Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 21, 1954, edition 1 / Page 4
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SUNDAY, NOVEMSCR 21, 1951 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE FOUR Was hopel. Hi You Can The Difference in our better Sanitone Dry Cleaning V Fabrics soft, yet. -full-bodied V Like-New Texture Restored. r Send Your THANKSGIVING Cleaning Early UNIVERSITY CLEANERS Across From Post Office Phone 49219-1901 THE iw D rsses.cin DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS I. Deride 5. Extraordi nary act 9. Persia -10. Therefore L.) 11. Man's name 12. Pungent vegetables 14. Trust 5 16. Neuter pronoun I 17. Supporting j frame I 18: Mature - 19. Plaything 20. Monetary unit (Siam.) 21. Seraglio 24. Portions I 25. Across 26. Coin -, (Peru) f 27. Cover 28. South - American f republic ' 32. Water god - (Babyl.) 33. A lemon ' drink ; 34. Walked ; 36. Old : measures of length 37. River (Fr.) 38. Little island 39. Rodents 4. Kronen (abbr.) 5. A barrier 6. City (Pa.) 7. Past 8. This coming night 11. Skill 12. Sole 13. Marks to let stand (print.) 15. Kind of bomb 18. Swiss river 20. People of Bali 21. Cavities 22. Airplane pilot 40. Feat DOWN 1. A horse who runs a mile 2. Silk scarf (Eccl.) 3. A container , for te4 Churches .Churches serving Chapel Hil lians and surrounding commun ities' have announced the fol lowing schedule for today's wor ship services. A cordial invitation is' extend ed to all students to participate in the fellowship. BAPTIST Sampel T. Habel, minister Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship . -.ll"a.m. BSU Supper Forum 1 6 p.m. CATHOLIC Rev. John A. Weidinger, chap lain. Mass 8 a.m. Mass , 10 am- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Morning Worship 11 a.m. COMMUNITY Charles M. Jones, minister Morning Worship 11 a.m. CONGREGATIONAL CHRISTIAN Richard Jackson, pastor Morning Worship 11 a.m. EPISCOPAL Chapel of the Cross David W. Yates, rector Holy Communion 'JL..-L 7:30 a.m. Morning Worship. ; l:u-4- 11, a.m. Canterbury Club - 6 P m- Evening Prayer : 8 p.m. EPISCOPAL Church of the Holy Family N Maurice A. Kidder, priest in charge Holy Communion . 8 a.m. 11 a.m. . 7 p.m. j Morning Worship ; Evening Prayer 1 i JEWISH Hillel House Rabbi E. M. Rosenzweig, director j Morning Worship 11 a.m. LUTHERAN ! Wade F. Hook, pastor Sunday School . - 9:45 a.m. : ':' f 1 j Of T 23. Color 24. Game played on horse back 26. An unspecified amount v"V I I IUC A S A IClAL I i- loTt E E nJj 28. Early English scholar ( poss. ) 29. Department in" Colombia, (So. Am.) 11-2? Saturday' Aniwer 30. Rested from work 31. Roman money 33. Mislaid 35. Narrow inlet (geol.) 38. Fish 1 1-27 ipb d Suits IfqaiciAf 1 6RUEU , lTstsIj AH T TTTP V O O ElLlJ QgAEJ5 A remTRc AM ARjAT 21 Z2 23 ZZ a mzzwm " w ZZZ.ZWL 11 II 1 1 rl 11 ti cat iLCs? irnMiiu Morning Worship 11 a.m. Student Supper i 6 p.m. METHODIST Charles Hubbard, minister Morning Worship 11 a.m. Wesley Foundation 6 p.m. PRESBYTERIAN Vance Barron, minister Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship : 11 a.m. Westminster Fellowship 6 p.m. SOCIETY OF FRIENDS Morning Worship . 11 a.m. WHAT GOES CM HERS NEWMAN CLUB The Newman Club, Catholic stu dent organization, will meet to night at 7 in the Roland Parker Lounge of Graham Memorial. The speaker will be Mr. W. D. Car michael Jr., vice president of the University STUDENT PARTY The Student Party -wall meet to morrow night at 8 o'clock in Ro land Parker Lounge. CHARLOTTE-CAROLINA CLUB The Charlotte-Carolina Club will meet Tuesday nigMt at 7:30 in room 108 of Hanes Hall. Bids will be distributed for the Christmas dance. CAROLINA CHRISTIAN FELLOW SHIP The Carolina Christian Fellow ship will meet in the APO room of Graham Memorial at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Wayne Thompson, first year medical student, will lead a panel discussion. COMMUNITY DRAMA GROUP The Community Drama Group will meet at 8 tonight in the As sembly Room of the Library to read Maxwell Anderson's "Win terset." MBA CLUB Felton Wells, manager of Sears, i Roebuck & Co., in Durham, will I be the speaker at the regular meet- .: A ii mm a . i a ing oi me mesa l.iud tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. in 105 Carroll Hall. He will speak on experiences In Sears system of distribution. PRESS CLUB ' ' Manley' Wellman, novelist, will speak1 at the Press Club' meeting tomorrow night at the Pines. Group will leave from Bynum Hall at 5:30 p.m. Monday. North Carolina Folklore Club To Meet Soon The North Carolina Folklore So ciety will hold its 43rd annual meeting December 3 in the Sir Walter Hotel, Raleigh, at 2:30 p.m. Announcement of the meeting p?ens came from Dr. A. Palmer Hudson, Kenan Professor of Eng lish here, and secretary-treasurer of the Society. The - meeting will be open to the public'. Speakers will include Manly Wellman, Chapel Hill author, who will discuss "The Writer's Use of Folklore," and James M. Carpen ter, Greensboro. Carpenter, who owns a large collection of British ballads, songs, sea chanteys and folk plays, will describe his experiences in folk lore collecting in Britain and Am erica, illustrating some of the songs with recordings. Also featured on the program will be the presentation of a num ber of' North Carolina folksongs by UNC student Miss Margaret Underwood, of Greensboro. Miss Underwood will sing "Vandy, Van dy" and others, while accompany ing herself on the guitar. Officers will be elected during a business meeting immediately following the program, with James York, Mocksville, president, pre siding. Plans for continuing -he recently revived journal, "North Carolina's Folklore," will also be discussed. ' Dr. B. E. Washburn. Rutherford ton, and Russell M. Grumman, di rector of the UNC Ex-tension Di vision, are vice-presidents of the Society this year. CLASSIFIED NAPIERS PENINSULAR WAR If the chap who bought the odd volumes of this title will stop 'in, we'll either sell him the missing copies or buy his at a profit to him. THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP. Mm MONEY FOR CHRISTMAS: Swap those paper-backed books you've finished reading for hard cash. We pay 40c for 10. The Intimate Book Shop, 205 E. Franklin St. 1-6587-12 7, 8 Games 4 Planned; To Be 'Amateur7 Lexington! va. (Wash ington and Lee University "defi nitely" will field a varsity foot ball team next year and expects to play a seven or eight game schedule, W&L President Francis P. Gaines said Friday night. In accordance , with university , policy laid down when subsidized football was abandoned earlier this year, the 1955 club will be an "amateur" team and will compete with other "amateur" teams, Dr. Gaines said. Washington and Lee's entire varsity football schedule for this fall was cancelled when the uni versity decided to give up subsi dization. But a "junior varsity" team representing W&L has play ed several other college -jayvee squads and prep school teams and the university has awarded mono grams to 22 students who were members of the team. Dr. Gaines said he did not know who would coach the 1955 varsity team which he said would at tempt to schedule games with out fits of the caliber of Davidson, Sewanee, Centre College and Wa bash. Carl Wise, who held the post of head coach when the Gen erals abandoned football in late summer, is on a three-months Hamilton entry in the Canadian! Professional Football League and his three-year contract at W&L still has a year to run. The jayvee j team this fall has been coached by Boyd Williams, former line coach at VMI and Richmond who also sells insurance in Lexington.) Yackety Yack Snapshot Contest, Dr. Gaines said the coaching which ends at midnight on Dec. 12, post "is still Carl Wise's if he is offering eight prizes donated wants it." At the same time he by Foister's Camera Shop, praised the work of Williams with j Each entry must be accompan the jayvees. , J led by the entrant's name, the neg- Wise told Roanoke. Radio Sta- ative, a caption and an alternate tion WSLS today . he planned to caption. i ; ' : . i , . return to Lexington in December, but doesn't know whether. he will continue his affiliation with Wash-, ington and Lee. . : ? j Dr. Gaines said the varsity teams ' W&L will field in tne future will; schedule games on a "campus-to-j campus Dasis, tnus eummaung games in huge public , stadiums such as . Franklin Field in Phila delphia, Griffith Stadium in Wash ington and Baltimore's Municipal Stadium, where the "subsidized," W&L teams of the past appeared. Craft Fair The Chapel Hill branch the American Association of of University Women extended an invitation yesterday to their Craft Fair of Penland Products. The Fair will be held Dec. 3 4 upstairs in Graham Memorial On Dec. 3, the Fair will be open from 2-10 p.m. On Dec. 4, it will open at 10 a.m. and close at 5 p.m. A special feature will be the Chinese auction and folk tales of Dr. A. P. Hudson from 8:30 to 9:30 Friday night Also pres ent will b e Miss Lucy Morgan, Director of the Penland School of Handicrafts, and her assis tant, Miss Irene Beaudin, along with Chapel Hill Alumni of the school. They will demonstrate the age-old mountain skills of. weaving, pottery-making and . copper enameling. Let Our College Outlines Pull those Marks Up and Up. The Intimate Bookshop 205 E. Franklin St. "" Opn Evenings fthall Tmam M Scales May Be Tried In Home Town Of Greensboro In Dec. GREENSBORO, Junius Irving Scales, in all probability, will stand trial in Greens boro, his home town, on charges that he was a member of an organization advocating the violent overthrow of the Federal Government. rUctr-;,- AttArnm- Fi-In i Stanlpv said Frirlav that the r.mp will annear on the trial j j v a a ill vy i a i v y a i a Sorry, Adlai's Sleeping SOUTHERN PINES JP! Two hunters passed the farm home where Adlai Stevenson is vacationing and called out early yester day that they wanted to see the 1952 Democratic candidate for presi dent. , ' A member of the household of, Ernest Ives and Mrs. Ives, Ste venson's sister, tiptoed outside and shushed for quiet Stevenson was fast asleep. One hunter said, "We voted for Adlai in 1952 and we want to see him. He was awake then and he'd better be awake now." The member of the household again called for quiet, and the second hunter said: "Well, all right. Well be back in an hour. If he isn't awake then, he'd better be awake in 1956." -SSL Honors UNC- ( Continued from Pcge 1 ) liege and a bill advocating chemi cal tests for drunkenness from East Carolina College were also jointly passed. Other bills jointly passed were the amending of Article H, Sec tion 4 for the state Constitution from WC, omnibus education pro-f posals from East Carolina, length ening of the student visa from WC, recommendation of electro- mecn?ni . tra,ffic cop in ties over 50,000 in the state from Shaw. Carolina's academic freedom bill Yack Contest Underway The pictures will be judged on basis of interest, originality and suitability for use in the annual, according to Miss Emily Finch, Yack photography editor. These factors, rather than technical per- fectioh, will determine the winner, cm-Canners' Entertain Sophomore members of the UNC Nursing School entertained their dates Friday evening with a spag hetti supper and Parisian talent. The gala festivities were held in "Hondo's Hidaway," converted Nurse's Dorm recreation room. The Parisian talent, which con- sisted of a variety of "Can Can - ners," vocalists and models, re - Bridge Tourney Mbnday Dr. Harry Smith, PhD in the School of Public Health, wiH con tinue to supervise the Graham Memorial Student Bridge Tourna ment tomorrow night- in the Ren dezvous Room. The tournament is a weekly af fair running from 7:30 to 11 p.m. Davidson DAVIDSON (JP) Davidson Col- lege yesterday announced the gift , of $33,000 by Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Staley of Rye, N. Y-, for .scholar - ' ships to ministerial candidates at the Presbyterian srhool. Staley is head of the Wall Street firm of Reynolds & Co. He and his wife are natives of Bristol, Tenn. - The gift will establish the Dr. EAT COVERS Complete Upholstery Repairs DALE'S AUTO TRIM SHOP 116 W. Rosemary St. LI'L ABNER The sundav i can't bear thisS SNAIL DOESN'T (Wl GOING TO TRV JuicKSS LOSE HIS TO BASS HIM IT TEMPER- r-'S J BUT. OTHER O yOP DRIVERS V . LOSE THEIR ,Y AJj . SX V j j was passed jointly in this session as was the desegregation bill and a measure from State on the state's highway funds and one from .Wil mington College on aid to disaster- stricken townships. ; Panel Discussion Wesley Foundation, will pre sent a panel discussion entitled "The World Church Council What Does It Mean To You?" at 6:45 tonight. The meeting will be open to the public. she said. The pictures should depict some phase of campus life, Miss Finch said.. . . . ; The following prizes will be awarded to the winners: first prize, Argof lex 75 flash ! outfit; second prize, Ansco Rediflash outfit; third prize, Ansco Shur-Flash outfit; the next five prizes, two rolls of film. Miss Finch encouraged everyr one to turn in pictures, and said she expects a larger response than shown so far portedly recent imports from the French Rivera, were in reality the freshman nurses who served i the group and comprised the floor show. Italian spaghetti, cider and apple pie constituted the "Carte d'un j restaurant" while the atmosphere 1 was candle light and cafe. On Tuesday afternoons from 4 until 6 o'clock Dr. Smith gives free bridge instruction for Graham Memorial. These free lessons are open to anyone on campus. And all interested persons regardless of their bridge playing experience are urged to attend the sessions. Gets Gift and Mrs. Thomas F. Staley Mem- , orial Scholarship Fund. j Dr. Staley was a physician in j Bristol and his wife was a niece J of R. J. Reynolds, Winston-Salem tobacco magnates. . T. F. Staley was graduated from , Davidson in 1925 after playing on the basketball and tennis teams. His son, Thomas F. Staley Jr., was graduated from Davidson in 1953. THE PATIO at HILL N DALE Golf rang Enclosed and heated for the Winter Season KIATURALL.V AT THIS MOMENT THE SNAIL TRIES THE OTHER, SIDE OP THE ROAD. Year ..... i' calendar f or tne December term here of U. S. Middle District Court when Scales' removal from Tennessee is ordered. The Greensboro term of the Federal Court is scheduled to be gin Dec. 6- Scales, arrested in Memphis early Thursday night, is due to appear at a hearing there Tues day, presumably to determine whether he is to be removed to the Middle District of North Car olina. ' It is likely, if his removal is or dered, that Scales will be brought to the' Guilford County jail to await trial, unless he posts $100,- 000 bond, Stanley said. Scales' arrest came only about 5X hours after a grand jury re turned an indictment against him in(;the Wllkesboro division of the Feqeral . Court. The true bill was returned.-about ,2 p. m. ' 1 $ 'The bill was ; re.turned by the same grand jury which had re turned a number of indictments of a' more routine nature during the opening day of the Wilkesboro term df the court. I "get oujr ! iWlWiiBiWUlt Wt m:i HM'i iil!Vr. lit: Hi.:iii; raw tysNMa - .i STUART' HEISLErV ML IATLDI C0NH1E IUSSQ1 TODAY & MONDAY m l cm 7M $ 71 52 Chevrolet Sport Coupe $1295 LIKE NEW 49 Chevrolet 4-door $495 t Extra Clean 53 Dodge Convertible ... $1595 SPECIAL PRICE - 8,000 Miles Actual GUARANTEED Harriss-Conners Chevrolet rSK."sK.'-sOM PEOPLE ;A .. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 21, 1954, edition 1
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