Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 12, 1957, edition 1 / Page 3
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TUESD AY, MARCH 12, 1?5? THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE EFFECTIVE SEPT. 1 : FVe Named Two Resign, Five appointments to 'the' TJNC faculty dud two resignations were announced yesterday by Chancel lor Robert House. To become "e ectrve Sept. 1, 1957, the appointments were ap proved by the Executive Commit tee of the Board of Trustees in a meeting in -Raleigh yesterday morning. Henry C. Thomas, ta tie a pro fessor in the Dept. of Chemistry here is a native of Cheraw, South Carolina, and was grduated from UXC in 1932. He attended Yale, and has worked for' the DuPont Company. - Lyle V. Jones was appointed as assistant professor of Psychology and as director of the psychomet ric lab. He is a native of the State of Washington . and was graduated from the University of that state. To be an assistant professor in the English Dept. is Osborne B. Hardison, Jr., a "native of Califor nia. Hardison received "his Ph.D. in 1956 from . the University of Wisconsin and his M.A. from UNC in 1950. John S. Pike, to be an assistant professor in the School of Den tistry, was born in Georgia. He was graduated from Emory and from the University of Nebraska. Clifford M. Foust, Jr. is a na tive of New York. A graduate of Syracuse University and of the University of Chicago, he will be an assistant professor in the His tory Dept. Resignations from the faculty of North Carolina were by G. Gorden Ellis, an assistant profes sor in the School of Education who accepted a position at Iowa FIREBUG ... A thousand curses on that slim, Incendiary she Who calculating shrewdly my Combustibility Enflamed me with her eyes and let me burn so merrily That when the fire was out she'd made A perfect ash of me. MO&ALt Where there's firs there's smoke. So pull yourself together, chum, and put a flame to the end of your Chesterfield King. Ah-h-h-h that feela better. Take comfort in that regal, royal length. Enjoy the smoothest natural tobacco filter. -Savor the smoothest tasting smoka todaypacked mora smoothly by ACCU-KAY! Lilt yovr pimotvf EISl Chssf rfisld King & CvrytMnt (50 goe to DantelJ. SuCioeu. ZIoly Crom OJZegt far km CJu-itrr Field poem. $30 for mch ph Sompkicol vert aaeepttd far puhtie l,am. Chestxrfitii. t'JO.Bax 21. JWj York . N. Y. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Capital (Eur.) S.Chase balls (colloq.J 9. Satan 10. Works hard 12. Musical drama 1$. Fictional lover '-. 14. Absolute 15. Spoiled 1. Music note 17. Water god (Babyl.) 18. Purchase 19. Moist ' 50. IJn4 (N.Y.O 23. Not difficult' 24. Slow 28. Appear 2. Diminish 31. Open (poet.) 32. Cod of . ' pleasure ( Egypt 1 : 33. Pronoun - 34. Measure (Chin.) 3tJ. Prickly envelope . of fruit" 36. Sleeveless . garment' 38. Fruit of the oak. 40. Firm 41. Black bird 42. Abrasive mat&rtai 43. Wife of J a baronet 44. Foundation DOWN 1. Say agaia 2. Across 3. Boggy 4. Guido's highest note & Wander ' a. Monk's cowl 7. Point 8. European kites 9. Birds of peace 11. Dirty, as a chimney 15. Botcher 18. Plead 19. Small ' bundles 21. Opposite of awcather To Faculty, Says House State College; and by Rubin Hill, a professor in the Dept. of So ciology who accepted a position with the University of Minnesota. Belle Corey Is YWPrexy Nomination The nominating committee of the YWCA met yesterday after noon and presented the following persons as candidates for" office: Belle Corey, president; "Ann Morgan, vie e- president; Mollie Adams and Barbara Fowler, sec retary; Lloyd Daughtery and Ann Holt, treasurer; Phyllis Kraft and Eve McClatchey, program chair man; and Mary Louise Bizzell and Lucinda Holderness, mem bership chairman. During the open nominations meeting Monday, Mary Moore Ma son was nominated to run for see retary and Cindy Seagraves was nominated to seek the ' office of program chairman. The elections will be held Wed nesday, March 13, in the dormi tory and sorority house meetings, stated Martha Richardson, presi dent of the YWCA. Editor Speaks Here "British and American News papers" is the topic of a talk by Harry M. Evans, chief editorial writer of the Manchester Daily News, Manchester, England, to be given at an address of a Journ alism Assembly at 12 noon Wed nesdayn March 13, 22. Head cover- in; 12. Bitter vetch 25. Roman money 26. Kind of heat 27. Of heroic poetry "29. Imperial rule 30. Poverty. YeUrdr Aawr 26. State of insensibility 37. Malt beverages 39. Eees stricken 82. Easter pet 35. Raised 40. Earth god (var.) ffcdl -- - - - I Li Si p e Istjs1r 'hi lory lAivi aK .Ti leic .Is HjoiT n 'lM' Jl IT " idKtp Committee By BILL KING The committee appointed by the Student Legislature to investigate the conditions' surrounding the Le noir Hall situation met yesterday in an attempt to ascertain the op inions of the student workers in volved and to decide the goal to ward which the committee would work. A good part of the meeting con cerned itself with George W. Pril- v - . - x;'v:':-:::-:.v,: S;- I - v.. MISS HAVA . . Israeli Council Convicts Student For A student was convicted by the Men's Honor Council on charges of theft and sentenced to indef inite suspension, according to a report released by the Council yesterday. The student was found guilty of selling a book belonging to an other student at a local bookstore. The report released by the Hon or .Council is as follows; " ' ' A local bookstore recently re ported that several stolen books had been sold to them, and that one of the owners had claimed his and asked that the Men's Honor Council be notified of the theft The student stated that his World religion group The World Religion Study Group will meet in Lenoir Hall at 6 p.m. tonight for dinner and a continue ation of its study of Asian reli gions. Dr. W. L Stace will lead the group in a discussion of Buddhism. All interested persons have been invited to attend. WOMEN'S BI-PARTISAN BOARD The Bi-Partisan Selections Board will hold interviews Thursday from 4r5 p.m. and from 6:30-7:30 p.m. for the purpose of screening can didates for Women's Honor Coun cil seats. The board will also meet the following day, Friday, from 1:30-3:00 p.m. Three seats are open to juniors. Girls interested in running for these seats have been asked to sign a list posted on the door of the Council Room on the second floor of Graham Memorial. The list will be removed today at 5:30 p.m. Appointments for interviews will be closed thereafter. UNC GRAD. CLUB Dr. Arnold Nash of the UNC Re ligion Dept. will present a short CLASSIFIEDS 5 ROOM BRICK HOUSE, 3 BED rooms, all modern conveniences. 3 miles on Old 86 Hyway. Stove and Frigedaire furnished. Call Fred Katzin after 6:00, 8-9025. TWO BEDROOM HOUSE FURN- ished or unfurnished, near camp us. Call 9458 during day or 2926 after 5:30 p.m. and weekend. FIVE ROOM BRICK HOUSE IN center of town has hobby work shop. Call 9453 during day or 2926 after 5:30 and during weekend. LOST: ONE ROLEX OYSTER Speedking wristwatch, Tuesday night in Physics Lab (I think). , Please .contact :JoostPolak,. 208 Lewis. Covering The University Campus A scs c laman and some of his statements at a meeting of the student work-i ers last week. ' The feeling, according to a stu dent, seemed to be that Prillaman, manager of Lenoir, has evaded the major issues and concerned' him self 'with the relatively unimport ant details. As an illustration, it was point ed out that at the meeting of last Wednesday five students were 1 KOHAV student "Personnel" text had been stolen from Lenoir Hall on Feb. 8. Next day as he started to buy another one he mentioned the theft to the saleslady. Remembering that she had the day before bought one produced the book in which hi? name had been entered. She stated that she had requir ed of the student sellmg"this and another book his.; ID ,cax4 anC hj. signature in each one, which is a general procedure of the store. It was evident then that the sig nature must have corresponded with that of the ID card and that the possessor of this ID card at the time was guilty of the offense. The student whose name corres talk before the UNC Grad. Club Friday at 8 p.m. in the Roland Par ker Lounge of Graham Memorial. Dancing and refreshments will follow the preliminary business of the meeting, which is open to all .grad students, UNC employees, members of the Administration, registered nurses and " undergrads over 21. ' UNC-DUKE JOINT PHILOSOPHY COLLOQUIUM The UNC-Duke Joint Philosophy Colloquium will meet tomorrow at 8 p.m. in room 200 of Carroll Hall. Prof. William H. Poteat will pre sent a paper entitled "The Incar nate Word and the Language of Culture."- SENIOR LIFE-SAVING Everyone interested in senior life-saving class-es has been urged to attend a meeting in room 304, Woollen Gym tomorrow at 4 p.m., it was announced yesterday by Dick Jamerson of the Athletic Dept. UNIVERSITY CLUB The University Club will meet at 7 p.m. tonight in the Library Room located on the second floor of the YMCA building. All mem bers have been urged to attend. ELISHA MITCHELL SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY The Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society will meet in the Main Aud itorium of Phillips Hall at 7:30 to night to present plans concerning the commemoration of the centen nial of the death of Elisha Mit chell. Full attendance has been urged by W. L. Engels, Pres. GOVERNMENT LEADERSHIP TRAINING COMMITTEE The Student Government Lead ership Training Committee will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow in Roland Parker Lounge Noi 1. The purpose of the meeting will be to discuss further plans for a Retreat to be held in the spring. All Interested persons and members have been urged to attend. a try- j ver counted- by Prillaman who were unable to eat lunch at Lenoir, while several other people count ed as many as 10 to 15. Prillaman, at the session in Le noir, expressed his bewilderment that the . workers didn't come to him with their problems. A state ment was made at the meeting yes terday that the student workers had been discouraged from going any higher than their immediate superior in the past. Al Alphin, chairman of the com mittee, said that the goal of the committee would be to gain an ac cumulative payment system. The student under this system would be able to carry over the balance of his food allowance that he does not use. This carry-over would ac cumulate over a period of a month with the student to receive, in cash, the balance at the end of the month. The amount to be carried over would not exceed $.90 a day. Alphin said the committee would make this recommendation to the legislature in its report. The students at the meeting ag reed this would satisfy most of the workers at Lenoir. Opinions were also expressed that the workers at Lenoir were afraid of losing their jobs as a re sult of Prillaman's statements which could be taken as threats or insinuations. It was brought out that Prillaman could not "black list" the student workers and that only the student aid office had the authority to "blacklist" a student worker. The investigating committee ag reed the Lenoir Hall situation was a bad one and that something should be done about it. ponded to the signature was sum moned before the Men's Honor Council and presented with the charge of theft. To this charge he pled "not guilty." When ques tioned as to his possession of his ID card during the month of Jan uary and February he stated that he had loaned it to his roommate once to acquire a iostal package Tor hint. He testified that this was during the last of January and that his roommate had kept it for several weeks, but could not re member the exact date of its re turn. Further interrogation by the council established this date which indicated that only he could have possessed it on Feb. 8. Faced with PLACEMENT SERVICE The Placement Service will snonsor a career program in Ger- rard Hall at 7:30 p.m. tonight. BLARNEY'S BALL The Independent Women, and four men's dorms Alexander, Grimes. B.V.P. and Old East will stonsor a dance and party in the basement ef Cobb Dormitory Fri day from 8 to 12 p.m. The Hill side Joymakers from Durham will entertain. ' The theme will be in line with St. Patrick's Day and will fee call ed Blarney's Ball. Dating will not be prohibited, but strongly dis couraged so that more men and women will attend. WESLEY CHOIR ,The Wesley Choir will hold a rehearsal tomorrow at 6:45 p.m. in the Sanctuary of the University Methodist Church. BRIDGE LESSONS Bridge lessons will be given to morrow from 4-6 p.m. in the Ren dezvtras Room of Graham Memor ial, and on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Victory Village Day Care Center. JOINT UNC-DUKE PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM The joint Duke-UNC Physics Col loquium will meet tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 206 of Phillips Hall, i Dr. Warren Henry of the Naval ; Research Laboratory will present a j talk on "Magnetic Interactions in j Solids." v . YMCA ELECTIONS YMCA elections will be held in Gerrard Hall from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday. PSYCHOLOGY CLUB There will be a meeting of the Psychology Club tonight at 7:30 in room 210 New West. A movie, "This Is Robert," will be shown. Following the movie there will be a discussion led by members of the Psychology , Dept. All under graduate psychology majors and other students interested in psy chology have been invited to at tend the meeting. Local Station Carrying NBC Program List WUNCVTV, the University's educational television station, Monday night carried the first of a five-day series of programs tele cast nationally by NBC and the Educational Television and Radio Center. The programs, to be carried live by all the educational television stations in the country, will be seen each week night at 6:30 for a 13-week period this spring. It marks the first time the na tion's educational television sta tion will carry live network pro gramming from the NBC studios. The series is a non-commercial deal with all commercial stations excluded. 1 The programs will be in the areas of literature, geography, mathematics, government and mu sic. Well-known authorities in each area will be featured. A similar 13-week program is planned for this fall. NBC is presenting the mathe- HUMANITIES (Continued from Page 1) associated with the University. Undertakings which are expect ed to be followed by the Institute are: (1) Scholarships in humanities; (2) Improvement of teaching methods; (3) Visiting Professor ships; (4) Individual and periodi cal publications; (5) Funds for research expense, travel, ' micro film and clerical assistance; (6) Special Library acquisitions; (7) Support of departmental interest in high school teaching. Theft the facts, his plea changed to "guilty." The council members felt .that his offense constitutes one of the most serious violations of the hon or code and consequently issued a sentence of indefinite suspen sion. - i ( Ducats (Continued from page 1) for the trip, stated Student Body President Bob Young. If the amount of students signed for the Friday night game does not justify , a special train, then the train trip can be made for the Saturday j game stated Young. The train trip will be made eith-1 er from Durham or Raleigh and could leave Friday morning for Philadelphia and be able to return Sunday night, said Benny Thom as, social chairman of the IDC- The cost for the round-trip, tra vel only, will be approximately $20, stated Thomas. Pete Evans, president of the Cardboard, said that any students who would like to paint posters for the caravan will be welcome to the Cardboard office over Emer son Stadium. Poster material will not be furnished, but paint and brushes will be offered, said Ev ans, i ISRAELIS (Continued from page 1) the touring Israeli students, has been reported to be one of the most brilliant graduates of the Is rael Academy of Music. After he finished his - studies in Israel, he came to the United States to con tinue his work. Recently, he won the Lado Artist Award and play ed at the Waldorf Astoria and in Brooklyn Museum. Miss Hava Kohav, an "Israeli dancer, is a graduate of the Mu sic Teachers College in Tel Avilv. After her graduation there she joined the Israel Defense Army where . she tauglit Hebrew songs and original Israel dances to im migrant soldiers. She has pre pared several folk festivals, especi ally in communities in the south of Israel. - Miss Kohav came to thi? country three years ago an 3 is now studying at the Juilliard School of Music. She has per formed with a special professional dance troup in Carnegie Hall. After serving in the Israel army. dramatist Eliezer Plotnik was ad mitted to the Habimah, a famous Israel theatrical company. Three years ago Plotnik came to this country to further his musical and his theatrical studies. He now has a scholarship at the ' Mannes School of Music and Drama. He has participated in a number of performances in this country, specifically, in a tour of campus es in the Middle West, matics, government and music "series. The ETRC is underwriting the literature and government programs and supplying lines to connect the network cables with educational television stations. The literature program, carried for Ihe first time Monday night, will dramatize certain aspects of American life and culture as seen by contemporary writers. The program will feature Dr. Al bert D. Van Nostrand, author and associate professor of English at Brown University. Host for the geography series will be Albert E. Burke, executive director of the American Insti tute of Resource Economics. The programs will deal with the eco nomic realities of geography and their influence on world action. James Newman, editor of "The World of Mathematics," will serve as chief consultant on this series designed to make mathematics in teresting and understandable to the general public. Host for the government series will be ' E. E. SchatU-chneider, chairman of the department oi government at Wesleyan Univer sity and president of the Ameri can Political Science Assn. 1 Dr. Schattschneider will explore the evolution, functions and op eration of the institutions of American government with the objective of helping the citizei understand how his government really works. The music series will deal with Phi To Debate Measure A bill resolving that war be rec ognized as an end in itself will be debated tonight by the Assem bly of the Philanthropic Literary Society. The bill, which points out the role of war as a stimulus to na tional effort and unity, calls war not a destructive force but an ef fective and necessary means of supplanting antiquated national and international institutions. CRAZY, MAN, CRAZY! WHILE THEY LAST BUY $69.00 WORTH Or RECORDS AND GET A 3-SPEOD PHONOGRAPH i 1 " J 207 E. Franklin St. "PWWW'"WW',,'WW'"P"'",,,,",,,ew' HoipHaMfwmMIMMP"M't'WW mi Ilium M.IIHIIH mull"! ' "'" ' 1 r " 'M: '"wy FT" " r'zr " l nt4" 7 i 1 MM m Spin a platter . . . have some chatter . . . and sip that real great taste of Coke, Sure, you can have a party without Coca-Cola but who wants to! Bottied under Authority of DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. , "Highlights of Opera History." j Paul Henry Lang. Columbia Uni- versity musieology professor and i New York music critic, will host this series, to relate the history i of culture from 1600 to 19o0. Producers for the five programs are well-known in the field of broadcasting. David Lowe, pro ducer and director both in tele vision and the theater, is overall producer of the project and will produce the mathematics program. William Parish, an NBC super visor of public service programs, will produce the comtemporary American literature programs. Brice Howard, NBC senior unit manager has been assigned to pro- duce the government scries. Charles Polachek, who has been associate producer of the NBC Opera Co., will produce the music series and Dorothy Culbcrtson, former supervisor of religious ra dio programming and education features for NBC, will produce the geography programs. Religious Books By C. S. LEWIS The Intimate Bookshop 205 East Franklin Street YOU CAN BELIEVE By U- N. C.'s Frank Hanft Lenten Reading at $1.69 The Intimate Bookshop 205 East Franklin Street 7 Jf The Coca-Cola Company by Wlp A ?1IK fAM-MMM. CO?it 14 CCl CftO Ct" nnr
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 12, 1957, edition 1
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