Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 4, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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,i'.T. WEATHER Clearing and colder today with an expected high of 43. Yesterday's high, 55; low, 32. POET An alumnus publishes book of verse. See p. 2. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 88 Complete JP Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N, C THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1954 Complete IP Photo and Wire Service FOUR PAGES TODAY lie JMfaii&? JHleel Navy Lists New Slate Of Officers Midshipmen officers of the Na val KOTC unit at the University of North Carolina for. the spring semester were announced yester day by Col. R. C. Burns, USMC, professor of naval science and commander of the unit They are: Battalion command er: Midshipman Captain E. B. Gross, Harrisburg, Pa Battalion staff: Mid'n Cmdr. J. S. Schenck, HI, Greensboro; LCDR. H. D. Bradshaw, Green ville; Lt. H. H. Arnold, Dover; Lt B. G. Skidmore, Charlotte; LTJG N. B. Barkley, New Or leans, La.; LTJG C. C. Seabrook, Charleston, S. C; and CPO J. A. Blake, Wildwood, N. J. A Company: Mid'n LT D. L. Har ley, Haddenfield, N. J.; LTJG J. H. Sweeney, Wilmington; CPO W. K. Scarborough, Annapolis, H. D. Gleitz, Jacksonville; ENS Md.; ENS G. W. Cook, Forsyth; and ENS W. H. Ruffin, Jr Durham. B Company: Mid'n LT M. O. Reg ister, New Bern; LTJG J. Q. Stil well, Charleston. S. C.; CPO T. M.. Stokes. Jr., Raleigh; ENS H. W. Conner, Charleston, S. C; ENS T. A. Parnell, Lumberton; and ENS R. S. Cowell, Rocky Mount C Company: Mid'n LT T. E. Medlin, Smithfield; LTJG R. C. Carmichael, Durham; CPO J. H. - N s - j ' r ' f .'' - ? -'vr " - - - - . v : " , j THEY HITCHED old Dobbin to the sleigh when the snows carrfv to Chapel Hill in the week before ex ams. This two-horsepowered snow plow was in operation at Fraternity Court. Staff Photo by Jerry Cook. Bissel, Bever, Hutchinson and Cheek Four Faculty Members Added Four new faculty members have been appointed and approved by the Executive Committee of the Trustees for the UNC staff, it was announced yesterday by President Gordon Gray and Chancellor Rob ert B. House. They are Dr. Dwight M. Bissell, as professor of public health ad ministration; Dr. Christopher The odore Bever, associate professor of psychiatry; Dr. Joseph Candler Hutchinson, assistant professor in . a. in. i n-c r t i ivounLee, jr. jiu Airy, r& m.. Romance Languages; and Miss Woodford, Clemmons; ENS J. G.Mary Vida cheek assistant profes Colson, Jr., Greensboro; and ENS j sor; School of Nursing, and direc- t i j? t : xr v Drum and Bugle Corps: Mid'n LTJG R. L. Skilien, Durham; ENS H. V. P. V.ilson, IH, Dover, Del.; and CPO T. H. Hoover, Charlotte. Students Pick Indian Theme For Program "An Indian Evening" of singing, dancing, movies, and refreshments will be presented tomorrow from to 8 p.m. in the Rendezvous Room of Graham Memorial by In dian students and members of the tor of Nursing Service, N. C. Me morial HospitaL Dr. Bissell will begin his duties as professor of public health ad ministration, School of Public Health, on May 1. He received his B.A. degree at Fresno State Col lege, California, took his M.A. and MJ). dgrees at Stanford, and his M.P.H. at California. Dr. Bissell has served as district superintendent and principal of high schools in California, health officer in various California com munities, and h2S taught public health administration at San Jose State College. A number of his ar ticles have been published in lead ing medical magazines, including the "Journal of the American Medical Association." Dr. Bissell is to mom1-fT- rf iho 4mnrican TpHi Although given primarily for . u i i 'cal Association, American Public members of the Cosmopolitan i ' ... . , n u t, u Health Association and other schol- Club, Ram Desican, m charge of , . . . , ...... . . arlv and professional organiza- tne party, mvites any other inter-1 - . , . tions. esied persons to come. . We will serve light Indian re- Dr- Bever began his work here freshments, and also have an ar- thls semester. Born m Munich, rangement of Indian handicrafts. I Germany, " he was graduated cum We hope, by this program, to bring !Ia"de from Harvard where he re to all students a better under-! standing of the India of today j - the country, the culture, and the! people," Desican said. The program will open with the singing of the national anthem of India. Then Purabi and Sipra Eose will do a native dance. A. L. Rao will give an exposition of Camatic music with demonstrations. Three movies on India will be j shown. The" first, "Freedom, Marches On." is a pictorial chron icle of the epochmaking times since 1947. This film presents in day-to-day form the events that are shaping Lndia's destiny. The second film is "Indian Art Through the Ages," which pictures Indian sculpture and other art forms over a period of 5,000 years. Last will be "Indian Minorities" which presents the India of today, a land of diverse races and creeds living as one. This film won the Award of Merit at the Canadian International Film Festival in 1951. ceived the B.A. and MJD. degrees. He was clinical instructor in psychiatry at Georgetown Univer sity for two years before coming to Chapel HilL He is a member of the Ameri can Psychoanalytic Association, American Psychiatric Society, and American Orthopsychiatry So ciety. Miss Cheek, a native of Durham, received her B.S. degree in Nurs ing Education from the University of Virginia and her M.N. from the University of Washington. She has served as supervisor, North Caro lina Baptist Hospital, supervisor and instructor at Winchester, (Va.) Nursing Service and School of Nursing, Memorial Hospital of South Bend, Ind., and director of Nursing Service and School of Nursing, The -Queen's Hospital, Honolulu, T.H. Dr. Hutchinson joins the Uni versity faculty on September 1. Born in Hazelhurst, Ga., he was graduated from Emory University with B.A. and M.A. degrees. He received his Ph.D. at the Univer sity of North Carolina in 1950, where he was also instructor for three years. He taught at Emory for a year and will complete two years as in structor at Sweet Briar before re- APO Opens Book Store On Campus A student-operated book ex change will be open in the Y building from 9 to 4 o'clock to Tlay and during the opening days of this semester under the aus pices of Alpha Phi Omega, cam pus service fraternity. Since students have often griped about getting too little for their old textbooks, and having to pay too much for somebody else's, APO decided to open an exchange where stu dents may name their own prices for their used texts. This is how it works: The stu dent takes his book down and sets his own price for it "When it is sold he is notified and can collect his money, minus a ten cent service charge. Three-section cards will be provided for the student to fill out. One section goes in the files, one in the book and one to the book's owner. The books are arranged according to sub ject, and there is a great variety to choose from, according to Charles Katzenstein, president of APO fraternity. He said there are about 25 non-profit book ' exchanges op erated Joy chapters of APO fra ternity on other campuses in the county. udents emesrer aclc in Routine Memorial Hospital, director of turning to Chapel Hill. Memo To Frugal Record Fans: Columbia, RCA Slashing Prices There's no price war developing , will play to long-playing pop rec between RCA Victor and Columbia I ords, too. Records-not exactly-but both Milton Abernethy at Abernethv's have either reduced their record!,,- j,,, Mauser's Back And The DTH Has Got Him Chuck Hauser, a long-time figure on The Daily Tar Heel from 1946 to 1951,. returned, to, the paper's staff this semester after serving in the Army for two years and seven months. prices or are in the process. Victor has informed its distribu tors to mark 12 inch long-playing records down from $5.72 to $3.99, the 10 inchers down from $4.67 to $3.25. That's the prevailing price of Victor records in Chapel Hill now. On Feb. 4, the Columbia com pany will advertise a cut-rate rec ord price in Life Magazine. A sec ond record will be offered by Co lumbia for half-price, provided the first is bought at store prices ranging from $2.85 to $5.95; that the squeeze on the dealer. The price-cutting is definitely a sales promotion idea, he said, possibly initiated by the companies to aid in their inventory, or maybe just to increase volume sales and turn over. In 1938, Abernethy remem bered, the prices of all classical disks were cut from $2 to $1. Whatever the reason for the price come-down, news of the slice is sweet harmony to the ears of campus music-lovers. In' dollars and cents terms, it simply means more for less. He was named to the post of as- i their way every bottle of liquor sociate editor yesterday by Editor ! sold at orth Carolina ABC Stores Rolfe Neill. Hauser will serve 1 wiI1 carry an appeal for the im- with Neill and Associate Editor Ed Voder to round out the editorial staff. Hauser went into the Army in the summer of 1951. He went through OCS at Fort Sill, Okla., and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the artillery. While serving in Korea with the Second Division Hauser was wounded in action. He received the Bronze Star. He was discharged last week. He is the son of Col. and Mrs. J. N. Hauser of Fayetteville. Hauser was managing editor of (The Daily Tar Heel his sophomore year and held the post for two years. 1 By Dick Creed Most of the novelty of the semester system had worn off yesterday aa students, faculty, and administration -began the routine business of getting the machinery for the new session into gear. South Building, as usual at the beginning of a new semester, was -filled with long, creepy lines of students waiting to see their deans or advisors in hopes of dropping or swapping courses, or getting physical ed from 11 to 1 o'clock instead of from 1 to 3 o'clock. They were letting them in ten at a time at Archer House, clear ing house of the drop-add trans actions. Some of those who had gone through the drop-add procedure before were confused; and the lit tle sheets telling when, where, and what to do were missing from the envelopes containing class tickets. Here's how it's done: Anybody wanting to change his schedule must see his advisor or dean and get authorization for the change. The authorization will consist of one original and four carbons. The student must take the au-. thorization and the tickets to the classes he is changing to Archer House. The tickets and the au thorization will be taken. Class tickets to replace those from courses dropped will be issued. 11 no tickets- are available at Archer House for the course to which the student wants to switch, he must inform his advisor. Drop-add will continue through Saturday. Something new was added this semester in the form of a personal schedule card delivered with each set of class tickets. Some confu sion resulted when the semester system went into effect last fall when students often showed up for Monday classes on Tuesday and vice versa. No enrollment figures for the new semester system are available as yet. Assistant Director of Rec ords Raymond Strong said that an official report on enrollment should be ready by "the middle of next week." SUAB Films Begin Tonight In Carroll Hall SUAB will show "Beauty and the Beast" as the first of this semes ter's selection of eight movies at 8:30 tonight in Carroll HalL Admission is by season ticket only. Season tickets, will be on sale at the door tonight for $2. They are also available at the Gra ham Memorial Information office. ' "Beauty and the Beast" is con sidered to be one of Jean Coc teau's greatest films, utilizing imaginative and provocative sym bols and film techniques. . Other films in the series: Feb ruary 18, "Murderers Among Us," a postwar German film and one of the few to be exhibited in all four occupation zones of Germany. "Murderers Among Us" is a psy chological drama dealing with the conflicts in the minds of the Ger man people as they emerge from a chaotic war. March 4 will see th2 presentation of "Greed," a masterpiece in the expression of naturalism directed by Erich von Stroheim. On March 18, a French film, 'The Smiling Madame Beudet," will be shown. Motor Vehicles Official Asks Warning On Liquor RALEIGH, Feb. 3 (JP)U Motor Vehicles Department officials have biber not to drive while drinkinj 'Are You On?' Robert Frost Treats Students To Pot-Bellied Stove Type Talk By Joe Raff j English Department. In an hour- The mornin? after Robert Frost i lno discussion session, the audi- addressed the Carolina student body and Chapel Hill townspeople in Hill Hall, the poet walked over to the assembly room at Bingham Hall and spoke to members of the Positions Open For Handbook Students Interested in running for editor or business manager of The Carolina Handbook may ap ply to the YMCA Publication Board now. Forms r be filled out can be Picked up at the main desk at the; YMCA until February 9. All ap plications must be turned in by that time. The business manager receives a commission on all advertisements sold. If If I I 1 V . S5S?5r 1 'Hilt x A HR" i ' l?t 3 lLJS- 't? I II t :V r-rs - : 1 - ;: .. b .... vv,.v,:.-,. WIbmbctwiW Tl,; I JlVlllllliag!MB!agW.: - . . is -s ' I - -' - -i - -fiI u- -.v.-. w-- y-.y- i IN CASE you didn'r take time to look out the win f'aw in the cour? of studying for exams a couple of weeks ago, here's the way ft was in Chape! Hill. Six inches of snow covered the campus, bringing on whole sale snowball vandalism to windows and street lamps and some damage from melting snow which short-cir cuited un V-rground cables. At top left, a prideful PiKA Sr. pictured taking a picture of his fraternity house. Two studsnts (top center make their careful way down South Building's i3?s and the photo at top right, shows one of the snow plows which was hauled into operation to clear the walks. Virginia Breece, (bottom left) a Miami -Cornell Wright Photos coed unused to snow and U gets a kidding, and a hand in clearing off her windshield, from dormmate Jane Ysarley. And even th president's ear wasn't immune. President Gray's Lincoln is shown parked at South Building, bogged down in sludge. At bottom right is shown the icy pathway past Old West Dormitory. ence showed a reluctance to ask questions so the poet of Ameri cana posed his own interrogations, and attempted to answer them. As ever, Robert Frost was not giving a formal address. It was as if a group of students adults and youths was huddled about a pot-bellied stove listening to a wise gentleman expound on the nature of things, especially literature. Frost spoke with scholarly famil iarity about poets of other periods. He reached into the readings of his boyhood and quoted poetry most of us would have forgotten we even read. He spoke with ad miration of the works of other poets and cited some of their shortcomings. One of the most striking quali ties about Mr. Frost is his frank ness. He jokes about his side stepping questions and issues, but he will seldom fail to satisfy a question which he is qualified to answer. Frost would read one of his verses, lock up from the book of his poetry (which he borrowed from a local professor), and ask in his traditional homespun manner, "Are you on?" He mentioned that in the classroom a poem is as sign2d to the students. They go home and read the poem and the next day the professor tells the students what it was all about. The argent-crowned poet said that po etry was a fifty-fifty proposition and that he wanted a fair shake. Frost also spoke to those in the audience who were interested in writing as a career. He advi?ed the aspirants to do some writing and then to determine whether the writing is successful or not. He cursorily added that the writer should give up writing if he were no, successful. The statement is reminiscent of the W. C. Fields quip: "If at first you don't succeed, give up. There's no sense being a damn fool about it"
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 4, 1954, edition 1
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