.A- rlY IS. 1955 fj Friends Award Life urship To Nine Persons tory is companion. r-.J . a 1 i .. . "t4C ageay THE DAILY TAR KEEL , r ho Librery met srs for their of man. And tht fu; is muct nl., on, at which be the consemiPn r .ys . . . " KJk nosing the etiring Profs l o Be Honored V?JrJ an adcress by the Library of t The UNC Press Club will hold its annual spring banquet ThUrRriflv ;; ,cvr, for 1956-57. ' records upon which true hiltorv i - With retirin2 Professors O. rf-rships to nine real history may be reared ' Uk ia and PhilIiPs Russell of .uearns said. ' -uurnaiism School hnnnr guests. The dinner, , to be held at 6:30 P- m. in Lenoir Hall's south din ing room, will be open to the pub lic. Main speaker win k r-u,, Recent Collections In Li brary D i s p I ay PAGE THr.EC Four St udents Working On Novels Jo Enter In Putnam Prize Competition tant librar collections at , .e. stressed ,-: manuscripts as " '. t.vMry. and paid L s-u:hcrn Historical ', leaders, Dr. J. H-n-.ilton. former V; -.nier, and Dr. Geori e M. Stenh ville, Friends, of the Library chairman, was returned to office for another year, Xas were five others: John Sprunt Hill, Durham honorary chairman; Miss Corne lia Love, Chapel Hill, vice chair man; Andrew Horn, Chapel Hill secretary; Mrs. Lyman A. Cotton' Chapel Hill, honorary serve,'. and Claude E. Teague, Chanel Hill' r e. ; rt ent director, j treasurer. man learnea xiesion Davie of New VnrV r-s Vf;rr.s TfoilcnM "ulUH' associate editor of The Chapel Hill Weekly and UNC gra duate, who will travel to Russia during the early summer. Dean Norval Neil Luxon of the Journalism School will announce nners of the Coffin. j Representative books and man uscripts from recently , donated collections are now on display m the Wilson Library. The donations include many val uable first editions of Whittier, Longfellow, Hawthorne, Dickens, Thackeray, Raleigh and Twain. , Four new collections of over 1000 volumes each have been, re ceived during the past year. These gifts are from the library of the late Edwin August Bjorkman, pre sented by Mrs. Lucy Millender new lurK UV jj . . said, -more; and Herman Weil of Goldsboro u i , . ne Iirst tlme- The three of thj .second-1 were . elected as vice chair I 0:"UJdImPs. to go to rising se- i blessed, patient and Dr. Clifford P. Lyons of Cha jocor.d chance. To pel Hill was named to the execu- jtvpid. savage, peri- tive committee, which includes the chairman and the secretary. Life memberships in the Friends of the Library went to nine per- Johnson Scholarships, being awar-l Bj5 rtJ.. w. rne nowara w. uuum :i 3 people, we have , ,-r. :!"? truth that im-' i ; i : ircOinjJiric insiu- . invented his- V (WW "hhs in tne Journalism School, were provided by the Journalism' Foundation. They honor the first three heads of journalism instruction, here; Louis, Graves, 1922-24; Gerald W. .TfvVinonT 1 no 4 . i t sons who have given $1000 in mo- i926-53. . ' Ui""' ur materials ot equivalent va lue. They are Mrs.- Edwin Biork man, Asheviile; Harold Gammans. Newport, R. I.; Miss Josephina Niggli, Greensboro; Miss Sallie Ford MacNider, Dr. Sturgis E. Leavitt, Mrs. Howard W. Odum, Mrs. Philip Schinhan, all of Cha pel Hill; Dr. Eugene P. Odum, Athens, Ga.; and Dr. Howard T. Odum, Durham. TRAVELING IJG VACATION? ihad for these USTATLER HOTELS 'X STUDENT RATES i N NEW YORK :-.N3T0N-BOSTON lALO HARTFORD I iTEL NTW YORKER I NKW YORK ' ! xo-n $5.50 a night .' n e '5o S4.50 a night I'.a -so-n $3.50 a night j r. s ui) $3.03 a night Phi Beta Kappa Initiates Phi Beta Kappa initiation cere monies will be held at 5 p. m. today in Carroll Hall. A banquet will be held imme diately after. Paul Green, noted author, will speak at the banquet. ' ulXM HOITLS IN Y0:!K BUFFALO h;n(; to boston j IM) HARTFORD f ' -V e room $6.50 a night I . r o room $5.50 a ninht ' o room $4.50 a night ''c rcom $4.00 a night 1 J -'ORF-AS I'ORTA and n.-ZA. NFAV 'ORK 'croon $3 00 a night "o rcom $6 50 a night -o room $5 50 a night ! RESERVATIONS Jdtnt Relation! VTi: i at tic hotel of your :!-r T or group rates in any of v write Mi, Anne Hill--"t Rclitions Director, 'immt Hilton Hotels, Hotel ion. l ity. Yacks Here Friday The 1956 Yackety Yacks will be given out Friday from 5 to 8 p.m. through the windows of the Rendezvous Room at the back of Graham Memorial ac cording to Editor Jack Markham. WCHL TODAY 6:00 Sign on & Headlines . 6:05 fiig John 7:00 News & Weather 7:05 Breakfast Bar 7:30 News & Theatre Guide 7:35 Breakfast Bar . 8:00 News & Weather 8:05 Bulletin Board 8:10 Breakfast Bar 8:30 News & Weather 8:35 Breakfast Bar. 9:00 News & Weather 9:05 WCHL Comes Calling 11:00 Records From the Rec 11:58 News Headlines 12:00 Big John 12.15 Bulletin Board 12:20 Big John 12:30 Kaleidoscope 12:58 News Headlines 1:00 The Ivory Tower 1:55 News & Weather 2;0O Seventy-Eight 3:(X) News & Weather 3:05 Forty-Five "Skipper" Coffin has continued on the journalism teaching staff since relinquishing the deanship three years ago. He and Mrs. Cof fin will leave Chanpl Will thic summer to reside in Raleigh and Canton. Russell, a member of the faculty since 1931, teaches cre ative writing. Author of a number of books, chiefly biographies, he also serves as editor of The Cha pel Hill News-Leader, Tickets for the dinner are being handled by Press Club members and the Journalism School office. Discussion Of Service Life To Be Held Thursday A discussion of service life for prospective Navy arid Marine wives will be held Thursday at! 7 p. m. in the Faculty Lounge of Morehead Planetarium. Three speakers will discuss se veral facets of the life of a ser vice woman. They will discuss ser vice men's pay, transportation and l social activities. Speaking will be Mrs. Robert Carter Burns, wife of UNC Naval Science Professor Col. Burns; Capt. George S. Good, USMC, and Lt. Allen Josselyn, USN Supply Corps. All interested persons s tion, presented by the Odum? fa mily; the library of Dr. William deBerniere MacNider, presented by Sallie Ford MacNider; and the Gammans collection, given by Ha rold W. Gammans. William A. Whitaker has donat ed the first issue of the first edi tion of "Oliver Twist," several Thackeray first editions, and the very rare first issue of Longfel low's "Evangeline." , , Other donations include the first edition of Raleigh's "Essayes," gi ven by Paul Greenland the first American edition of "Huckleberry Finn," a gift of Claude W. Ran kin. ' . Special cases on the first" floor display recent additions to the Henderson-Shaw collection, and the Hoyt-French History collec tion. The Hoyt display includes proclamations and bulletins issued by Napoleon and exquisitely bound memoirs and histories of the Na poleonic period. Also on display .are portraits from "A Gallery of Famous Por traits of Presidents of The Unit ed States," donated by Dr. W. P. ' Jacocks. : i Four Carolina students are now working on novels they will en ter in the Putnam Prize competi tion if., they can finish in time, according to Miss Jessie Rehder of the English Dept. who is ha-ndling inquiries- and entries in the com petition. The . young novelists are Ted Rosenthal, Bob Fowler, Miss Syl via Yelton, and Miss Margaret Ann Quillan. All four are mem bers of Miss Rehder's Creative Writing Class and are working on novels instead of the customary short stories. Miss Rehder said so far there MAJORETTES Tryouts for majorettes for the University Band will be held Tues- haveiday, May 20. Interested coeds have been invited to attend the meet-'been asked to report tbEmerson in; field at 4:30 p.m. that day. Fink Wins Award In i Recent Opinion Contest Miss Gretchen B. Fink, fresh man from Chapel Hill, has receiv ed an award . for her entry in Reed and Barton's Silver Opinion j Competition held on campus here last February and March. The announcement was made from Reed and Barton Silver smiths', Taunton, Mass. offices. She will receive a special hand engrossed Certificate of Merit, for her excellent essay selected as the best entry from UNC by Reed and Barton's Scholarship Advisory Board, .composed of the deans of nineteen leading universities and colleges, according to the an nouncement. , Mis Fink's esay was one of more than 5000 submitted from 150 colleges and universities. 5 have been three actual entries and 45 inquiries from places all over the world. The entries include one from UNC, one from State Col lege in "Raleigh, and one from the Philippine Islands. An extension of eligibility for "he prize has been made this year, Miss Rehder said, to include "any writer who has at one time been a student at the University or who is . at prest t . enrolled in ana branch of the University. Students in the Extension Division are al so eligible." Before, only students currently enrolled or graduate students were eligible. Either fiction or non-fiction books of "general interest" may be submitted, she explained, but works .of a "strongly scholarly or highly specialized nature" will not be considered. Submitted manuscripts must consist of at least 40,000 words with a detailed synopsis of the unwritten parts of the book. Thej must be submitted by July 15, 1956, accompanied by return pos tage, to Miss Rehder, " Box 350, Chapel Hill. Judges this year will be Frances Gray Pattoh of Durham, author of "Good Morning, Miss Dove," and James Ramsey Ullman, whose "Ti ger of the Snows," the autobiogra phy, of Tenzing of Everest, was published recently by Putnam. BA Seminar Here Today A Seminar on "The Flow-of-Funds System of Social Accounts" will be conducted this afternoon at 4 o'clock in Carroll Hall, under the auspices of the School jot Bus iness Administration. Stephen Taylor of the National Income, Mpneyflows and Labor Section, Board of Governors of the Federal Rserve System, Washing ton, D.C., will conduct the-seminar. , Taylor's discussion will concern mainly - the - flow-of-funds system of accounts, which 'is One of the three major systems of social ac counting now in use. He has been one of those intimately associated with the empirical implementation of , the system on the staff of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Covering The Campus STUDENT WIVES The Student Wives Club will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in the assembly room in the basement of the Fir,. Baptist Church. Election of officers will be held. All student wives have been invited to attend. UNIVERSITY CLUB The University -Club will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Rendezvous Room of Graham Memorial. Plans will be discussed for the Spring ' S)1 1 t1 OO-Carolina News & Weather Extravaganza, wmcn wm oe ne.a 5:05 Bulletin Board 5:10 Theatre Guide 5: 15 Evensong 6:00 News & Weather 6:05 Evensong 7:00 News & Weather 7:05 Evensong 7:15 Sign Off , ,i,l!i'M":'i;",Hn' 'J-TACTIONS PRESENTS J U U J;. t I'M MM.' - '-i W,. ".' i I 'jiniiArinoro.M. i fiilH.MIil illlllllllll I ? -4i -aw l -V ! - . UX 1 '.mm Minn ninm"' ' i V. M.EIGH MEM. JSHow7:45 & 10:15 52 $2.10 $2.75 $3.00 $3.50 j'-Urder and ticket saU : t-ttn's Record Shcp i urn urged to attend. CLASS RINGS " A clas' ring representative will he in Y-Court tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. to assist the Grail in taking order for class rings. This is the last time rings will be sold this year, according to Ring Chair man Bob Hornik. More information can be obtain ed from Hornik at telephone 6031. WUNC v ' Today's schedule for WUNC, University's FM radio, 91.5 mega cycles: 7 p.m. Intermezzo . 7:15 -Vistas of Israel 7:30 Songs of France 8--Music Program 10-L.The News At Ten 1 o: 10 Program Preview 10:15 Evening Masterwork AUDITORIUM WED. MAY IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Miss' Gail Hodgson, Dr. Jay ashri Katju, Miss Patricia Bar lowe, Mrs .Sophie Martin, Robert Thornton, Richard lobst, Hugh Mason, Herbert Thuemmlar, James Dillingham, Roger Da!e hite, Stephen Marks, Donald Bul lard, Larry Powell, David Mc Creight, Christopher Douty. CLASSIFIED S LOST WEDNESDAY: A WHITE Gold Lady Elgin wrist w&tch, silver band. Sentimental value. , Reward. Barbara Moore, 8-9142. CAMPUS Calendar HOT? COOL OFF AT THE POOL ROOM Without A Doubt The Coolest Spot In Graham Memorial AFTERNOON NIGHT 5d A Cue Ceramics Class. . .4-5 p.m. . .Graham Memorial. Women's Honor Council. . .5-6 and 7-8:30 p.m. . .Graham Memorial. WAA Picnic. . .6 p.m. . .Kessing Pool ( APO. . .7-9 p.m. . .Graham Memorial University Party. . .7:30-11 p.m. . .Graham Memorial University Club., . .7:30. . .Graham Memorial Pharmacy Awards Night. . .7:30 p.m. . .Howell Hall Di-Phi Banquet. .... .Ranch House, C0LLM8IA PiCTURU (WWU I ,m HUMPHREY iViiyLBOGART I r i iiiiii iLinom V J ROD STEIGER L,-,rr-rr. jan.sterung MIKE LANE m Tors Mem KAX BUM liRSEY JOE WALC0TI EDWARD WfWJ tMO nqr rWUPYOftOM . IMHiml IU0S xwuat LAST TIMES TODAY i :h : Fi,! In MNiJit li n itj&t'.'t ' a. hi ii j WALLER, BRENKAN-PHIL HARRIS NOW PLAYING Buy Your Vacation Reading Now! If you must sprain your ankle, there's nothing so fine as a moun tain for doing it. Beaches are swell for shells and sunburn. And the great beautiful woods hold enough mosquitos and wasps for the stur diest out-of-doors man. But pal, one thing you won't find in the glorious summer wonder lands is a bookshop as good as the famous old emporium in Chapel Hill. Even the thick-headedest museleman beains to feel a bit empty in the cranium by the Four th of July. Don't let your , brains rust out this summer. Get on the ball, pal, get on the ball. Start stowing away a supply of light but not stupid paper-backs from the place where good paper-backs grow on trees. THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill Open Till 10 P.M. 0 97 - v'v -i .-. f ' '0 i ff V' A 4 L- t ft z" i J -ff UjtiXrtO' lilies IS i- - : I Of course. 'Most evervone X. s I 4 I Si' I Of course. 'Most everyone does often. Because a few moments over ice-cold Coca-Cola refresh you so. It's sparkling with natural goodness, pure and wholesome and naturally friendly to your figure. Feel like having a Coke? BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. YOU'LL BOTH GO FOR THIS CIGARETTE U LI Jcefo f Qca WINSTON TASTES GOOD! r V4 V V LIKE A CIGARBTTB SHOULD I Sr.: O Winston is the cigarette that gives you flavor in filter smoking full, rich, tobacco flavor! No wonder Winston's so popular with college smokers clear across the country. Along with real flavor, Winston also brings you a finer filter that works so well the flavor comes right through. Try Winston! n. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON.SALEM N. C. . it

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