Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 24, 1960, edition 1 / Page 3
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WEDNESDAY, PEBRUARY 24, Mid TH8 DAILY TAS HIR. PAGE !ffiH: Plastic Laminating Service II' '.ml Driver's Licenses Sn.iph(K Si.:.il Seenntj 'inls Cards Snapshots Newspaper Clippings Mail to P.O. Boi 561 Durham, N.C. ,s;s.3'i 13 IS 3 3,n a U fl 3 0 0 WO 0,1 9 VH01 V yWH 0 V A aQl;d V d an fL vp'A 3 i n vna:3-h .i;Vo:i hI'Vm bh'vs! U .Pits DvVs LI yip jalpj i , j The New York Life Agent On ' Your Campus ' Is A Good Man To Know George L Coxhoad U.N.C. "42 Campus Representative PHONE 92052 Now York Life Insurance Coiiipanj The Wruy ) i 'f)i)iu n. a nii i who i. iinlnitliliil In lift yahlif) iiun f uiiitn llif fncwiiir of oi't'iit' he I in i ii lnsmn. I Old daimt the su) tlin Ikh I;)ouH(I of mo OPENS TODAY 15) OF THE IF YOU NEVER PICTURE IN YOUR DONNA Scim r h JOMIt PAXTON r.tm no.) 4u4 4 DKtel tj STANLEY KRAMER ,N dlLI9N l,S Vi3,d d, oj,osm:0own 3 H S 3d d 3d09H Tfl i z BUS V i Vr .: fVV Rbcf Collection Paintinqs On Display Here 47 p.im:i;:y ii'n:!i the l';.:ied VA '.vaiti V. Km! r.)!!et.:n rre cur- i rently 0ti i..w .it the Ackland Me- ! :niri:il Art CctVcr. j Ca!!vl "2!.h (Vi'my American , Paintings." the ehi.ii.;on contains works by 2'A ar'.i N uhise styles tnn'.'e ,'rern !h n!i-:M ot the ":ihc!n" haul to t:u ;ihv ructions I and non-ihjecii e paiiuiius of today. ' The exhibit has been lent to INC by the Munson-William-Proeter Institute, recipient of the Knot bequeM. and is bcinjf cir- j culateri nationally by (he Smith- 1 soniait Institute Traveling F.xhi- j bition Sersiee. ! i The ai t Center i open on Sun- j days from 2 (o ." pm.; on Satur- ' days, in a.m. to ." pm.: and Tuos-1 day through Friday. 2:30 to i p.m.. and .1 to 10 p.m. The galleries are j closed cn Mondays. j The current show may he .seen : until March l.. ! Watch and Jevelry REPAIR Tfo use tne larcsf electronic and ultrasonic equipment T. L. KEMP JEWELRY 135 E. FRANKLIN ST. PHONE 2-1331 z: WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE AN OUTSTANDING MODERN RUSSIAN 6 MOTION PICTURE Is 1- GRAND PRIZE WINNER. CANNES FESTIVAL PLUS NEWS CARTOON HOURS OF SHOWS: 1:00 2:53-4:46 6:39 8:32 ojc J D uIJ& YEAR - NEW YORK TIMES SEE ANOTHER MOTION LIFE YOU MUST SEE 19-iJ fa ins n:. i MSMl Story .-!iw. Ul UUI Tims! 5rl ANDERSON i, NVtl SHUTE iim4 t UNlTtCQMTlSTJ . '- -: & - i - r.'rv i-!'-" f ' , ;. ' 7 ' f : ' ' ft tr "H? -ss H I IT'S REAL! Dude Hatten explains to Martica Diaz and Humberto Lopez that this part of Jerry Walker's make-up is not make-up at all. Lopez and Miss Diaz are two of the seventeen visiting Cuban students who will attend tonight's opening of the Carolina ' Play makers' production of "Volpone." Tickets are still available for to night, Thursday and Sunday. Covering The Campus STIDY GKOL'P The seminar on "Man in Mass .Society." led by Pete Austin, will meet at 9 p.m. in the Council Room of the Presbyterian Student Center Thursday. This is the initial meeting of the seminar and all interested persons are cordially invited to at tend. Dr. George V. Tavlor, associate professor of history, will discuss David Rie.sman'h. "The Lonely Crowd." a study of the changing American character. DIX HILL Trips to Dix Hill are scheduled lor today and tomorrow, leaving the VMCA Ixbby at 1:30 p.m. NURSES TALK The study group. "Suffering, Pain, and Disease," will hold its in itial meeting at 9 p.m. Thursday in the Nurses Dorm. The group will meet on alternate Thursday here after . PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM Dr. Thomas Aldrich of the Car ' negie Institute of Washington will speak on "Problems in Nuclear Geophysics" at the joint lXC-Duke Physics Colloquium, tonight at 8 in the Duke Physics ' Building. FELLOWSHIP The Intervarsity Christian Fellow ship will meet at 6 p.m. Friday n3 p G 0 0 0 LA PIZZA 7-1451 n Carry Out And Delivery Service D LaZl GmS EalZ3 CmIS ACROSS I. Small orrlii-st ra f). SpriiiK is h-r 8. Juki bot tn;iwr 12. Konln arc nn pvrrywlif-re l:t. Atli-f'tioii:ili'ly (2 nordsi 1I. OverscaO'd I.ovit of Tin f'nti musii .' 17. Whui to ir'ukn time, obvininly CI wonli 10. ratf's I'ulmirui- lion 20. IliiilKPr'n first narnt 21. dariicn-varirty Kill 22. longtt, vita br ia 23. How you t,i whilf mnokiiiK a Kool 2S. ChurU' Tr.-nct )tiii hit HO. Nat folcin Paris 31. Cio it alonf Giving in u lit t U 81. tlulf a park of KooU :l."i. Wh.-re Halifax in ta:nr.) 'iii. Kesislaiic' unit 117. Ki l.tiou urotijti 40. W liui's (iwatit bv studi'nt body? 42. Hi, .iOih state! 43. Not a requisite for rook 'n' mil 44. Reaction to no -he k in the mail ECCDL 45. Villa .1' 4H. I'nloiil 47. Manly hrroinc DOWN 1 . Son ia I ttMKo'a Iton t , ii 2. t )n.- ti.. -sn't niakr a Hiumr 3. ( 'omr afi t-r 2 l lo'vn. nal urully 4. I IiKiti j;irl it. 'i' !.' M,( ft'' or nil'-i 'i'th ti. W itai v )U l)u'ft hi n I n!ii 7. Shrunk i on-an X. Fov (: H i. T. 'rr-s f . lU'd or? 10. 1 he si, of Ifoo-f t tf 1 1. llriv.ii t s hi-tt.l 11. 11 ! in. Haif ol fri.a 21. Muuri-eti (CHar;.' lan.l 22. Arn. ri. an ISook- M''!liTi AsSII. OlblT.J 21. Kant, MVeii.ri) i llo. I. in siy Ivool toiiaivos aren'l Krriwn liero 2li. These ure hasic 27. Put on i Kfor ds? 2!t. The kind of Maii- KooU have C.l l .a-e in lioiid Mnlu ITI'W 37. lines limp She's Kr"n'h 33. Perfert rj,s-rip- tion of Km -is, man 41. Just-pas-sin li-ltors YOU NEED THE OF Evl 1 : v ? upstairs in Lenoir Hall. WESLEY FOUNDATION ?he Wesley Foundation will hold : a retreat at Bricks near Rocky I Mt. Saturday and Sunday. Deene Clark will lead the discussion on "The Rale of the Church on the University Campus." Cost of the weekend will le $4, including meals. Interested people should call the Wesley House on Pittsboro St. INTERNATIONAL DINNER Tickets for Saturday evening's International Dinner are available Symphony To Prepare Adeline McCall, music supervisor in the Chapel Hill elementary schools, will direct a Symphony Workshop here Saturday for teach ers, supervisors, principals and other in'ercsted persons to prepare them for North Carolina S.'-mphon children's concerts this spring. The workshop will be 10:30 a.m. 1 p.m. at (he Carrboro Elemen tary SchtHtl. .Joint sponsors tor the Workshops are. the Extension Division and the North Carolina Symphony. .James S-eagall of the Extension Division has charge of all arrangements. Mrs. McCall will give an in j service workshop March 2, cover ing the same materials, for teach ers in the live Chapel Hill ele mentary schools. Children from j Chapel Hill schools will participate in both workshops. Included on the Full Symphony 1 children's program this year is the ; Overture to Mozart's opera "The I Magic Flute." Teachers will view ! a color film strip on' the opera at KROSSWORD 1 1 V 1 Wi" I6 I7 piS 9 1)0 III 1 - i ,2 miTl u 73 mi - - i . i yir 17 . ?wn : i Lteii L.lf.,.',L, 22 P 23 24 f" 26 27 .fc3S.-H 28 29 rrii i teg mkmmz, T7 1 fit rrr, 37B39l 1 I ENOUGH TO Q 8 KMAC.K this?" J v-- p-V 46 KL 47 When your tfiroal tell: you its tirnG for a you need a real change 1 rm n Seawell Asks For State School Fund; Encourage Interest In Government Atty. Gen. Malcolm Seawell called Tuesday night for creation of a state fund to assist counties in building new schools and improving old ones. And he said, "we must wiihin our means pay our school teachers suf ficient salaries to encourage them to continue teaching and to attract good teachers into the profession." Seawell. who is stepping down as Attorney General this week to run for Governor, said this in a speech prepare! for delivery to the Parent-Teacher Assn. of Row lan 1 Xorment School in his home town of Lumberton. ! "It is imperative that this state ! create a fund to be tused wiih funds i from the counties for' building schools and improving present j school facilities,'" Seawell said. "It j should be such a fund as will, over i a tour-year period, permit the coun i ties of this state to do the job of for $1 at the "V" and Danziger's. '' ENGLISH CLUB The English Club will present a ! talk by Dr. George Harper of th? English Department, Friday rt i. ; p.m. in the Library .V ".iibly Room. His topic will be "The De cline of the Hero in Contemporary Drama." The public h invited. j CANDIDATE TO SPEAK Malcolm Seawell, candidate for the Democratic nomination lor gov-! ernor of North Carolina, will speak at S p.m. tonight in the Law School. Workshop For Concerts the Saturday Workshop and a group of students will present their ver sion of the story in an original dance pantomime. Other numbers to be danced according to the chil dren's own interpretations are Ia Roy A n ders o n's "Syncopated Clock": DcFalla's Spanish Dance No. I from ' La Vida Breve"; and the Andante Cantabile from Tschti ikowsky's Fifth Symphony. Use of instruments will be stress ed in the workshop session as well as at the concerts. Children will make drums, rhythm sticks, claves. rattles and staff castanets to bring to the concerts for participation in a "percussion surprise" number. Hand-constructed instruments wi 1 be on display at the workshop. A puppet show, inspired by the Rip Van Winkle story in Ferde Grole's "Hudson River Suite" will be performed by youngsters at the session. Next Saturday's workshop will be the third held by Mrs. McCall dur ing the current concert season. No. 5 2 changG x y providing the physical plants ne- j cessary for our growing school pop- j ulation . . . we cannot ser.d our : children to school in buildings which j are firetraps." j Seawell told the PTA members, "we should begin with the premise ! that the people of N )r.h Carolina i desire public education that they I intend to tav in the business of ; educating .our youih and that they j intend, at all cost, to improve the ; curricula and the physical plants and the teaching processes here in our state. "We cannot, as a people, stand still. Public education does not lend i:."elf to balding the line." he ; declared. He asserled that the people of the state have "been extremely wise in the road which they have taken in the preservation of public education. We have won our cases in the federal courts and w a.c foliating a course which is tin' on ly safe course that North Carolina may take." Seawell said it is "alarming to me that there are so many of our children fini.-iiing hi;'. .1. .ol when they can neither read, wii.e nor spell." ile said remedial reading Megro Students Resume Protests; More Dernonstrctors Arrested CHARLOTTE .li-egro students, apparently welcoming the probabil ity of arrest, resumed non-violent demonstrations against segregated lunch counters in the Carolinas Tuesday. And police in two North Carolina cities arrested both Ne groes and whites. The resumption of the passive resistance movement after a lapse of several days in many cities fol lowed astate - wide strategy meet ing in' Durham of Negro student leaders. The students voted to con tinue their protest by sit-down dem onstrations, boycott and picket line until they reach their goal of de segregated lunch counters. Rock Dill, S. C. felt its second demonstration since the movement was born in Greensboro Feb. 1. In Richmond. Va , pickets march ed outside Thalbisncr's. a quality department store, in deliance of the arrest of t!4 Negro students there Monday. Police arrested 21 demonstrators in Wir-ston-Salem 12 Negroes and 1 nine whites as they sat at a white O E3 03 E3 El Oil 0 u u y j 0 K3 Name LA PIZZA'S Newest 0 TASTE Is- I lam t s f - I f f r Kit . . " -f j mm a - ""''- .ih..-mi.iuiw:.. .,,.i.4i.-. Only YOU Latest i t 0 is 0 :0 n You can win S10 while enjoin; La Pizza's Latest Taste Sensation. Now it's called a La Pizza Sandwich. But anytime before Tuesday, March 1 you can submit your suggestions. Come out to La 1'izza and ask for a "La Pizza Sandwich." You'll enjoy this 12 inch La Pizza Treat'. Then submit your suggestion for its name on the official entry blank in this ad. Remember to get y:ur si'g.Jestions in before the March 1 deadline. Sub mit as many entries as you wish. The best entry wins the S10 cash prize. Judging wiM be done by employees of La Pizza. courses should be encouraged. Seawell said in recent years he had interviewed many applicants for Morehead Scholarships at the University of North Carolina and many of them were asked to tell "what form of government 4o.we have in the United. States?" He said invariably they answered in-. correcdy that "we have a demo cracy" insiead of "our govern ment is a republic." "For a hih school senior or a college s udent not to know that areat difference h.Uweer. demo- . cracy and a re-ublic is a tragedy to me." Seawdl said. "Is there any vvender th:.. we have created in : his co-1 Try a monstrous bureau cracy which, to a great extent, governs a'l f us? Unless the young; men anr young women who are be ir.g graduated from our colleges an 1 universities become mare and more interested in their government and more and more interested in sha ing in the experience of di recting the course which our gov eminent takes, then some of yen may live to see the day when we may have a form of government which is nei.her a republic in nit e or in fact.' lunch counter marked for the use ! of F. W. Woolwurth Co. employes and their guests. The Negro .stu dents came from Winston-Salem Teachers College and the whit s from Wake Forest College. Negro spectators cheered as po lice led each of the demonstrators to patrol cars for transportation to headquarters and booking on charges of trespass. In Charlotte, the arrests of two Negroes and one white man were oa charges of assault. About 70 Negro students from ' Icinson C. Smith University milled outside the door of the basement ' cafeteria of the 15 elk Bros. Depart . ment Store. Police and fire depart i ment officials ordered hte group to I di-pe-'se. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS C3 4 Know The Name Addition To The CLIP AND SEN I WOULD NAME THE LA PIZZA SANDWICH A NAME ADDRESS CITY PHONE CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE .77 CORVETTE. FUEL injection, posiihe traction rear axel. -V cam. two tops. $2.fX'U. Excellent condition. Phone 2 92. or write 2510 Brandon R 1, Wilmington. N. C. WE WILL HAVE A FEW SUMMER jobs for col'ege men at most of our Branches locate 1 in ci.ies throughout the state. First come first reived basis. Call Carolina Inn '!i431i sn.1 ask Lr Jack Gar ska - Wed., 1-7 p.m.: Thurs. 1-7 p.m. ONLY Pleaset FOR SALE 1S53 CHRYSLER New Yorker. 4 door. Black with white top. Automatic transmis sion. S300. Cash only. Call 9-t".7::G between G & 7 p.m. APARTMENT FOR RZ.'T - NEW. beautifully decora. ed modern apartment. Completely furnished. Phone 2-1744. ROOM FOR RENT - AVAILABLE March 1. 1! 0. Ma.i only. Close in. Private entrance. Reuigerator. S"30 pr month.. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 24, 1960, edition 1
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