TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1955
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
PAGE THREE
Covering The Campus
WOMEN'S RESIDENCE COUNCIL
The Women's Residence Council
will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in the
Grail Room of Graham Memorial.
WESLEY CHOIR
The Wesley Choir will meet to
day from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Univer
sjty Methodist Church.
CHEM CLUB
The Chemistry Club will meet to
day at 7:30 p.m. in Venable 207.
A 'film produced by the. Atomic
Energy Commission will be shown.
LZZ
Christmas Gifts
For Tiny People
Cloth Books Our set will stand
. . . .
a poweriul lot 1 of gumming, and
most will survive a dip in the
washing machine and come out
delectable as new! 15 titles to
tempt you. Priced from 50c to
$1.50.
Gone Is My Goose A very lovely
little book by Chapel Hill's own
Dorothy Koch. Simple enough for
the first grader to read to baby.
$2.25
See The Circus by H. A. Rey.
Children (love Key's "peek-a-boo
books" and this one is especially
appealing. $1.50
Baby Anjmals Thick paper and
warm colorful pictures make this
Golden book a year-round favorite
with tiny folk. ' SI. 00
Harold's Fairy Tale by Crockett
Johnson. The ' director of Mr.
O'Malley writes an ingenious tale
of a small boy and a crayon
Grown-ups like it too. $1.50
A Hole is to Dig by Ruth Krauss
This is not the newest of Miss
Krauss' books, but we find that our
very small customers love it most
of all.. $150
Beatrix Potter Books We have
most of them, from Peter Rabbji
On UP, and thev're hparf-warminff!
t nod ;!:9h;!ff:
THE INTIMATE
205 E. Franklin St.
Open Till 10 P.M
1
Why Pay High Prices? -
I've Held Them Down Since July, '55
ASK YOUR BUDDY!
CDcriAi 7ii- ---i t.. aj fr Per C
ji tviL emu i
ESSO GAS
Cash
YES!
Cash
Reg. 29.9 H.T 32.9
Plus
Bring This Ad And Get 1 Cent Off Per Gah Gas,
5 Cents Per Qt. Oil
? WHERE ?
At The Students' Friend
WHIPPLE'S ESSO SERVICE
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS 8. Installed
t. Shine ceremoni
6. Faultily ously
11. Rascal Mix
12. Mule blanket 10. Auction
13. Incites
14. Smithy's
block
15. Fools
17. Before
18. StQps
21. Bellow
24. Assemble
troops
27. Piers
Areh.)
29. Setting
30. Damper
32. Appends
33. Not awake
35. Yam (H. I.)
37. Uproar
41. Inside
44. Mature
person
45. Pillar
of stone
46. Indian
soldier
47. Mud hut
48. County
(Eng.)
' DOWN
1. Unit of
weight
2. Wolf
3. German
river
4. Absolute
sovereigns
5. Middle
(Law)
6. Wine cup
7. Homo
apienj
16. Man's
nickname
19. Genus
of swine
20. Pranks
21. Uncooked
22. Single unit
23. Gained
25. Finish
26. Property
L.)
28. Lamprey
id
a.1
23
30
33
35
3
At
AS
47
YOUNG ADULT GROUP
The Young Adult Group will
meet at 8 p.m. at the University
Methodist Church.
FACULTY CLUB LUNCHEON
Professor J. Carlyle Sitterson,
Dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences, will speak today when
the Faculty Club meets at the Caro
lina Inn at 1 p.m. Professor Sitter
sonTs topic will be "Ljbcral Ar
in the University of North Caro
lina." WUNC-TV
WUNC-TV, the University's edu
cational television station, channel
4:
12:45- Music.
1:00 Today on the Farm.
1:30 Music in the Air.
2:00 Science and Nature.
5:45 Music.
6:00 Magic Lantern.
6:15 Sports Clinic.
, 6:30 News.
6:45 Sports.
7:00 Books and People.
7:15 Bible Course.
8:00 Dr. Shivers.
8:45 State Government.
9:30 Musical Forms.
10:00 Final Edition.
10:05 Sign Off.
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE: 1949 FORD-8. SEAT
covers, radio, heater, and new
battery. Price $195.00. See at
101 Mason Farm Rd. anytime or
phone 8-0113.
Photo Finishing Service
AS CLOSE AS YOUR MAILBOX
GUARANTEED SERVICE
Any 8 exposure roll develop
ed and 8 JUMBO PRINTS; only
50c 12 exposures 75c 16 ex
posures SI. 00.
...FAST, 6.HQUR FINISHING
jFREE .ALBUM WITH EACH
l0lrH 0f?;:f Ita
FREE MAILERS
ftOJPQJO SERVICE
Box 3803 Park Place
Greenville, S. C.
ru - aae i.uu
Pius Dep.
ESSO GAS
Cash
31. Sports
official
(colloq.)
34. Rub
out
35. Sound,
as
a
goose
36. Fa
miliar with '
(slang)
38. Drinking
vessels
Z9. Genus
of lily
Yeeterday'e Anwcr
40. UnJerworld
river
42. Old times
(archaic)
43. King (Sp.)
t4
il
2T
ll
it
33.
3
3?
AO
I
4 to
SjOAjppsllAKT
.I.kEj 1 GAF
il HAL Si R X I S C
StVk iv jfrjN r ,Pij!S
j lEM ills.
pijjeoa a!p Jots
jctt jTn7 pta l w e
r P.j SrfAL OjU D
sj i jNjel jet to Alms
'Mignon'Set
For WUNC-TV
Viewing Friday
Norman Cordon, commentator
for "Let's Listen to Opera" each
Friday night over WUNC, the
University of North Carolina's FM
station, has chosen as this week's
presentation Ambroise Thomas'
ever popular "Mignon."
The broadcast at 8 p.m. Friday
was recorded at the famous Brus
sels Opera House, Theatre de la
Monnaie, by London Records. The
chorus -and orchestra of that
theatre are conducted by George
Sebastian.
The title role wil be sung by
Genevieve Moizan supported by
Janine Micheau as "Philine,"
Libero de Luca as "Wilhelm
Meister," and Rene Bianco as
"Lothario." .' x,
Study Begun
In Med School
A three-year study of "The Pro
cess of Patient Referral to a Uni
versity General Clinic in a Rural
State," has gotten underway in
the UNC Medical School, made
possible by an $86,325 grant from
the .U S. Public Health Service.
Drs. Kerr L. White and T.
Franklin Williams of the Depart
ment of Preventive Medicine are
the 'principal investigators for
the study.
The grant, provided by the
USPHS Division of Hospital and
Medical Facilities, provides $27,
370 for the first year, $29,285 for
the second and $29,670 for the
third.
Teacher Shortage Is
By Noted Educator,
By BOB MYERS
A tireless first grade teacher
took cotton-topped, cherubic, little
Johnny upon her lap and struggled
to put on his galoshes, which were
a mite small.
After 15 minutes, the "mud-dob-bers"
were manipulated as Johnny
asserted, "Miss Jones, these aren't
my galoshers.' And she struggled
15 more minutes getting them off.
"But they belong to my brother
and mother said for me to wear
them," Johnny disclosed, much to
the teacher s chagrin.
And the teacher struggled with
Uohnny's "galoshers" once again
and she thought about the first
day of school when there were so
many k;ds in her room that it ap
peared and sounded like a Satur
day cartoon matinee at the local
theater. That was the day Mrs. Van
Wagon brought in little Percy, say
ing, "Miss Jones, I know you will
give personal attention to my dear
son."
Miss Jones took a look around
the room and with a half sigh
said, "Oh, yes, Mrs. Van Wagon,
little Percy will get special atten
tion." Figurative as they may be, the
foregoing jllustrations were used
by T. M. Stinnett, reputedly one
of the best informed men in the
country on education as executive
secretary of the National Educa
tion Associations Commission On
Teacher Education and Profession
al Service, in pointing out the ex
tra burdens of teachers amid
crowded conditjons in the nation's
public schools.
But the educator, on a recent
visit here, says the country's cur
rent educational problems in pub
lic schools are no indication of
things to come. Stinnett, noted for
his prophecies, says the country
is on the threshold of the "Golden
Era of Education."
GOLDEN ERA
This Golden Era will develop in
the next 25 years along with the
advance jn nemerical technology;
electronics, atomic fission, produc
tion of more goods than ever be
fore, new scientific and synthetic
materials, 50 per cent more food
production, the rocket and jet age.
and the coming of the 30-hour
work week, the educator prophesi-
ed.
All Premiums And Rraft
T. V. Good Place To
Watch Boxing & Football
Bring Your Date
SANDWICHES OF ALL KINDS
WEST FRANKLIN STREET LUNCHEONETTE
Next to But Station 5
Phone 9-2846
Police Blotter
Students on the Chapel Hill
police blotter between Nov. 12
and Nov. 26 were as follows:
John Grey Todd, speeding; Miss
Marilyn Ann Keil; blocking
driveway; William Pender,
speeding; Jerry Edward Cohen,
speeding; Lee Joyner, hit' and
run; James Robertson McQuis
ton, stop sign violation; Clifton
Thomas Boyd, passing on curve;
Giles Garrett Nicholson, reckless
driving; Charlie Allen Ross, stop
sign violation and speeding;
William J. O'Sullivan, public
drunkeness; and Donald Spencer
Atkins, public drunkeness. '
UNC Nursing School
Elected Agency Member
Dr. Elizabeth Kemble, dean
of the University School of Nurs
ing, announced today that the
School of Nursing has been ap
proved for full membership in the
Council of Member Agencies, Dept.
of Baccalaureate and Higher De
gree Programs of the National
League of Nursing. ' 1
Membership in this Council is
limited to collegiate schools of
nursing that have been fully ac
credited by the Collegiate Board
of Review of the National League
for Nursing. The UNC School of
Nursing is the first school of nurs
ing in North Carolina to receive
full membership in this agency. '
Public Health Profs
Present New Methods
Two members of the faculty of
the University School of Public
Health will present a new proce
dure in the diagnosis of syphilis
at the American Medical- Assn.
Clinical Conference in Seattle,
Wash. Nov. 26-30.
The new procedure is called
"Treponema Pallidum Comple
ment Fixation Test."
"By 1965, the gross productivity
of the country will reach $560 bil
lion," and in 20 years present pro
duction wjU be multiplied live
times," the national education of
ficial said. "And by 1975 the ave
rage income for the working man
will be increased to $3,200 annually-
With other advances will ; dawn
the greater era for education.1; "By
1975 the population N of the United
States will increase to as many as
the combined peoples of England
and two other European countries,
the executjve secretary predicted.
$10 BILLION SPENT
- "And where the nation is now
spending $10 billion on education in
public schools, by 1975 there will
be need for an expenditure of $25
billion and teachers' salaries will
have to be doubled," he said. Un
less teachers' salaries are increas
ed, educators will f jnd othef fields
more attractive.
"We must add 600,000 new teach
ing positions by 1965," the authori
ty emphasized, and in the next ten
years must prepare one and one
half million new teachers to meet
the demand. '
"In the ensuing 10 years, edu
cation wil assume the private fav
cr of the American people as it
never has before. It will Become
as necessary to people as clothes
and shelter," Stinnett predicted.
COMPETITION WITH RUSSIA
Another reason for the advance
of education js competition with
Russia. Stinnett pointed out how
Russian leaders have discovered
the power of their peoples and
how they are subsidizing education
with scholarships and grants under
a regimented system.
"We must keep abreast of Rus
sia," Stinnett said. lie proclaimed
the salvation of American educa
lion is by "our own democratic
system not any regimented sys
tern like Russia has." We must
have access to free educatjon for
every child from grade school
through college.
KEY
The key to all is the future,
jiamely, the quantity and quality
of teachers we will get," Stinnett
sid. lie indicated that the Ameri-
can people should stop kidding
themselves of the misconceptions
about education and stop trying
Health Prof
Heads Group
Miss Julie Smith, associate pro
fessor of public health nursing at
the University School of Nursing,
was elected chairman of the pub
lic Health Nursing Section of the
American Public Health Assn. at
the recent meeting of this associa
tion in Atlantic City.
Miss Smith, who was vice-chairman
of this section for the past
two years, is a native North Caro
linian!. She graduated'' from . Hol
Iins College, the University of
Pennsylvania Hospital School of
Nursing, and received her master's
degree at Teacher's College,
Columbia Univrsity. Before join
ing' the faculty of the University
Sehool of Nursing, she was resi
dent lecturer in public health nurs
ing, she Was resident lecturer in
public health nursing at the Uni
versity of Michigan.
Speaks In
Raleigh Friday
L. Deno Reed, audiologist of
the North Carolina Memorial Hos
pitar and instructor of otolaryn
gology in the University School
of Medicine, Dept. of Surgery, will
speakf in Raleigh on Friday.
Reed will address a meeting of
the North Carolina Assn. of Spe
cial Therapists at the Sir Walter
Hotel at 7 p.m. on the subject of
"Diagnostic and Therapeutic Mea
sures for Speech Defective Chil
dren." Reed also will be a member of
a panel headed by Mrs. Annie Ray
Moore, health educator of the
North Carolina Dept. of Public In
struction, which will discuss
"promising Hearing with the
Hard-of-He arin g."
Analyzed
UNC Dean
to duck the fundamental causes
of the teacher shortage and grow
ing demands for teachers.
' "The future depends on the kind
cf teachers we will get," he said,
"and we can get them." What can
be done of necessity is ljke the
two men who fell into opposite
ends of a newly-dug eight-foot-deep
grave; while taking a short cut
through a cemetery at night.
I After each had been detained
for sometime, and pondering his
fate", one discovered he had com
pany and tapped the other on the
shoulder, "Hey," he said, "you
can't get out of here." But he did.
TEACHER SHORTAGE
Dean Arnold Perry of the School
of Education, approached about
the teacher shortage, emphasized
the gravity of the problem and sug
gested mass production of teachers
zs a means of meeting the forth
comjng demand.
The dean pointed out that the
post-war bumper crop of children
nas only recently been felt in the
elementary schools. In about five
years the shock wave will roll over
the junior high schools and in an
other three years, over the senior
highs.
Statistics bear out the dean's
statements. The nation in 1954-55
had 690,000 elementary teachers
and 375,000 high school teachers.
Of this number, about eight per
cent leave each year, reguiring the
replacement of about 83,6oO teach
ers. But this isn't enough. Around
15,000 more would be needed just
lo overcome "the present crowded
conditions of the schools. Another
30,000 teachers would be needed
to take care of the national in
crease in enrollment.
EDUCATION OF TEACHERS
North Carolina, for instance,- had
a shortage of 1,267 teachers last
year. ' Since 1947, ' the number of
teachers in the state has increased
by about 1,000 a year, but the edu
cation of teachers has not kept
pace with the increasing enroll
ment:' V
A program for relieving this pro
blem should meet certain minimum
standards to be effective. First,
present standards of teacher edu
cation should be ma;ntained, or
the teacher profession will lose its
appeal to alert and intelligent peo
ple. "Ijower standards will deny
the school child the superior in
struction and guidance which we
are seeking for him," the Dean
said.
The program should be channel
ed through 20 white and 12 Negro
the state, and any worthwhile pro-'
gram must be a long-range one,
because "no temporary 'stop-gap
measures will suffice."
"What will Johnny face in ths
classroom of the Golden Era in
Education?" -
News
is In
The traveling exhibit of the 13th
annual ''News Pictures of the
Year" contest is now on display
in the Library.
The exhibit features all the top
prize winners and finalists in this
year's contest. It includes rep
resentative prints from the tojj
portfolio that gave the title
"Magazine Photographer of the
Year" to Grey Villet of Life maga
zine. '' The "News Pictures of the Year"
contest is co-sponsored by the Na
tional Press Photographers Assn.
and Encyclopedia Bxitarinica.
Under NPPA's educational pro
gram short courses in photo
journalism are taught in schools
in Boston, Syracuse, Chapel Hill,
Chicago, Seattle and Los Angeles.
The still division of the year's
contest was judged in ten different
categories. The current exhibition,
consisting " of about 140 prints,
contains a cross-section of these
ten categories.
This year's show is being ex
hibited in leading colleges, uni
versities, public libraries and
Nursing School
Faculty Attend
Chicago Meet
Miss Marion S. Wood and Miss
Mary Walker Randolph, professors J
of nursing at the University of
North Carolina, are representing !
UNC School of Nursing at a meet- I
ing in Chicago this week of the
Council of Member Agencies, Dept.
of Baccalaureate andlligher De
gree Programs, National League
for Nursing.
Miss Wood is in charge of the
undergraduate program and Miss
Randolph of the graduate program
in the School of Nursing.
The UNC School of Nursing has
recently been approved for full
membership in League's Council,
which is limited to nursing schools
fully accredited by the Collegiate
Board of Review of the National
League for Nursing.
Display Case
An oak boolvtawto display and
protect a valuable collection of
rare books on pharmacy was pre
sented to the School of Pharmacy
here recently by the Woman's
Auxiliary of the North Carolina
Pharmaceutical Assn. Dr. E. A.
Brecht, dean of the school, accept
ed the case for the, school. The
presentation was made by Mrs.
W. P. Kendall, Charlotte, presi
dent of the organization and Mrs.
W. P. Brewer, Greensboro, im
mediate past president.
Out cf fear, '
she fled from;him...
rJ ' Out of fascination.
0 she clung to him !
LAST TIMES TODAY
;SiCinn:. idvavvts i-j.
; 0
A COLUMBIA PICTURE with BRIAN KEITH KIM HUNTER PAUL KELLY KEVIN COUGHL1N
StWT dScopto by DANIEL TARADASH ELKJK MOU. Owecled by DANIEL TARADASH . Produced by JULIAN BLAUSTEiN A PHOENIX PRODUCTI3M
TODAY
And
WEDNESDAY
Picture Exhibit:;:'
Wilson Library
museums throughout the coun
try. The UKC Library is exhibiting
the prints in the Assembly Room,
the Reserve Reading Room and
the General College Reading Room.
The show will remain here
through tomorrow.
UNC Medical Profs
Attend Teachers Meet
Two members of the University
of North Carolina. School of Medi
cine faculty returned ' recently
from the Atlantic City meeting of
the Association of Teachers of
Preventive Medicine.
Dr. William P. Richardson
participated in a panel on teach
ing rehabilitation by a Dept. of
Preventive Medicine. Dr. William
L. Fleming took part in a round
table talk on "Clinical Preventive
Medicine." ' -
MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE-A FRIENDLY BUSI
NESS CHAT WITH THE
FfID THAT:
THE NEW YORK LIFE AGENT
ON YOUR CAMPUS
IS A GOOD MAN TO KNOW
George L Coxhead
UNC '42 CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE
PO BOX 1065 PHONE 82331
....
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BOTTLED UNDEB AUTWOtfTY
DURHAM COCA-COLA
"Cok" is e register- trade-mark.
i
i V
i- - - .- ' -' - - i
- - srfLQcttro j--J
It's
Chile
ren
S
boos: 'vvgg::.
Enjoy
Second
Childhood
In The
Wonderland
Of
THE INTIMATE
BOOKSHOP
205 C. Franklin St.
Open Till 10 P.M.
MAN. YOU'LL
11
1
' 1
You feel so ne and fresh v.
and good all over when you
pause for Coca-Cola. It's sparkling with quick
refreshment . . . and it's so pure and wholesome
naturally friendly to your figure. Let it do
things good things for you.
OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY tf
BOTTLING CO.
195A, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
9 1BBW 4fcKl