Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 9, 1962, edition 1 / Page 3
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Sunday, December 9, 1962 DAILY TAP. HE&E Pagre 3 i 4' - - -J 44 f esi - ft ' J' H I1' i it I o Campus Briefs CANTERBURY HAYRIDE Those going on the hayride this evening should meet in the park ing lot tonight at 6. . SOPn. CLASS PUBLICITY There will be a meeting of the Sophomore Class Publicity Com mittee at 7 p.m. in the Wopdhouse Room of GM. ' GM. All committee members and all other interested persons are urged to attend. STATE & NATIONAL AFFAIRS There will be a meeting of the Sophomore Class State and Na tional Affairs Committee tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. in Roland Parker 1 in Recruiting B All GH I Cowboy Roundup Buffet Starts 5:30 Feast On O Rare Roast Beef O Barbecued Chicken 0 Vienna Loaf Selection of 8 Gourmet Vegetables O Waldorf Salad French Potato Salad Cottage Cheese & Chive Salad 3 Other Unique Ranch House Salads Dessert Fr. Garlic Bread & Ice Tea 1 'J OHLY In Charcoal Cablnette of genuine hard wood veneers and hardwood solids In Char coal. Model 23T17TV with matching fin lsh on metal tHand wired Chassis precision crafted with modern hand and dip soldering methods. Golden Voice Speaker for clear FM fidelity tone. Full Year Guarantee. Manufacturer's one year guarantee covers free exchange or reapir of any com ponent proven defective in normal use. Arranged through selling dealer. Labor extra. pliance 0 Carrboro Garrboro Tire 134 E. Main St. 942-25G3 DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Mirth 5. Woodland trail ailake, as a basket 12. Smithies' block 13. Increase the bet: poker 14. Honey maker 15. Sign or a bads: 16. Equally 17. Only 19. Medieval poem tale 20. Brazilian rubber trees 2 Listened to 24. Harass 28. Influenced 30. "The Way ward -" 33. Eject 34. Exclama tion' 35. In proper sequence (2 wds.) 37. Winglike 38. Stone under coronation chair: G. B. 39. Hip-Wgb boot 41. City NB Illinois 42. Prize 43. Watched, carefully 44. Coral reefs DOWN l.IUver western 2. Wash 3. Biblical name 4. Lamprey 5. Penetrates and spreads 6. A Bedouin 7. Warble 8. Hebrew prophet 9. River into Ohio River 11. Ancient people of Gaul 15. Unit of work 17. Star in Cetus 18. In reversed order: 3 wds. 21. Sun god 22. De-nomi-na-tion 25. Preposition 26. In spectors of weights and 27. Man's name 29. Play fulness 30. Swiss Alps cold wind 31. One's father's brother y liklftl IE DAN CiEMil tii-lll S I vl E I l (lE3 slol IP lfB'P S yWKlJtr SIL AM l A pic N jCjE A S fa. A M AN Pf, fN NUJL ' 1 ' -o Saturday's Answer 32. Thin, in expensive cigar " 36. Unicorn fish 37. Call it (stop working) S9. Women's Army Corps member 40. Milkfish r777 fo 27 222 zMV as ' yy. 39 40 7T ""p"" The following companies will re cruit on campus this week: Monday, December l6: Women's Army Corps: Army Material Com mand ;Ennis, Linder & Folger, CPA's; Martin Company. Tuesday, December 11: Martin Company; Package Products Com pany, Inc.; Celanese Corporation of America; Haskins & Sells, CPA's; North Carolina Wesleyan College. Wednesday, December 12: A. M Pullen & Co.; Furman University. Thursday, December 13: Colum bia University Graduate School of Business; S. D. Leidesdorf & Co., CPA's; Union Carbide Consumer Products Co. Friday, December 14; United Aircraft Corp. Research Labora tories; The Kroger Company; Ernst & Ernst. JUNIOR CLASS '.EX. .COMM. Any member of the Junior Class Executive Committee "who can at tend the ' sale 1 should contact Spen cer Barnes. IN-SERVICE TRAINING Dr. Harris Tindall, Associate Physician of the UNC Infirmary Staff, will speak on ".Health Serv ices of the University" Monday, Dec. 10 at 4:30 p.m. in 105 Hanes Hall. STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM Dr. Ronald S. Burdick of the Duke University Department of Mathematics will address the Sta tistics Colloquium on Monday, Dec. 10 at 4:00 in 265 Phillips Hall. His topic will be "Stage-by-Stage Modi fication of Polynomial Estimators by the Jackknife Method." RIALT0 THEATRE Durham's New Art House Tel. 6S2-4320 NOW PLAYING Not since "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari' has any film created such a sensation as "Last Year at Marienbad." Truly a land mark of the cinema. t TRULY EXTRAORDINARY" N. Y: Tlmtt DIRECTED BY UUNRSMMS AST m Raase lilt"' Jl Free, "Marienbad Match Game Special Art Film.. Program Notes Coffee Available Also short, "Etruscan Paintings" Showing, daily, 2:02. 3:45, 5:30, 7:15 and 9:00 219 E. Main St. ' City parking lot across street NOW PLAYING iinnnnTrnriii i" tiiJidiEiiruE.: TIME MAGAZINE HYPNOTIC!' LIFE MAGAZINE "BRILLIANT! NEW ALAIN RESNAIS't NEW YORK TIMES HIROSHIMA. MOM AMOUHl An ASTOR Release 1AST YEAR H KliOSAD" ooww sow sm aibertazzi 'scnnaer-JUJUIIKSIUUS-JUJUNSuBK-GRUJEr CHRISTMAS PARTY GMAB and the Pan - Hellenic Council are sponsoring a "trim the tree" party today at 2 p.m. in GM. AH students are invited. The purpose of the party is to decorate GM for Christmas but entertainment and refreshments will be provided. Bob Rearden, chairman of GMAB, said, "It is hoped that many campus men and women who have the 'Christmas Spirit' will come Sunday to help out." An estimated turnout of over 400 girls are expected. YDC .Representative David Henderson from North Carolina's 3rd District will address the monthly meeting of the UNC-YDC tomorrow eve ning at 7:30 in the Law School Courtroom. Foreign Student Visits papitf.il "It looks like a European capital because of the parks and avenues," a foreign student here said about Washington, D. C. Aritonio'Munoz was one of the uve toreign students studying In the United States' who were chosen to represent their .respective coun tries at Foreign Student Day in Washington, D. C. last Tuesday. He not only represented Spain but all of Europe. These five students from Japan, Argentina, Iran and Ghana joined other foreign students studying in Washington to celebrate the an nual event sponsored by the For eign Students Service Council. The highlight of the day was an address by President Kennedy in which he emphasized the responsi bility of foreign students as am bassadors of their respective coun tries. Munoz, a Business Administra tion major, was a Fulbright schol ar, during his first j7ear in grad uate school here. Piano Recital Slated Today Dr. William S. Newman of the Music Dept. calls it his "pet." Music jnajors call it "one .of their favorites." What are they .talking about? "Original Music ior Two Pianos." This "petite Musicale presentation of Graham Memorial featuring the twin piano recital will be present ed tonight at 9 in Hill Music Hall. Five of Carolina's most talented pianists will present selections by Clementi ("Sonata in B-flat"), De bussy ("En Blanc et Noir") and; Brahms ("Variations on a Theme J by Haydn"). i Those students who will be per forming include Sue Wallace, Lynn Duval, Harriet Herring, Tom Glymph, Bill Flicker and William Robinson. Dr. Newman, co-ordinator for this GM presentation, invites everyone to enjoy a Sunday night of music. The concert is free and ID cards are not required. Faculty Pay Raises Said Likely Faculty members of colleges and the University. Presidents of th ? universities 'in North Carolina may ! other state operated institutions get a substantial pay raise in 1953. The" state's" proposed new Taudget, which was completed last week, calls for increased salaries for college and faculty members. Consolidated University Presi dent William C. Friday had asked followed much the same lir.e. ' Hugh Cannon, state director of administration, said the summary sheets his department will pre pare for the legislature should be finished by Christmas. The 'total amount of the state the advisory, budget commission 1 budget for the next biennium wl!l for-almost $5 million for faculty not be released until Cov. San increases at the three branches of! ford presents it to the legislature. THE BOOK EXCHANGE "The South's largest and most complete Book Store" AT JTVE POINTS DURHAM. N. C. m 76 SOPHOMORES There will be a meeting of the Sophomore Class Publicity Com mittee, today at 7:00 p.m. in Wood house Room, GM. rvl Jr 1 I J kit J t f iR If' Somewhere a Qhild Depends On You for a Booh Contemporary & Traditional Christmas Cards One of the Finest Selections In North Carolina Come in Today, Browse Choose. Christmas .Gifts For -,..-.-,, . . Tiny People PEGGY CLOTH BOOKS Sturdy cloth resists little teeth; aiid the colorful illustration, printed in non toxic ink, are just right for little tots. Best of all, these books will stand boiling and washing. Sev eral titles, of which our favorite is "Good Night." $1.09 KATE GREENAWAY MOTHER GOOSE Although we stock sev eral Mother Goose books, our pet is tms lime oia-iasnuneu ins lish edition, with its quaint and dainty colored illustrations. $1.50 THE WILD AND WOOLLY ANI MAL BOOK, by Nita Jones, with drawings by ' Dale Maxey. Our favorite dollar flat. The color is gay, but not. obtrusive, the pic tures modern but cuddly, and the "story. just enough for a very small person. $L00 THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD, by' "Watty Piper. An old favorite in. lively new' dress, and your child wHI love t just as much as you used' to. ' $1.50 A TALE OF TAILS, by Elizabeth Macpherson. Another big book With. , big ' colored pictures that will delight Ihe stmall "reader. YVe think Mama will like it, tbo. $1.99 Be A Good Sanfa! The Eniimai II- o as Gifts For the Eilit-to-Twelve Group THE CHILDREN'S CHRISTMAS CAROL, by Johanna Spyri. T!so author of Heidi in a sparkling lale for the six-to-ten age group. Hand some Alpine illusti aticiK in lull color. Sl.rJ THE PHOENIX AND THE CAR PET, by E. Nes.bit. What happens when the children discover that a second-hand carpet, bought for the nursery, is a flying one. A classic among fairy tales. $1.93 THE COMIC LOOKING GLASS, edited by Hart Day Leavitt. A generous collection of comic writ ing, suitable for the young, by Thur'ber, Aesop, llenchley, O - Henry, and others. $1.91 THE HOUND OF THE RASKEiJ VILLES, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. A wonderful introduction - to the world of "grown-up books," that will keep the young reader on his toes. $1.9.1 STARTING A ROCK AND MIN ERAL COLLECTION by Miriam Gilbert. A nice little flat book for the youngster who is old enough to collect. We recom mend it for that eight-year-old boy on vonr list. $1.00 THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 119 E. Franklin St. Open Till 10 P. M. if you have too many friends . . . Our nickel Christmas Cards may Save the day! THE IllTirilATE BOOKSHOP 119 East Franklin Street Open 'til 10 P. M. if - - - f f 1 - i Tr iff 9 J Sold and enjoyed matt 50 state . end mmote than 200 cornntnes erotma trweworta Jn all 50 states, the big switch is to Marlboro Remember when Marlboro came to town? Suddenly, the U.S. kad a flavor cigarette with a filter on the end. Sales grew in every town, in every state. Today the whole place is Marlboro country land of the filter cigarette with the un filtered taste. Behind this popularity is the famous Richmond recipe of ripe tobaccos (the finest grown), and the pure white Setectraie Filter, Pack or box, you get a lot to like.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 9, 1962, edition 1
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