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Saturday April 27, 19G3 THE DAILYTARffiEL Fzze 3 tl" 4 " - -3M Vv, H i q IVlUSlirOOIllS. 10 40 1958 Memorial Hall got padded seats to replace the hard-backed ones it had sines it was built. 1948 Glen Taylor, who was Henry Wallace's running mate on the ' Pregressive Party ticket, told Use The DTH DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Negri 5. Out of 0. Substitute for spinach 11. Long for 12. Devilfish 13. Well-known theatrical producer 14. Guido'a highest note 15. Spawn of fish 17. Old times 18. Thong 20. Thrive 23. Tie 27. Examine, as account books 29. Playground Item , 30. Cheeped 32. Ogle 33. Fencers' f0ll3 35. Chinese weight .38. Female sheep 39. Before 42. Corner 44. Discolored 46. Pneumatic tubes 47. Incline 48. Killed 49. Sharp t DOWN 1. Apple or pear 2. Spoken 3. Miss Turner 4. Statute 5. Back 6. Storm 7. Egg-shaped 8. Fix 10. Male red deer 11. Acquits 16. Grampus 18. Steal 19. Cloys 20. Breach 21. Regret 22. Poem 12 id 20 121 122 21 jo 33 33 13 197 H2 Hi Hi ii ) kDU CAM'T GO TO ' PETALUMArORTHE attach tiST!sr- UoRNINFLO. 5XVE SOU ririrtimb'Kf GETTIN MARRIED V ,1 Spriag showers are like no others. One minute, umbrellas sprout like mushrooms all over campus. Fifteen minutes later onIy an Convenience to have to carry around. But the warm weather and spring blossoms make it all worthwhile don't they? .. . From Past Tar Heels Years Ago To UNC students, ". "The people running this country today are leading the American people down the road to Fascism." He was booed and hissed. , 1938 The vote on a poll by the C.P.U. ran in favor of the Classifieds C A M SO i. L Jm A N Qo lUMS A G Ol ASE ISEJTJ E A R C HEP Hs n s i t E1T race III E22J5 lslie e lsT 24. Rival 25. Bever age 26. Thrice: comb, form 28. Indian shelters 31. Mois ture 34. Lam preys 35. Berets 36. Indigo 37. Monster A R JeH I. ESSE SJO MIS vv t as fLB. it s I ER EN SlU P e sF dsiop Yrnterday's Autre 40. Full-grown 41. Paradise 39. Bacchanal's 43. Mr. Ayres cry 45. Breed ii 13 l 1 16 23 24 125 26 2d 29 31 32 34 38 3? HO HI HH IH5 HI HI -27 WiL GET LOST OR FALL IM A HOLE OR SOMETHING,' YL?CAN'T - wuat LIKE? ii ft mm 3 W J hawks. The tallies were: "I will fight if the United States is invaded 599; in any war the government may declare 175; in no war the govern ment may declare 111." 1928 .-r"" Dr. Henderson told new Phi Beta Kappa members: "True geniuses still exist." GLASSES with gray frames lost near Saunders Hall. Call 933-3434. ," FOUND GOLD CHARM bracelet with "six charms. Call John Lunsford at 968-9115. BLUE RAINCOAT, ladies' size 6. Call Edward Finnell at -933-3323. GIRL'S GLASSES with black frames. Call 929-3055. V-- 'rj,V -" dra' " .. .. v - . -v- ' - day Lost And Found LOST CAMEO RING, gold with brown stone. CaU Frank BaUard at 933-3374. SUNGLASSES with dark rims. Left at Playmakers Theater or Bingham. Reward from Jim Newton. 929-3665 or 968 9305. WALLET left in Morehead Planetarium. CaU Landy Colten. PROSE AND POETRY oj Modern France left in Car WANTED Person experienced in Offset Printing Layout work and Line Camera Work for Print ing Department. Call or apply in person at North Carolina Blue Cross and Blue Shield, Personnel Department, Chapel Hill, N. C. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER IS THAT kmt M3a fc&MTTO HAYS HAfTCM?toU WANT TO GST LOST C2 RAIL IN A HOLE OR STXIETHINS?.' V lTYr A MAKE A GOntS 1 A a atc nn y MATE fiOR ANDY glkt By HAL TARLETON of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Boys in Scott Residence College are looking forward to the future. They have a good reason in September, 163 girls will move into Parker, one of the dorms in the college. "All college activities will be centered around the girls." said Scott College's recently elected governor. Ben Tayor. "We hope to get them involved in the college." The college officers have tried to attract mainly freshman and sophomore girls. These girls are less involved in other campus activities and can give more time to the residence college, according to Taylor. Although the girls may seem catered to, the men already in the college have not been forgotten. College officers have added a second free juke box to the Scott facilities. More candy and drink machines are to be added soon and the Avery lobby will be redecorated. Picnic tables have already been purchased and will be placed behind Avery, near the snack bar entrance. Taylor said the Scott legislature hopes to have a barbecue pit built in the wooded area adjoining the dorms. As a result of a petition initiated by the Scott legislature and signed by a majority of residents, Scott College will have room phones in all three dorms by Thanksgiving. Although changes are taking place all over Scott College, the greatest changes will take place an Parker. Not all of these will be solely for the future female residents. One ground suite on the south side of Parker will be converted into a complex of an office, a classroom, and a seminar room large enough for40persons. for 40 persons. This complex will be used by the three faculty professors who will spend two hours each per week in Scott College teaching and serving as ad visors. These professors are Dr. Maynard Adams, Dr. Peter Filene, and Dr. P. Townsend Ludington. The professors will teach some General College courses and popular electives. In ad dition, the rooms will be open to Experimental College courses. ; . , The resident faculty! will be a giant step in the "living learning" environment which is the basis of the residence college system, according to Taylor. Although the living area the suites themselves will be lit tle changed, the rest of Parker will be almost completely renovated. The present Parker lobby will be converted into a parlor for the girls to receive their dates. A staircase will lead from the first floor parlor to a basement parlor-lounge which will double as a TV room. roU HaU Monday night. CaU EmUy at 968-9316. ULYSSES in green hardback with notes. CaU Pat Dearborn at 942-2085 or 933 3001. TAN BILLFOLD left in Woollen. CaU Sam Portaro at 968-9139 LADIES' BULOVA white gold watch. Reward offered by Kay McCray, 968-9030 or 966 8651. SORT rt k f STUPID BEAGLE I ) M HMM, MUST Ii POOR IE A DECENT J L A 4 . PFLLFB Y sic Despite rumors to the con trary, Russ Perry of the university Physical Plant said that the balconies on the back of Pakrer will not be screened in. However, a "Great Wall of China", an eight feet high curving brick wall win be built behind Parker. "Inside the wall, wiU be a Pipes Become The 'In' Thing J In Chapel Hill By JEFF ISHEE Special to the DTH i?e baldinS professor wor r,ied about his appearance the frat man concerned, about his image, the "dorm rat" trying to find that distinguish ed look, or the man who simply wants a good smoke all these are potential pipe smokers. Neither as dangerous as cigarettes, nor as offensive as cigars, nor as messy as chew ing tobacco, the pipe offers what many consider the ultimate satisfaction for the smoker. But probably the most im mediate attraction of the pipe is its cosmetic appeal Ihere is a certain aura about the man with a pipe in his mouth. According to Elliot B rum mitt, manager of Sutton's Drug Store and Smoke Shop, there is an increasing demand in Chapel Hill for pipes and all the paraphernalia that goes with them. He maintains a running inventory of between $8,000 and $7,000 worth of pipes and estimates sales of about $800 per month. His stock con tains more than 200 styles, including several suitable for ladies, though few of the fair sex ever find the nerve to try them. In addition, he does a brisk business in tobacco, selling between $300 and $400 worth per month. Coupled with numerous sales of such items as reamers, pipe tools, lighters, pipe cleaners, tobacco pouches, pipe racks, ash trays and other related accessories . this- addsup Jto a . substantial business. But what is it about pipes that attracts so many? Certainly fear of lung cancer and other respiratory ailments World ' test garden-like area with shrubs and furniture," said Perry. Parker girls will be able to entertain their dates in the garden during the warm months. Final changes include con verting a first Door suite into an apartment for the housemother and converting the second ground floor suite tempts many cigarette smokers to take up the pipe; but this fear doesn't by any means account for all the pipe smokers around. Devotees of the briar maintain that the well-tended and properly smoked pipe yields the most satisfaction possible from tobacco use. They point to the large variety of available tobaccos (Sutton's alone carries 133 dif ferent brands) which stock allows each person to find the particular taste and aroma that suits him. But most pipe smokers are attracted, initially at least, by the looks of the thing that aura. For some inexplicable reason smoking, or just simply holding a pipe makes a man look older, calmer, and more distinguishednot to mention the subtle and certain appeal to the ladies. And a great number, once they have mastered the stoking ritual and achieved their first good smoke, become entranced by the pipe's virtues and become devotees in their own right. But whatever the reasons, pipe smoking is on the upswing and is rapidly becoming the "in" thing. Campus SPEECH FESTIVAL in Caldwell Hall from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Workshop in the oral interpretation of literature. LIBRARY SCIENCE alumni association coffee hour at 10 a.m. at the "School' of Library Science. .J V. BASEBALL at 3 p.m. UNC vs. East Mecklenburg Problems stimulate me. Problems upset me. C(ott College? into a coed study room, a laundry room and a kitcheal Each of the upper floors hi Parker now contains two single rooms, located side by side in the center of the dormitory. The wall between these rooms will be torn out and a door made leading to the balcony. These rooms will serve as study and typing Fuller Maintains Power EveryHMm (Con tinned from Paxe 1) tenced for refusing induction into the Army. Mrs. Sellers began her speech with several remarks about her husband's con viction: "Cleve will probably get the full sentence for it," she said, "five years and ten thousand dollars." She said that blacks should refuse to serve in the Vietnam war because it was a "white" war. "I hope our black brothers will stand up and say no to this racist system, and our sisters will stand behind our men," she said. "The position we're at now is that the whites can leave us alone or they won't have a country." she continued. Mrs. Sellers spoke frankly about her own personal future. She said that the "revolu tionary blacks" like her hus band are the ones that are arrested and killed early. She also said that the black revolution has no place ior intellectuals "fighters" are needed. Moderacy does not have a place in the revolution, either. "We're reached the point where whites dont matter any more," she said. "We don't need people like Whitey Young or Uncle Roy WUkins either." Mrs. Sellers refuted the idea that college students at schools Calendar High. BOB SCOTT RALLY and din ner leaves the Central Carolina Bank parking lot at 4:30 p.m. Rides available. CaU Bob Farris at 942-4009 , nights if interested. ( FREE FLICK "Rebecca" at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in CarroU Hall. If you want to earn a living in a field that con stantly offers new and exciting perspectives new problems to solve consider the work of the CPA. A CPA has to grasp the essentials of many different fields, and have the Independence to form objective opinions about them. He's more in demand than ever before, by corporations, non-profit agencies, government bodies at all levels. Why? Because the increasing complexity of business requires new concepts of fact gathering, problem-solving, and communication of economic information. The CPA, for example, is one of the leaders in planning new ways to use computer systems. He might also be called upon to weigh the relative merits of social programs in terms of available resources, helping to shape an urban renewal program. So if problems intrigue you, and if.you have aptitude for concentrated, meticulous, creative thinking, you might make a good CPA in a pub lic accounting firm, in industry, education or government. At some point, you might even de cide to form a firm of your own. Talk with your faculty advisor. He can tell you about the courses that could lead toward a CPA certificate soon after graduation. Or you can do graduate work. You can also learn about the work of a CPA in a booklet we'll be glad to send you. Drop a note or card to: Dept. A10, AICPA, 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10019 American Institute of Certified Public Accountants rooms for the girls on the individual Doors. A small room at the end of each hall will become an ironing room. Mrs. Diane Benson will be the housemother of "the most modern girl's dorm on cam pus," And Parker will be in the center of one of the most progressive residence colleges,. like Orangeburg, S.C.. had rioted. "They're too middle clas 10 go out sniping." she said Airs. Sellers blasted whites for being patronizing to blacks. She cited the example of a woman she sat next to oa a plane flight. She said that the woman said she just couldn't un derstand why Negroes were so militant, according to Mrs. Sellers. When Mrs. SeUers tried to explain, the woman talked of bow close she was to her colored maid. At that point Mrs. Sellers gave up trying to explain. This prtronism and superior ity is what angers blacks, she said. "I can dig George WaUace because he's honest. He says I hate you nigger but some people say thay want you to teU them your troubles, and when you go to them they don't do anything." She says that the blacks know more about the Bible than people like Lester Mad- dox; "The Bible says Thou shalt no kill, but it also says to defend yourself.' " Carl Oglesby, former na tional director of SDS. also spoke. He compared the police state in Nazi Germany to what America is becoming today. He blamed the people for letting the U.S. commit mass genocide just as the Germans did in World War II. Oglesby also accused this country of furthering totalitarianism in Southeast Asia. Speakers also appeared for David Stith, Negro candidate for Congress from the fourth district, and Charles Pratt, Senate peace candidate for eastern North Carolina. - Tuz speakers outlined their candidates opinions on issues of the war, poverty and race.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 27, 1968, edition 1
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