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^agi two CHAPEL HILL MEWS LEADER Personal Mention . (Phone 8444 For Contributions To This Mr. is Column) | and Mrs, Vic Haggins returned last night Trom Charlotte where they attended the annual Hardware Association Show and Con- “fgg'ns wa.s guest speaker of the North Charlotte Rotary Cltib on Monda}'. William J. Woestendiek, editor of the Long Island Newsdav magazine zit* m" on a slory for his inaga- zine. Mr. -Woestendiek was editor of The Dailv Tar Heel in 19+7 and later was wilh the Winston-Salem Journal J. Maryon Saunders and Chancellor R. B, House left today to attend Dr mZm -'r k h I f 10 Fleming, piofes.sor of I*reventive Medicine, UNC School of Medicine, and Dr. ■William P. Richardson, assistant dean in the School of Medicine, have ju.st returned from Chicago where tte.v attended a meeting of the Council on Medical Education and -■American Medical Association. Dr. Fleming de pap^j, ..Teaching the Family Physician's Ap livened proach.' Among those who returned Monday from a Ivi'o-and-one-half day con ference sponsored by the Foundation for Infantile Paralysis ir Omaha, Nebraska, were the following UNC medical and hospital Dr. James McClure, Dr. W. P, Richardson, Miss Ethel weekend with personnel Harrison and Miss Sue Flowers, Mrs. Daniel Donovan of Chicago is visiting here with her son Dr D. L. Donovan, and his family. Melvin B. Ashley of Elizabeth City wdll spend the friend.s in Chapel Hill. Prof, and Mrs. Walter H. Hartung spent the past weekend in Rich mond, Virginia. V . Qirson Ryan, Kenan profc.ssor of education at the University, is in , ''*1,'''’ f”’’ meeting of the Congressional Commission On Mental Illness. Ottar Dahl of Oslo,. Norway, was in Chapel Hill for a few days last week ami toured the UNC Library. Mr. Dahl is studying at Co- lum ia University on a Rockefeller grant. Other visitors to the town and Library last week W'ere former Chapel Hillian Frank Rankin, now with the Research Division of Colonial W'llliamsburg, and his boss Prof. Edward Riley; Mrs. KatU^jn Devereaux, a librarian of Moline, III., and her mother, Mrs. Adams. Mr. and Mrs. H, Andrews of Wilmington and daughter, Miss'Anne Andrews of Burlington were weekend visitors of Misses Ola Agnes and Nelle Andrews. Jan Philip- Schinhan, professor in the UNC Department of M;usic, wa.s in Kannapolis this w-eek to assist Mrs. Schinhan with a boy's choir of more than 100 members. Eighteen local Presb.vterian women attended the annual meeting of the Women of the Church, district three of Orange Pri(byTery, held Tuesday morning in the Mebane Pre.sbyterian Church. Pres ent from Chapel Hill were Mrs. Ralph T. Marshall, Mrs. Mary Belle Jones. Mrs. Charles Rush, Mrs. Walter McClellan, Miss Frances Archer, Mrs, L. R. Higley, Mrs. W. G. Privette, Mrs. Arnold Perry, Mrs. E, H. Long, Mrs. Dan Martin, Mrs. Albei t E. Radford. Mrs. Faison Hicks and Mrs. George Ramseur. Mrs. John W. Ross of Jacksonville. Fla., is here on extended visit to her sister, Mrs. T. M. Andrews, at Bolin-Bronk Farm. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Carmichael Jr. celebrated their wedding anniver sary. Friday. Mrs. Carmichael wore a beautiful orchid for the occasion. Dr. Henry Clark, Dr. Ernest Craige, W, D. Carmichael .Ir. and Pete Ivey spent Wednesday evening in Rocky Mount participating in a heart di.scussior Pre-sirlcnt Elsenhower's private physician. Dr. Paul Dudley Whi>,e was the main speaker for the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. Roy ll dsten have returned to Chapel Hill after spending a week in Gold.s’ioro. ^ Mrs. Charles Cf K sev Redwmod City, California and Seattle, "Wash ington is spen 'ing .sonip Line here with her d.augiiLrr, '.Irs. The::'.- I as P:jlfe:son and Mr. Patterson on Whitehead Circle. Mari0ch..iu' F,ql)al, Chancellor of Tehran University, Abdullah Riazi, Professor of Hydraulics and Nossratollah Kassemi, Professor of Medicine, all of the University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran, ivere here for a couple of days this week studying our public health affairs program. Miss Grace Kyle and her two cou.slns of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., visited Mr. and Mrs. Russell Grumman on Laurel Hill Circle this past weekend. Mrs. Byron Falls of Shelby spent several days recently with Mr. and Mrs. A. H. A. Williams on Cobb Terrace, Jlrs. Williams and Mrs. Falls spent Saturday at Haw River. Mr, and Mrs. Boh Scot I Langley of Kinston spent Friday with their aunt, Mrs. Robert W. Madry, West University Drive. Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Kastenbaum, who were married Lifecember 22 in New- York are now living at 131 Hamilton Road, Gien Lennox. Dr. Kastenbaum is doing some post-doctoral w'ork in Public Health, Clarence Deane of the New York Times’ office spent two days in Chapel Hill last week studying the race situation in the Lhiiversity. Caleb Phillips of the Washington New York Times' office spent last week in Chapel Hill getting material for an article on the. race situation in the University for the Magazine Section of the New York Times. The article w'ill appear in about three weeks. Mr. Phillips is a native of Willianishurg, Va. . Laura Clark, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Henry T. Clark, Kings Mill Road, celebrated her eighth birthday last weekend. Her guests were Millie Blackwell. Mary Slttqrson, Jane Fleming, Karen Thomas, Betsy Shands, Carroll Roberts, Carole Decker, Beverly- Ncwton.and Gill Cassell. Mrs. W. R. Cely of Greenville, S. C, is spending a couple of weeks r -with her daughter, Mrs. Joel Carter and Prof. Carter at their home on Laurel Hill Road. .Carlton Noell of Rocky Mount and his mother spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Kay Kyser. Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Smith and daughter Dheadra of Sumter. S. C. .spent the weekend with Dr. Smith’s sister, Mrs. Eddie Teague and Mr. Teague, 17 Maxwell Road, Glen Lennox. The Rev. and Mrs, Winfield Smith and their four daughters of Wel- ,don spent lYiday with Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Teague, 17 Maxwell Road, Glen Lennox. yNorman Cordon and Prof. Walter Golde entertained the students of Durham High School in the now assembly room Tuesday. Mr. Cordon sang ”1 Got Plenty of Nothing” among other songs. Mrs. Collier Cobb and Miss Mary Cobb have returned from their trip to Florida. They flew dowm there and then rented a car so they , could see the country. Abe Kanegson To Sing Here Sunday Night Abe Kanegson. folk singer with unusual repertoire not ordinar- ilj- he+ard in this area will present a program in Graham Memorial on Sunday night at 8 o’clock. His appearance is co-sponsored .by Graham Memorial and Hillcl's Purim Pestiv^al. The Purim Festi val stems out of the story in the Book of Esther, and has tradition ally been marked by the presenta tions of strolling players. I Al>e Kanegson has swapped songs with people from varied culture.s in different parts of the country, sometimes in unexpected places. In Marne; a -family from Lebanon taught him Arabic songs: a group of Latin-.fVmerican students at a Kansas university contributed some fine Mexican .songs. An ethnic ex pert on Yugoslavia gave him the Serbo-Croatian section of his re pertoire; a retired square dance caller in Ohio offered some songs that Ohio farmers were singing 50 and 60 years ago. In addition to folksongs of the United States, Canada. Latin Amer ica and Europe, Mr. Kanegson will present little-known and rarely heard Yiddish and Israeli folk songs. The public is invited. Ad- Folklorist as well as folk singer, * mission will be free. Theatre Revival Being Planned _ I Caldwell Book Picked For Use fh Israel A movement ll/ll,b VI uifi uiiitcfu oLuies are pro-j rt. •/uuts. cn m nisiory, written • A ^■‘Jwntry” is being I posed on the tentative outline of by University prufes.sor Wallace initiated by a group of national the plan, he said. Plays would he E. Caldwell, in collaboration with ^lea le leaders, including Samuel ^ produced simultaneously in these E. H. Merrill, has been selected for se.den, Chairman of the Universi- four area.s and then tour 10 cities ; use in school.-in the .slate of Israel i “Hellenic Conceptions' of Peace”, published in 1919, and “The .'Vn- cient World”, published in 1927. in each of the areas. “The regional pla.v-groups will I t'.ieir own producing and we ty Dramatic Art Department. Mr. Selden reports that a “40 Theatre Circuit Plan” is being | (j worked out under the guidance of the American National Theatre and Academy, on whose board of in play-production under ad- directors Selden .serves. i visors trom New Yo.k,” Selden Dramatic centers in four reg- i said. Entitled “World Hislory” and published in 1949, the book was recently translated into Hebrew hv hope tnai they will take the init- iil^ssadah Limited, an Israel pub- fishing firm. ALTRUSANS HEAR LINSKEY Professor Caldwell of the UNC History Department is the author of several other bocks, including Arthur O. Linskey, graduate stu- den. in the University’s Depart ment of Education spoke on “The University Testing Service” at a meeting of the Altrusa Club held Thursday at the Carolina Inn. FOR EAS' PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY— WEST-WILLIAMS FLOWER SHOP Phone 9-8241 A t >M1.>\AL ADVERTISING I WF.r.K . . . TERRI ARY ; 19ili Riru 25lh ILLUSTRATED Guaranteed $100 Value! 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Chapel Hill News Leader (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 23, 1956, edition 1
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