Sunday, may 3, 1959
'fur OAltY TA HtEL
Sfafe
IV ee
lu Mil l, A( l V
!. u 1 ;t;n m a
Next wtik
ts
ncial As- j
1.. .;. -Vs wiil v:
! .ui.i action on
.. 1 . i ;i!i..n. 0!mtv-
l! ! - -.tliv.uly ap-
II
1 firt Muth-
a n ; u. !;,n: a v ,iUf Ui'v ,
t ' !U cn io C'om-
! t'iii 1 1 1' rm April
i !' 1 tin, and, jussi
n ho,v much 1
k.. ;,t to col-I
inn,: the.
. will be j
Hi
THE SENSATIONAL
riST-SELUR...
14 ORE SENSATIONAL
ON THE SCREEN!
LJ
MILES DIANE VARSI
JKAN STOCKWELL ERADFORD DILIWAM
a;a d zwja rekaho puischk
NOW PLAYING
HOW!
7
THE
Pressurized
t f
. - .
f "s " " ' .
I
.,v uu ran mi joy Yanlli'Y After Sliaving Lotion,
1 iiiimii- for n iji, cool scent and nick-liraling touch,
in the ih-h J ttieam jireSHiiried container.
No lo I e, no l.oltle to break. Just press the
top for liyjit amount. Won't ill or cvuporate.
Jrt tM.mi pive-t you ijitality atul convenience. Try
it to.l.iy. $ I p!u tax.
NEW JETSTREAM
YARDLEY After Shavinc Lotion
Assembly Will Have Busy
Vifh Many Items To Cover
the .signal for the appropriations J ample, it would be possible to in
tommittee to get down to case on crease appropriations above the bud.
budget for the next biennium.
3. A rip snorting debate in the
Hmi.se on the subject of highway
commission reorganization. Admin
istration leaders are expected to
fir.ht hard to defeat a bill to increase
hihvvay commission membership
from 7 to 14.
The debate is expected to start
Monday niht when the lawmakers
ret mn from a weekend at home.
The scene will be the House cham
ber and the .subject will be a bill
to clothe National Guardsmen with
the arrest powers of peace officers
v hen they are called out by the
governor. The bill would make it pos-
! MDle to send guardsmen lo replace
I highway patro'.nen on strike duty
tat Henderson without placing the
I .uea under martial law.
I The ,'uard bill was introduced last
Mon.iay niht and won speedy ap
; pn.val in the senate. However. It
pto.Imel a lengthy debate in the
Hi iim' Friday before it passed sec
otui reading by a lopsided margin.
I'nles.s there is a big change in
st ntimt nt, the bill will be exacted.
Motulay or Tuesday saould bring
a i t port from Revenue Commission
I. nir, S Curie on Am il tax collec
tions. Legislators will look it over
e;-gerly lor income tax collection
lume.s. Currie has hinted that the
riptiit will b- encouraging but no
t a! ion. House Ajipropi iat ions
'h.iii u.an Harris already has
(l-. it will le pis.silile to raise
i' !ir,,a'e of tax eollee! ions for
ta i. t t ,M) 1 cal yeais above the
!! ii' fj by the governor and ad
m.'c.in binigei commission when they
(.iipare.l their budget recomineilda
iinr.s. It tho revenue estimates can
be raisl 10 million dollars, for ex-
CLASSIFIEDS
SELL I S YOUK HOOKS WE'LL
buy an thing in reasonable good
coikl.tion from texts to collectors'
items. THE INTIMATE BOOK
SHOP. NOW PLAYING
fontonc of dco4ul
AUDREY ANTHONY
HEPBURN PERKINS
"GREEU L1AUSI0I1S'
.. ,Tbt fwbtd5 foreiti Byood Tin Aimon!
LEE J. COBB
1
SCSSUt HAYAKAWA HENRY SUVA
v CinImaSCOM mr.4 MIT SO CO LOR
FIRST
Shaving Lotion
get recommendations by that
amount without increasing taxes.
Unless the nrnpram is changed thp
senate will act on the minimum
wage bill Wednesday and the House
will debate highway commission re
organization Thursday.
As passed by the House, Commis
sioner of Labor Frank Crane says,
the minimum wage bill would in
crease the wages of 55,000 Tar Heel,
retail and Service Industry work
ers by an average of 15 cents per
hour $6 per week and $300 a year.
Crane said it would add 16V4 million
dollars a year to the total purchas
ing power of these workers.
When the senate takes up the
measure, it is sure to receive
amendments to remove this or that
group of workers from the bill's
coverage. Whether they will pass
remains to be sten.
The House, will take up a bill
by Hep. Walter Jones of Pitt to in
crease highway commission mem
bership. Instead of the present 7 at
Urge-members, there would be 14
members one from each of the
highway engineering divisions un
der Jones' proposal. The highway
commission was reduced from 14
to 7 members two years ago at the
governor's urging, and his backers
are expected to fight the Jones bill
as they did when it won approval
by the house roads committee 10
Jays ago by a one-vote margin.
Legislative Committees also ore
expected to have a busy week. The
joint education committees will hold
a hearing Wednesday on the "in
centive" plan. The plan is aimed al
increasing financial support of the
schools by dividing iu million dol
lars of state money among counties
which match it in accordance with
their ability.
Math, Science
Teachers To
Meet Here, July
High school mathematics and sci
ence teachers from 12 states, main-
. : 1 1. .i ; . .
iy ui uie Miuiueasi, wm parucipaie
in a summer institute which the Na
tional Science Foundation is Kpon
soring here.
Forty-two North Carolinians were
included among the 80 stipend reci
pients according to the institute co-
directors, Prof. Edward A. Cameron
and Prof. Victor A. Greulach.
Known officially as the NSF Sum-
- A-.. 1 1
mer institute lor itign 2cnooi sci
ence and Mathematics Teachers,
the program gives the teachers
fresh contact with the newest de- with a psychiatric patient, and de
velopments in the fields of math- SCribes what Mrs. Parker learned
ematics, biological science or phy-
sical science.
They also earn graduate credit
which may be used toward a mas-
ter's degree, and benefit from the
exchange of ideas with teachers
from other localities and states.
The institute begins June 8 and con
tinues through July 17. Participants
receive stipends of $450, plus living
allowances for dependents and a
travel allowance. They are exempt
from all tuition and fees.
Chamber Of
Commerce To
Convene Soon
Chamber of Commerce executives
rem 23 states and the District of
Columbia will spend the week of
May 17-23 at the University as part
of a three-year 'advanced manage
ment study.
Known as the Chamber of Com
merce Academy of Organization
Management, the program is spon
sored by the U. S. Chamber of Com
merce. Only Michigan State Uni
versity offers a similar program,
that is being conducted during the
fall.
Fifty-one men will come to Chap
el Hill for their yearly in-residence
week. The lone North Carolinian is
William B. Little, executive vice
president of the Greensboro Cham
ber of Commerce.
The group will be housed at the
Carolina Inn and will attend six
hours of classes daily at Carroll
Hall, with UNC faculty members
serving as study leaders.
A kick-off dinner at the Inn on
bunuay, May 17, is the opening
event. An evaluation session on Sat
urday, May 23, will end the aca
demy program.
Six areas of study incorporated in
each year of the academy program
cenccrn management, behavioral
sciences, institutions, research and
analysis communications and the
dynamics of urban growth.
prang Is
Do You
J-;'..
Robbln Williams, Miss North Carolina Press Photography, takes in
some Chapel Hill sunshine in front of the Carolina Inn. The Southern
Short Course in Press Photography closed yesterday at the Inn.
(Photo by Murphy)
Journalistic Grant
Given To Women Here
The Roberts Fellowslup, a nation
al award for graduate study in
johrnalism by a nurse, has been
won by Mrs. Frances Cherry Park
er of the University.
Mrs. Parker is an instructor of
community nursing in the UNO
School of Nursing and a part-time
student of journalism at UN'C. She
combines these duties with her re
sponsibilities as a wife and mother,
finding time also to write and edit
articles.
As a Roberts Fellow, she plans to
discontinue her teaching duties dur
ing 1959 60 and to take a full sched
ule of courses at UNC beginning in
September. She will work for a
master's degree in journalism, with
a minor in sociology.
The fellowship was established by
the American Journal of Nursing
Company in 1950 in honor of the
Journal's late editor emeritus, Mary
M. Roberts. Qualified nurses who
receive it spend the year develop
ing skill in writing so that they will
be equipped to interpret nursing to
nurses, prospective nurses and the
general public
xne aWard provides
all tuition
f ees at the chosen institution, plus
a $3,000 grant to cover th winner's
living expenses during the study
year, and, at the end of that year,
a three to six month internship on
the company's editorial staff.
Mrs. Parker was chosen on the
basis of a manuscript which she sub.
mitted to a judges panel from
throughout the nation. Her article,
"What I learned From Mrs. O,"
was based on a series of interviews
about mental illness and about in
terviewing in the nursing field.
a native of Elkton, Ky., Mrs.
Parker was graduated from the St.
Thomar School of Nursing in Nash
ville,'Tenn. and received her B. S
in public health nursing from UNC.
"If he should
iere
Doubt If?
I II
k v. w , '
" . -;-Jfr lit" '
! : '
i J
: mil (fill WilfflnlffifflrifflWKIIM '-yWM'
FRANCES CHERRY PARKER
Her nursing career has included
positions at Bowling Green, Ky.,
City Hospital; St. Joseph's in Pon
tiac, Mich.; Saratoga General in
Detroit; and in industrial nursing
in North Carolina. She is a mem
bet of the N. C. State Nurses' Assn.
and the N. C. League for Nurses.
She has contributed articles to a
number of North Carolina newspa
per as well as. to the-American
Journal of Nursing, Nursing Out
look, Nursing World, R. N., Com
munity Health. Tri-State Safety
Journal, and several other publica
tions. Her husband, Fred Parker, is a
part-time instructor in transporta
tion courses in the UNC School of
Business Administration while do
ing graduate work.
Judges for the 1959 fellowship were
Mrs. Purcelle Peck Smith of Cali
fornia, a former editor of Public
Health Nursing; Miss Helen W.
Munson, librarian at Hartford, Conn.
Hospital School of Nursing; Miss
Kathleen Leahy of the Univerity
of Washington; and two prominent
writers. Mari Sandoz and Welbourn
Kelley.
i - f
Li
get by you, Emma, double back for the Camels!
Covering The Campus
SIMONSON SPEECH j
Lee Simonson will speak on "Eu
gene O'Neil Development As a
Dramatist" in The Playmakers
Theatre at 8 p.m. Monday.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM
Prof. Willy Halberli of the Uni
versity of Wisconsin will speak on
"Polariation in Proton Elastic Scat
tering" . Monday at 8 p.m. in the
Physics Building at Duke Univer
sity at a joint Duke-UNC Physics
Colloquium.
STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM
Prof. Wassily Hoeffding will speak
on "Lower Bounds For the Ex
pected Sample Size of a Sequential
Test" at the Statistics Colloquium
Monday in 206 Phillips Hall.
CAMEKBURY CLUB
Do you like swimming or just
plain fun? If so, meet at the Chapel
Of the Cross at 5 p.m. Sunday. From
there, transportation will be ar
ranged for an informal outing in the
country at the home of a parishon-
er. Bring your swimming suits.
Grant Awarded
The National Science Foundation
has awarded a grant of $16,560 to
the School of Medicine to be used
for research projects by UNC med
ical students.
These basic research projects are
called ' ."Short Term Research by
Medical Students." The grant will
be administered by the Dean of
ithe School of Medicine and by a
.acuity committee of five members.
No Moth Balls
For Mother!
Mom is no antique, pal, and
she'll thank you for letting her
know that you inow it.
Facades may change a bit with
the years, but you can take
our word for it, mom's the
same lively biddy who put your
old man through the hoops not
so long ago.
She'll thank you for opening
the doors of youth to her. She'll
be no end deliiihted with the
.ort of things that delight you,
like, maybe, Pa&sionella, Sick,
Sick Sick, or a Charles Addams
cartoon book.
If that's too steep a price, at
Heast send her youthful card.
To hell with the Lavendar and
Old Lace stuff, pal. Come hum-pety-humpety
over to the old
Intimate and give Mom some
thing with life in it!
The Intimate
Booksl
205 E. Franklin St.
Open Till 10 P.M.
hop
I i 1
ANGEL FLIGHT - - quested to be at the Cadet Lounge
All Angel Flight members are re- today at 1 pjn. in summer uniform.
SERVE YOURSELF
II p P
t, J SS' II 11 ia I
At The
NCH
RECOMMENDED 9fljM. PfiAA
:t 1 - BY 'lff
10ME OF CHOICE HICKORY-SMOKED
MOTHER'S
DAY
lightly turn his thoughts with
1UUMU mm IWiYfftW.
by PRINCE MATCHABELU
You'll love this charming light-hearted
bouquet of 17 Spring flowers. ..in
Cologne, Perfume Creme Sachet,
Cologne Spray Mist, and Dusting
Powder... each in a delightful nsw
r i . .. tr.
FREE GIFT
SUTTON'S
'taSteiU&ar! SACHET II 1
More people feeep going back for Camels
than any other cigarette today. The
Camel blend of costly tobaccos has
never been equalled for rich flavor and
easygoing mildness. Today as always,
the best tobacco makes the best smoke.
By-pass the fads and
iSBgjaifiBlLft
tave a miSSBL
EVERY SUNDAY
5:30-7:30 P.M.
HOUSE
IJUDA !M ADVENTUR" 1N
CQOD195
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
gift f f
I" iw.
PERFUME
CREME
SACHET
1 oz. I
DUSTING FOWDER
with puff
6oz$2
ell pric pl tox
WRAPPING
Drugstore
fancy stuff .
MAY
10TH
f . m m
PPAV JJUT 1
TW .'-wT Ml 1