Whaf s Up TODAY Hillel will hold Sabbath Serv ices at 9:30 a.m. SUNDAY The Wesley Foundation Con gregation will meet for luncheon and discussion fol lowing the service of wor- , ship. Call 942-2152 for reser vations. A Service of Worship at 11 a.m. at the Wesley Founda tion delivered by the Rev. Banks 0. Godfrey, Jr., speaking on "Holy Com munion, The Self, and The Body." The Newman Apostolate will meet at 7 p.m. in St. Thom as More Church Hall. Fa ther William Shun, S. J., will speak on "Situation Ethics." "Do we belong in Viet Nam?"; a faculty debate in the Con temporary Issues Series be tween Dr. Lewis Lipsitz and Dr. John Dawson of UNC Political Science Depart ment at the Westminster Fellowship at 6:30 p.m. Sup per for those wishing to at tend at 6 p.m. instead of the usual Hillel Choose From Lambs Wool And Alpaca V-Necks And Cardigans In Solid, And Heather Mixture Colorings. Priced From $15.95 Clothiers of Distinction FRANKLIN STREET ) SJJEalA. While he was writing it, John Barth described his new novel, Giles Goat-Boy as "a longish story about a young man who is raised as a goat, later learns he's human and commits himself to the heroic project of discovering the secret of things." When Giles Goat-Boy was published last month, the critics displayed none of Barth's restraint. Giles Goat-Boy has become one of the most celebrated liter ary events of the new publishing season, and John Barth has been variously described as : "the most prodigally gifted comic novelist writing in English today . . . Who else but Barth would dare create a hero who was sired by a computer out of a virgin ? . . . "No summary, no excerpting can possibly convey the fantastic richness of the novel, its profligate bounty. Barth could have cut it by a third (though one would hate to see a line of it go) and made the reputation of a dozen novelists by distributing the pieces among them." . , Newsweek Magazine "clearly a genius . "What is one to do about John Barth? Is he as so many people interested in original, funny, creative, and brilliant writing agree he is - the most original, funny, creative, and brilliant writer working in the English language today? Or merely, as these same people hasten to add, the most impertinent and long winded ? Is Giles Goat-Boy the great American novel, come at last into being, or just a long, though expert, shaggy-goat story ? And if so or indeed, if not so, or both whose beard is being pulled? Mr. Barth is clearly a genius ... but what does that mean? Intoxicated by Giles Goat-Boy, I would suggest it ap plies to someone who by force of will and wild connections in the mind, intoxicates .. . "What is one to do about John Barth? Well, first of all, partake eat, quaff, enjoy. Whatever the doubts and recriminations, they will keep till morning; I'm not sure they matter in the slightest " ELIOT fremont-smith, New York Times "like Mephistopheles or perhaps Batman. "(Giles Goat-Boy is) a gothic fun-house fantasy of theology, sociology, and sex, leaping across great tracts of human history . . . Prodigious . . . Reading Giles Goat-Boy, and debating its meaning will be one of the most bracing literary exercises of 1966 and beyond. It is a satire of major import."-rtwie Magazine "a rarity among American novelists in having a bril. liant mind ... a mind that invents ideas only to flout them . "With this fourth novel, John Barth at 36 increases the likeli hood that the years since World War II are among the most rewarding m the history of American fiction."-RicHARD poirier, Washington Post Book Week "the best writer of fiction tee have at present and one of the best we have ever had ... "His audience must be that same audience whose capacities have been extended and prepared by J oyce, Proust, Mann and Faulkner. "For some time we have been wondering what to do with the training given us by those giants of modern fiction . . . The answer now seems clear. The difference between competence and genius ;an hardly be made clearer. And Barth is a comic genius of the highest order." -Robert scholes , front page New York Times Book Review GILES GOAT-BOY is published by Doubleday & Company. Inc.. Garden City. New York, which usually devotes this col umn to Anchor Books, but felt that plugging this partu-.Jar hard-cover novel was irresistible. GILES GOAT-BOY is $6.95 at one of the best-equipped booksellers in the country your college store. At Carolina Sunday Supper Social there will be an inter-Hillel Mix er and picnic at Piney Lake in Greensboro from 2:30 -4:30 p.m. If you need a ride or have a car please meet at Hillel at 1 p.m. The Carolina Political Union will meet promptly at 7 p.m. in the Grail Room. All members are urged to at tend fqr the consideration of some constitutional amend ments and other important business. Rides for Sunday services at Church are available at Y Court, the BSU Center, Chase Cafeteria and Nurse's Dorm at 9:30 for Church School and at 10:45 for Morning Worship. Evening Supper-Seminar rides are Available at 5:45 p.m. If. you miss your ride call the church office, 942-4964. The Cosmopolitan Club will have a dinner - picnic in the Forest Theatre at 5:30 p.m. Dinners will be 50c per person. University Party will meet in Howell Hall Auditorium (room 104) at 7:30 p.m. A showing of the film "Cry, The Beloved Country," based on . Alan Paton's nov el, will be held at the Wes ley Foundation at 4 p.m. The film was made on lo cation in South Africa, and is concerned with the inner and outer tensions of poli tics and faith. Interviews for the University Party legislative vacancies will be held in Roland Par ker III, GM, at 5 p.m. A seat is vacant in the Alder men - Mclver - Kenan dis trict and th? sorority dis tricts. The UP Executive Committee will meet in Roland Parker III at 5 p.m. for Legislative interviews and an import ant business meeting im mediately following. Obser- Q. What was Carolina's greatest single afternoon in compiling football yardage? A. In 1959 Carolina' Over whelmed Virginia by a score of 41-0. The Tar Heels rolled up 32 first downs to Virginia's nine and amassed 583 yards from scrimmage for a new Carolina and ACC record. Infill Hi' If tfi i'-Hj vers are welcome at t h e business meeting. LOST One pair woman's black-rimmed glasses cases. Lost somewhere on campus or up town. Please contact Nancy Berger, Granville Towers East, 929-2992. Playmakers season ticKei (student) number 1155 down town. Call John Peeler, 933-. 1137. Reward. Brown woman's wallet be tween Bell Tower Lot and Hanes. Contact Eve Camp bell, 968-0801. Black key case in lower quad. Please return to 319 Graham Dorm. , . Antique Cameo lost after tne State game near Parker, Teague, Avery. Reward. Totty Spencer, 402 Winston. Taken from dorm ten speed English racing bike, purple. "Nantucket cycle shop" sticker on the frame. Please return to Jim Og burn, 3 Old West, 968-9164. UNC key chain with four keys. Lost between South Build ing and Morrison Dorm. Jay Hawkins. 929-3177. FOUND A ring on Finley Golf Course. Owner call and identify. Robert Roskind, 929-5586. Legislature Continued From Page 1 actions" before he voted for the bill. y The only debate against the resolution came from Ed Wil son, UP floor leader. "There are many issues in volved in this which havn't come to light," Wilson said. "We are not representative enough to make a decision. This is a good piece of legisla tion but I don't like its being crammed down our throats," Wilson added. He called for a campus re ferendum on the resolution, but Dietz told the Legislators there was not time to conduct a referendum before Wednes day and not over 30 per-cent of students have voted in them in the past. ' The seven legislators who voted against the bill were Wilson, Hank Hankins, Rick Miller, Larry Richter, Artie Robinson, Bob Sheppard and Randy Worth. Julie Jones ab stained. All are UP; Richter, speaking after the resolution passed, said, "It is high time we left the defense of Communist speakers to those Greensboro attorneys who are inclined to defend them, and turn to the business that is our proper and respon sible area of concern." 12 Freshmen Selected As Cheerleaders Six freshmen girls and six freshmen boys have been chosen to form the freshman cheerleading squad: v They are. Cindy Kane, Rik ki Syndbeck, Evelyn Weid mann. Debbie Patterson. Car rol Skinner, Alice Caldwell, Freddy Cline. Dennis Lester, Charlie Brickhouse, Bob Pon der, Frank Weed, and Tom my Nasekos. f J Hold that crease? You bet it will. ' JybJ I I f the fabric is one of the great, i ipj V 1 new permanent-press blends g , J I of 2-ply polyester and cotton iCt t- masterminded by Galey & Lord. I For the new dimension Htm0jWr I I in collegiate slacks, $V2U Caught Again g it .. .... . . . L ............. , r SL Receives 23 Twenty three bills and res olutions, including the Cam pus Drug Congrol Act, were in troduced at Thursday's ses sion of Student Legislature. The Drug act would make it an offense against the stu dent body to sell, solicit oth ers to sell, or to administer drugs which , could not . be, ob tained without a prescription. It was introduced bv SP Floor Leader Steve Hockfield. Other bills introduced would: PROVIDE $300 to reimburse faculty members for conduct ing informal discussions in their homes introduced by Ann Brownlee (SP). ESTABLISH A committee to study the possibility of a south crmpus lobby - library in Chase introduced by Chase Saunders and Charlie Mercer (UP). REFORM ELECTION laws and redistrict the legislature introduced by Myles East wood (SP). Some resolutions introduced called for: SUPPORT OF reformed wo men's rules introduced by Pam Nielson and Julie Jones (UP). THE POSTPONEMENT of the end of Christmas holidays by one day introduced by Myles Eastwood (SP), George Isherwood (UP) and Noel Dunivant (UP). IMPROVEMENT OF the natural environment of the New Mills Upper Quad by planting grass introduced by Tim McKeith an (UP). STUDY OF THE feasibility of laundry rooms in men's res idence halls introduced by Jed Dietz (SP). THE NSA coordinator to conduct a program of student information of,, drugs ,-r-, intro duced by David Kiel (UP). AN INVESTIGATION of acoustics in old residence halls introduced Steve Hope (SP). BRICK OR hard - surfaced walks at several places on campus one introduced by Hank Hankins (UP); another by Randv Worth (UP). THE FINANCE committee to investigate fees of students not in residence halls and the benefits received from such fees in comparison to bene fits received by students in residence halls introduced by Hank Hankins (UP). : All 23 bills and resolutions were sent to one of the four standing committees. Q. What unpleasant record did the Tar Heels set in 1915? A. Seven regulars were side lined by injuries in the VMI game that year. The substi tutes found the ball squirting about like soap in a shower. A total of 16 fumbles were re corded, only two recovered. Yet Carolina managed a 3-3 . tie. FeesFir Bo wu Sowbi By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer Demand for parking spaces in Chapel Hill and a continu ing loss of money forced the local merchants this year to sub-lease their parking lot to the city. City Manager Robert H. Peck said Friday that the lot on the corner of Columbia and Rosemary streets had been ta ken over by the city because of a request made last year by the Merchants Parking As sociation. Last year the lot offered two hour free parking for custo mers of some 20 downtown firms. This year the lot under the management of the city charges 10 cents per hour. The other city lot which is located in the middle of the same block of Rosemary also charges 10 cents per hour. This is double the five cents per hour which was charged for parking in the same lot last year. The hours that the meters must be fed has also been ex tended from 6 p.m. to mid night. Peck said, "We have had tc double the meter fee and ex tend the hours until midnight to help defray some of the ex penses involved in the con struction of the lots." Bonds which were issued two years ago for the first lot and those issued last year for the nearly completed adjoining lot will not be paid off for 30 years. More than $130,000 was required to finance the build ing of the lots, Peck said. Even though the pric of i parking in the downtown lots has increased greatly since last year, spaces are still dif ficult to find. Peck hopes the new lot will continue to relieve some of the parking problem. Private lots located down town near campus are near ly full due partially to the commuting students' renting Roberts has the straight story! All across America, it's handsewn loafers and this rogue of a brogue Roberts knows what goes! That's why these classics are college classics . . . and are going to stay that way. The hand- sewn-vamp Trujuns, $15-$18; the long- wing brogue, $16-$25. jfV THE COUNTRY COBBLER 518 S. Main St Burlington, N. C. Are places rather than walking from the Ram's Head lot. Students who have most of their classes near town even find the downtown lots more convenient than the Bell Tow er lot. Orville Freeman To Speak Scretary of Aericulturo Or ville Freeman will make i ma jor address on the World food crisis at Memoral Hall next Thursday night at 7:30. The address is being spon sored by the UNC Young De mocrats Club in conjunction with the Orange County YDC. Freeman will spend Thurs day campaigning in the Fourth Congressional District in behalf of Rep. Harold Cqol ey. Former Gov. Luther Hodges, who served in the cabinet with Freeman, will introduce the Agriculture Secretary. Freeman's speech will deal with the Food for Peace pro gram which was passed by Congress earlier this year, and proposed by Cooley. The program calls for put ting 50 million acres of fer tile farm land back into pro duction. The harvest from this will be sent to needy nations around the world. Earlier in the day, Cooley and Freeman will appear at the meeting in Raleigh of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service. HUGH AUSTIN MENS STORE 237 Market St. Smith field, N. C. 51 M LUW INTERNATIONAL SHOE COMPANY, ST. Mike Peck said the parking situ ation is crowded, but that Cha pel Hill is still charging consi derably less in its lots than are Durham and Raleigh. The Vested Blue Suit With A Tradition Pare navy wonted Is the traditional rait for contem porary Hvinf. It's the Tnultl-nnriuiM basic snit that Is lndispensl- ie ana appropriate day or night - for business or so cial activities. From $75 Hars?tgj Clothiers of Distinction I Franklin Street JV-.tf Ma' St. u. - am Hj9h Point, N. C. LOUIS w Li I

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view