September 16, 1966 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page IWI Tube Season A DTH Review 5 &?-'frWsrf'S ''"W'- PWW IIJ,,I,I"WM f - : ... 1 t : 1 Omens This Fall Those students who. haven't been too tied up with orienta tion week and the start of clas ses to watch television know that the video season for next year is varied, but, alas, dull. . Every year about this time the networks present for public inspection the vMeo fare for the coming year. The: technical machinery is in high gear, of course, and the screams you hear are those of producers who must share the series of production crews. .Just about everything, including commercials, has gone -into color, woefully over taxing the color - processing laboratories. NEW SHOWS FOR TUBE FANS For the benefit of Carolina students who indulge in that, the least strenuous and cheap est entertainment on the face of the earth, television view ing, the Daily Tar Heel will publish a regular schedule of shows over local stations that especially merit your time and efforts. Because of space limitations, a daily and com plete schedule of programs is not possible. Watch for "Shows Not To Miss" regularly in the DTH. though they really never left us. ABC leads with three new ones: "The Iron Horse," The Monroes" and "Shane." New Quarterly Promises A Lively Literary Season BATMAN'S FRIEND ABC's "Treen Hornett may not be a full relative of "Bat man, but our hero parks his super - car behind a billDoard Meanwhile, among the 90 re gular .programs on the even ing schedule, there are 34 new shows.. Everybody has his can didates for glory and sudden oblivion. NBC's "The Monkees," a co- 3 1 a. l l m . t meay aDoui a Duncn oi tock 'n' r V L roll singers, was receiving con- Jhat sPhtf? wen he shes out j-i.y All- to save the dav. siaerauie auenuon wnen inter- Arn ur TT i views -with the stars - to - be Jf1 ?en 1Hfornet " ? were .halted. It seems t h e .AiS SSL h& youngsters were acting bored hut0 1JS?l,pf kf about.confrontations with vis- 1 l iting television writers. tL TnlV.-nrPictc Wpvpr tfcnt iua uu wi sums ueiiiug-uw in its concept, the series has tried! to capture some of the qualities of the Beatle movie, "A Hard Day's Night," which would jbe nice if true. "ROUNDERS" "The Rounders," an ABC entry, ;is a contemporary cow poke comedy which its public ists: term "lusty." But it is doubtful whether any early -evening television programs, including "The Rounders," could '.really be described as lusty. ; Anything broadcast be fore 9 p.m. must be fit for ten der tyoung eyes and ears. RUNNING MAN "Ilui, Buddy, Run," anoth- pr Crs fintrv. seems to be a O In the same category is NBC's sibling of "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.," called "The Girl From U.N.C.L.E." NBC is so fond of initials it has added another show called "T.H.E. Cat." SCIENCE FICTION And add a couple of science fiction entries NBC's "Star Trek" and ABC's "Time Tun nel." They will go down nicely with the crowd that loves ""Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea" and "Lost in Space." No one seems to know much about "The Tammy Grimes Show" on ABC except that the star will play a slight ly "Auntie Mame" character, too. NBC's "Tarzan" promis- INDIAN SUMMER The identical twins above are not re ally redskins ... but they are red heads. Margaret and Katherine Howell from Rochester, N. Y. are among a group of UNC students who spent their summer in the cast of the outdoor drama "Unto These Hills" in Cherokee. The 19-year-old sophomore coeds are both majoring in dramatic arts at the University. The part in the drama was to dance in a chorus of Indian girls. The long scalp of hair they are examining is part of their costume. Photo by Barber, Hendersonville Is The Draft Fair To Students? By DANIEL W. PATTERSON Editors Note: Daniel Patter son, who reviews the new Ca rolina Quarterly, is a professor in the Department of English and a winner of the Tanner Award for excellence in teach ing. With a chilling cover design, a nimpressive roster of con tributors, and the Wolfe Me morial Writing Award story, ths Fall Issue of the Carolina Quarterly opens the literary season which promises to be lively. At least three other journals (B. B. C, Prologue, and Lille bulero) will be active on cam pus, and a new flock of writ ers has arrived in the Septem . ber migration. The Depart ment of Radio, Television and Motion Pictures has retrieved Ralph Dennis from Harvard. The English Department gains two poets, Christopher Brook house and Ronald Moran, and regains Max Steele, the 1966 1967 Writer - in - Residence. Two of these writers, Brook house and Steele, contributed to the new issue of the Quar terly. The' other contributors are Lamonx Prize winner X. J. Kennejdy, last year's Caro lina Writer - in - Residence NEW YORK ( AP) An As sociated Press survey of young Americans disclosed a fairly , general feeling that the Selec tive Service System is discri minatory and unfair. On the question of whether a draft offering nonmilitary al ternative assignments would prove practical, replies were less conclusive. Most of the high school and improvements in Selective Ser- while several miles away there vice. Addressing a group of may be another draft board students who have been work- with a surplus of draf table men ing for the government during who are neither married nor their summer vacations, the in school." President asked: Daniel Reiher, 19, Detroit, a "Does the present system student at Highland Park Col have flaws or inequities which lege, thought that, "Men who should be corrected?" prefer not serving in the mili- "Can we make the draft fair-, tary because ot religious oeiiei rv i er and more effective?" "Can we, without harming college students questioned in national security, establish a the rnast - to - coast sampling practical system of nonmilita- fotind fault with the present lo- ry alternatives to the tirartr ti Wi-MJ J f " - . . . uarlav on the spoof that won es to be amusing even if there ViioVi rn.infrt! last season tor NBC's "Get Smart." This time the hero is a spoof on "the running man" theme a fellow , fleeing murder - mind ed gangsters. Another along the Same lines is NBC's "The is no Jane and the great apes have shrunk to more docile chimps. Milton Berle, at this writing, had not taped his first variety show for ABC. Two se ries, "Rat Patrol" and "The Man Who Was," are being shot abroad and unbiased word cal Selective Service board quota system. The imposition of area quotas, they con tended, results m the drafting of youths in some localities who would be deferred if they "lived elsewhere. IMPROVEMENTS TYPICAL ANSWER should be drafted as medics, office workers and other non combatant duties." ' N. C. YOUTH Donald Tilman 1 Ilamrick, Winston - Salem, N. C, a Uni- VH Leon Rooke, Wolfe Award Winner Myles Ludwig, N. C. novelist Fred Chappell, 0. B. Hardison of the English De partment, two UNC-G writers, Jim Applewhite and William P. Root, and an interloper from San Francisco, Robert Peter son. Following a tradition of some standing, most of the wri ters are professionals. Only Myles Ludwig is a UNC stu dent. The issue is distinctly super ior to the usual student pub lication and a high competence is maintained throughout. I feel the highlights of the verse are X. J. KenneYfy's " satirical Class Reunion" and O. B. f Hardison's "Great 0 Antiphons for Eastern Airlines," which exhibits again his skill at blen ding sense with surface. "Snowy Egrets Melt in Sum mer," Myles Lud wig's award story, is deceptive. The open ; ing builds apprehension of a local color story, complete with dialect and customs. But it un folds into, an entertaining pre sentation of character, and show real talent in the process. GOLD AND STERLING UNC PINS CHARMS LAYALIERS The stories of Rooke and Chapell depend on shock for their effectiveness, and both are too brief to strike deep Chapell's, in fact, is part of a new novel. The best of the stories, and a very good one, is Max Steele's "Fiction, Fact, and Dream." It creates a thick sense of family life and char acter, while exploring the in terweavings of an author's factual, dream, and imagina tive worlds. The editor, Michael Paull, is to be congratulated upon his first issue. The spattering of typographical slips does not de tract from the quality of his magazine. And what a pleas ure to read from one cover to the other without bogging down in a single manifesto, dull exegesis, or critical puff. A comment typical of t h e versity bf North Carolina jun- views turned up in The Asso- icr, disueea. dated Press survey came from "I don't think we can sud-. Greg Weymann, 18, Pensacola, denly switch and become a Fla.. a sophomore at Tulane Switzerland," he said. "Our TECHNICOLOR A UNIVERSAL PICTURE- University. "The practice of a quote wPQtPrnq are having one of about their progress is slow in 1 f ' . . TT 11 1 their Periodic revivals ai- arriving in tioiiywoou The survev was prompted by for specified regions is a de President Johnson's caUThurs- finite flaw," said Weymann. 'Married men or couege men may be drafted in one area involvement in the world re quires an Army and a Navy and an Air Force. The mili tary way is the only answer as far p as national , . security, goes.'' ' 1:40, 3:30, 5:20, 7:10, 9:00 Have You Entered "Pad" Contest? RIALTO of Durham FROM $2.00 135 E. Franklin St. "Home of the Old Well Charm" WANTED -JOBS JOBS JOBS. Waitresses, bus boys, delivery - boys, Jd&hwasher, partime, full-time, Hours be tween 5-12. La Pizza 967-1451. WANTED by RECORD CLUB OF AMERICA, Campus rep resentative to earn over $100 in short time. VW '62, Runs well, looks fair. Also, Suzuki M 31 (55 cc, step-through frame) 1700 mi., like new. Call Beardsley, 159 Phillips or 942-1590. DORM ROOM FOR RENT. LARGE two man room near campus for person not having previously paid for room rent. Call Max Jones at 963-9180 after 10:00. ri 1 - on . i miiiii ii wTmrnTM mrr-n n n rmr T rmm wnimr i t I IX V III 1IIIlieiLUil . XU1 bllXs ... W r--- . , . . . iminmr ll II I II . iminiMWlTI I llll IIIIIIIMI III III lllllll IMIIIIII 1 J aM.aHaEsaMaT nnmim ir ii.imii i o ; . , , wmmm- - - mrwwmmmwmmmmmmmwmmmm.. mm. .ith nf America to surest may De araitea m uc u - . , ,v ; t , ,, ,,, (And You Too, Prof) i Without You WeVeHad Less Reason For Bdng Here. But Here YOU Are And i eU To Sound The Beginning Of Round One. ' . .i ti. AJlaWft For You - When You i The University Again Has Charged Us With The Kesponsimmy w--"h There Are More Of VantThem-All Of The Books And Tools Necessary To The Educational Process. And, B Gosh, 1 here Are You Gals And Guys Than Ever Before. v ! On The Other Hand, The FaciUties With Which We Mf Work Axe KSK ( Years A20. Oft' Times We Become So Absorbed In The Tasks Ol bhelvmg, unsne v g SolhowTheWarmU. , I But Mark You-And Mark You WeU-We Have NO GREATER DESIRE Than lo That WiU Make Your College Life Easier And More Enjoyable. l You NeedABookThat Mi On The SJieW, 4sk Us To Order It For You. h fYou1$eedA3ob,SeeUsh VOU DO NOT NEED AN APPOINT- W -HYouHaveAnySuggestionsAsToHow mENT TO TALK TO OUR MANAGER. We Hope You Made A's On Everything! n n fF5 BOOKETERIA A!MD THE EXCHANGE Your Scholarship Trust-Fund Stores s r 4 ! I .1 f ! i 1 1 : , - iru

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