!
pabi THSti
SATURDAY, MARCH S9, 151
TME DAILY TAR HEEL
I
Sijt mlp Ear
SOCIETY
Joan Brock, Editor
c
overing The University
Campus
Phi Gams Hold Fiji Festivities
1 jst mum-k end the Phi Gams held their annual Fiji pledge weekend
with a series of festivities. On Friday afternoon they held a formal
p;ir: at the house at which time the Pledge Class officers were for
!i:.i.'!y presented to the group.
on Friday nijjht the Fijis and their dates donned sarongs to attend
; Fiji Iland party at the house. A south-sea island atmosphere pre
vailed complete with sand and tropical flowers. Sam Atwater's
combo. The Atomic Five, of Chapel Hill provided music for the oc-
i.iMon.
Saturday afternoon the Thi Gams held their annual Pledge-Active
lu-bull game and Saturday night they traveled to the Little Red
Sthool House to continue festivities. Less Sutorius combo from
Cjiapel Hill was on hand to ljven up the event.
i
Chi Psi Pledge Weekend
j The Chi Psis celebrated their annual pledge weekend beginning ,
jt Friday. Friday night the pledges were entertained at a tormai
dame at the American Legion Hut on the Durham highway, where
tlu danced to the music of The Embers, a Greensboro orchestra.
Following the dance, a number of the brothers, pledges, and their
d.tes returned to the Chi Fsi Lodge for a Pizza party.
Saturday night a semi-formal party at the Lodge was the event
f the evening, and everyone enjoyed dancing to the latest hit tunes,
Itirnished by Frank Wilson's combo.
Saturday afternoon the Chi Psis and their dates attended the Blue
and White fowthall game together in a group.
THEATRE CONFERENCE
Dr. Tom F. Driver of Union Theo
logical Seminary in New York City
will speak this morning at 11 o'clock
on "Religious Dimensions of
; Theatre".
Dr. Driver is speaking at a ses
sion of the South Eastern Theatre
Conference which is being sponsored
I by the University's Dramatic Arts
Department Thursday through Sat-
l urday.
Sunday evening, at 8 o'clock. Dr.
Driver will discuss "Biblical
Student Conference
Slated For August
The 11th National Student Con-
sress and Student Body Presidents
Conference will be held at Ohio WCHL
Wesleyan University in Delaware,
Ohio, August 19-29.
Themes in Contemporary Drama",
at a public lecture in Carroll Hall
Auditorium. ;
WESLEY FOUNDATION
Wesley Foundation Sunday sched
ule:
9:30 a.m. Sunday Seminar - A
discussion of "The Liberal Move
ment In Protestant Christianity.!'.!
5:45 p'.m. Sunday Forum - Dr.
Arnold Nash of the Dept. of Reli
gion will speak on "Facing Detn."
PALM SUNDAY SERVICE "
The Palm Sunday Worship at the
United Congregational Christian
Church will include a special, pres
entation by the choir.
The pastor, the Rev. Harvey L.
Caraes, will speak on the theme
"The Ascending Way". The Service,
at 11:00 a. m., will be broadcast by
GRADUATE CLUB 5 - -
'The Graduate Club at the "Uni
versity will hold a supper meeting
in Lenoir Hall Monday night with
Daniel H.Pollitt of the Law School
as guest speaker.
Pollitt, who jointed the law faculty
- i -
after elections by the new stu- last beptem&er wui speaic on ine
dent hodv Dresident announced Fifth Amendment." The supper hour
The theme for the Congress is
"Student Responsibility in an Age
of Challenge."
Delegates will be appointed
Sonny Evans, retiring president.
ATOs Party
Friday afternoon the ATOs began their pledge weekend with an
informal party at the house. Friday night they donned tuxedoe9 for
thnr formal pledge dance at the Flks Club in Durham. During the
evening the Pledge Class officers and their dates were presented in
a figure after which they enjoyed an evening of dancing to the music
i.f .lack Victor's orchestra from Duke.
Saturday night the ATOs held an Fgyptian party at Smith's Lake
in Durham. The ballroom was divided into two halves one side de
picting a temporary Fgyptian court and the other giving the illusion
t,t a lake surrounded by shrubbery and bull-rushes. The outside area
aUo depicted a desert scene accented with a 15-foot Sphinx.
The inside court area featured colorful, painted and decorated
mummies and The Topi provided music for the Egyptian affair.
t
Li o wh
ONE DAY
SERVICE!
O Save Money
O Play Safe
O Expert Work
Guaranteed
O Budget Terms
Chapel Hill Tire Co.
"Coodytar Tirts"
502 Witt Franklin St.
You will haves n9
of security in turning
to thi s profiiool
pharmacy, dedicattd
to guarding the health
and welfare of your
houjehold.Alwayibt
sur to bring o your
Doctor's prcrip
tion j compounding
it our specialty!
b
Fret Delivery
Phone
91711
DAILY CROSSWORD
Af'KOHM
1 Native
Croatian
I A non
combatant people
11. Orretlrij:
12 One gigantic
in iiz
y and
power
II Put on.
a salve
14 Ahead
15 Toward
15. Lawyer's
charge
17. Subdue
IS. Music note
20. Fuel
22. Soak flax
21. Not io
freah
23 Cub acout
group
2e City on
Lake Krte
23 Kngilah
streetcar
SO Rubs out
21 CTilneae
dynaaty
34. Simmer
3V Creek
letter
34 Lanata
3H Likely
3 Kaker
ireol.)
40 Siberian
gulf
41. Wooden
ahn
41 WindahielJ
leaner
4 5 Fat
4 Slyly
sarcastic
47. by and by
DOWN
1. Banters
2. Say
again
3. Leather 20.
fUak for oil 21.
4. Entire
amount 2-
0. Plaything
6. Ermine 23.
Eur.)
7. Cain 27.
8. Neuter 2
pronoun 29.
9. Cloaey
surfaced 31
cloth 32
10. Sounds, a
a horse 34
17. Sells
18. Travels
by
Fruit
Even
(poet.)
City
(Turk.)
.Anger
. Hurls
. A dried
Krape
. Disclose
Baby
caretaker
Cavalry
sword
EMM
To i ia'r'6 sDuI
a 4i s 4Hjfi
Yeter4jr'e Aswr
37. Havlnj toes?
38. Incite t
41. Coin r
(Peru)
42. Arabian
garment
44. Greek j
letter
' i1 iJ h I W M r r
wWZ
iill-JP !
w III
g- --
- 1 1 y-j 1 1 1 1 h
Appointment
In Education
Is Announced
Miss Annie Lee Jones, former
supervisor of the Pitt County Pub
lic Schools. Jias been appointed
i to the faculty of the School of1
Education to work in the field of
elementary education. Her appoint
ment was announced by Chanr
cellor William B. Aycock follow
ing approval by President Wil
liam C. Friday and the Board of
Trustees.
Miss Jones is currently a teach
ing fellow at Boston University
and is completing graduate work
leading to the doctor's degree.
She will undertake her new du
ties at UNC on Sept. 1.
In the School of Education
Miss Jones will work as an as
sistant professor with an assign
ment to assist in the education
of teachers for the elementary
schools.
Miss Jones received the bache
lor's and master's degrees from
East Carolina College and has
taught in the public elementary
schools of Chocowinity, Farm-
ville and Raleigh. From 1949 to
1956 she was supervisor of the
Pitt County Schools with head
ouarters in Greenville. Her grad
uate studv at Boston University
has been centered in the field of
elementary education where she
has worked intensively on prob
lems of teaching reading under
the direction of Dr. Donald Dur-
rell.
is set for 8 o'clock with thSitaJk
and discussion to begin about jfr:i$fl
All graduate students are ;invijedi
"! j-.'.l'l
to attend .along with other inter
ested students and faculty members.
ART LEAGUE .
The University Art League meet
ing will be held Monday, in Room
210 Gardner Hall at 7:30 p. m.
Speaker for the occasion will be
Sylvia Carewe, a painter who has
studied in Paris.
She will discuss her art as com
pared to the art of other contempor
ary artists.
HARVARD PROFESSOR
A Havard University professor of
government will deliver , two public
lectures at Carolina next week.
The visit of Prof. Arthur A. Maas
to UNC is being jointly sponsored
by the Department of City and Re
gional Planning and the Urban Stud
ies group of the Institute for ' Re
search in Social Science.
Prof. Maas will speak first on
Monday .at 7:30 p. m. in the faculty
lounge of the Morehead Building;
his subject will be "New Approach
to Study of Local Government."
Tuesday at 3 p. m. in the Morehead
Lounge be will discuss "Profession
al Planning Compatible with the Re
quirements of a Constitutional
Democratic Government."
PARENTS DAY
All preparations have been made
Suftr
Scabbard & Blade Announces
Its Military Ball Beauty Court
for another big Parent's Day,
day, May 4. ' .
Any person or organization that
wishes to participate in the activi
ties or wants further, information
about the event should contact
Larry Hayer at 27 Old West (4r91S5)
or anyNAPO members.
MOBILOIL, SUMMER WORK
A representative of the Mobil Over
seas Oil Company, affiliate, of So
cony Moibil, will be on campus in
the next few weeks recruiting ap
plicants for summer overeas jobs."
Applicants should be interested in
career employ abroad .and should
be able to speak either French, Ger
man. Italian or Spanish.
The company is sponsoring a ten
week training program for juniors
in their foreign operations. The
areas include l-rance. Lrermany,
Austria, Mexico, and parts of West
Africa.
GMAB OFFICERS
Applications for officers, commit
tee chairmen and committee mem
bers for the Graham- Memorial
Activities Board for 1958-59 are av
ailable at the information" desk at
Graham Memorial.
The offices of president, vice
president and secretary will be open
as well as- many important commit-
Scabbard, and Blade has announced
the selection of the 1953 Military
Ball Beauty Court.
The Court was chosen from photo
graphs submitted by the members
of L Co 8th Regiment here at UNC
The Queen of the Military Ball will
be' chosen from the members of
tee -chairmanships and committee
posts. - . ;
la regard to the applications
Benny Thomas, GMAB President,
has invited anyone who has ques
tions, about the positions open and
'illing out applications, to come by
his office any afternoon. .
STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM
New and better ways to find pro
babilities related to fluctuation will
be described by a famous specialist
in probability Monday at the Statis
tic Colloquium in Chapel Hill.
William Feller, professor of mathe
matics at Princeton and author of
a widely known book on probability,
will speak on "Combinatorial Meth
ods in Fluctuation Theory" at four
o'clock in Phillips Hall.
WUNC RADIO SCHEDULE
9L5 Megacycles FM
P.M.
7:00 Paris Startime
7:30 Over the Back Fence
the Court and announced at inter
mission of the Ball, April 12.
Members of the Court and their
dates are Linda Barnes of Sims,
with Cadet Capt Jerry Mayo, Patri
cia Chandler of Dalton,, Ga dth
Cadet M. Sgt. Nick Zlotnicki, Mar
jorie Crane of Chapel Hill with Mid
shipman Capt. Maurice Glatzer.
Carolyn Dennis of Essex Falls,
N. J. with Cadet Ma j. Jerry Cole;
Alice Eller of Winston-Salem, with
Cadet M. Sgt. David Ellis, M-Wgot
Goetze qf Greensboro with Midship
man Lt. Edward Butchart,,. and
Ruth Hoffman of Ft. Wayne, Ind.
with Cadet Col. Tom FarrelL
Voices From the Past
Showtime
Roman Forum
Horizons in Music
Evening News Summary
7:43
8:00
8:45
9:00
10:00
10:15 Evening Masterwork
11:30 Sign off
WUNC-TV SCHEDULE
Channel 4
P.M.
6:30 Opera For Tomorrow
7:00 Tempest in- Test Tubs
7:30 Action at Law
8:00 Quest for Adventure
8:30 Psychology One
9:00 Sign off . .
1 1 ' i ,
Measles
(Continued from page 1)
"Well. one of the other doctors
said kindly in a post-mortem voice,
"We'll be expecting most of your
fripnrls un here in about two
weeks."
"They say," whispered one of the
nurses furtively, "that this whole
epidemic started at the Duke-Caro.
lina game. The Duke students had
the measles then." Walt till Mc-
Guire and the ACC officials hear
about this?
Looking Smug
So you are sitting out there
looking, smug! Do you have a rash,
a temperature, swollen lymph
nodes, a sore throat? Do your eyes
itch, and do you sem to have a cold?
Ah, ha you must have gone to the
Duke game, or maybe the girl or
the boy who lives down the hall
from you did. Eh?
If so hurry up in time for lunch
if possible. We are having egg
plant and ravioli today.
Now if I only can get this story
smuggled out of the infirmary in a
medicine bottle, disgulshed as a
new miracle drug. Maybe there
will be time to warn you all: spot-
ticus pokidotticus is on the march!
Each issue of The Daily Tar Heel
that comes out this time has the
added attraction of one free measles
germ which isb glued onto the edi
toral page.
CLASSIFIEDS
LOST! KHAKI -COLORED RAIN
coat with red and black plaid
lining. Finder please call Marion
Eells at 89142. Reward.
LOST: CLASS RING WITH PHI
Kappa Sigma inscribed , in stone.
Name on inside. Call Britt Hud
son, 80S85. Lost in Hanes Hall.
Reward.
What does this fruit have to do with this cigarette filter?
. , ..,.. . . ; .... . - i
-., ,:
-
"V . , .ylt -
' " - " ' n v 4'V'-',V "' S
. . . : : . :...:x.y.. fc
vv ' - i mm ..4j4i?
.
...... -P
It ' -
VICEROY FILTER
t.
U!
it II II II it if I i if u 1 1 1 1 un iiu; it 1 1 1 1 i f 1 1 1 1 1 1 uu II I fin ft i v n
mi a phi, mmm $
un mm m m fmii
and if ives you Maximum Filtration
for the Smoothest Smoke!
From the same soft, pure material found in the rich pulp of
nature's healthful fruits, modern filter scientists have created the
orcatest 'dfrarette filter ever designed . . . the Viceroy filter". For the
Viceroy filter "ives you the maximum filtration for the smoothest
smole tViny cigarette. More taste, too . . . the pure, Natural taste
of Tich, mellow tobaccos. Yes, Viceroy gives you more of what you
change to a filter for!
. Y . ...
New crush-proof
flip-open box or
famou familiar pack.
:,
PURE, NATURAL FILTER'. .
PURE, NATURAL TASTE
Olt'S Brews A Williaauaa Icbacca Cur?