Page Two THE TAPw HEEL Thursday. July 22. 1954 t)e Car Iecl The official publication of the summer school of the Univer sity of North Carolina, it is published by the students every Thursday during the summer sessions and is printed by the Orange Printshop of Chapel Hill. Editor Daniel Wallace Assistant Editor Franklin P. Jones Features and News Ellen Brauer Brame Represents University In Nationwide Art Exhibition Thomas Brame, III, UNC grad uate and native of Sanford, is one of 12 painters and 3 sculptors from 15 professional art schools and universi ties across the country whose works p fecial summer exhi comprise the tion at the Addison Gallery of Ameri can Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. B ante's paintings represent the Ai;t Department of the University of North Carolina at this national ex hibit which will remain open until Sept. 27. Each institution was invit ed by the Addison Gallery to nominate one former student to represent it. Each artist contributed from five to seven works which were selected to represent both school experience and later performance in order to contrast the influence of training with independent experiment following graduation. Besides revealing how some of the ounger American attists are meet r.'z the chtd'enire of today, the tx :ib:t trace- them back to their pro visional beginnings. Bi ame, i A.B. i wno graduate IL'.j.'J with A continuing studies in Ait History and is pa mg tne summer, li posters arid painted theatre in Princeton years, and has worked New York City durir months of 1154. ting dur- i nas ::es;g!.e'i j y for a he past two! nd painted in j the first six ' jk - . - ' 'St : v.,v ff?.-r-' '.V "" I' " ' r-S.'t. V s-.-'- jt--: .- s . v-"" - . "i ' - f "V- - ? rH . ,v ... . 1 I ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' ' His work has been exhibited in Person Ha!!, at the North Carolina Federation of Women's Clubs Annual at Asheville, and at the 11th Re gional Exhibit of Virginia Intermont College at Bristol. The University of North Carolina was represented in the Addi-on Art Schools U.S.A. in 1:50 with work bv several entrants. COME IN YOUR SPORT SHIRT Informal dr-ss keyn servic es in Forest Theau r being cond ,;.'tet i'Vr, y Sunday by the Community Church. Dr. .John II. .Mari u., Jr., of B hurri-p f,f f., oTd -I'-sion servi' -: during tne an.-er.se ' 'ha:-. ! tin M. Jones, who i-t taking a well-earned .'aiuu CAROLINA CAPSULES NATIVE TAR HEELS The three leading candidates for the quarterback position on the Uni versity of North Carolina football team this fall were North Carolinians, j They are Albert Long of Durham, Marshall Newman of Clinton, and Teedie Bullock of Avden. College Queen Contest Open For Entries Carolina coeds who are between the j ages of 18 and 25, single or married, j attending summer school or have at tended tne i Joi-o-i term are now eligible to enter the North Carolina ;ld Daphne Du Maimer's No el Surpasses "Forever Amber be NO RESTRICTIONS College Queen contest to ! August 2u-27 in Drexel. Trie contest is sponsored by the Drexel Community Fair, and the girl selected as North Carolina College Queen will go to Asbury Park, N. J. to compete in the National College Queen contest on September 10-12. Football tickets for University of j The winner of the national contest North Carolina football games this ! will receive 85,000 in prizes, fall are now on sale to the general! Transportation to and from Asbury public with no restrictions. i Park will be furnished by the Drexel : Community Fair, and while there the TWENTY-ONE LETTERMEN Xorth Carolina College Queen will When the University of North be the guest of the city Park. Asbur Carolina football team renorts for pre-season practice Sept. 1, 21 letter-1 Contest entries will be judged on, men are expected to be on hand. The j the basis of representing the typical j only letterman vacancy is at f ull- AnK'"can b-v her Physical dnnen- j j!)acj.: " ! sions and a 250-word essay on '"What j 1 College Education Means to Me." i r.nr.r. . ..rn Any glid desiring to enter this The annual golf tournament for football coaches, sports writers and press photographers, with the Uni versity of North Carolina host, will be held this year on Thursday, Aug. IP, on Finley course here. FIRST AND LAST The University of North Carolina football team this fall will open and close the season with games at home. The opener is with N. C. State on Sept. 25 and the season ends with the Duke game on Nov. 27. contest can get complete information by writing -to Miss Norma Shufcrd, Contest Director, North Carolina Col lege Queen Contest, Drexel, N. C. Deadline for entries is August 10. A sample of the official entry blank is posted on the bulletin board of the Graham Memorial Student Union. ON FIRST TEAM Eight of the eleven players on the tentative University of North Caro lina starting football team are native Tar Heels. An all-native backfield may open the season. By John Beshara Resounding chuckles heralded the publication of Kathleen Wirnsor's Foff rt,- Atiibi r but Daphne Du Mau rier's new novel, Mary A)n', (Double day, Sol pages, So. 50) should cause a double wallop, because just about twice as much dirt has been packed between a similar number of pages. Whereas Amber sold herself to achieve position, Mary Anne adds to that ancient art a sizable supplement by peddling commissions in the Army. The same old '"business" of a royal "protector," a discarded husband or so, other men in considerable quan- i tities, and almost documentar y reports ' on who was sleeping with whom ' among the minor characters, all con- ! tribute to what seems a reworking of ; Amber's story, all set to be served, not ' at the family reading circle, but in the privacy of a pink-lit boudoir or; a dorm room. Marv Anne's ascent ur the social ; ladder to the bedroom of a prince ! is an engrossing enough story, if you : can see the story for the lubricity. ; Certainly some passages are rather , interesting as writing, possibly even as literature; the reading of the : Duke of York's love letters before ' six hundred tittering members of ; Parliament, and the bourgeois re spectability of Mary Anne en famille ', drinking vintage champagne and royal-preserve venison do manage to arouse genuine laughter. Pool Tables at GM Giaham Mmr la! Uni"H ha.- annoiji..-! J i hut ! room will . -i. to s--i ,d summer' -tudi-nt- from through Saturdav. In ;: p;sa p, r Bi'i dm ii J v a ii s W xl & Sa .': r-J in tlie congenial al mosphere of th- Intimate Bookshop Open 10 A.M. -9 P.M. M on ci a y Sat u r J a y Oil I M 5 cl i s c-1- o

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