Friday, January C. l9Sf THE DAILY TAR HEEL ..Pecs' ill hepe! I3i!i 8 dis 01 Annua! January Spectacular SUITS priced to really sell. And what a selection to choose from. Over 250 suits in hopsacks, herring bone, and 100' y worsted wools. Sivled in the tradi tional manner. Suits were $53.00, now$ 12.77. $49.50, now $o7.15. TOPCOATS in a beautiful selection of olive, brown and grey heather tones. Reduced from $19.50 to $37.41. From $42.75 to $34.77. From $38.75 to $29.99. SPORTS COATS priced to sell. An arrav of stripes, plaido, herringbones, and Harris tweeds. Tailored in traditional ivy style and featuring the Hub's fine quality. Prices slashed from $39.95 to $29.8S, $35.00 to $27.44, S32.50. to $23.77. DRESS SHIRTS. Best sale ever in Chapel Hill. 100 Oxfc-d cloth featuring the ever-popular button down collar. One shirt $2.99, three for $8.50. SLACKS at a real saving. Finest selection ever. $14.95 cut to $11.77, $13.95 cut to $10.14. Many other re ductions. - JACKETS with heavy pile linings, quilted linings and unlined. All reduced to save you money. $15.95 now $11.41, $13.95 now $9.77. $10.9S now $7.99. CAR COATS in finger tip lengths and full length. Many with orlon pile linings and hoods. Stay warm this winter and save with a car coat from the Hub. Were from $16.95 to $19.95. Now only $13.95 and $14.93. SWEATERS Boatnecks, cardigans, V-necks and shawl collars. Styled in lambs wool, alpaca and shaggy wools. Still a fine selection to choose from 86.88 to $11.95. AS an added attraction, a tremendous selection of TIES at only 99c. li nr.it. faA Charge Plan DO HOT HISS IT At he or E3 II f Shape! is!) 103 E. Franklin St. Phone 2-1252 Charge Accounts Invited DAILY CROSSWORD 5 f I ACROSS 1. Whiff 6. Girl's name 10. To the ship's left 12. Dropsy 13. Missile weapon 14. Whiter 15. Compass point i (abbr.) 16. Stitehbird 18. Cuttlefish's smoke screen 19. Erbium (sym.) 20. Confounded 22. Ravel 23. Affirm : 25. Bobbin '27. Miss Bara 28. Belonging1 . to us 29. Fish SO. Russian tracts 82. Selenium (sym.) 34. Solar deity 35. Affirma tive votes 3G.Not strict 37. Roman garment 39. Mirror reflection 41. Massenet's 'Thais' 42. Submarine locator 43. Beasts of Warden 41. Obnoxious person DOWN 1. Antiquated 2. Sleeping car berth 3. Enemies 4. Friar's title 5. Military caps " 6. Girl's nam 7. Lightened 21. Sunk f ence3 22. Riches 24. Sun god 25. Thus 2S. Exer cises 27.Stu- . dent'3 theme 29. Enemy scout1 RjUiF FflS AlS hIa y qMaUJ ijj leTHa Mi A R EtitP "O Af lAjN PjU PIGU KIGji jT A rt'as a ntgWb Iet; F A C I L EQFiOUf? "3 A Tt lP- U L Lf' ' S T ppE S T OplEiS AfTilfE PlSflM A V E. HQTAGEt G REf W sinIoIrIeTpUsIeiPiS 1-7 S. Corrected 9. An informer 31, South (slang) American 11. Of social ?' rodents states S2. Icelandic 17. Cured tales e:ras3 20. Stood up S3. Put forth effort . Tejtcrfity'g JLtiwcr, 34. Greek portico r i - 36. Narrow :; : roadway 5 33. Anger. ,l 40. Swab IT 1 1 Jf 33 777 39 -K? izttlzdztziz 1-7 note irie 1 ' - ' ' - v - f - i S- I , i , f , , . s - s f . - - - & - C' , 1 : " , i ---- r - . - I ' ? , , , 1 ' fc-. I '( ' t : B ' .v 0? - i x i S V : I f i I ; . 1 I '-if , i ' 1 r ,- i - A f J - I i & , - X , . j. " i ' ? - i i , i. ? , ; 1 ' ; A,; ' ) " " ' " i' I Uf.f . ' V:.:;:j::::?:f;:i1: 'Sls-- ;:,:WtpM-'r';' :f. ::S:iis;;:si;S:::ij::Sa ii I don't give a damn i 7i is running for President; he's not giving the. Pentagon to the Russians! . The Church Key There will be no Canterbury Club meeting this Sunday since the Feast of Lights service will be held at 8 p.m. Rev. Hill Price, Baptist students'- minister, will speak on "Christ and the Campus" at the student supper forum of the University Baptist Church Sun day at 5:45 p.m. The student groups of the University Baptist Church and the Binkley Baptist Church will hold a joint worship service Sunday at 8 p.m. Rev. Lonnie Kliever, Duke graduate and a well-known speaker throughout the South, will talk on "How Great Is Your God?" The Baptist Student Union will sponsor an- ice skating party tonight at 7:45 following the supper which will begin at 5:45 p.m. It is urged that every one wear warm sports clothes. Westminster Fellowship will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday for supper. The program for the evening will feature a Student Panel which will discuss the ideas presented at the Quadren nial Conference held in Dallas, Texas, Dec. 27-31. The topic of the conference was "Commit ment Amid Conflict." Highest CASH Prices for All Used Textbooks THE BOOK EXCHANGE Durham No Ivory Tower For ' Star Phyllis Cur tin "An artist must experience life, and not live in an ivory tower," says New, York City Opera star Phyllis Curtin, who's split personality life exemplifies her belief. Many personalities have hobbies, even strange ones, but hardly anyone can boast of such an unusual- and vast assortment as Miss Curtin. The glamorous sqprano, who will appear in the UNC pro One Of 'Best Dressed' For I960 Next 1st Lady Fashionalb NEW YORK (UPD Jacque line Bouvier Kennedy, whose ultra-chic, wardrobe became an SUMMER JOB INTERVIEWS THIS MONTH . All students who want help in locating summer jobs should sign up at the Placement Serv ice, 204 Gardner, by the end of fall semester. The following companies will interview in January prospec tive candidates for summer jobs, as well as for full-time jobs: . January 10 Bureau of Cen sus. ' . January 11 U.S. Army Ord nance, Aberdeen Proving Ground. January 11 Chatham Manu facturing Co. ' January 12 First National City Bank of New York. January 12 DuPont de Ne mours (Ph.D. Physics candi dates only). On January 11, Robert Lech ner will interview for counsel ors at his Echo Hill Camps ih Clinton,-New Jersey. On January 12, Mrs. Nina Matthews of the Social Security Administration will interview any Junior men or women stu dents in Liberal Arts or Busi ness Administration for sum mer assistantships in the De partment of Health, Education, and Welfare. - ' ' issue in her husband's presi dential campaign, Thursday won top place on the list of best dressed women for 1960. The wife of the president elect was one of 12 women cited by the New York Couture Group based on its yearly poll of -fashion writers and column ists. Some critics during the cam paign accused Mrs. Kennedy of spending too much on clothes and of favoring European de signers. 'Best Dressed List' The "best dressed list" gave no estimate of her expenditures but it noted that the designers she liked were Americans Nor man Norell, Ben Zuckerman, Oleg Cassini and the custom dressmakers of the New York department store, Bergdorf Goodman. Tall, dark-haired Mrs. Ken nedy told the press on the day after her husband's election that being a pacesetter in fashion was "at the bottom of the list" of things that she considered important. Fashion critics ignored this and placed her above such well known fashion plates as Audrey Hepburn, Princess Alexandra of Kent, Mrs. Stavros Niachos and the Queen of Thailand. From Society Other women on the top drawer fashion list came mostly from the world of society. They were Vicomtesse Jac queline de Ribes of Paris; Mrs. Norman K. Winston of New York and Paris; Donna Marella Agnelli, of Turin, Italy. Mrs. Loel Guiness of Paris and Palm Beach, Fla.; Mrs. Pat rick Guiness; Mrs. John Barry Ryan III of New York City, and Mrs. David K. Bruce of Wash ington, D. C. Mrs. Kennedy has a manne quin sized figure and clothes tastes that are distinctly" American. CLASSIFIED ADS Britannica set of the famous lith Edition at $30, and the 14th Edition at $75. The Inti mate Bookshop, 119 E. Franklin St. Open till 10. FOUND AT THE CHI PI 1 1 Houses girls leather jacket. Call 89073 and ask for Mrs. Camp bell. . FOR SALE OR RENT 1933 House Trailer one bedroom. Call 21004 Tarheel Trailer Ct. or 87741 Carolina Beauty Shop, Thomas or Laura Webster. English Students We have just put out a small but very pleasant library of an English Literature scholar. You'll not find first editions here, but you will find titles that are not too commonplace, at moderate prices. You'll find them on the fea ture shelf in the Old Boole Corner. THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 113 E. Franklin Si. Chapel Hill OPEN -TILL 10 P.M. STEVECIS-SEIEPIIERD'S JANUARY duction of "La Traviata," is an accomplished violinist, electri cal engineer, political scientist, archeologist and photographer. FIRE SCARE (Continued from Page 1) came on at the hall ends, girls flocked to the light like a moth to a flame, rushing to get a spot under the light to continue their intellectual pursuits. One girl shouted, "What a perfect time for 'a pantie raid!" Another female voice moaned, "And I've got two tests tomor row. Coeds resembled modern Abe Lincolns, as they studied by candlelight and flashlights. Damn," muttered one girl, "my Eveready batteries just lost heir ninth life." One coed, who had just bleached her hair, was disap pointed because no one could tell it in the dark. , A few girls chatted with the friendly -firemen who invited them to the station house where electricity still prevailed. Girls scrambled to borrow wind-up alarm clocks for the morning's awakening. PEANUT 5 H , I WV BURIED j By Schulz IHATfiJATHEl S0Ei I'M TO do? sofBiimms I vol 1 COHERE ARE YUmA&GDW V0U GOING? TO SIT OP C0ITH' I V 7 : 11 1 THIS' FIRST NIGHT timOOTTHB BLANKET 15 60IN9TO SETHE HARDfcTJ P O G O By Walt Kelly 1. 1 I I LINS AS0UNPOUR . RAM V WOW CAM If I AIN'T 10 A&AIN IN ANY A POHV Wifl GUClKlAZ. Nrt K2Z CUC&Sl'MV 1 Jtv.it, v ;-i c- - - 1 -, 1 . Miss Curtin studied violin in her home town of Clarksburg, rW. Va., and at Wellesley Col lege, before she began formal voice training there. At college she also studied political science and eventu ally received her master's de gree in it. Needs Funds After graduation she needed funds to continue her voice les sons. "I couldn't find a job in the field in which I had ma jored," explained Miss Curtin, "but happened to fall into a job of which I knew absolutely nothing." This was an assistant job as electrical engineer for the War Production Board in Boston. The job lasted until several concerts throughout New Eng land sent Miss Curtin on the road to .becoming a New York City Opera prima donna with the exception of a four-months respite, when she went along on an archeological expedition to Peru. Keeps Record To keep a record of her trip Miss Curtin took up photogra phy and became so accomplish ed at it that several of her photos were later published. Her photography ability was a surprise to her husband, Eu gene Cook, himself a famous photographer. Some have suggested that Miss Curtin is a dual personal ity. Those who know her well vouch that this is really not true. The best explanation seems to lie in the words of her colleagues: "Phyllis Curtin is a woman who has found the secret of counting 25 hours in the day!" -Inauguration- (Continued from Page 1) "supporting and supported by a stronger economy." He cam paigned through three difficult elections with education as his battlecry. , "I dedicate my public life to the proposition that . . . educa tion must be of a quality which is second to none," he said. "If it takes more taxes to give our children this quality education, we must face that fact." He called on the citizens of North Carolina to support his program. 0 lju 3 Lb Now In Progress AH Winter SUITS 20 OFF All SP0HTS COATS 20 OFF All Spring SUITS . . 20 OFF Also SAVE .20 - 60 on Dress Shirts, Trousers, Shoes, Hats,' and all other Classifications of Apparel STEVENS--SHBPHSE FINAL REDUCTION "5 , 0 vV V-TW, mmmm 3?- f I U CHAPEL H1LL,KLC.