Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 7, 1961, edition 1 / Page 3
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I I i I I ! -f Tuesday, March 7, 1S81 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Paeo Tires BY MAKING HONOR ROLL 140 Students Louse Ura The Curve Cecil Johnson, dean of the General College announced to daj' the names of the 140 fresh men and sophomore" university students who have been named to the General College Honor Roll for the fall semester, 1960 61. The students - named to the honor roll have received grades of B or higher and were en rolled for a minimum of 15 se mester hours.- ' Students named to the honor roll are: David Finger ; Addle stone, Sumter, S. C; Richard Edwin Akers, Roanoke Rapids; Felix Hill Allen Jr., Louisburg; Edward Duncan Anderson, W. Palm Beach, Fla.; Willard Abe Andes, Miami, Fla.; Willis Ar thur Archer, Salisbury; Robert Beale Bennett, Washington, . B. C; Garry Patrick Bergeron Jr., Farmville; Bruce Hanna Bever idge, Atlanta 5, Ga.; Gerald Wayne Blake, Jacksonville; William Roger Bowerman, Chapel Hill; Lanny Boone Bridgers, Jackson; Frank Acree Brock, Lookout Mt., Term.; Scott Newton Brown JrJ, Signal Mt., Tenn.; Robert Lindsay Bug den, Fayetteville, N. Y.; Thomas William Bundy, High Point; Robert H. Burns III, Whiteville; Edward Ramsey Burt, Biscoe; CLASSIFIED ADS $5 REWARD FOR INFORMA tion leading to arrest, convic tion of vandal who threw my bicycle down Carroll Hall steps Feb. 22 night. Call David Lob- dell, 445 Cobb. - : FOR SALE: INGOLDSBY LEG ENDS, A nice 2 vol.. set of this classic,, handsomely illustrated. Only $1.50 in; the Old Book Cor ner of Intimate Bookshop, 119 E.7 Franklin Street. - xxxiE VJT, nt&- Willard Alan Case, West Ashe ville; Raymond Hurt Chatham, Lawson, Mo. ; Charles Samuel Chinnis, Ra leigh; Cecil Clair Conner Jr., Greensboro; Daniel M. Coursey Jr., Memphis, Tenn.; Barry Phil lip Craig, Stanley; Joe Malcolm Craver, Shelby; William Justis Crawley, James ville; Thomas Michael Cribbin, Greensboro; Ann Marie Cummings, . High Points Robert E. Cunningham, Greensboro; John Laughlin Cur rie, Carthage; Christopher Jo seph Daly, Hyattsville, Md.; Ed ward William Davidian, Smith field; Norman McBrayer Davis Jr., Charlotte; Claude Edward Dawson Jr., Chatham, Va.; Foy Roberson Devine, Hampton, Va.; Carole Ann Dotson, Pensacola, Fla.; Dorothy Sue Drennan, Bel mont; Gary Denton Edens, Salisbury; Stuart E. Eizenstat, Atlanta 9, Ga.; Charles Allan Eure, Roduco. Gail Fambrough, Chapel Hill; Sutton Burns Farnham, Bristol, Va.; Marion Geddings Follin III, Greensboro; David Gardner Frey, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Robert Donald Garrison Hayes ville; Stephen Little Garrison, Charlotte; Lewis Abbott Gikow, Millburn, N. J.; Richard Fordes Gorman, Winter ville; Norman Clifford Gorsuch, Raleigh; Fred Hey ward Gregory, Charlotte; James Eugene Gudger, Ashe ville; Tony Steve Harrington, Taylors ville; Elzie Franklin Hart Jr., Burlington; Ronald Elmer Hatfield, Tampa, Fla.; Thomas Franklin Henley, Chapel Hill; David Patterson Henry II, Chapel Hill; Eddie Shaw Hines, Clinton; John W. Hobbs Jr., Wilmington: Howard David Homesley, Cherry ville; . Lattie F. Honeycutt Jr., Raleigh. I Thomas Ruff in Hood,. Dunn; Eugene Frederick Hpwden, Winter Park, Fla.; William Carl Imes, Birchdale, - Minn.; Mary 2 ''ns- w w fi.' Our Most Popular ART BOOKS This -new series is full of fine color plates, well edited, and moderately priced. Stop in and see for yourself. The Louvre text by Germain liz:iiY, curator-in-ch iel. French Impressionists in The Louvre, text by Germain Bazin. The Prado, -text' by" F. J. San chez Canton. ; The National Gallery, text by Sir Philip Hendy. . $7.50 Each THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 119 East Franklin Street Open Till 10 P.M. JL Lou Johnson, Clayton; Robert Brook Jones, Greensboro; Rich ard Allan Keever, High Point; Thomas F. Kelly Jr., Chapel Hill; Ronald Martin Kimzey, Asheville; Peter David Krones, Clifton, N. J.; Linda Sue Laugh ter, Horse Shoe; Charles Louis Leder, Goldsboro; Mitchell Wooten Legler, Memphis, Tenn.; Clifford T. Lewis Jr., Beaufort; Evelyn Pauline Lloyd, Hills boro; Allan Barry Luks, Rock ville Centre, N. Y.; Clarence Ed ward Lupton Jr., Edenton; Gabriel, Otto Manasse, Durham; John Cordell McCabe, Chevy Chase Md.; Joseph A. McChris- tian Jr., Ft. Knox, Ky.; Larry Stephen McDevitt, Asheville. Jerrill Lee ' McEntire, Old Fort; James Norwill McLamb, Wilmington; John Gordon Mc Lamb, Benson; Gwyn Farrell McNeely, Hickory; Bryan Doug las McSweeney, Hewlett, N. Y.; John McRae Medlin, Rome, Ga.; Edward G. Michaels III, Mon roeville, Ala.; Ronald Bryant Moser, Charlotte; Donald Whit ney Needham, Greenville; Jesse Ronald Oakley, Mebane; Jerome David Odom, Burlington; Elmer R. Oettinger III, Chapel Hill; William C. Patterson, New York, N. Y.; Larry Hicks Pope, Troutman; Ralph Williams Pope, Rich Square; James Norwood Pratt,.,; Winston-Salem;' James Walter Roark, Creston; William Edgar Robinson, Georgetown, S. C; James Ted Rogers Jr., States ville; Richard Lane Roth, New York, N. Y.; David Mark Rouse, Goldsboro; David Martin Rubin, Greensboro; Frank Roy Saund ers, Silver Springs, Md.; Wil liam Andrew Sawyer, Gaines ville, Ga. Howard Lee Schweitzer, Miami, Fla.; Jerry Lynn Sharp, Oak Ridge, Tenn.;' Arthur Bruce Simons, Fort Bragg; David Murray Simpson,a Winston Salem; Melvin Ronald Simpson, Fayetteville; Robert L. Single tary, Wellesley,' Mass.; Robert Dresden Skees Greensboro; Philip Logan Smith, Winston Salem; Herbert Lee Smyre, Newton; Ann Curtis Spencer, Chapel Hill; James Henry Spruill, Windsor; William Wayne Spurrier, Charlotte; David Bolan Stephens, Raleigh; James Frank Stonestreet, Albe marle; William R. Straughn III, Chapel Hill; Trawick Hamilton Stubbs Jr., Atlanta, Ga.; Scott Ernest Summers II. Morgahton; Gray Temple Jr., ColumbU,' S. Chapel Hill; William Gerald Thornton, Clinton. Kenneth L. Toppell, Miami, Fla.: Jerry Lynn Townsend, Elizabethtown; John Raymond Tyndall, Greensboro; John Carleton Ulfelder, Winchester, Mass."; Wallace R. Urnberger Jr., Burlington; Albert Franklin Walser, Salisbury; Scott Dean Ward, Zirconia; John Alexander Warren Jr., Charleston, S. C; John Alan Watkins, Roanoke Rapids; Barry Franz Westfall, Martinsville, Va.; Elizabeth C. Whitfield, Durham; David Ram say Williams, High Point; Den nis Jay Winner, Asheville; Broadus Bryan Wright Jr., Washington, D. C; Nancy Re becca Young, Gastbnia; James Alvin Yount, Claremont. Norman Mattis To Deliver Spring Lecture On 'Rhetoric, Oratory' Professor Norman W. Mattis of the Department of English will deliver the 1961 Faculty Lecture in the Humanities on Wednesday, March 8, at 8 p.m. in 106. Carroll HalL Professor Mattis will speak on "Rhetoric and Oratory To day." He will present the new modes of rhetoric and oratory demanded in a day of television, high level conferences, and pub lic relations.. Professor . Mattis teaches courses in voice, diction, and in the oral interpretation of litera ture. He received his training at Pittsburgh, Cornell, and Har vard Universities. Professor Mattis came to Chapel Hill 14 years ago. Prior to joining the staff of UNC, '. Professor Mattis taught at Oberlin, Oklahoma Baptist University, Harvard and Am herst. He has written numerous articles for professional jour nals, and is the author of a text book on speech traiinng. Bi-Phi Be bates TV". Secession From, U. Should N. C. secede from the Union? Di-Phi members will reach a HERE THEY ARE! The following are some of the numerous, rare and. exciting items io be auctioned to night at the Campus Chest Auction' Some have never before been offered to the general public . . . Your first, last, one-and-only chance to call one of these exotic items your very own! ,. , Electric razor Piano Puppy Caspar Picnic ' Garments from Milton's Beautiful Teams of Cleaning Women! Shirrs Laundered ' ' Shades of Shoe Polish - Sunlamp "Authentic Valkyrie Candle Autographed Dook Basketball Campus Chest (!) Waitresses Pledge Class Slave Girls Dinner with President Friday One House Harmonica Tickets to Spencer Dorm's Breakfasts Camera 30 Minutes Behind Dairy Bar Record Albums 100 Theatre Passes Sofa (Soft) " Net From Dook-UNC Basketball Game Autographed Picture of Frost Picture of Robert E. Lee Polly, The Parrot Television Travel Posters Ticket to Paris Carwashes German Bids AND MULTITUDINOUS OTHERS Research Work Open To Students During the summer of 1961 the Field Crops Department of State College will sponsor an Undergraduate Research. Par ticipation program in coopera tion with the National Science Foundation. , Students participating in the program will work in biochemi cal or plant physiological research. The program will run from June 12 to August 18. Partici pants will receive a stipend of $60' a week for the ten-week period. To qualify a student must have a "B" average. THROUGH TODAY oreheud Interviews Continue of a student, but on his all- Final interviews of candi around Qualities. Criteria for, dates for Morehead Scholarships r "' 1 - ' WHY WORRY? We have outlines and study guides for all your courses. THE BOOK EXCHANGE Five Points Durham DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Healthy 5. Blemish 9. Switch board section 10. Stories 12. Water tortoise 13. Polo stick 14. The Happy Warrior 15. Like gold 16. Repentent regret 19. Water god (BabyL) 20. Radio interference 21. Public grounds 23. Tuneful 25. On the ocean 27. Uttered 30. Overhead 31. 1918 wine, eg-. 32. Parts of fowl 35. Sun god 36. Girl's name 37. Adam's son 39. Rent again 40. People of Bern 41. French coins 42. Cereal grains DOWN 1. Shakespear. Jan tragedy E"-.K 2. Some 3. Guided 4. City train 5. Gaze . fixedly V 6. Wan 7. BulgingT jar J 8. Seesav s 9. BartlettS 11. Sirloin i 13. Russian 15. Seed coating 17. Feminina , 18. Great Barrier Svf Island - 21. Liquid measure 22. Deeds (I) 24. Animal hide aways 25. Boring: -tool 26. Maple tree plugrs 28. Exit 29. Apportions 31. Waistcoats UU., - Ml. . , I..I-M L K W t j ' I A!L Up! fL E V E P ?A WiA P El EITIAjP 5 LjR AjNjG E fieIOt Z i j g sffpp B'p.NIN ET tLZSPWG i v i epnLt- I N G O pa NmPiVLTATr pip P A Tjl- " S NlT D E TAM Eif A PpE P AlLlElRiTit jHSISIPIe Saturday's Answer 33. PhUippine knife 34. Stead 37. Milkfish 38. Morsel 40; Oh! . fit ti X R - 42l - wl in r37 3a ' Chemistry Topic Of New TV Show The Department of Chemistry will be featured on a new ser ies of WUNC-TV, Channel 4, shows beginning on. Tuesday, March 7, from 9:30 to 10 p.m. The series, entitled "Chemis try at the University," will con sist of 13 programs which will demonstrate? teaching areas and methods and research underway in the department. The remaining programs in the series will be on "The Phy sical Plant and Its Operation"; "The ShoD Facilities" a tour through the. instrument shop and glass shop; "Crystal Chem istry," discussed and demon strated by Professor J. C. Mor row; "Organic Chemistry Radio Chemistry"; "Inorganic Chemistry"; "Instrumental Ana lysis"; and a second show on "Radio Chemistry." concerned with problems "of radioactive fallout. selection include sound aca dqrnic. ability, character, leader ship and service to school and community. There is no quota on the num ber of recipients; each candidate is judged solely on his own merits. The scholarship pays for all of the recipient's school ex penses, plus a little extra for outside activities. There are 138 Morehead Scholar in the University to day. Forty-nine were selected last year. . Faculty members from the various schools concerned are here with the visiting candi dates to offer their support of their students. Jaycees To Pick Miss Chapel Hill For This Year The Chapel Hill Junior Cham ber of Commerce announces that four experienced judges will select the new Miss Chapel Hill for 1961 on March 17. Mrs. Kay Kyser of Chapel Hill heads the list of judges. Miss Tonya Gamble of Durham Top-Ten Dance Party hostess on a local television station, will also serve as judge. The men judges for the pageant are certainly not stran gers to Chapel Hill. Dr Curtis Lashley, physician at Guilford College, graduated from the University of North Carolina Medical School. The fourth judge, Martin L. Cromartie Jr., is a graduate of U.N.C. Law School and serves as municipal judge in Tarboro. Pageant co-chairmen John Ulmer and Bill Sparrow an nounce the largest number of entries in many years will com pete for the Miss Chapel Hill crown. Both U.N.C. co-eds and native Chapel Hill girls will be in the pageant. The winner will represent the town of Chapel Hill in the Miss North Carolina Pageant at Greensboro this summer. Were in progress Monday and will end today. The decisions of the trustees will be announced publicly over Channel 4 at 5:30 this afternoon. i According to Roy Armstrong, executive secretary of the More- head Scholarship Foundation, 48 boys from North Carolina high schools and prep schools in and outside the state were selected from 650 nominees by the Central Committee of the Foundation. , The boys come from prep CHRYSLER SALES UP Chrysler Corp. reports its car and. truck sales in 1960 were 30 per cent higher than sales of the previous year. The company said it marketed 1,183,300 cars and trucks last year with more than 500,000 of the sales credited to Chrysler's three newest entries in the market. schools in New England, Vir ginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, and the District of Columbia. The Morehead Scholarship is not based on any financial need -King- (Continued from Page 1) "His editorial views as ex pressed in the editor's columns are his own, and are not neces sarily more important, nor more valid than the views of another student. - "The right to make editorial comment stems from being in a position of information. It is not the right to dictate or stifle conflicting opinion. "It is the same right to com ment that any student has. His comment, however, must be based on analysis of fact, not on personal prejudice or bias." -Rash- (Continued from Page 1) Sevier and Harrington. The secretary must not only have experience but also organiza tional ability and the energy and desire to smoothly coordinate the efforts of the executive branch. Lynda's work this year in the Secretariat gives her a complete knowledge of the job plus the necessary background to organize a successful staff of assistants. She has also served as secretary of the Elections Board. "To round out this ticket of experience, Pete Thompson has been nominated by the Univer sity Party for Treasurer. Pete has filled a University Party legislative seat in DM II for two years and has chaired the Finance Committee." LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS DIAMONDS end J DIAMOND II JEWELRY decision tonight at 8 in New West Hall. They must also de cide whether or not to ratify . the Constitution of the Provi sional Government of the Con federate States of America. . The debate, in observance of the national Civil War Centen nial celebration, will be held as nearly as possible in the spirit of the original state con vention of May 20, 1861. Period costumes will help set the mood. The bill being presented to the Society tonight is a com-' posite of resolutions and ordi ances actually passed in 1861, according to Joe Ferrell, his torian. : The Di-Phi has asked the public to attend and join in the discussion. HOME IS ONLY MINUTES TH' kSNA PH tt?U-M UKB THAT NUT By Schulz pMaiilfS RATHER FR16HTENIN0TO ) ?1 5EE THE 0M6 60 ID m THAT 6RASS 15 6REEN, V0U KNOU), 15 NOT SAVINS NEARLY 66ATERL fOR ttMHG NATURALLV CURLV HA1R...I REALLY AM-. SOMETIMES MV DADW CALLS ME rLADVBU6f...I U6ED. TO READ A LOT, BUT LATELY. I JU$T PON T 6EBTD HAVE TIME... FRIEDA SITS" BEHIND ME IN SCHOOL...! HAVEN'T HEARD A ' WORD OOR TEACHER HAS SAID THIS tOHOLE eEMESTEZ! m" O G By Walt Kelly sOWf? VA VOW MK&t ( gASy If, who? n&zfsf-y v&& up fzosv-jLey.- ( cosftsnzm ' HIM WWO ccqu $100 to $10,000 Ill III it Mwrrfvmi RALEIGH, N. C. V AWAY y ((rJ) y. on " ( mmmm - Plan to fly home soon on x Piedmont Airlines. Piedmont serves colleges, prep-schools' and home towns all across the top of the South r JfU ft t fi Jfti iff tilfit - - - U m U m M IkeMM M ai 4- mJ . serves you better call Piedmont or your COPVRIOHT 1961, THE COC COLA COMPANY. COCA-COLA ANO COKE ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARK'S I BETWEEN FRIEND C... ' ' , There1 $ nothing like a Coke! t C f ' i 4 . X - '' ' ' f X y s s 5 "i f 3 4 i : 1 - ... Get that refreshing new feeling with Coke! Bott.eC under authority of DURHAM COCA-COLA The Coca-Cola Company by BOTTLING LO. Durham, IT. C.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 7, 1961, edition 1
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