THE DAILY TAR HEEL
PACE THREE
Reading Courses Being
Offered This Semester
Covering The University Campus
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1953
Applications are now being ta-1
ken for the spring semester ses
sion of the HeaJing Program.
The program is a voluntary,
three r our non-credit course de
signed to assist students in im
proving their reading and study
habits.
Applications will .be taken in
Itoom 03 Teabody from 0 a.m. to
4 p.m. through Feb. 12. Classes
will begin on Feb. 17 and end two
weeks before examination period.
The Heading Trogram is open to
all University students, graduate
and fTofessiimal as well as under
graduate. It is offered every hour
of the day froin 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Monday through Friday, and can
be arranged to fit the individual
schedule.
The classes are small, limited to
14 students.
It is expected that all applicants
can be enrolled this semester.
Students enrolling in the course
can anticipate considerable im
provement in their reading speed.
In the past, 110rl improvement
has been the average. Gains in
comprehension and studying effi
ciency can also be expected.
SOCIET
Joan Brock, Editor
Y
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V'Cji TYPEWRITING
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mmmmm'mmmm Afternoon Classes Begin
Phene Monday, February 3
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town classes
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Chpel Hill, North Carolina
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Pinnings
DU Charles Sloan of Arlington, Va., to KD president Edith Mac
Kinnon of Charlotte . . . DU Andrew Vanore of Robbins to pale
Avery of Sanf ord . . . ATO Robert Morrison of Atlanta, Ga., to Uni
versity of Ceorgia Chi O Happy Strickland of Atlanta, Ga. . . ATO
Bobby Butler of Leakesville to Alpha Gam Phyllis Krafft of River
Forest, 111. . . . Wally Kuralt, member of Delta Psi and Phi Mu
Alpha music fraternity, to Ruthie Rces, a Duke coed from Charlotte.
ATO Bob Creighton of Montclair, N. J., to Pi Phi Arnold Garvin
of Aiken, S. C. . . . ATO Fred Steek of Towson, Md., to Duke coed
Musette Dunn of Enfield . . . DKE Donnell Cobb of Goldsboro to
Chi O pledge Lou Cheatham of Greenville . . . DKE Pearce Weaver
of Asheville to WC student Nancy Johnson of Asheville . . ". DKE
Max Fearsall of Rocky Mount to Tri Dclt pledge Cecile Martin of
Jacksonville, Fla. . . . Phi Kap Arnold Wood of Charlotte to Joyce
Sharpe of Belmont.
Engagements
ATO Bud Oliver of Mount Airy to Wake Forest coed Barbara
Jester of Mount Airy . . . DU Harold Johnson of Fuquay Springs
to Katie Collins of Battleboro and Raleigh . . . Gerald Mayo, UNC
senior of Greenville to WC sophomore Linda Barnes of Wilson.
ADPi Patsy Miller of Kinston to former Daily Tar Heel sports
editor Larry Cheek of Chapel Hill . . . UNC grad student Bill
Colonna, former Phi Gam at the University of Richmond, to West
bampton College senior Patti Doggett of Richmond, Va.
ATO Pledge Officers
Ralph Cummings of Raleigh is serving as president of the ATO
Pledge Class. Other officers include Al Eskridge of Shelby, vice
president; and Norwood Holmes of Goldsboro, secretary.
DKE Pledges Elect Officers
Howard Holdcrness of Greensboro has been elected president of
the DKE Pledge Class. Marvin Blount of Greenville is serving as
vice president and Stan Leggett of Rocky Mount is secretary and
treasurer.
Phi Kaps Elect New House Officers
The Phi Kaps have elected new house officers for the spring
semester. George Menke of Barnesville, Md., was elected president.
Other officers include Doug Schahner of Charlotte, vice president;
Britt Hudson of Hickory, secretary; and Tank Goins of Burlington,
treasurer.
The Phi Kap pledge officers are Tom Allred of Burlington, pres
ident: Jim Ashburn of Mount Airy, vice president; and Parker
Hodges of Asheville. secretary and treasurer.
World In Brief
COSMOPOLITAN CLUB
The Cosmopolitan Club will pres
ent slides of the 1957 Moscow Youth
Festival at its meeting Sunday.
Feb. 2, in the Library Assembly
Room. Andy Blane, delegate to the
festival, will speak at the informal
"get acquainted" tea.
Dr. Fridoon Antia from Bombay.
India will also speak after the dutch
supper In upstairs Lenoir Hall. Dr.
Antia is an economist who studies
at Geneva, the Sorbonne and the
London School of Economics.
The public is invited to attend.
New officers will assume then
duties. They are Jean Pierre Bois
savit, president; Leila Ibrahim, vice
president; Helen Fedde, trasurer,
and Mayme Porter, secretary.
WEBSTER JOINS MED STAFF
Alfred C. Webster will assume du
ties today as director of the Depart
ment of Medical Illustration at the
UNC School of Medicine, it was an
nounced. He will be responsible for organiz
ing and staffing the newly created
department which will produce vis
ual aids for medical teaching, take
pictures needed for hospital patients'
medical records and prepare il
lustrations for medical articles and
exhibits. The department will be
staffed and equipped for art work
as well as for still and motion pic
ture photography.
Webster, a Durham native, was
with the Duke University Medical
Center staff since 1945.
FREE FLICK TONIGHT
"Rebel Without a Cause" starring
Natalie Wood and James Dean will
be the free flick tonight at 7:30
in Carroll Hall.
OXFORD SCHOLAR TO SPEAK
Prof. Ronald Syme of Oxford Uni
versity will visit UNC this weekend
and give a public lecture Monday,
Feb. 3, at 8 p.m. in 105 Gardner
Hall.
"The Romans and Spain" will be
the title of his talk, which will be
sponsored by the UNC Classics De
partment. Kenan Prof. B. L. Ull
man. department chairman, will
(Continued from I'age 1)
new "United Arab
their 28 million peo-
Anachronism?
Not really. 'Cause if Coke had been
around in Caesar's day, Caesar would
have treated himself to the sparkling
good taste, the welcome lift of Coke!
Caesar's motto "I came, I saw, I
conquered." Pretty good motto for
Coke too the prime favorite in over
100 countries today!
at ion ol the
JJtntc" joinin;
pie.
The new state will have one flag.
J one cabinet, one parliament, one
i army and one president Nasser.
Cairo will be the capital,
j It will be the first union of two
I Arab states in nearly BOO years
the first since Saladin made himself
j Sultan of Egypt and Syria and de
; fended his vast dominions against
the Christian crusaders.
sized killer who always wanted to
"be somebody." began the final
Inp of his trip back to Lincoln to
day to answer for 10 brutal slay
incs. Lancaster County Sheriff Merle
Farnopp said that while riding from
Douglas, Wyo.. Starkweather oral
ly admitted the 11 killings, 10 in
Nebraska and the other in Wy
oming, where he was captured
as visiting lecturer at various
stitutions. In January, 1957 he vi
sited Chapel Hill and spoke on the
UNC campus.
FACULTY CLUB LUNCHEON
Dr. Everett Palmatier,' chairman
of the Physics Department, will ad
dress the Faculty Club Luncheon
Tuesday, Feb. 4, at 1 p.m. at the
Carolina Inn.
NIGHT ART CLASSES OPEN
Evening art classes for the resi
dents of Chapel Hill and vicinity
will be taught during the spring
semester by George Kachergis, as
sociate professor in the UNC Art
Department.
The classes will be held in Person
Hall on Wednesday evenings it? 13 ;
weeks. The first class will meet
Wednesday, Feb. 5, 7 p.m. J
The course, which is for beginners j
as well as those who are advanced, !
will consist of drawing from models,
problems in drawing and composi
tion and the use of various drawing
media. A moderate fee which in- i
eludes supplies, will be charged up
on registration.
PI SIGMA ALPHA
Current economic development of
India will be discussed at a meeting
by Dr. Fredoon Antia of Bombay
at 3 p.m. in 105 Caldwell Hall.
Dr. Antia is manager of the Ce
ment Marketing Company of India.
He earned his doctor's degree at
the London School of Economics and
has attended universities in Geneva,
Berlin and the Sorbonne.
The meeting is sponsored by Pi
Sigma Alpha, political science
fraternity.
TRADING POST OPENS
Alpha Phi Omega is now operat
ing its Trading Post for used books
in the cabinet room of the YMCA
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 1, 3 and
4. Students may bring their books
which the APO will sell at the re
quested price plus a nominal handl
ing charge.
ANCIENT AFRICAN ART
The exhibition of ancient African
art will close Sunday, Feb. 2. at j
1 1. l- . X T I T . - 1 n 1
me r-rsun nau trx. uauery. me
in-"exhibited
works. The gallery is will perform in concert on the last
open from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
daily and from' 2:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
on Sundays.
FRED ON BAND TOURS
Herbert W. Fred, director of UNC
Bands, will - be- -guest conductor at
three schools during February. He
is conductor of the Northwestern
N. C. Band Clinic at Appalachian
State Teachers College, Boone, Jan.
31 to Feb. I.
He will conduct the Virginia All
State Band in Highland Springs,
Va., Feb. 7-8. Each of these bands
day of the clinic. Fred will also be
guest conductor with the McLean,
Va., High School Band in their An
nual Winter Concert.
PHILOSOPHICAL CLUB
Prof. W. L. Wiley of the Romance
Languages Department will present
a paper, "The Paris Theatre Audi
ence of the 17th Century," at the
Philosophical CJub Tuesday, Feb. 4,
7:30 p.m. in be library assembly
room. Faculty and graduate stu
dents and taeir families are in
vited to attend.
Today
2-5 -'Wte
Refreshments and Sandwiches
The Patio
.... - .1
piay nosi to tne noted scholar during public is invited to a talk on the
his weekend visit. j exhibition 3 p.m. Sunday. Kenneth
Pj-ofessor Syme. a New Zealander Ness, acting chairman of the Art
by birth, has been in the United i Department, will explain he art
States and Canada for the past year and other factors relating to the
J
CLASSIFIEDS
Killer
GERING, Ncbr., Jan. 31 P
Charles Starkweather, the bantam-
IIELP WANTED STUDENTS:
Waiters and kitchen help want
ed at La Pizza. Contact Chuck
Gerke, 7-1451, or come by La
Pizza in the afternoon, (eng.)
SIGN OF GOOD TASTE
DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
DAILY CROSSWORD
5
10
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15. Noah'
flood home
19. Airplane
engine
20. Flee
21 Foundation,
24. Interval
29. Fog
tl Thicker
31. Perform
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vessel
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letter
34. River
(Chin.)
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42. Girl'a name
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11. Rugged
mountain
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22. Pismire
23. Storage
place
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liard stroke
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Iiin
wA 1 1 W?
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waLFiftia
(By the Author of "Rally Round (he Flag, Boys!" end
"Barefoot Boy with Cheek.") -
A SCHOOL AWAY FROM SCHOOL j
Students majoring in science, like all other Americair
students, have a wild yearning for cultures butr alas;1
when a student is after a degree in engineering or math
or like that, he simply does not have time to take all the
liberal arts courses his heart pines for. ;
; And what is being done about this unhappy situation?"
I'll tell you what: Enlightened corporations everywhere
are setting up on-the-job liberal arts programs for the -newly
employed science graduate courses designed to
broaden his cultural base for the enlightened corpora
tion realizes that the truly cultured employee is the truly,
raluable employee.
Take, for example, Lambswool Sigafoos.
A week after his graduation, Lambswool reported to
Mr. Femur, the personnel director of an enlightened cor
poration engaged in the manufacture of cotter pins and
wing nuts. "How do you do?" said Lambswool. "I'm
Lambswool Sigafoos and I've come to work."
"Sit down," said Mr. Femur, chuckling kindly. "Have
a Marlboro."
"Thank you," said Lambswool. "I like Marlboros.
I like their filter and their flavor."
"Me too," said Mr. Femur, blinking humanely. "And I
like their flip-top box. When my flip-top box of Marlboros
is empty, I use it to keep fish hooks in."
"Know what I do when my flip-top box of Marlboros
is empty?" asked Lambswool.
"What?" said Mr. Femur, sniggering graciously.
"I buy some more Marlboros," said Lambswool.
"A sound idea," said Mr. Femur, vibrating fetchingly.
"But enough chit-chat. Come along to the campus."
"Campus?" said Lambswool, puzzled. "But I've come
ta work. Take me to my drawing board."
-This is an enlightened corporation," said Mr. Femur,
yodelling viciously. "First you must get your cultural
base broadened." .
Mr. Femur took Lambswool to the training campus,
which looked like any other campus. It had ivy-covered,
buildings, dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, a
stadium, a deer park, and & moat. Lambswool was given
a roommate, a beanie, and copies of the company hymn
and rouser, and the enlightened corporation proceeded to
fill the gap in his culture.
First he was taught to read, then to print capital letters,
then capital and small letters. Then there was an attempt
to teach him script, but it was ultimately abandoned.
From these fundamentals, Lambswool progressed slowly
but steadily through the more complex disciplines. He
was diligent, and the corporation was patient, and in the ,
end they were rewarded, for when Lambswool finished,
he could play a clavier, compose a triolet, parse a sentence,
and identify the birthstone for every month of the year.
His lengthy schooling finally over, Lambswool was
assigned to an important executive position where he
served with immense distinction. . . . Not, however, for
long, because one week later he reached retirement age.
Today, still spry, he lives in St. Petersburg, Florida,
where he supplements his pension by parsing sentences
for tourists. &iva.Mxauim
...
Here' m sentence that's east to parse: Subject you. Verb-
t2 Object tot to like in a Marlboro, irtose maker bring
yuu thi column throughout the tihool year.