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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1955 THS DAILY TAR HEEL PASS f ' ! n i 3 i 1 ig Weekend Planned By Activities Board GMAB is sponsoring several events this weekend. Charlie Peterson, billiards pro fessional, is now giving exhibi tions in Graham Memorial Pool Room. Tomorrow night has been proclaimed "Date Night." it A free movie, "Were Not Mar , ried," with Fred Allen and Ginger UNC Health Official Talks Today In Raleigh ' The one-day meeting of the ninth annual State Rural Health ; Conference held in Raleigh today -.Tvill feature as speaker, Dr. Hen dry . T. Clark, administrator of , UNC Division f Health Affairs. 'This meeting is being sponsor ed ' by the Medical Society of .North Carolina. Approximately 500: community and professional Jiealth workers are expected to at tend the conference. "Together We Build Better Health" is the theme of the con . f ersnce. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS ' Rogers, will be shown in Carroll Hall tomorrow night. There will be two showings, at 8 and 10 p.m. Bruno's Combo will play for a dance in Cobb basement tomorrow night from 8-12 p.m. This is a free dance co-sponsored by GMAB and the Interdormitory Council. A reception will be held in Cobb basement Saturday following the Georgia game. This reception, co sponsored by GMAB and the I.D.C., will last until 6:30 p.m. Bruno's Combo will be present. There will also he coed - hostesses and free refreshments. Student Chancellor Committee Meets Today The student committee appoint ed to help select a chancellor to succeed retiring Chancellor Rob ert House, will meet again today in the GM Council Room from 3 to 5 p.m. The committee met for the first time yesterday. With Sonny Evans as chairman, the group has as its purpose to air student views on the chancel lorship. Student Body President Bob Young and this committee will ap pear before the Trustee Commit tee on Oct. 27 to present its report. PLAY OPENS WEDNESDAY: 'Aha stasia1 Draws Its Cast From Six Different States PIS mtdhnm (Author -Barfot Bv With Chtk, te.) MARKING ON THE CURVE... AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT Twonkey Crimscott was a professor. Choate Sigafoos "tvas a sophomore. Twonkey Crimscott was keen, cold, brilliant. Choate Sigafoos was loose, vague, adenoidal. Twonkey Crimscott believed in diligence, discipline, and marking on the curve. Choate Sigafoos believed in elves, Jayne Mansfield, and thirteen hours sleep each night. Yet there came a time when Twonkey Crimscott mentor, sage, and savant was thoroughly out-thought, out-foxed, out-maneuvered, out-ployed, and out-witted by Choate Sigafoos, sophomore. It happened one day when Choate was at the library studying for one of Mr. Crimscott's exams in sociology. Mr. Crimscott's exams were murder plain, flat murder. They consisted of one hundred questions, each question having four possible answers A, B, C, and D. The trouble was that the four choices were so subtly shaded, so in tricately worded, that students more clever by far than Choate Sigafoos were often set to gibbering. So on this day Choate sat in the library poring over his sociology text, his tiny brow furrowed with concen tration, while all around him sat the other members of the sociology class, every one studying like crazy. "What a waste !" he thought. "All this youth, this verve, this bounce, chained to musty books in a musty library! We should be out singing and dancing and smooching and cutting didoes on the greensward !" Then, suddenly, an absolute gasser of an idea hit Choate. "Listen !" he shouted to his classmates. "Tomor row when we take the exam, let's all every one of us check Choice 'A' on every question every one of them." "Huh?" said his classmates. "Mr. Crimscott marks on the curve. If we all check the same answers, then we all get the same score, and everybody in the class gets a 'C'." "Hmm," said his classmates. "Let's get out of here and have a ball!" said Choate. So they all ran out and lit Philip Morrises and had a ball, as, indeed, you will too when you light a Philip Morris, for if there ever was a cigarette to lift the spirit and gladden the heart, it i3 today's new Philip Morris firm and pure and fragrant and filled with true, natural, golden tobacco, lip end to tip end. 1 . $le should be out $mm fflddsxcm M moocWs Well sir, the next morning the whole class did what Choate said and, sure enough, they all got "C's," and they picked Choate up and carried him on their shoulders and sang "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" and plied him with sweetmeats and Philip Morris and girls and put on buttons which said "I DOTE ON CHOATE." But they were celebrating too soon. Because the next time shrewd old Mr. Crimscott gave them a test, he gave them only one question to wit: write a 30,000 Word essay on "Crime Does Not Pay." "You and your ideas," they said to Choate and tore off his epaulets and broke his sword and drummed him out of the school. Today, a broken man, he earns a meager living as a camshaft in Toledo. Iiv.1.6 Max Shulman, 1956 At the top of the curve of mo king pleasure, you'll find today's new Philip Morris. So, confidently, say the makers of Phllty Morris," who bring you this column each week. "Anastasia," opening production of the season for The Carolina Playmakers, drama group at UNC, draws its cast of 13 from six dif ferent states. The recent Broadway success, adapted from the French of Mar cclle Maurctte by Guy- Bolton, will begin a five day run next Wednesday at the Playmakers The atre. Acting the title role, as the girl involved in a plot to prove her the heir to the Russian Romanoff dynasty, will be Rusti Rothrock, Anniston, Ala. Mrs. Rothrock, wife of a' UNC graduate assistant, has acted with several community the atres, at Cherokee in "Unto These Hills," and at the University of Arkansas. Formerly a high school speech teacher, she is now a speech therapist for Durham Coun- FITZ SIMONS AS EMPRESS Marion Fitz-Simons, veteran Chapel Hill Playmaker, will por tray the formidable Dowager Em press,' grandmother of the supposedly-massacred princess and strongest challenge to the success of the plan. Mrs. Fitz-Simons, wife of a UNC professor and mother of four sons, has appeared in a long list of Playmaker productions, in cluding "Macbeth," "Medea," "Ar senic and Old Lace," "Dark of the Moon," "Lysistrata" and last year's "Blood Wedding." Morgan Jackson, of Charlotte, will play Prince Bounine, exiled Russian nobleman who trains Anya for her pretense and presents her to those who must be convinced. Jackson, a Korean veteran, has Oxford Prof Talks Here An Oxford University professor will give the second of two ad dresses here tonight. Dr. Alfred Ewert, a professor of romance languages, will talk on "Judas Iscariot in Medieval French Literature" at 8 p.m. in the Library Assembly Room. The lecture is open to the pub lic. Ewert, who was born in Canada and once taught at the University of Texas, gave his first talk yes terday afternoon to graduate stu dents in romance languages. He talked on "The Strasbourg Oaths and the Eulalia." acted wtti the Paris American The atre Group in Paris and the Weis baden Theatre Guild in Germany, the University of Alabama The atre, and "Unto These Hills." Joe Whitaker, of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, wno was active with the University of Arkansas theatre group, will aopear as Prince Paul, Anastasia's childhood sweetheart. MINISTER HAS ROLE Rev. W. Robert Insko, Chaplain to Episcopal Students at UNC, will take the role of Dr. Serensky, who has known the pretender, Anya, in another identity from that of a princess. Russell Link, of Jamaica, N. Y., and Gene Duke, of Oxford, will play Chernov and Petrovin, com rades of Bounine. Others in the cast are: Peter O'Sullivan, of Val halla, N. Y., as Counsellor Drivin itz; Betty Jinnette, of Goldsboro, as the Charwoman; Hope Sparger, of Scarsdale, N. Y., as Varya; Frank Rinaldi, of Waterbury, Conn., as Sergei; John Sneden, of Tena fly, N. J., as the Sleigh Driver; and Eve Janzan, of Durham, as Barones Livenbaum. "Anastasia" will be under the direction of Samuel Selden, chair man of the UNC Dept. of Dramatic Art. Stage Manager will be Dick Newdick, of Augusta, Maine, and the set is designed by Tommy Rez zuto, of Asheville, technical direc tor of the Playmakers. Business Fraternity Names 18 Pledges Eighteen students were pledged to Alpha Kappa Psi, professonial fraternity in business administra tion, at ceremonies held Friday night. Pledged were Denver E. Bird, Charleston, W. Va.; Hugh Camp bell, Laurinburg; Joseph Mark Clapp, Greensboro; James ' F. Dix on, Clinton; Billy Green, Concord; Jimmy Hunter, Raleigh; Dwight Jenkins, Charlotte; Ralph Johnson, Winston-Salem; Jerry Leonard, Charlotte; Alex Lewis, Morehead City; Donald Paris Moore, Asheboro; Robcrl Pendergraph, Durham; Alton Pons, Valdese; Dona'd Lacy Pugh, Asheboro; John Reaves, Charlotte; - Theodore Roo sevelt Smith, Sea Cliff, N. Y.; Gerald Suddreth, Granite Falls, and L. P. Wheeler,' Washington, D. C. HALL NAMED COMMANDER: Naval ROTC N ames New Battalion Officers G. Brad Hall of Evanston, Illi nois has been named Battalion Commander of the UNC Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps for the fall semester. Hall is a member of St. Anthony Chemistry Club Holds Tuesday Open House The Chemistry Club entertain ed members and visitors at an op en house Tuesday night. The meeting featured demon strations by the Chemistry De partment. The program showed the work ings of the infra-red spectrome ter, the emission spectrometer, the recording polarograph, the X-ray machine and the research appara tus of Dr. Rydolph Schmidt, re search associate in chemistry. The meeting closed with a re freshment get-acquainted period. Hall, Phi Beta Kappa, and Phi Eta Sigma. Another top post went to Don aid E. Kentopp of East Orange, N. J. He was named Battalion Executive officer of the NROTC New Battalion Operations offi cer of the unit is Luther H. Hod ges Jr. of Leaksville and Raleigh Hodges is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha, social fraternity and Phi Eta Sigma and Phi Beta Kappa honorary fraternities. Carter G. Mackie of Point Pleas ant, N. J., was named Battalion Communications officer. He is a members of Pi Kappa Alpha. David L. Ward Jr. of New Bern was named Battalion Supply offi cer. He is a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Eta Sigma and Phi Beta Kappa. New Battalion Mustering Petty officer is Larry R. Williams of Concord. He is a member of Kap pa Alpha social fraternity. Old West Seeks To Have More Girls Walk By Dorm The men in Old West Dorm are reportedly unhappy. Very unhappy, in fact, their president says. Why? ft seems that the girls on campus fail to walk by the dorm. President Teddy Jones says. The dorm, one of the oldest buildings on campus, is located on East Cameron Ave. across the street from Gerrard Hall and beside the Old Well. Jones didn't know whether the allegedly unwalked-upon-by-girls walks near the dorm were the result of geographical circumstances of the fault of the inhabitants of Old West "As President of Old West, I should like to rectify this mat ter," Jones said. "The men of Old West are men of outstanding character capable of conducting them selves in gentlemanly fashion," Jones added. Jones has extended to all co eds a "cordial" invite to walk by the dorm. "They will be wel comed and well received, he said. In making a last plea, Jones said, "Girls, give the 'boys a chance to show their true ap preciation : of the female sex." Girls! Go West! OUR 97tl ANNIVERSARY FEATURES STOREwlDE SAVINGS I LOOK AT THESE mi $S8te. ANN I VE KSAIIY sj. mmr-i mm. r n -:. . w.-' mmv .i. ANN PAGE Blended ... , u7w&w& . -ww: . mm9 . V TV WIT r -v '-'rj TV. I - mi -Ml mmm msm Smm mm M etji EJi J W m tJt 1 KT It I til H js. jtflPlh. J H! il Ulna il a fi II t " l 8 . ?W 3 II 14 I If If II I II fi lit I f I w 24-Oz. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 11, 1956, edition 1
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