Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 15, 1952, edition 1 / Page 7
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. -- nuiT v "t-r oti-ni 1 1 fT r rg'M'ty T 'TCrO "1 TACL 2 House Names Changes For UNC Faculty 11 Eleven appointments, two pro- j motions and seven leaves of ab- j sence have been okayed for facul- j ty members by the , Executive j Committee of UNC Board of Trus-: tees. - j Chancellor Robert B. House yes- ; terday released the following names: Dr. W. Dougald " MacMil- lan, professor of English, is the new chairman of the English de-? partment, succeeding Dr. C. P. j Lyons who is now dean of the college of arts and sciences. Dr. Ernest Wood has been ap- pointed professor and head of the j department of radiology of the j school of medicine. He is a grad- j uate of Duke and received his ' M.D. from Harvard in 1939. 'j Other appointments include Dr. Thomas W. Farmer, professor, de partment of medicine of the school of medicine. Farmer is a graduate of Harvard, took his A.M. at Duke and. received his MD. from Harvard in 1941; Dr. i aid in setting up a suitable mone- George Vincent Taylor, assistant ! tary system for Korea. professor of the department of BERNARD M. BARUCH vrarned members of the Indus trial College of the Aimed Forces yesterday that the na tion's economy is "propped pre cariously on . stills" as a result of prices, diminshed savings and the decreased purchasing power of every defense dollar. One-fifth of this country's de fense spending in the next fis cal year will represent a "need less tribute to inflation. Keif Oak Ridge rs AC Choose A President Special to Tee Daxlx Taj Hen. -GREENSBORO, May 14 A general named Eisenhower defi nitely is the No. 1 man in the political lives of Woman's College students vho lined up at a polling booth yesterday to register their preference of presidential candi-j dates. Ike tabbed 588 of the 1,103 stu dent votes. About half cf the 2,500 student body voted. Senator Kefauver led the Dem ocratic ticket with 328 votes. Sen ator Taft, who spoke on the WC campus last fall, ran a poor se cond to Eisenhower with only 29 votes. Georgia's Senator Russell followed Kefauver on the Demo cratic ticket with 87 votes. Governor Stevenson of Illinois led the write-ins with 28 votes. n -bp art Wore.- II'- v :.. I '' . ; . v --X if- 5 I . -. - - ' - - 1 I " - -x" -. . i : 49. I . v - - ,y .srr i j - y - - .. - -. ;' i i !-"' - - - ! 1 I V- - . - ; . f . I i jiJ j SEH. ESTES KefauTer (left) split with Gen. Dwighl Eisen hower (right) in campus presi deniial polls run al two North Carolina schools. Ike was a landslide choice al Woman's College while the Tennesseeaja took Oak Ride by a good m&r-gin. Spanish Club Names' New Officers history. A graduate of Rutgers, Taylor received his Ph.D. in 1950 from the University of Wiscon-4 sin; Dr. John T. Sessions, Jr., assistant professor, department of medicine, school of medicine. Sessions is a graduate of Emory University and received his M.D. there in 1945. Dr. Tihamer Zoltan Czaky, as sistant professor, department of pharmacology, school "of medi cine. Csaky received his M.D. from the University of Budapest in 1939; Dr. Joseph Frederick Bunnett, assistant professor de partment of chemistry. Bunnett is a graduate of Reed College and received his Ph.D. in 1945 from the University of Rochester; Dr. Paul Leslie Bunce, assistant pro- Lynn Gault, assistant professor, other writeins were Sen. Paul department cf dramatic art, was DougiaSt 5; Harold Stassen, 2; recommended for a leave of ab- j justjce w. q. Dounlas. 4: Averell snece, September, 1952, to Sep- j Harriman, 6; President Truman, 1(19 frT fitr-iYsci-r' L-nrlr i . . z; ana fjovernor warren, 9. tember, 1952, for further work and study. Dr. Herbert Robbins, professor of the department of mathemati cal statistcs, was recommended for a leave of absence for the academic year, 1952-53, to study at the Institute for Advance Study. Dr. William Wells, professor of the department of English, was recommneded for a leave of ab sence, fall quarter, 1952, for fur ther study. Four retirements effective June 30 were included in the report to President Gordon Gray: Pro fessor Thomas F. Hickerson, Ken an professor of mathematics; Dr. school cf medicine. A graduate j Karl 11. Fussier, professor in the of Oberlin College, Bunce re ceived his M.D. from the Univer sity of Chicago in 1942; Miss Syl via Ruth Kiger, assistant profes sor, school of nursing. Miss Kiger received her B.S. in nursing from WCUNC in 1949 and took her M.S. in Nursing in January at Western Reserve University. Dr. Morris S. Davis, assistant professor in astronomy. A grad uate of Brookyn College, Davis received his M.A. from the Uni versity of Missouri in 1947 and his Ph.D. from Yale in 1590; Dr. John Seridan MacNerney, assist ant professor, department of mathematics, MacNerney grad uated from the University of Tex as with honors in 1948 and re ceived his Ph.D. there in 1951. Dr. Herman U. Baity, professor of sanity engineering in the school of public health, was re commended for a leave of ab sence from Sept. 1, 1952 to Sept. 1, 1953. He will serve as the first director of environmental sanita tion of the World Health Organization. Charles Edward Eaton, assist ant professor of the department of English, was recommended for a leave of absence for spring quarter, 1952, and the academic year ,1952-53 for further study. William A. Olsen, professor of speech,, department of English, was recommended for a leave of absence, spring quarter 1952, upon advice of physician. Dr. Clarence Heer, Kenan pro fessor of economics, school of business administration, was re commended for a leave of absence, spring quarter 1952, upon request tf the Department of Defense, to department of physics; Floyd Harris Edminster, professor chem istry, and Hugo Giduz, professor of romance languages. Robert A. Fetzer, director of athletics, will resign June 30 to accept the office of executive sec retary of the Morehead Scholar ship Foundation; and Mr. Ed ward Freed, of the department of radio and division of communi cations, will resign to accept a position of faculty member at the University of California. He is presently on leave. . The campus election, which was undemonstrative after, the initial spurt of rally enthusiasm Monday evening, was sponsored by The Carolinian, undergraduate news paper and the Students for Dem ocratic Action. Sally Beaver is 1 editor of The Carolinian and Bun ny Greenberg heads SDA. OAK RIDGE FOR KEFAUVER Special to The Daily Tar Hiel i Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) beat Gen. Dvvight D. Eisenhower, 97 to 63, in a campus presidential preference vote yesterday at Oak Ridge Military Institute. In the Republican primary, Ike won. with a whopping 48 votes to nine for Sen. Robert A. Taft (R-Ohio), seven for Harold Stas sen, and two for Governor Earl Warren of California. The Democrats nominated Ke fauver with 55 votes,, compared to 24 for Averell Harriman, 18 for Sen. DickJtussell (D-Ga.), and none for Sen. Robert , Kerr (D-Okla). Jim Eagan, a rising senior from Portsmouth, Va., recently was elected president of the Spanish Club. Other" officers selected were Vice-President Johnny Poindex ter, Burlington, and Social Chair man Shirley Gee, Johnson City, Term. Club plans for next year include parties with the Woman's College and Duke Spanish Clubs, speeches to the club on Latin America and movies at the meet ings. The club meets every Thuisday night at 6 o'clock in the upstairs dining room of Lenoir, Hall. In terested students are invited. TIT 11 ,9, ft rv 4Ollt ml tell Real! Daring! Thrilling! Mad murder, strange evil in a Paris you've never beheld before! & - -- it SS1 v. .v v ?. . f v . . S ' i ;- ..,.( jrTTN S.5.-r.; "jtMoytng -rCrcting Shipping itStorcge Phone 2159 for Free Estimate i . j - -1 NIGHT PHONES: 8-8587. 3-3362 810 Ramseur Street 1 1 Playing Now HERE'S TH' f. VOU'RE A . V FLOWERS. J : GOOD KE. j UX. WIFE-BUT AH is SO RAKIM' JN) TEN CENTS A DANCE, AT TH SHMOZE- LAE BAU-ROOM jjj on Mm J. ., f.vrf'iF:'---i -AW ASSOQEE-AnM' VUlF GEMNULMEN WHO tS SO INTER ESTED IN HER CAREER. THEV GTVES HER HAMBURGERS AM' FLOWERS FQ' FREEZ'-s'C.?' TH WORLD.1? I "fe38e -w . .. 5 8 rS!SSSSS52: i I f
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 15, 1952, edition 1
7
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