I i i I?! ' V -ry r,"' i o v , WEDNESDAY, MAY A, 1959 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE TH2ES School Week' Coming; Teachers Will Attend V:-. -1 IVrry. W-m of tin- UNC , T;.lcntcd Youth." Meeting will be , ', ,""m ,Us announced htld in the auditorium of CarrolJ S,h,": u"k" will bo held ' Hall ' II h.-re. I l''i'r .-xlministriitor.s from 'Jiout tho st.Ue have bten in i to attcixl I)tMn IVrry indi t!i..t in u-w of the generally . J.r.nrd intrrot in education on a:t of non prolesional ctluca i rrf-r.im will he open to Mrctin- the Challenge of li SUMMER EMPLOYMENT? Earn $75.00 Vcr Week Apply Room 105 Gardner Hall From 1 To 5:30 P.M. TODAY Speakers for the occasion will be Kcbert J. Havighurst. professor of education. University of Chicago, and Thelma Gwinn Thurstone. UNC professor of education. Each of these .speakers is qualified to discuss prob lem involved In the education of pfted children and youth Professor Havigharst took his I'h I), decree in ' chemistry and tcaiht and conducted research in this area for several years. Then, becoming interested in problems of education, he changed his field of work to that of education. He is author or co-author of seven books. I ILLINOIS COLLEGE-OF OPTOMETRY . announces that applications for admission to its classes bgin nin,; September 8, 1959 are now being received. 3 year course of professional study leading to the degree. Doctor of Optometry REQUIREMENTS FOR ENTRANCE . ;. 2 years (HO sem. hours of equiv alent qtr. hours) is specified lib eral arts and sciences. Write for bulletin to: RECISTAR Illinois College ol Optometry 3245 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago 16, Illinois idea for Mothers Day... Bootonware SALE . . . tho finest of all Mclmine Ware LADY SUNBEAM RAZOR CHEMEX COFFEEMAKERS it WOOD PECKER WOODWARE TV ELECTRIC MIXERS it REVEREWARE FLOOR & WALL LAMPS ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY MOTHER'S DAY mm MAY 10TH COLOGNE lightl turn his thought with -SHHH& WS. by PRINCE MATCHABELLI You'll lov this charming light-hearted bouquet of 17 Spring flowers. ..in Cologne, Perfunt Creme Sachet, Cologne Spray Mist, and Dusting Ponder . . . each in a delightful new gift pacaga as fresh as Spring itself I bA r'r$. vm ipf COLOGNE SPRAY MIST I I PERFUME CREME SACHET 1 oi. I DUSTING POWDER with puff " ei.$2 fl prices pluf tax FREE GIFT WRAPPING ft 4 i ' 4. 1 'K - a f I .4 w overing The Campus YACKETY YACK A Yackety Yack organizational meeting will be held at 4:30 p.m. today in Roland Parker II. SCHOOL OF PHARMACY The 11th annual program for the graduating class of the School of Pharmacy will t:e held in Greens boro today. The program is sponsored by the Justice Drug Co, of Greensboro. During the afternoon a tour of the Justice plant will be made. A ban quet will be held tonight at the Xing Cotton Hotel. The event is to be attended by all graduating students and their wives and members of the faculty of the School of Pharmacy. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WOMEN'S AUXILIARY The final meeting of the school year of the Women's Auxiliary of N. C. Memorial Hospital will be held at Gravely Sanatorium Auditorium today at 10:30 a.m. Officers for the coming year will be elected and installed at this time. Also various service awards will be presented to members who have served a designated number of volunteer hours during the year. GIMME A 'C The new cheerleaders who will be leading UNC students next yearin yelling for ole Carolina rest for a while after strenuous and long try-outs which ended Monday. These new cheer leaders are as follows: first row (left to right), Sue Wood, Kathy Fulenwider, Jenny Elder, Nancy Wills, Margaret Thompson and Jody Guercio; second row (left to right, Tim McCoy, George Ricks and Walt Keck. Photo by Bill Brinkhous Strike Scene Is Quiet; Senpfe To Investigate IIENDEllSON. N. C". May 5 It was quiet on the picket lines Tuesday, but developments came elsewhere in connction with the drawnout Henderson textile strike. In Washington, Sen. Sam J. IOrwin Jr. ID-NC) announced the Senate Rackets Committee will start hear ings within the next three or four weeks on violence which has flared out of the Henderson labor dispute. In Vance Couniy Superior Court at Henderson, selection of a jury went slowly for trial of a case grow ing out of a picket line incident. A 5C-mcmber venire was exchausted and court officials began questioning a 20-man group to seat a jury to try Leonard Barham, a striker I charged with assault and property damage. Judge Raymond Mallard, prcsid j ing for the special three-week term ! of court, demonstrated his inten l tion of preserving order by slapping j $10 contempt of court fines on nine men for conversing loudly in an anteroom. CLASSIFIEDS FOR QUICK SALE: 1934 TWO door Ford, 6 cylinders, in fine con dition. $335.00. Call W. P. Frie derich at 5236 after 3 p.m. NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL CA reer agents are leaders in per formance. In the life insurance in dustry, 1 agent in 46 is a C.L.U. In the Northwestern Mutual, 1 AGENT IN 6 IS A C.L.U. Phone 9-3691, Matt Thompson, Arthur De Berry Jr. SUTTON'S Drug Store SELL US YOUR BOOKS - WE'LL buy anything in reasonable good condition from texts to collectors' items. THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP. LOST: SOMEWHERE IN CHAPEL Hill a pair of specially built ortho paedic shoes that look like duck' feet. Navy blue. Reward. Please return to YMCA or telephone 6761 or 5266 or 5641. One of the nine was Luther Jackson, president of the Textile Workers Union of America local at one of the struck Harriet-Henderson Cotton Mills. Another was a local police man, Hamiln Lloyd. , Meanwhile, the strike situation was reflected to a degree in Henderson's municipal election to choose a mayor and four aldermen. James Harold Ranes, a former policeman and son of another union local official, ran as a write-in can didate against Mayor Carroll Single ton. Ranes resigned from the city police department a few week ago and got in the race. His father is Charlie Ranes, a TWUA local president. Singleton, who has figured often in efforts to curb strike violence, also was opposed by W. L. Adcox. There was no new word on nego tiations between management and union looking for a solution to the strike, now nearly six months old. It began last Nov. 17, after the company called for changes in arbi tration under the contract. M The Senate Rackets Committee made its decision to hold hearings on Henderson strike violence at a closed meeting. Sen. Ervin said he would expect the inquiry to "look into the whole situation the strike, the cause of the strike,, and the violence." Barham is one of a number of defendants a waiting trial on charges growing out of strike violence. The special three-week term of court, which opened Monday, was called in an effort to clear the docket. However, slow progres in select how marty. cases could be disposed ing the iirst jury made it uncertain of. Former Solicitor W. Jack Hooks of Lillington, is prosecuting the cases. He was called in when solici tor W. H. S. Burgwyn, whose dis trict includes Vance County, had to be in court elsewhere in the district. DAILY CROSSWORD mm ACROSS 1. Ticker 5. Male offspring 9. One with low I.Q. 10. Banal 12. Fencing swords 13. Slacken 14. Gain. 15 Olft 18 Bdlb! woUusk 1 r!orrrx V -n - ulberry 2' Seethe 21. Secondhand garments (slang) 2.. Andy's TV partner 2',. Split pulse 2 : Norse god 3 .Marvels f Eats away 2T. Contend for 3 1. Jewish month 3d. Silk veil feed.) 4 1. Burn, as with liquid 2. Walks . through water J3. God of war 4. Female , sheep DOWN 1. Theme 2. Madison Square Garden 3. American author ; 4. Half ema ' 5. Leather . thong t 6. Russian city 7. African . i river &FUmct&r'a double 9. Cries, as a cat 11. Lauds 15. Ohio city (poss.) a i i a i i-u cr i ii 1 i ! Tim S P I Itlbt 1 A L b K l TlMgtitrdElEjsE 1C AiNlOjNQW E A HP U N DiE OSjU EjZ j I ! rNPPP - - It A SlEl I UMd E R : IE1D1PIAIS1 iSIOIPMTJ 17. Youths 18. Escape (slang) 21. Fearless 22. Cry of pain S3. Ports 21, U.S. . patriotic Boner 9 Ww 5-fc 23. Man's Yeiterday's AniwfC nickoamo 80.Travel3. , 21. Shun ' S2.Vexea 33. Observes 35.Eskers 86. Valley (poet.) 39. Be in debt 40. Untrained 'A X9 2 3& L2 15 2 'A I 30 Vs. YA 13 30 21 23 to IS 5 Vj 21 3 3 21 mm 40 2i 17 21 I V. Russians See UNC Books This Summer Russian citizens will get a chance this summer to see first hand "what America reads." and 15 of the books that they will be examining at a Moscow display will be from the UNC Press. Included in the six-week Ameri can National Exhibition, the ex hibition, the exchange is being pre pared by the American book publish ing industry at the request of the U. S. Government. Some 10,000 volumes will be sent. Opens July 4 When the book display portion of the exhibition opens on July 4 at Moscow's Sokolniki Park, Russians will see the range and diversity of U. S. book publishing and the ways books reach people at home, through bookstores and in libraries. "Man in His Theatre," by former L'NC drama head Samuel Selden, is one of 15 works which the UNC Press has been asked to supply. Two copies are being sent of the Selden book and also of the best selling "Bridge To The Sun" by Gvvcn Terasaki. Street's Book "The New Revolution in the Cot ton Economy," by James II. Street, also was requested, and three copies are to be included in the exhibit. The other UNC Press contributions reflect wide variety in subjects, in cluding history, political science, architecture and scholarly language studies. They include "Chretian, Troyes and The Grail," written by UNC Prof. U. T. Holmes and Sister M. Amelia Klenke, O. P., published this year; and "Problems of Democracy in Latin America," by former Ecua dorian president Galo Plaza, who has lectured at Chapel Hill. Southern Winner Another book being sent is an award winner in Southern books competition: "The Early Architec ture of Georgia" by Frederick D. Nichils and Frances Benjamin John ston. Other selections: "American In dian and White Relations to 1830," by William N. Fenton; "Separate and Unequal," by Louis R. Harlan; "The Early Empires of Central Asia," by W. M. McGovern; "Her man Ilesse and his Critics," by Jeseph Mileck; and "Sources and Analogues of the 'Nouvelles Recrea tions et Joyeux Devis' of Bonaven tere des Periers," by J. Woodrow Hassell. Russian Exhibit While the Russians are studying American intellectual, technical and cultural life through the printed page, Americans will also have an opportunity to learn more abcut the USSR. A Russian exhibit will be held at the Coliseum in New York City as part of thc cultural ex change. Bocks for the Moscow exhibit were selected by a 13-member panel rep resenting libraries, museum, the book trade and various institutions. Book publishing executives form the committee, to. actually arrange the book exhibit; which is coordinated by the American Book Publishers Council. Prescription Headquarters Tr Yes, this professional pharmacy is headquar ters for t he prompt and precise compounding of prescriptions. Be sure to bring us your Doctor's next prescrip tion. Our ample stocks permit us to fill even the most complex pre scription without delay. You will appreciate our courteous service and fair prices. PHONb ; u731 FREE DELIVERY Yack-Workers Needed Want to work on the Yackety Yack? Well,' co-editcrs Tom Overman and Bob Austin are have an organ izational meeting for all students interested in working on the annual. Pvoland Parker 2 will be the meeting-place today at 4:30 p.m-.- - No Moth Balls For Mother! Mom is no antique, pal, and she'll thank you for letting her know that you know it. Facades may change a bit with the years, but you can take our word for it, mom's the same lively biddy who put your old man through the hoops not so long ago. She'll thank you for opening the doors of youth to her. She'll be no end delighted with the sort of things that delight you, like, maybe, Passionella, Sick, Sick Sick, or a Charles Addams cartoon book. If that's too steep a price, at least send, her a youthful card. To hell with the Lavendar and Old Lace stuff, pal. Come hum-pety-humpety over to the old Intimate and give Mom some thing with life in it! The Intimate Bookshop 205 E. Franklin St. Open Till 10 P.M. STUDENT SPRING SAFETY SPECIALS $20 VALUE FOR $10 CHAPEL H ILL. M.C 1. Motor Tune-Up Front-End Alignment Brake Adjustment Balance 2 Front Wheels FREE Grease Job With Every Oil Change 3. RECAPPING SPECIAL 670-15 9.95 750-14 12.95 301 CAROLINA TIRE SERVICE (formerly Carolina Motors) E. Main Carrboro Phone 8460 Oh, to be in Elba... noiv that Winston's there!" i- - v - I ? -it- i Ik xt?f. $ Ssa v : v j i tT t . , v ! " ' i t A - - - i ' - . i -1 it v . , " " J LLH. LliL':. . j w m B8 IHATS HIP FiUCSPJl" TMAT'GOUNIS The mystery is solved! Napoleon's famous gesture was just to reassure himself that he had plenty of cigarettes. His army may have traveled on its stomach, but the old boy himself wouldn't have been caught at Waterloo if he hadn't been checking the Belgian bistros for a spare carton of Winstons! There's a rare smoking treat that comes from Winston's famous Filter-Blend which means a careful selection of fine, mild tobaccos specially processed for filter smoking. Try a pack real soon, and you'll agree that . . . Winston tastes good like a cigarette should! R J. RrVNOlOS TOBACCO CO.. Wl NSTCN-SALE M . N. C. .m,..m ' ' n.i.n ii jljTi -i 1 11 " 1 " " 1

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