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wtUNtSbAY. MARCH 18, 173?
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
PAGE THREft
1 1
il
Covering The Campus
i r, J 1 r.KUM'.K M.SSONS
! Si-ri i.i! Kxints Committor Ls '
Miirv tut h rid no hvsvons to- j
,it 7 ) vlink in the KoihUz-
;.. I', (Ml
1 1 i'ctiovs r.oi:n
; : i v w.'.l he a nu i-tm of tin
, I'.o.irJ this a It t.1. noon at
. .i.'ovk in the Yox!house t'onfor
, luxiin. mvoih! Hour Graham
M.I'll I I'Ml ON IM.I.TA
;:.( ill hv an A lv I)., pi v
; , .! t( ntal li atoinity. meet-
i .;!.-!. iv in I.rnoir Hall at t
Watiue a talk
Stiauhn ot the
in the
tenotomy
', 1 . ;r.i 1 1 ,tu w
Pr William U
. ,-.,:! :r.i nt i
...l u: Mcihcuif
I HMlMVt V H1VKS
U.t I'h.irin.H'.v Wives will p.Hi't
s.-viay at ! pin. at the Institute
ijuvt rnnu n! John 1. 1 Ian is,
I, ni tu u'.iurist troin Uakiji,
-peak on latul.stapin.
M, i'h.i;tl llil'.iaiu interested in
!-v.i;':r.4 have turn invited to at-
I! -t,
ir the oi uision w ill ho
Mrs. .John David Iloval. Mrs. Kob
rt M. Morris and Mrs. Thomas M.
est.
SOUND AM) FURY
Tryouts for thi year's Sound and
Fury productions, "Oh, Hellas," will
h held today. Scripts for the pro
ductions may be checked out at the
Information Desk in Graham Me
morial. The tryouts today will be from 3
to (i p in. and after 7:30 in Me
morial Hall.
MF.VS OKICNTATION
Application blanks lor men's ori
entation counselors for next fall are
now available at the reserve read
v room in the Library, the YMCA,
(.iraham Memorial Information Desk
and Lenoir Hall.
NAVAL INTERVIEWS
Persons interested in the Navy's
o!!icer candidate programs will
have a chance to talk with represen
tatives of the Haleih Recruitment
Oil ice and the Naval Aviation Cadet
Information Oifice who will visit the
I'M' campus.
Any youn man or woman inter
ested in serving as a commissioned
PT
officer in the U. S. Navy is invited
to visit the information booth at
the YMCA today and Thursday be
tween 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
wuc
Anv ris'in;' junior or .senior fiirl
who is interested in running lor
chairman of Women's Residence
Council andh as an overall "C"
average is eligible.
Each girl must submit to the Elec
tions Board a petition of 25 names
plus her own. The petitions must be
in the student government office in
Graham Memorial by 7 p.m. March
i I
1
-:4 ,
fflpUS
( II y the Author of " Rally Round the Flag, Boys! "and,
"Barefoot Boy u ilh Cheek.")
TIIK TRUE AND TYPICAL CASK
OF CHATSVVOUTII OSCEOLA
"U nil know, of cour-e, th:it evj-ry rnsiinrrrins senior is reeriv
v'z i.-ilii!iiH oiTrrx from doens of corporations, ,u do you
know jM-t how f.ilniloiis t hese offers are? I ) you li.i vr any ".!
ho widely the corNr:itions an eonijH-tins? Ia inr cite for
oi tl. true ami typical c:ie if C'hatsworth Osceola, a true
and f piral senior.
( h.iUworth, walking m ross the M.I.T. rampu? one day last
k. wa.-. hilled ly a Mian sit tins in a yellow convertible
t'.li!-d with precious jrem stones. "Hello," said the man, "I am
Norwalk T. Siszat'Mw of the Siafo Bearing and Bushing Coin
pnnv. lo Mm like this car?''
"Yeah, hey," said (.'hat.-w orth.
"It' yours," said Si2afKs.
"'ri:irik, hfv," said C'hat. worth.
" I you like Philip Morris?" said ifrafoofi.
"IK corris, " said C'hatsworth.
"Her- is a park," said SiafiHis. "And a now park mill be
d'hrrod to you at twelve-minute intervals every day as long,
you sh ill live."
"Thanks, hry," iii Cliatsworth.
'"IW your wile like l'hilip Morris?" said Sinnum.
"Hie would," haul C'hiitsworth, "but I'm not married."
"Do you want to Ih?" said Siafoos.
"What American ly d(Ksn't?" said Oiat.sworth.
SiL'.itoos pnKd a button on the d:i.-hUard of his convertible
ti the trunk opened up and out came a nubile maiden with
j:"ldrn hair, flawless features, a erfect disposition, and the
Plndix already removed. "This in Laurel Gcduldig," said
NfciilW. I'W'ould you Ljkc to marry kttTl
x M terjpptffo oatPf
"l her appendix out?" said Chatdworth.
"Ye.," faid Higafoon.
't ky, hey," paid Chatawnrth.
Conrntul.itions," naid Sigafo'K". "And for the happy bride,
s pik )f Philip Morris every twelve minutes for the rest of
h.r ln."
"Thank, hey," raid laurel.
"Now then," raid fcfigafoo C1iatworth, "letV get down
to husines. My company w ill start you at $4.3,000 a year. You
ill retire at full salary ujfin reaching the age of 20. When you
-tart work, we will eivr you a three-story house made of bullion,
rotnphte with a French Provincial pwimming We will
provile fitter service for all your children until they are safely
throtixh pulerty. We will keep your teeth in good repair, ami
hImi the teeth of your wife and children unto the third genera
tion Wo will send your dentist a pack of l'hilip Morris every
twelve minute as long a. hofhall live . . . Now, son, I want you
to think c.-refully alnuit this ofTer. Meanwhile, here is ten
thoii-atid dollars in small, unmarked bills, which places you
under no obligation whatsoever."
"It certainly seem like a fair offer," paid Chatsworth. "But
ih, r is "ometliing you should know. I am not an engineer. In
lot. I don't goto M.I.T.atall. I am a octry major at Harvard.
I ju-t i . line oer here on a bird walk."
" h." said Sigafixis.
"1 gue- I don't get to keep the money and the convertible
nod laurel now, do I?" raid Chats orth.
"( f rour-e ou lo," said igafoos. "And if you'd like the job,
my off r still stands." C ih n.ithuio...
Speakina of engineer, the rhilip Mnrrin cnmpnnu make a
filter eifarelte that' crtairieered to please the moat tliHeern
tno ul filter nmoker Marlboro, lite eigarette tcilh belter
" mnk in'." More (tat or plus more filter equal moretigarettel
4 S
JONES
(continued from page 1)
and their future," he concluded.
Jones said to accomplish the first
objective of the paper, he would
work toward a broader reportorial
staff and seek out news from areas
of the campus that now seem re
mote to everyone who doesn't ac
tually live there.
"Local outlets like the dormitory
and fraternity newspapers or "poop
sheets" .should be regularly checked
o.er for news items and leads," he
said.
"Student money, either in the
form of Ices or indirectly through
at'Acrtising, pays for The Daily Tar
Heels, and at the same time the stu
dents support Graham Memorial ac
tivities. Student Entertainment Com
mittee programs, IDC, 1FC. German
Club and University Club dances and
events," he explained to illustrate
his second point.
"As for provoking thought, this is
the job of the editorial writers and
tc .some extent, feature writers.
Members of all the 'generations'
should be persuaded to write for
the editorial page. There are many
excellent student writers on this
campus, and I will exert every ef
fort to get them to contribute to the
paper," he concluded.
..;.,- -nTOLimwn miv
- -f i W'
' Hkilml
I ' I
9 . .
M L ij , l
V ' -...- .-. .... .
Faculty
Fraternity
i
Report Soon Due
The Faculty Committee on Fra- j George E. Lynch, J. C. D, Chan
tcrnities is expected to report their cellor, Diocese of Raleigh
findings on deferred rush, housing, Election of new officers, a ban-
discrimatory clauses and scholar
ship next Monday.
G. M. SLATE
UNC EDUCATION OFFICERS New officers have been named by
UNC students forming the Frank Porter Graham chapter of the
Student National Education Association. The newly-installed leaders
for 1959-60 (L-R) seated: Margaret Ray of Fayetteville, president; I
and Charles Hellard, Salisbury, vice president. Standing are Eleanor
Cain of Mullins, S. C, treasurer; and Phillis Blake of Hillsboro,
secretary. Dr. Donald G. Tarbet or Mrs. Stacy K. Ebert of the UNC
School of Education staff act as sponsors for the group.
Alpha Epsilon Delta
Initiates 8 Tuesday
Fight Carolina students were in-1 Award. Perdue is a junior from
itiated into the national pre-medi-j Louisburg, who is working for a
cal and pre-dental honorary society, D. S. degree in medicine.
Alpha Epsilon Delta, Tuesday night ! Duff, a sophomore from Green
in ceremonies held in the clinical ville, is a Morehead Scholar, vice
auditorium of the UNC Medical ! president of AFO, vice chairman of
School. ' lne University Party, a member of
A EI) candidates for membership ! the Men's Honor Council, the Var
rre h.d-od bv their scholastic ac- baseball and soccer teams and
- - CT
.
One day I sat sad and musing,
a voice came to me out of the
gloom and said,
"CHEER UP,"
Things could be worse.
So I cheered up and sure enough.
Things GOT WORSE.
a student in the superior sophomore
program.
A sophomore from Ahoskie, Bryan
is also a Morehead Scholar, active
in the UP. and working for an A. B.
in English literature. Moser, a can
didate for an A.B. degree in Eng
lish, is a junior from Swannanoa.
Hurt, a junior English literature
major from Raleigh, Ls a member
di Chi Psi social fraternity. He will
work a vear as student research as-
e1 Hill, is a member of Phi Eta Sig- j sistant in tne pathology Depart
ma and the Order of the Grail and : mcnt of the UNC Medical School be-
complishmcnts, extra-curricular ac-
tivities, social ability, character and '
in; crest in their chosen fields. 1
This semester's initiates are
Edgar Gerome Hoecutt, .Jasper Bert
Perdue .Ir., Angus MacLeon Duff,
Floyd Telmadge Bryan, Artus Mon
roe Moser Jr., Joe Paul Hurt. Wil
liam Breniscn Long and Chester
YY infield Taylor.
Hoecutt, a sophomore from Chap-
Newman Club
Convention
Is Here
Some 200 students from 27 col
leges and universities in North Car
olina and Virginia will come here
April 3-5 for the fifth annual conven
tion of the Piedmont Province, of
the National Newman Club Federa-
l tion.
t
The Newman Club movement,
which began in 1893 at the Univer
i sitj' of Pennsylvania, includes 670
participating clubs for Catholic stu
! dents at secular institutions of high
er learning. .
Tate M. Robertson, president of
the UNC Newman Club, has an
nounced details for the convention
which will open Friday, April 3,
with registration and social program
in Graham Memorial.
; Keynote speaker will be the pro
vince chanlain. the Rev. Thomas J.
Walsh of Norfolk, Va., who will
speak at the first plenary session
Saturday morning, April 4.
The Very Rev. Michael P. Walsh,
S. J., president of Boston College,
will give a public lecture on "The
Ci.tholic Church and Evolution" at
2 p.m. April 4 in Carrol Hall. Father
Walsh is a noted Jesuit biologist.
Two other convention speakers
will be the Most Rev. Paul J. Hal
liuan, D. D., Bishop of Charleston,
S. C; and the Rt. Rev. Msgr.
quet and a dance are other events
to be included in the convention pro
gram.
This meeting was originally sched
u'ed for March 16 but postponed un
til March 23.
George Esser, assistant director
of the Institute of Government,
heads the committee which has sub
committees studying each of the
four topics.
Sam Magill, assistant dean of
student affairs, said new fraternities
probably will not. come on campus
until some of the present fraterni
ties are" more stable."
However, Magill expects several ! German
more fraternities by 1962. "Part of
the long-range planning calls for
about 11 more social fraternities
and three or four sororities by 1970,"
he reported.
Delta Upsilon, the newest frater
nity, came on campus in 1933.
Activities scheduled for today in
Graham Memorial include:
Public Health reception, 9-11
p.m., Main Lonnge; Budget Com
mittee, 3-5 p.m., Grail Room;
Panhel, 5-6 p.m., Grail Room;
Carolina Womea's Council, 7-9
p.m., Grail Room; Rules Com
mittee, 5-6 p.m., Roland Parker I:
Women's Orientation 1:30-5:30
p.m., Roland Parker I & II; Ways
and Means, 1:30-3 p.m., Wood
house Conference Rom; Elections
Board, 4-6 p.m., Woodhouse Con
ference Room; Stray Greeks, 7-8
p.m., Woodhouse Conference
Room; Bridge lessons, 7-9 p.m..
Rendezvous Room.
Quarterly, Fleisehmann corresponds
with Ginsberg and Gregory Korso.
Beat Generation authors, and is now
translating poems of Ginsberg into
We Like
v as
awarded the Freshman Honor fore entering medical school.
Unanimously by Young Democrats
Budget Is Endorsed
Officer Slate
Of U. S. Navy
Is Explained
'Beatniks'
To Be Topic
Of Fleishmann
. The "Beat Generation" will be the ;
subject under fire when Dr. Bernard j
Fleisehmann of the English Dept. J
speaks Thursday in Graham Me- i
morial. !
The Current Affairs Committee of
GMAB headed by Jerry Stokes is
sponsoring this discussion at 8 p.m.
in the Main. Lounge of Graham Me
morial. Literary, rather than sociol
ogical, aspects ot the beat genera
tion will be discussed with special
emphasis on the generation's au
thors and their works.
Dr. Fleisehmann is editor of the
yearbook of General and Compara
tive Literature, an international pub
lication of scholarly literature.
Feature writer for the Carolina
You To
Laugh
Aloud
Thats Why
We Keep
So
PRESCRIPTIONS...
The B budget of the University of
North Carolina was unaminously en
dorsed by the Executive Committee
of the North Carolina Young Demo
cratic Clubs Sunday.
The committee, meeting at the.
Washington Duke Hotel in Durham,
endorsed the B budget after hear
ing Dewey Sheffield's talk on it.
Sheffield, a member of the com
mittee, said, "to better the educa
tional status of the University . . .
must increase and provide for
adequate salaries for our instructors,
especially due to the fact that they
could receive much more money in
private industry and they are under
a financial burden with the present
inadequate salaries . . ."
He also emphasized the need for
an outstanding library and a new
student union. "The present student
union is grossly inadequate and . . .
future enrollment will be substantial-
ly larger the present enrollment,"
he said.
Sheffield also spoke for a new
coliseum for basketball games and
other events drawing large crowds.
Young Names Managers
FILMED AND
Delivered
When you have prescrip
tions to be compounded,
and no one to send to the
drug store, telephone us.
A messenger will call for
your prescription and
return with the precisely
prepared medicines. No
extra charge. Use our
delivery service also for
drugs and health aids.
PHONE 9-8781
FREE DELIVERY
ft
CMXPCt HILL. M.C
(continued from page 1)
Young, though an SP member and
officeholder, had received the en
dorsement of the University Party.
"This endorsement was granted,"
they said, "because of Young s
pledge to keep the newspaper and
its staff free from grubby political
maneuvering."
The two managers added that this
promise did not mean that Young
would run a "gutless" editorial
page. The promise meant, they said,
that Young would be an editor, not
a combination lobbyist and leading
light for one of the campus' poli
tical parties.
"In order to do a proper job as
editor, it is necesary to concentrate
on immediate problems that affect
the newpaper. There is not enough
time in the day to huddle in all the
smoke-filled rooms, attempting,
among other things, to handpick a
successor."
Tiffany and Shields also stated
their belief that the present editor.
Curtis Gans, would print an editorial
1 . . .i
page enuorsemcm lor me majoi
cantuaaies ot nis cnoice.
"Nobody," they said, "will dispute
the editor's 'right' to do this. We
are simply saying that when next
year's election rolls around, Young
will act differently. He will make no
endorsements on his editorial page,
and he will not attempt to handpick
a successor."
TODAY
Hy, hy! Actually
filmed where it happmwdl
1
V w
M G M prauntt
DEBBIE REYNOLDS
TONY RANDALL
PAUL DOUGLAS
IheAtdttng Game'
FRED CLARK UUIUia
si -
representatives from the Offict
of Naval Officer Procurement ir
Raleigh will be on campus today
and Thursday to explain the Navy's
commissioned officer programs, to
interested personnel. Interviews will
be conducted in the Y Building.
Openings are available for assign
ment in aviation, general line .and
in specialty categories. Most of the
programs are open only to the col
lege seniors who expect to graduate;
however, undergraduates who have
completed CO semester hours of ac
credited college work may apply for
j ppointment as a Naval aviation cadet.
To avoid delay in being ordered
to active duty after graduation, ap
plications may be processed several
months prior to attaining the re
quired academic qualifications. Fin
al acceptance will depend upon the
successful completion of these quali
fications. Any candidate who meets the re
quired standards may take the qual
ification test and make application
with the visiting Navy Procurement
Team if he desires. Those who take
the qualification tests or who make
application and subsequently change
their mind are not obligated in any
way.
f L-r What an
a(v. v. ' mnA4linrt
widow she
could be!
That's the
Society
Doctor's
- wicked thought!
MGM
LESLIE. DiRK
CAROM BOGARDE
in BERNARD SHAW3 :
THE DOCTORS
Wlth DiLEMIA
ALASTAIR SIM - ROBERT M0RLEY
m METR0C0L0R
Cottumn by CECIL BEATON
Produced by ANATOLE BE GRUNWALD
oifcti by ANTHONY ASQU1TH
An MGM Release
NOW PLAYING
CLASSIFIEDS
Many
Cartoon
Boohs!
RUBBER STAMPS MADE TO OR-
der. Ledbetter Pickard Station
ary Store 157 E. Franklin St.
WHY NOT LIVE WITH YOUR
children not off them. Ask your
Northwestern Mutual agent about
an Insured Savings Program.
Phone 9-3691, Matt Thompson,
Arthur DeBerry, Jr.
The Intimate
Bookshop
205 East Franklin Street
Open Till 10 P.M.
CHUCK WAGON
Special of the Day!
ROAST PORK LOIN And DRESSING
APPLE SAUCE
TWO VEGETABLES
TEA or COFFEE
BREAD & BUTTER
DESERT
v.
AMERICA'S fvjk 1 1 vj dynamic. VJV r-ii
Hp) inl full K
MJa7 : Mil
CHRIS BARBER tcTW
OnillE PATTERSOH
AND
MIS
Drummer
CR!!M HIRBIDCE
m BAKU
1 rumpelrrr
PAT II U.COX
MOMY SlHIE
N.C. STATE FAIR ARENA
n ;Bywew ;tw repwewg
r -4-Inr I
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m r. m. fM AD
Adm $2-$2.50-$3 -$3.50
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FRKE PARKING ON FAmr.ROl"SD. positively the cklt appearance ih cakouna
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BUY YOUR
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