were received by students of English, drama, speech and other allied fields. Duke University ranked second with 440 degrees during the period, 81 of these in the humanities and 32 for English majors. Another piece notes the increased number of Wilson Fellows as a re sult of the Ford grant to the Wood row Wilson Fellowship Foundation. The article says that of the 1958-59 Dollar Days! Friday & Saturday 712) are concentrated in 18 uni versities, with UXC's total of 24 ranking twelfth among the 90 Amer ican and Canadian institutions with at least one Fellow this year. Exact ly one-half of the 24 Fellows at the University are registered in Eng lish. These figures made students and alumni of the UNC English Depart ment aware of their position of prominence in the South. This fact, coupled with the interest ,pf grad uate students and faculty members, pointed up the need for such a journal which now is a reality. The news letter also reports that enrollment in the graduate division reached a record high with a total of 121 candidates for advanced de grees for the year 1958-59. The group is made up of 51 candidates for the Ph.D. degree and 63 candidates for the M.A. award. Seven students are undecided. Other pertinent facts include rec ognition that higher entrance stand ards at UNC, including the require ment of College Board Examina tions, have resulted in a qualitative improvement of the freshman-sophomore required program. In addition, the curriculum for su perior students has been expanded and extended as part of the Uni versity's program for superior stu dents financed by funds from the Carnegie Foundation. Total registration for freshman English was 1,384 with 1,062 in Eng lish 1, about 280 in English 2, and V7w flooring Story oftie Qun that Won the Wedtf i If II I p Shelley IB nnrr Dan n nvrii i a i.timb iiuiotM. corvmH? Q im twi cooa-ooc eoanum TODAY ONLY J X' : v t SSI lULUJ MM Dr. Brauer, Dental Dean, Wins Honor Dr. John C. Brauer, dean of the UNC Dental School, has 'been elect ed to honorary membership in the Academy of General Dentistry. The Academy, which met in Chi cago last week concurrently with the 94th Midwinter Meeting of the Chi cago Dental Society at the Conrad Hilton Hotel, has as its special aim the encouragement of post-graduate study by dentists. Fifteen deans of dental schools now are honorary members of the Academy. While in Chicago Dean Brauer at tended sessions of the Chicago Den tal Society Midwinter Meeting, where 15,000 dentists and members of allied groups launched the 100th anniversary of organized dentistry at a centennial uvic Luncheon. UNC Physics Prof Wins NATO Grant A grant of $45,000 from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to the Summer School of Theoretical Physics of the University of Gre noble has been announced. The Summer School of Theoretical Physics was founded in 1951 by Prof. Cecile DeWitt, now of the UNC Physics Department, and is held during July and August of each year at Les Houcmes, Frances, under her direction. The 1959 session will be devoted to study of neutral and ionized gases (the many body prob lem at non-zero temperatures), with 30 young physicists from all coun tries in attendance. t rrc ks. r i w m v n r W jIMllte M KERWiN MATHEWS ,S i KATHRYNGRANT -1 UKJf Z.' LA$T TIMES TODAY PLUS CARTOON - NOVETTE NEWS 42 students in the advanced 2A sec tions for superior students. .' The journal also reports outstand ing activities of some 19 of the Eng lish Department faculty members, titles of articles and books written by others, news of about 129 alum ni who did work in the UNC Eng lish Department, and the "success ful placement of 30 graduates into college teaching positions by -the de partment placement service ender the direction of Kenan Professor Arthur Palmer Hudson. IZnovr how tm cell 1 fom lire1 i depcrtment r 9 Poplar Days! Friday & Saturday RECOR BRAND NEW FACTORY SEALED HI-FI LP or STEREO POPULAR CLASSICAL JAZZ SYMPHONIES OPERA SHOWTUNES ff r m If ban SatsiadiM w Money lefunded CHK1 m H0HET MOEt 1m Ib) ptkt LESS JOS.. DS OFF Wt pay poitogt. Ht C0.0.'i phmt. SfMCify ttri. bktl r uunlof mmisw. HI-FI RECORDS 430 N. State St. Chicao lO, III. 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Don man ages test center operations at the Arling ton, Virginia, office of The Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Company, He supervises 9 people. - -- t "We maintain equipment and facilities tecords 'on the 61,000 telephones served by this office and are responsible for han dling customer trouble reports and dis patching repairmen," Don explains. "But one of our most important jobs is locat ing potential trouble conditions before ' .our customers', service is affected. "In my previous assignment I was in charge of the group responsible for the maintenance of switching equipment at suburban McLean, Virginia. This was a smaller office serving 6000 telephones." Don stepped into these supervisory positions after less than 3 years of actual telephone experience. (He has sand wiched a two-year military hitch into his record since joining the company in 1954.) Previously, while on the Plant Engineering staff, he planned circuits le tween telephone exchanges and expansion of facilities to meet future growth. He also studied the highly complicated cir cuitry of central office switching equip ment and its memory and functions. routing Where does he go from here? It de pends mostly on Don. But one thing looks sure: continuous growth in the industry will create advancement opportunities for him and young men like him who have what it takes to get ahead. This is not jut the story of Don Sly rs . . . many college men like him are moving ahead in telephone careers. See for yourself Mhat yoor future with the telephone company might be like. Talk with the Bell interviewer when he visits your campus and read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office. BELL. TELEPHONE COMPANIES .mi - -
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 17, 1959, edition 1
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