Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 19, 1954, edition 1 / Page 6
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PACE SIX THE DAILY TAR HEEL FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1954 ' f ; x I -I I Mexico ... wk end excursion. , ' . , J? f , : " " Jf ' V lVf ' ' IAST TIAAES TODAY . -s !sv' xLi .MMMSEaiM n i'm-""" .. . - .. .i.r IHM.J1LJ..IL ir-nnirr ' mmf m ' ' fc-f ' " , , ' : PIHF K?l . i Nvx If t M , m " 1 ' i " ! CSEATESTv I r II 'RIDERS . . h'1 P TO THE sx if i stars yj&yr Nr . v-1 - " IN COLOR BSC CCU3R CORP Of AMEHCA : - -V; - x ! - - STARTS TOMORROW! - I H Scotf Club Is . Formed The first college "Scott for Sen ate" Club to be organized in the state was formed here this week, Approximately 60 students at tended the initial meeting of the group and elected Stuart Jones, senior from Winston -Salem, chair man. Bob Farrell of Troy was elec ted vice-chairman and Charlie Dean of Fuquay Springs was chos en secretary -treasurer. Named as executive committee for the new club were Clay Stal naker of Spindale, Bob Byrd of Morganton, and James L. McElroy of Marshall. Pittsboro Solicitor Harry Horton, a Carolina alumnus and Young Democrats Club national commit teeman, addressed the meeting. He told the club not to "stop with the formation of the Scott for Senate Club, but for the next three and a half months get out and work as hard as possible for his election." Horton said there was "no ques tion in his mind, nor in the minds of the majority of people of North Carolina, that Scott will be elected. However, we cannot take anything for granted, and there is a lot of hard work to be done right now." "I feel that in Kerr Scott," Hor ton said, "we have an excellent opportunity to send to Washington a progressive man and a person who has the welfare and well-be at ing of all classes of people heart.' "He is not a man who represents any special group or any special class of people. His primary aim is not self-glorification, but it is one of rendering service to his state and to his nation." Cast thia Mendenhall, Asheboro; Don Carmichael, Fairfield, Conn.; Wil liam White, Tomsham, Me.; James Hager, Harmony; John Ludwig, New Orleans; and Len Bullock, Ay den. Members of the singing chorus are Jan Saxon, Charlotte; Nancy Murray, Raleigh Nora Jane Rum ph, Sumter, S. C.; Suzanne Elliott, Alva, Oka;. Jean Hillman, Neward, Del.; Lorraine Yancey, Williams burg, Ky.; Joanne Murphey, Look out Mt, Tenn.; Elsie Peterson, Le land; Barbara Treat, Chapel Hill; Jackie Brooks, Michigan City, Ind.; i r! Their Love made such Wonderful Music I Uto I. vr glenn Miller c STORY M mm' The "LSf mi 1 y WtyrZA BoomicHT i . - as mm mst nomm sum maims! sekwdc umf mm et sisuk if rom tuxeso junction n the mom rtnenvwiiA ssooo CHIU00GA CWXWKOO CHARLES DRAKE GEORGE TOBIAS HENRY MORGAN end Am Musical "Grtofi of Go. if Slant FRANCES IANGF0R0 LOU'S ARMSTRONG BEN POLLACK GENE KRUPA THE MODERJWES GOME MAD REDUCTIONS on 9 CI usts Sport Coats Parsts rfs Shoes SPONSORS FOR ITHE ANNUAL Black and Gold Ball, honoring the pledges of Phi Kappa Sigma were Eliza Little, Virginia Beach, Va., with Ed Willingham, Ridge ly, Tenn., president of the pledge class; Vee Copses, Charlotte, with Colin McMillan, Houston, Texas, vice - president; Shirley Somers, Reidsville, with Robert Hunt, Reidsville, treasurer; Vega Lingle, Winston-Salem, with Joe Correll, Winston-Salem, secre tary; and Connie Carbough, Roanoke, Va., with Stephen Har dy, Silver Springs, Md., corres ponding secretary. The formal dance, which was highlight of a weekend of winter houseparty activities, was held Friday night in the Crystal Ballroom of the Washington-Duke. Russ Olsen and his orchestra provided mu sic for dancing from 9 until midnight. 'fipiiia at MILTOMS CLOTHING CUPBOARD E. FRANKLIN ST. ATTE loan: NTSON FACULTY! On Your CAR Repairs Loans Refinancing Quick Confidential If you need money see or call Herring Motor Finance Corp, Women's Orientation Girls interested in being chair men of women's orientation should go to the Woman's Council Room m GM today and tomrrow to look through files from past years. Ap pointments for interviews for next Thursday will be made. At the in terview before the Woman's resi dence Council, students should have plans' for choosing their ad visors, for their training, and for the orientation next fall. Applica tions must be turned in by Mon day. WUNC Today 7 p.m. Evening Music 7:30 Carolina Sports Review, with Dick Jamerson 7:45 Adventures in Research "The Mite and the Market Woman" 8:00 Ways of Mankind 'The Sea Lion Flippers" 8:30 Let's Listen to Opera "Othello", acts ni and IV 10:00 News and Weather 10:05 Evening Masterwork . 11:00 Program resume and sign off. i t Get Your Student Union CAMPUS in the Y COURT FHIS A. JL FREE! A Program Notebook OJfarod As A Service By Your Student Umon Al Gordon, Greensboro; Taylor Durham, Riverside, Conn.; David Phipps, Durham; H. B. IThorpe, Rocky Mount; John Park, Green ville, S. C; Gene Parsons, Landis; Seymour Herzog, New York City; and William Waddell, Galax, Va. Hal Fraser, C-npel Hill, with dance director Foster Fitz-Simons, will do choreography for a danc ing chorus vhich includes Mary Helen Crain, Durham; Janet Green, Chapel Hill; Martha Boyle, Alton, HI.; Gene Overbeck, Fayetteville; Mrs. V. L. Bounds, Chapel Hill; William Costanza, Boston, Mass.; (CrYntiftitipA from vaae 1) Whetstone, Des Plaines, 111; Cyn- Hal England, Kings Mountain; Dan Reid, Raleigh; Ed Lovings, Greens boro; and James Gilliki, Atlantic. How's Your North Carolina Shelf? NORTH CAROLINA The long " awaited history, by LLN.C.'s own Lefle.- and Newsome, is really starting to move now. $7.50 THE CAROLINA BACK COUN TRY ON THE EVE OF THE REVOLUTION, by Charles Woodmason edited and in troduced by Richard J. Hooker. A contemporary journal brings new life to the eighteenth century Carolinas. $5.00 SOUXHERN ACCENT, by Wil liam f. Polk. The editor of the Greensboro Daily News takes a sharp look at the South. $4.00 THE - SOUTHERN PART OF HEAVEN, by William Meade Prince. Nearly four years after its first publication, we're still selling an average of one copy pe.- day of this great book. A book has to be good to keep that pace! $2.49 THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. FRANKLIN ST. OPEN EVENINGS r, is if 1 1 Dapkne clu Maurier's Lest seller comes alive 1 on the screen k r. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE NEW SPENCER MONO MICRO scope complete with mechanical stage and desk light. For furth er information telephone 5861 between 7 p.m. & 8 p.m. Audrey Dalton Ronald Squire -v.. George Dolenz JoLn Sutton TuJor Owen j. M.Kerrigan NOV PLAYING ?4 FOR SALE--ONE LARGE BABY carriage, good condition, ten dol lars. Call 9-6396 after 5:30. (1-743-3) LOST 12 LOST: ONE PAIR OF GRAY wool Argyle socks in front of Foisters Camera Store on East Franklin Street, on or about Feb. 5th. Sentimental value Call 93371 between hours of 1 p.in. 5 p.m. everyday except Sunday. : iX til feltuCSX, iwy' JIVA Will n m V.-.-.-J nr.- v.W.,Jillr'.f"VV0.0:COCC':0:".COCJl. .WW. ' . rViWWWWV. 'ViSyiV . yV-.V. V-VWifj3o . 6!-.-.- 3l vwiiW TO -X' -XOav. V' .XWOf w.-' - A- . --VV- - s.v- - oft y .'cwt txv s KW..'AvA'?,,.VVASV.V.W 6s 6&tttitfit & fitaeteo & avhy DELRAV CEUB COUPE HELP WANTED 8 This DeH-ay Club Coupe combines all the colorful smartness of a sport model with an interior that's designed for everyday family use. Seats, sidewalls, even the headlining, are all of soft, lustrous vinyl in color treatments that harmonize with the exterior color of your choice. ; And this new interior is just as durable and practical as it is beautiful. The vinyl is easily washable and amazingly resist ant to scuffing and wear. You don't have to worry about little feet on the seats or the things that little hands might spill. And for grown-ups, here at last is a coupe that -provides all the between-seat knee-room of a 2-door sedan! i The Dclray Club Coupe is only one of the wonderful new Chevrolet models that make up the lowest-priced line in the low-price field. Come in and look them over. J MORE PEOPLE BUY CHE VR OLETS THAN ANY OTHER CARI CASE WORKER FOR PUBLIC Welfare Agency. Call 8061 or or 9-8417. SEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER FOR ALL YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS! Conveniently listed under ! Automobiles" in your local classified telephone directory
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 19, 1954, edition 1
6
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