Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 1, 1954, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1954 THE; DAILY TAR HEEL Just Received! A NEW SHIPMENT OF TAYLOR MADE SHOES For smart dress wear we feature the new: Black Calf Wing - Tip $14.95 For casual wear with the utmost in com fort we feature the new: Moc - Toe 2-EyeIet Slipper $14.95 Brown or Black STEVENS-SHEPHERD EES TAXI For Prompt Courteous Service 6611 DIAL All Cars Equipped with HOLLYWOOD CAB CO i I WITH COMFORT AND CARE - I - WE'LL TAKE YOU THERE i : : ' TOMORROW FIRST WEEKLY FALL HOUSECLEANING SALE Slow Sellers and Shopworn Books in Religion, Psychology, Biography and Essays The Intimate Bookshop . 205 E. Franklin Et. Open Evenings L- - - - ' - - -"VT -Hfc ' . .." ....... " . ..." .-, -3 DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Summer ermine 6. Perform ' 9. Fragrance 10. Thrice (mug.) 11. Keel-billed cuckoo 12. Tree 14. Clamor ' IS. A son of Adam 18. New Zealand , parrot 2. Most hackneyed S. Hawaiian bird 4. Wine receptacle 5. Job 6. Close to T. An ever green tree 8. Capital of Libia 11. Viper 13. Cantors 15. Sniffed 17. Goddess of death (Norse) 19. Part of a lock 20. Dress feathers 22. Ciphers 23. Flimsy 25. French article ? 26. Skill ! 23. Cry, as a sheep 29. Help 30. Sun god 31. Destroyed by fire 33. Benefit 35. Male deer 1 (PL) 38. Horse blankets 40. Oriental nurse 41. Moslem title 42. Title of . ? i respect 44. A winy ' 45. Subside 47. French" river '49. Female deer 50. Petty quarrels DOWN tUori" t rational Statistics Speaker " The assistant director of the bureau of census will be the fea tured speaker at a meeting of the North Carolina Chapter of the American Statistical Associa tion Monday. Dr. Conrad Taueber will speak on "Methods and Problems in Taking the 1954 Census of Agri culture," at the 8 p. m. meeting in the theater in the new Stu dent Union Building at State Col lege in Raleigh. Community Church - Regular services of the Com munity; Church of Chapel Hill will be held Sunday at 11 a. m. Rev. Charles Jones is minister. Chli dren under two years of age wlil be cared for in the church office, second floor of the YMCA build ing Services will be held at Hill Hall Seat Covers CUSTOM TAILORED COMPLETE UPHOLSTERY FOR YOUR CAR REPAIRS Dale's Auto Trim Shop 116 W. Rosemary St. 6611 Two - Way Radio Telephone 21. Cloud like , masses 24. Swiss river 26. Biblical name 27. Devas tated 29, Hard Yetter&ajr'- Antwer hearted 31. Morsel 32. Greek letter 34. Small tree yielding fiber for rope (P. I.) 36. Strong winds ' 37. Shinto temple 39. U. S. admiral 43. Knock 46. Exist 48. Radium (sym.) l off stJffi p l7 a Sim pp oTs FttgrgT "Tb K A T , f r-r w 33" " 39 77? 33" " ""i ill IP-PIM 11 II MISS HELEN . . will sing in Campus Carousel By Eleanor Saunders Carolina professors may possi bly have a real treat in store for1 them this week. Since this marks the official end of sorority rush, and fraternity rush has yet to get underway, it may be that reluc ant students will, for a change, be prepared when those pop quizzes and uncalled for ques tions roll their way. And even more surprising to the once op timistic teachers will be the fact that a few of their female stu dents may manage to stay awake throughout an entire class! The exhaustion of the coed members of Carolina's population, coupled with the nervous tension resulting from last Saturday's sudden switch vto "Big Orange," points to a quiet, relaxing week end ahead. A few brave souls, possibly several from the Kappa Sig house, will disregard, distanc es and follow the home team to New Orleans, but the majority of Hillians will take time out to recuperate and to fortify them selves for oncoming seiges of big ger and better weekends. New sorority pledges seem to be in the spotlight this week, and after two weeks' work to secure them, why shouldn't they be? ADPi's honored their pledge class last night with a picnic at Dean and Mrs. Guy Phillip's home. The Ranch House was the scene for a Pi Phi banquet last night, an aftermath of Wednesday night's formal pledging ceremo nies. KD's held an informal par tv Tuesday night to welcome their new pledges, and Tri Delt's converted their house to a 1920 spak-asy, to carry out the theme of their flapper party. - Kappa Sig's and. Chi O's will join forces Friday night to hon or the sorority's new pledges. A tacky party, to be held, at the schoolhouse, will be in order. And on schedule for Tri Delt's next week is a Tusday night party with the Phi Gam's. Brother Bill Pittman will be hQst Saturday night at a Phi Delt party in Sanford. And at the Chi Phi house, plans are underway for an old-fashioned hay-ride, a novelty in this age of machines and motors. Leaving town Saturday night will be the Pi Lam's. Brothers and dates will make the Planta tion Club in Greensboro their party headquarters. And Lambda Chi's will journey in the oppo site direction, to the Saddle Club for a Saturday night party. Deke's are out of seclusion for n 3T MASLOFF GM Sunday their weekend parties over a wide area. A large part of the chapter will leave Saturday for Clarksville, Va and a weekend of waterskiing and the like. Those remaining in this part of the country will, party Saturday night at the Saddle Club. : Congraulations are in order for the new initiates of the 13 Club, popular social organization on campus. The twenty new mem bers went through rigorous ini tiation ceremonies at Saturday's football game, well-fortified by the pre-game party. New , mem bers ar Noel Sullivan, ATO; Bob Shelley, Jack Moore, and George Rains, Deke; King McGee and Charlie Bowles, KA; Bozy Tart and Knox Jenkins, Kappa Sig; Freddy Byrum, Francis Wicks, and Joe Towe, Phi Gam; Herb Gorham, PiKA; Jim Patton, Alex Galloway ,and Charlie Causey, SAE; Claude Plumlee and Toy Gregory, Sigma Chi; Donnie Van Loan, Runyan Tyler, and Brant Snavely, Zete. New officers of the society are Joe Mavretic, Jake Rountree, and Bill Moss. Pi nriings Sam Blythe, Beta from Hunters ville to Julia Kester, Chi O gradu ate from Winston-Salem. Silas Coley, Chi Psi from Raleigh to Rachel Brooks, Pi Phi from Rox boro. Dick Lackey, KA from Shelby, to Lou Hawley, Tri Delt from Flor ence, S. C. Tommy Worthington, Lambda Chi from Kinston, to Ann Bynum, St. Mary's student from Raleigh. James Seely, SAE from Winston Salem, to Margaret Cheatham, Chi O, from Henderson. Wyley Harrel, Kappa Phi from Virginia Beach, Va., to Betty Gil bert, Virginia Beach. Darle Shouse, Kappa Psi from Rural Hall, to Sara Poindexter, Winston-Salem. Engagements Mike Brown, Chi Phi from An derson, S. C, to Joan Connor, WC student from North Wilkesboro Marriages johnny Andrews, Kappa Psi from Durham, to Peggy Reavis, Winston-Salem. Don Goldstein, TEP from Nor folk, Va., to Sandy Cohen, Norfolk. Francis Fredere, Beta from Council, to Gerry Fore, Whitevlile. Tom Adler, ATO from Leonia, N. J., to Peggy Foley, Palisades Park, N. J. Dick Porter, Sigma Nu from Bur lington, to Nillah Gilbert, Hickory. Jerry Cook, Sigma Chi from WinstonSalem, to Julia Shields, ADPi from Chapel Hill. T Helen Masloff, Walter Golde Are Featured Sunday at 8 p. m. The Petites Musicales will be presented by the Graham Memorial Student Union in the Main Lounge of The Union Building. The Petites Musicales will fea ture Miss Helen Masloff, lyric so prano, and Dr. Walter Golde at the piano. This program, the first of the year, will present selections ranging from Mozart to Rogers and Hammerstein, and will be present ed in five parts. Miss Masloff, lyric soprano, will sing the aria, "Deh, Vieni non Tardar," from "The Marriage of Figaro," Mozart; "Spirate, pur spi rate," Donaudy; "Ombra di Nube," Refice; "A Pastoral," Veracini. The second part of her program will include "L'Amour de Moi," arranged by Tiersot; "Si mes vers avaient des ailes," Hahn; "Mor gen," Richard Strauss,' and "Ach, Gestern hat er mir Rosen gebrach," Joseph Marx. Miss Masloff will also present "Air de Lia," from "L'EUnfant Prodigue," Debussy "Laetitzia's Aria," from! "The Old Maid and the Thief," Menotti; "Fairy Lulla by," Edward Harris; "Maybe," Ser gius Kagen, and "Lift fThine Eyes," Frederick K. Logan. The last portion of her program will consist of "Getting to Know You," "We Kissed in A Shadow," and "I Have Dreamed," from "The King and I," by Rogers and Ham merstein. Miss Masloff will be accompani ed by Dr. Walter Golde. Westminster ' Westminster Fellowship will hold its regular Sunday evening supper at 6 p.m. in the Presbyte rian hut The Rev. Vance Barron, new minister, will speak on "What Do We Believe About the Bible?" University Club University Club will meet Tues day night at 7 o'clock in Roland Parker Lounge Two, Graham Mem orial. The Maryland Caravan- will be discussed. Ahoskie, to Becky Gordon, Chi O from South Hill, Va. Rufus Hackney, Chi Phi from Durham, to Betty Duncan, Duke student. Phin Horton, St. A from Winston-Salem, to Betty Ann Kirby, Pi Phi from Winston-Salem. Carl Venters, Phi Gam from Jacksonville, to ' Bobbie Hamby, Jacksonville. Pete Alexander, ATO from Day ton Beach, Fla., to Pat Turnbull, Chi O from Washington, D. C. Elmo McCorkle, Kappa Psi from Roxboro, to Mary Lee Bowman, Norfolk, Virginia. " John Jamison, UNC graduate from Charlotte, to Jenny Lynn, Pi Phi from Savannah, Ga. Charlie Kuralt, St. A. from Char lotte, to Sory Guthery, Charlotte. Mort Cooper, ATO from Wash ington, D. C, to Fran Winnery, Grand Rapids, Mich. Neil Satterfield, Chi Phi from Atlanta, Ga., to Marion Duckworth, Asheville. As a final note, the ATO's pro- mise faithfully not to dampen any more spirits in case another choral group chooses ot call. POGO 1 X - M . V I I I A FV If I lit v- I I J I V TX - V ,-A rr . 1 L 7 9r V Ll'L ABNER I ffjtl SkSy J ftm I VOU SEND V NEVAH DONE MOTH IN' I J OH, KIM SURE WE CAN, BASE. ) BUT VIE! VOU' RE J LIKE THET, BEFO BUT- J WE DO J AFTER WE GET FRAN Ki ??-AH ISTOONOUNG 7 J J THE MOST.r J NOW-AH NEVAH WANTS Jf IT ALL? MARRlEDr J V SHEATH' T UNDERSTAND SECH; H JU TOO NOTHIN' TH' J YOU"R& MV ( ANIMAL S IDC Vifd- "The position of the Interdor mitory Council in student af fairs is second to none," said Dean of Student Affairs Fred Weaver to the 250 nominees run ning for the various dormitory offices who were assembled in Gerrard Hall, as he urged every candidate to support the goals of the IDC. . "Without the support of the Interdormitory Council, there is little that can be done to im prove student affairs," Weaver continued, "and the IDC needs, your support in order to con tinue to goforward in its efforts to provide the dormitories with an effective social program and to promote a wholesome frater nal relationship." The meeting was called to or der by Manning Muntzing, IDC president. Muntzing stated that he was pleased with the ener getic support and the seriousness htat dormitory residents have given to the elections for offi cers. He further stated that many plans have been made to provide each dormitory with the kind of entertainment and recreation Need A Maid Of Cotton The search, is on once again to find King Cotton's official rep resentative the Maid of Cotton to spread the Southland's good will throughout some 40 cities in the United States, Canada, and Europe. The two-day contest, to be held January 3 and 4 in Mem phis, Tenn., will determine which Cotton Belt beauty will serve the cotton industry as its 1955 fashion and good will ambassador on a six - month international tour. The contest will consist of personal interviews, photo graphs, luncheons, a dinner dance, and a public appearance at Ellis Auditorium in Memphis. Shortly after the contest, the winner will fly to New York to spend a month in preparation for the tour. She will be out fitted in a beautiful, all-cotton1 wardrobe by 40 of the nation's' leading designers. The tour begins . officially in early February, and it will carry the Maid of Cotton to the Pacific Northwest states, Vancouver, B. C, as well as European and American cities. The 1955 Maid of Cotton will be the seventeenth Cotton Belt girl to represent the industry on the annual tour sponsored by the National Cotton Council, the Memphis Cotton Carnival, and the Cotton Exchanges of Mem phis, New York, and New Or leans. Entry blanks, which may be obtained from the National Cot ton Council, P. O. Box 18, Mem phis, Tenn., must be completed and returned by December 1. They must be accompanied by two photographs, one a head and shoulders portrait, and the other a full length photograph. CLASSIFIEDS USED TYPEWRITER SALE 1 L. C. Smith, 1 Remington, 2 Un derwoods, from $35.00 to $50.00 Machines are in good condition. Drop in at Smith Typewriter Co., I Dawson Bldg.,. Franklin St (1-6561-3). 'till 1.1 I I m . Jf HYjes' I Weaver program it needs and wants, and the success or failure of these plans depends upon the interest and efforts of every dormitory resident. Weaver cited the past achieve ments of the IDC since it's for mation in 1935. He stated that because of the Interdormitory Council dormitories now have social rooms, tiled floors, new plumbing facilities, book shelves in each room, dormitory mana gers and advisors and a host of other achievements that were ef fected through the hard work of IDC leaders. Weaver also stated that many outstanding campus leaders have won distinction by working on the IDC, and he urged each man there to grasp the opportunities open to him, whether they win or lose in the elections, to help bring about further dormitory improvements. - Voting for the six dormitory officers, President, Vice Presi M-G-M's Dramatic Thriller! am starring Willtem H0LDEN June ALLYS0N Barbara STANWYCK Fredric MARCH Walter PIDGE0N Shelley WINTERS Paul DOUGLAS Louis CALHERN & (Stilt ? iil&ilf ' ' '' ' ' ' fTTTTTTTTTTTf TTTTTTTTTffTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT fT FOOTBALL SPECIAL TRAIN To Washington, October 15 FOR THE U. N. C. - MARYLAND GAME And for those who want to stay over for the REDSKIN EAGLE GAME (Featuring Charlie Justice Day Round Trip Chapel Hill to Washington and Return Snack Bar RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED AT THE "Y",' GRAHAM MEM ORIAL TRAVEL AGENCY, AND TOWN AND CAMPUS MEN'S SHOP All seats reserved Make your reservations now. Special attention will be given to seating groups together Pick up tickets at the same locations beginning October 4 Sponsored by UNC ATHLETIC DEPT UNIVERSITY CLUB AND THE CHEERING SQUAD SEABOARD AIR -LINE RAILROAD 922 Insurance Building, Raleigh, N. C. dent, Secretary-Treasurer, IDC Representative, Intramural Man ager, and University Club Rep resentative, will take place Tues day, October 5. IDOriT KEED A GUN TO ' KEEP YCU MERE!" A starring STERLING HAYDEN GLORIA GRAHAfAE co-starring GENE BARRY , MARCIA HENDERSON i $11.75 STUDENT FARE (Including Tax) Air Conditioned Reclining Seat Air Conditioned ' Coaches and By Walt Kelly r Today and Saturday r THEY'6 5JX CNTS ) you ear A MAN OH c PUE DM THIS yCi GAHff&T EC-CAP A By Al Capp a change, and they plan to spread Dickie Hoggard, Phi Gam from
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1954, edition 1
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