WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1h-4T THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE FOUR ft ',A t ina s Around zvitli John w IIEiiE Ruffin dormitory has a mis guided inhabitant who is as i tt i 171 bout Saturday's game. Poor fellow was giving Carolina .and 6.... though he had winner too. Psychiatrists have been notified oi case. Chapel Hill police are in the middle of a cleanup. . . an inside job too. . .nothing sinister, though, just a coat of paint for the previously shabby headquarters . . .local crimebusters have ruled out whitewash in favor of a cream and brown combina tion. THERE Tio to Charlie Gibson and or the campus grounds com mittee . . . the Confederate soldier, subject of Charlie's dept DTH article of about 10 days DTH ego still clutches his whisky hitrthe big leagues this time bottle. . . good advertising for j . . . his no drinking at the visiting firemen come Satur-! State game editorial, hurrah! C .was picked up and reprinted And speaking of next Sat- nationally by the WCTU urdav. we understand that Clipsheet ..... .and we knew the governors of Virginia and him way. back when North Carolina will be on j Christmas is Coming ditto hand for the f ra y . . . oughta ! . . . Graham memorial's travel be some Justice joke there, man Bob Watson reports bu- but don't think of one just smess is picking up. He has now. put up a Seaboard schedule CONCENTRATING ON BETTING his chips and com pletely oblivious of the crowd that is watching him, University of Chicago student Albert Hibbs is shown in Reno, Nevada, where he and fellowstudent Roy Walford have beaten the roulette wheel for $7,000 with a unique system. The two young men started out with a stake of $300. (International Soundphoto) , Je Pense Que Je Suis... Three New Books, A Kind Reviewer, And Some Comment By Bob Sain Two excellent new Frence novels and a rather uncertain survey of a young man's mind have been more or less con sumed by the reviewer in the past week. First in importance and in- AND ELSEWHERE Local Boy Makes Good . . Ed . Joy ner, pious managing editor has interested in inpsio U tint to rrti: Of til! ANOKtk aaariicie atxwi iEO itiitl MEMO! I IS A HICK by UoBffld Ktd PBESIOEHIIAL POSSIBILITY No. 4 tloreld Slass . in jazz? light cpera? sym phonic?. . . every issue of PIC carries the latest record news and reviews. Sports Apparel Fiction Ccreers In the December issue en ell newsstands 25c. to relieve the pressure from information seekers . . . down town merchants evidently have the spirit too, they had the usual decorations up this year over a week before Thanksgiving. Overheard at a Student party conclave . . .Al Lomen stein pushing Mimi Massey for the student council opin ed to Al Winn that counci: members should be in close contact with each other. And a roar from the editor reminds us that the deadline was ten minutes ago . . . with Bill Sexton in Raleigh and Charlie Gibson contributing a lot of his time to the Caro lina mag, they have to fill the paper with stuff like this . . . .or do they? quality is Jean-Paul Sartre's difficult but rewarding novel, "The Reprieve. Some have complained about obscurity and denseness in Sartre's first first .novel, "The Age of Reason." They will fond in "The Reprieve" a book to make its predecessor nursery- cessary. It was just part of living. Camus is an ultra-pes-sismist and his little man of Algiers is one of the most pitiful characters in contemp orary literature. Bill Mauldin, the author of "Back Home," was, unlike the poor man of Algiers, not ! drawn into life but thrown Campus Parties in Brief . . Greek Letter Fete Imports, Groups Alumni By Sally Woodhull SOCIETY Dorothy Clarice to Wed Koch, As though the Duke game nough activities for one week Son of Founder of Play makers end, fraternities and dorms j 1 sceduled parties at just about j The wedding of Dorothv HEADQUARTERS For Good Used Furniture of Every Description at Rock Bottom Prices. Also new washing fna chines, electric refrigera tors, and oil burning space heaters. Southern Used Furniture Company 407-409 N. Mangum Street Durham, N. C. Opp. Big: A&P Store. rhyme simple ' iin, hed first. Mauldin's book Sartre has tried to scoop 1 concerns the politics and life up with his two hands Euro-iof Mauldin. It tells of the pean thought of the year j young, popular GI cartoonist 1938; and he has succeeded. jwho came back from the war But his technique, which con-; in Europe to find himself a tributes much to the diffi- celebrity and a widely-recog-culty in reading the book, nized political wizard, completely ignores the morej. His first civilian political obvious forms of transition, steps' were toward the far His characters are scattered ieft. These, however, were over Europe from Paris to more or iess. retraced as Prague and he doesn;t hesi- Mauldin got richer and rich tate to take you from one set er and lost his identification to the other in mid-sentence, j witH the massses. Now, like His much-discussed Exist-many young semi-leftists, he entialism is present in "Theiis not sreatlv concerned with Reprieve," though it would politics. His pen( and type take an expert to isolate it .writer) have been turned to and put a finger on it. (I'm! the civil rights front, taking the word of others. II "Back Home" is, as the think the philosophy in the publishers' blurbs always say, "profusely illustrated" with Mauldin's well-known brand of cartoonery. -CornerH (Continued from Page Three) ly-renowned architect and the designer of this new book is Existentialism. It may be Tibetan transmigration.) "The Reprieve," ' second in Sartre's trilogy "The Roads to Freedom" is desk and student lamp reading. Wait for the Christmas hiatus, or even better the summer holi- Albert Camus, on the other gilding will also be present hand, has offered a 154-page, along wlth John L. Morehead three-hour novel called "The an?t Nrma" j ' who' Stranger." Camus writes in , with ir Morehead, consti- a clean, matter-of-fact style L L"e. 'V1 u 1 U rounaa" much removed from the more .Jn which has been set up literary manner of Sartre.. ad.s1er the North Caro- He tells of a very ordinary , , man who lives.in North Afri- !TT ,ul1 "-'?is oi me no AimorcV rtnM ! u carbon and Carbide every spare moment during! Mrs. Cooke served from a the three-day period. Alumni ' lovely silver tea set. snri imnnrt flooded the ! The TEP's weekend activi- campus, and pinnings were , ties were highlighted by the numerous i pinning oi iwu uiuuias, Vaughn Monroe and his -Kinberg and Wiley Robinson, Moonmaids were - entertained , both to imports from W C at dinner following their Fri-1 Plans for a Pjrty during day afternoon concert by the a u " T Riama Phi' whnSp Sif Spv- by the SAE's. To be given in tef furnished entertainment. .Greensboro, the party will . A, . , honor John Berry, whose Following the Saturday marriage to Margaret Stone night, dance, the PiKA s en- wm take lacg in Ft Lauder. tertained brothers, pledges, dale Florida on December and alumni and their dates 20 ' and wives at breakfast from , pi phi Alums back for the 11 until 1 o'clock Earlier in(weekend were enteriained at the evening a buffet supper Sunday night. Among was served to about 200 cf;thm were N Laid Jo. those who managed to strugg- anne Mm Rusty Hancock, le through mud and traffic IAnn Robinson Betty Kend back to Chapel Hill after the rkkSj and Ann Cutts Qn Same- t ! Monday night Jean Basnight PiKA PLANS jgave a surprise bridal shower The PiKA's are also plann- a her home for Sara Buchan ing to welcome alumni and an who will be married to fHoc ir,cr .ootoriri Bill Porter m Decepiber. when Carolina meits Virgin-1 Chi Omega pledges were ia. As in past years, many en- entertained by the Beta s thusiastic visitors are expect- Thursday night and they are ed down from Aloha chanter Panning a party after Than- at Virginia jksgiving for the pledges ot - o Zeta Beta Tau alumni, the other sororities Among ADPi's entertained guests and brothers from the 'ack fJ he weekend were Duke, chapter were entertain- Cheatam, whose en- ed Friday and Saturday T;! tt-i un. night at the house, with a colored combo providing mu- fsic. Some 40 guests were giv en breakfast Sunday morning. The Dekes served their re gular buffet luncheon for a lums before the game Satur i fragment to Jim Vofeer has just been announced; Caro line Storn. Virginia Wilson, and Mary Pierce Johnson. We hear that Mr. and Mrs. James O. Miller were honor ed guests at the Billy Gra ham revival meeting in Char- aay, ana the aius gave a wt Qatrdav night. buffet supper Saturday night 'MiIler ran in a special race after the game and a break- !agains Parson Gil Dodds and fast following the dance. Phiafter the race Mrs. Miller's Gams threw a "Beat Dook" ins irational guidance' was party Friday night, and were I t of the text of Rev. hosts to alums and guests at ,rnrlrk' nprial sermon Clarke, daughter of Kevcrc ul and Mrs. D. A. Clarke .,f Roanoke Rapids, and Willing J. Koch, son of Mrs. Freder ick H. Koch and the late Pro fessor Koch, founder of 1 1 it Carolina Playmakers, will take' place Friday afternoon at 5:30 in the Duke chapel. A recent graduate of Mere dith college, Miss Clark al u attended Carolina and Duke, where she became a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. The bridegroom-to-be. a University lao instructor, graduated from Carolina ami k Chapel Hill high school, where he was editor of t he annual. He saw war service- I in the Navy, and was ..l o here with the V-12. Mrs. Frederick Kocl nounced that no invitai.. to the wedding had been se out, but that all friends u i cordiallv invited to the c en- monies. The bride and groom have known each other for approx imately seven years, accord ing to Mrs. Koch. his business quietly. The litt- , corporation with which Mr. ing the dance iwuil v J.liVVJVV- ill Al V a buffet supper Saturday night and at breakfast follow ing and finall kills someone, The killing wasn't really ne- V THE EXTRA POINT ed in an engineering or an executive capacity almost I continuously since his gradu- I i.V i . i ... jauon irom the University in Pre-game highlight for Mc- Iver girls was a dorm break fast served Saturday from 9 to 10 o'clock in the apartment of their hostess, Mrs. Cooke j 1891, are also to be on hand. Assisted by Lynn Blanchard, rv WINS GAMES LOOK AT THE EXTRA POINTS IN 1. bUiUidlim tfbut&i Gizattu 4.5 ia 5 Buttered e Q - Nicotinic Acid B Complex. 4. Afate , T&rmer'sl v , lit; OUR PLEDGE THE FINEST MILK AND DAIRY PRODUCTS 5. Afilh SiUfon 7. Gomel ontypi&m delected (jtieZMde Garni. S. Meeil t&jpUtemeHtd. of iacal and dtate health cudUoAitiL. 9. &Mf&uuded at production Lu fsy GOLDEN GUERNSEY, jhc., a nan profit aaAicultuAal atUfOiuqcUian. DR. WILLIAM T. KOHN announces the opening of his office for the practice of OPTOMETRY Contact Lenses Telephone 3686 140 1-2 E. Franklin St. Above Carolina Coffee Shop Office hours: 9:00 to 6:00, Tuesdays, Thursdays- and Saturdays. -Harland- (Continued from Page Three) half of the graduating class in the College of Liberal Arts have had one or more archaeology courses. Basis for this amazing pop ularity is the personal touch. Though many of his classes have more than 120 students, he gets to know each one and ;J their individual' idiosyncra- sies by the end of every s- .quarter. And he'll probably remember them when they H t send him a postcard from U some museum years later or ti' drop in on him at Commence ( ment. He has a cure-all remedy l;jfor those he doesn't get to v know so well at first because I, j they seem to have othr ne r Pavements. "I keen a Black gets around, and they ;tll come floating back. Also, a little quiz will usually throw them of and fill up the class room again. I just humor the students or let them think I do." And humor them all ho does, from the first day the y walk into the precipitous classroom, the 111 Murphy hall auditorium, through the last minute of the final ex amination. Jokingly, but with an undertone of seriousness, Dr. Harland refers to his classroom as the worst con structed auditorium in Amer ica and as the poorest possib le environment for archaeo logical study. Lectures Are Ilustrated The seats in 111 Murphcy are too close together; there's no place to take notes; it's too stuffy; the lighting is poor, and, the acoustics worse: and if you're not careful, you are likely to fall out of the ' i steeply banked rows and hurt yourself. But the ing the lect ed slides which accompany all of his lectures invariably liven up the period and help the class forget these dis comforts. Dr. Harland has ul ten said that if any student can get the room remodeled he'll try to name the new auditoriu mafter him. T.pftond arnnnd tho camuus I t of the i of .seats t yourselt. , i advantages of see- jtures via illustrat- J list of those," he said. "Then, has it that no student has ...u t n,,niltr nntmn o nvpr failrd -a Harland course VV11CI1 X tdOUUllY illVilViUH CA 1 " " few names on the Black List J Iin class, the word usually a tale which the jovial See HARLAND, Papc B i Sf! 19- dinners &airuCooj&ratiyejftc For the Best at THANKSGIVING si ... VKp U Vr The Jfsif foom And The JfaU Soom 1M Open their doers to all Carolina Students and Their Friends arvin s Restaurant of Durham 4 .V. 4 I J I' 1 V