r - f i rnaay, j?epruary 19, 1965 THE DAILY TAB HEEL Part? W. P. Jacocks UNC Dies Benefactor In Windsor University benefactor Dr. Wil liam P. Jacocks died at Bertie County Hospital , in Windsor Wed nesday after a brief illness. He was 87. The 1901 UNC graduate also held degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and John Hop kins. He received the honorary . uua. degree here in 1954. Jacocks contributed funds, books and art objects to the University. His gifts were mainly divided be tween the library and Ackland Art Center. He was one of the founders of the Order of the Golden Fleece and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He was considered one of the all-time great Carolina quarter backs. . Jacocks was a world authority on nutrition. He began health work with the - state Board of Health in 1912. He joined the Rockefeller Foun dation in 1914 and as regional director in health work for the J Mey 3om! Ihere are lots of . wonderful books for little people at little prices this week at the intimate! DIADQHE An elegantly tailored engage ment and wedding ring ensem ble with a lynjf Diamond of Incomparable brilliancy ... incomparable because it is 100 Fully. Polished by a unique process. Designed for today's modern bride in lustrous 14 Karat gold. Charge or Budget. . Quality Jewelers Sine WELDOH'S JEWELERS 327 W. Main St Durham The Students' Jeweler If 8 ' 4 A ROMULUS JMCSCLAYTOM Best Actres3 Award at the Cannes Film Festival! - ffc ANNE "T-rETE Bancroft-Finch Mason -JAMES IKOI-mammlKX. CUfTOi NOW - PLAYING foundation in India and Ceylon from 1914 to 1942. After retiring in 1942 he joined the Board of Health as director of the nutrition division. ' . Funeral services will be at 2:30 p.m. today in the Episcopal Church in Windsor. Piano, Recital Violin Planned Tuesday Night Edgar Alden, violinist, and Wil liam S. Newman, pianist, will pre sent a recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Hall. The program is sponsored by the Department of Music as one of the concerts of the Tuesday Evening Series. It is open to the public. - - . Alden is. assistant conductor of the University Symphony Orches tra and is head of the string division of the Music Department. His many years of experience in string trios and quartets, the Ral eigh String Quartet, the Alden String Trio, the University String Trio and the North Carolina String Quartet. Newman is chairman of the piano division at UNC. He has also written several books, the most important being those on the history of the sonata. This year, he made a solo tour out West, appeared on the Tues day Evening Series - with Wilton Mason in a duo-piano recital and is now preparing for a spring tour of solo recitals. The program will open with one of Mozart's sonatas for piano and violin, that in A Major (K.526), which was finished during the time when "Don Giovanni" was being written. 1 ' i " ) :PSVi - : - 7 ft A i ' f ' J ' " ' ' Ft fi " - ; :-::-:-:-:-:-x-x-:-::-:.-" v" ; - SPANISH FLAVOR? Nope. The rose goes with the name, that of Madame Rosepettle, the widow in Carolina Playmakers pro duction of "Oh Dad, So Sad, Mamma's Hung you in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad." Mrs. William Hardy is cast in the role. . , . "... Gets Grotesque Role INSTANT SILENCE For information' write: Academic Aids, Box 969 Berkeley, California 94701 TODAY Jam Session -Discoteau : 2 p.m.-6 p.m. - f-- The Fabulous SIDE-KICKS Featuring Loretta BALAN LOUNGE Next to Eastgate No Beer on Sunday By JOHN WHITTY William Hardy, associate pro fessor in the Department of Radio, Television, and Motion Pictures, has been giving his wife strange looks recently. She has been cast as the gro tesque Madame Rosepettle in the Carolina Playmakers pro duction of "Oh, Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad," which opens for a seven-performance run Tuesday. In the role which was creat ed by Jo Van Fleet for the New York production, . Martha Nell Hardy must, portray the man hating Dracula of a woman who has killed her husband, had him stuffed by; a - taxidermist, and carries him; about with her in a luxurious coffin. All In Fun Except for the fact that it's all in f uni this- would be enough to give any husband pause. But playwright- Arthur ' KopitT has dressed, his weird fairy tale in the trappings of comedy. Mrs. Hardy was last seen by Playmaker; audiences as the wife of V Archibald MacLeish's modern-day Job in last season's production of "J. B." This past FROM THE LONG-RUNNING LONDON HIT PLAY! ml-. METRQ-GOLDWYN-MAYER pnaert, A LAWRENCE WDTISARTEH PRODUCTION Hi I Short, "THE PONY," National Film Board of Sanada 1:20, 3:16, 5:12, 7:08 and 9:05 RI ALTO, DURHAM DVIMIHb IIMWKIiniW WIMnill IllllUllilil )PAMAVISION V JifeS, pV lip- :H::ii::H:::::::::::::::i- ' :;:::::::::!::::::::::::HS' "::i::t:::::::::::w jjnf. "01"; -or 7 nights in a A house of terror -or w . the unkindest cut of all. summer, she and her husband, who is also an experienced ac tor, appeared for their second season with the well-known Tanglewood Theater. Mrs. Hardy presently teaches a speech course for the Evening C.nlefre Whpn "Oh Dad" onened in) New York, one reviewer had this to say: "This young play wright has discovered the recipe for theatrical success, mixing Tennessee Williams with Ed ward Albee, adding Charles Addams for flavor and blending it all with original Kopit. The result is one of the funniest plays of the season. "His screwball dialog and macabre plot nicely satirize the "sick theater" of such works as "Suddenly Last Summer." The author may also be commenting on dominating matriarchs. But whatever his intention, his play is both intriguing and riotously funny. It's a side-splitting eye ning.'-' ' - - Starts Tuesday Performances are scheduled for Tuesday through Feb, 28 at Playmakers Theater, including a Sunday matinee on Feb. 28 Tickets are available to the gen eral public, and reservations may be made by contacting the Playmakers Business Office, 214 Abernethy Hall, or at Ledbetter-Pickard. Speaker Ban Is Slapped By State YDC The North Carolina Young Democrat College Federation unanimously passed a resolution last weekend opposing the Speaker Ban Law. The resolution, introduced by UNC YDC President Bill Which ard, called the law "radically inconsistent with the General Assembly's sincere : and praise worthy financial and statutory support for the higher educa tion of the people of North Carolina." The 100 delegates to the YDC meeting in Winston-Salem as serted that the Speaker Ban "represents an explicit and un founded lack of faith in the ad ministrators and trustees of public colleges and .universities to manage those institutions with wisdom and discretion. "Our colleges and universities have a public duty to graduate fully informed citizens who can discrimnate among opposing ideas. The existence of the Speaker Ban does irreparable harm to the cause of freedom within our state." The resolution also commend ed "members of the General Assembly, the editors and citi zens of the state who have brought to public attention the serious implications and effects of the Speaker Ban Law." The Young Democrats called upon the members of the Gen eral Assembly "to join in rea soned action to return to the trustees and administrators of the state-supported colleges and universities the power to regu late visiting speakers." $63,000 Grant Goes To Doctors The National Cancer Institute has renewed a research grant un der which a medical-pharmacy team here is studying potential anticancer agents. A three-year, $63,000 grant has been made to Dr. Claude Pianta dosi, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at the School of Phar macy. The co-investigators are Dr. J. Logan Irvin, head of the Depart ment of Biochemistry at. the School of Medicine, and Dr. Shu Sing Cheng, instructor in biochemistry. SPU To March 'The Student Peace Union plans to hold a "Peace Walk" at 1:15 n.m. Saturday from Y- Court to Franklin Street and back to protest U.S. policies in Viet Nam. SPU Chairman Chip Sharpe said Wednesday the march is not associated with the Liberian student contro versy. The group also plans to picket the Post Office on Frank lin Street. The ASSOCIATES ' Typing-Mimeographing 159 E. Franklin Over Sutton's Drugs I 942-3225 j Z f CONNIE STEVENS-DEAN JONES and CESAR ROMERO Music Max Steinw SEE TE3E Ml-1 lODBfl SIPEBga 0 IIP - 65 r.l.P.11. - $307 OPEN WIM, Inc. DURHAM, N. C. 117-119 Morgan St. (Between Riggsbee and Mangum St.) Ph. 681-6116 SALES SERVICE PARTS Factory Authorized Iloada Dealer cf ': miiiioRO MUM CAROLINA Since 1759 EVENING SPECIAL $2.00 Shrimp or Oyster Cocktail CHOICE EYE-OF-RD3 STEAK Baked Idaho Potato Tossed Green Salad Bowl Serving 5:30-8:00 Baked Idaho Potato Sunday Night Supper ... A Real Treat $1.36 Full Three Course Meal $1.36 DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Grampus 4. Consume 7. Mast 8. Willingly 10. Backbone 11. Natural bent 13. Tooted, as a car horn 15. French coin 16. Son of Bela 17. Custodians 20. Foot soldier 22. Tiny 23. Ffom: prefix 24. Scold persistently 26. Loiter 28. Like 30. Shore . recess 32. Secure 35. Bunch 38. Sick 39. Black, vlsdous substance 40. Token 42. Large pulpits 45. Careens 46. Rational 47. Epochs 48. Recent 49. Cufinliig- DOWN 1. Belief 2. -and file 3. Stream of water 4. Sprite 5. Trouble 6. Plague 7. Area along ocean edge 9. Inlet of sea: Norway 10. Stone fragment 12. Trick 14. Moisture 18. Lamprey 19. Vegetable 21. Seizes 25. Gun: sL 27. Contradict 23. Official acts: Rom. 29. Bangs 31. Affirmative reply 33. Certain types of places 34. Old measures of length 36. Pert, to the city 37. Vexes clATERflClLlA!S p A L J. V E. N C E S T Rjg A MOMIO O R SlAlSiHLJO QS B S pqu alPbIliu R t L I) N'S EISaLjE'S'S V Ej A C KgCI EC HlU STIS. A PlOiR Yesterday' Answer 41. Young lady 43. Single unit 44. Fasten with stitches. 1: l! f-p 55 36 rTT qi 4h 44 W i Today's Campus Calendar AH. Campus Calendar Items must be sBbmitted in person at the DTII offices in GM by 2 p jn. the day before the desired pub lication date (by 10 aon, Sat urday for Sunday's DTII). Lost and Found notices will run on Wednesdays and Saturdays only. . TODAY Film. Committee 3 p.m.. Grail Room. "Conflicts in the Creation of a Water Policy" 4 p.m., School of Public Health, speaker will be Dr. Siegfrid Von Wantrup, visiting lecturer from Univer sity of California at Berkeley. Hillel Sabbath Services 7 p.m., speaker, Dr. Lewis Lipsitz, "Prospects for Political Ideal ism." Baptist Student Union 5:43 p.m., Dr. Clifford Reifler, "The Student's Image of Him self as a Person." Carolina Christian Fellowship 6 p.m., speaker will be Tuis hem Shishak. Budget Committee 3-5:30 p.m., GM. Publications Board 1:15 p.m., Roland Parker I, will consid er budget requests. SATURDAY j Peace Walk 1 p.m., Y Court, for all persons wishing to ex press their concern over the Viet Nam situation. BRIEFS j Applications for Paris Exchange are due Saturday. Applica- - tions can be picked up in Y Court or at GM Information Desk. Interviews will be held Tuesday and Wednesday. Military week will be held March 1 through March 5. All .midshipmen and cadets should sign up for competition as soon as possible. MOVIES Carolina The Pampkla Eater Varsity Two on the Guillotine Rialto Signpost to Murder Free Flick Destry Rides Again SALE POSITIONS OPEN 1. part time: evening hours 2. full summer employ ment also available. CAR NECESSARY for Interview: call University Motel Feb. 19. 11:00-4:20, 9CS-4U5 ask for Mr, Garska HARVARD DEAN TO TALK Dean J. Leslie Rollins of Uar vard's Graduate School of Busi-' ness Administration will talk at 2 p.m. Monday in 200 Gardner t with students interested in attend- j ing his school. Students should sign up for the meeting at 211 i Gardner. VIRGINIA TICKETS - Tickets for the Virginia .game j Tuesday are now being distribut ed to all; students, and faculty j members. Monday at 8:30 a.m. the Duke tickets will be made available to all students and faculty members whose last names begin with N-Z. T. L Kemp Jewelry mum BAY SPECIAL NUINIBER OF NAME BRAND WATCHES (We Cannot Publish Name) 38V3 Otrfr if If Men's And Women's LIMITED NUMBER T. L KEMP 'Jewelry 135 E. Franklin 942-1331 IE ROOM OPEN Sundays 4:00-12:00 Mon.-Fri. 7:00-12:00 Friday High! Special Fried Fillet of Haddock, Shrimp, Scallop, Oyster, Deviled Grab, Cole Slav, Tarter Sauce, Lemon Wedge, Hush Puppies, French Fries, EMIs and Butter. o 9 ANOTHER PINE ROOM SPECIAL II ifoi! need lo era OiIm flni) nHlilFF l LI iHl M yililliillL x!fy RUB;:.: Y) 1 ' A I Of -w I 'J 8 Eaua! Opportunity I t0' Employer I rememtier Oils iniervlev. dais Good Humor world's largest I Ice cream specialties manufacturer' wD! hold on-campus Interviews cn this date. REGISTER NOW! Your Summer Placement Director or Student Aid Officer will set up an interview schedule for you. If you're selected your job is reserved until school closes. , And you may start work as early as April 1st EARNINGS ARE BIG WITH GOOD HUMOR Of the students working six or more weeks last Summer . 2 out of 3 earned $110 cr more a week 1 out of 2 earned $118 or more a week 1 cut of 4 earned $133 or more a week HOW TO QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW 1. Minimum age, 18 2, Have a valid drhefs license In State you'll be working, and be able to drive a "stick transmission 3. Pass a physical examination. I

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