t 1 i THE DAILY TAR HEEL Sunday, October9;1966 Page 6 -r- '-- tme" Whan You M Keep Alert When you can't afford to be drowsy, inattentive, or anything less than all there. . . here's how to stay on top. VEfiV Continuous Action Alertness Capsules deliver the awakeness of two cups of coffee, stretched out up to six hours. Safe and non-habit-forming. Continuous Action Alertness Capsules LYLE A TALBOT IN NEIL SIMONS I mKmss I I MM 1 IT J It foXDD)W V (V The Author f "jaWWTWW Directed by DANNY SIMON Scenery by U'fhtinobv Costume by OliVER SMITH JEN ROSENTHAL. ANN ROTH Ordinal Production Directed by MIKE NlCttOlS PAGE AUDITORIUM DUKE UNIVERSITY Monday, Oct. 10, At 8:15 P.M. Reserved Seats, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50 AT PAGE BOX OFFICE, OR CALL 684-4059, OR WRITE BOX KM, DUKE STATION, DURHAM, N. C. PRESENTED BY DUKE STUDENT UNION HALF PRICE TO STUDENTS (In Groups of 10 or more. Faculty included if attending with students.) "A National Theatre U. S. stvlel ANTA presents the National Repertory Theatre ( ' 'ill MM! 3""ir.. .r.1......1 , , I II , i- - , PLAYING SCHEDULE: EVENINGS AT 8:30 Mon., Oct. 17 Tues., Oct. 18 Wed., Oct. 19 Thurs., Oct. 20 Fri., Oct. 21 Sat., Oct. 22 TONIGHT POET TONIGHT POET TONIGHT POET Student Prices (all perfs.) Orch. $2.50, 2.00; N.C. 27412. For information phone: 272-5615 in Greensboro. rnsDoro- 6 performances only. Evenings at 8:30 Aycock Auditorium, Greensboro, Oct. 17-22 CTTZIP 1 0 dM3 Honettlv! DATS is the only tetonw- mat COfflDUter-datina Mrvir.a in "tha world and miirhM r. . w . . hosts and auidaa and iriiiiiy VVIH' panions-in most major European cities. Of course. DATA-CATS matrk v.j.... too. And Chicagoens. And around a lot, DATA-CATS in every major city-and on States and Canada. DATA-DATE offers six unique programs fltared to specific age and interest groups; the finest ques- y owimo; m Is i ! fc i m ft i M a i F-wepw or bi wan irve compatible persons: MU ""wnmiy nvwwener announcing DATA- reports or resuvais and attractions aoroaa. Sample Please send me without questionnaire. Name- Address- City Zip - College DATA-DATE, P.O. BOX 526 MADISON SQ. STATION, NEW YORK 10010 Campus TODAY The Wesley Foundation will have a luncheon and meet ing after the 11 a.m. serv ice at the Wesley Founda tion. Please call 942-2152 to make a reservation for the luncheon. Ths Hillel Foundation will hold a Sunday Supper So cial at 5:30 p.m. Make res ervations by calling 942-4057 between 3 and 5 p.m. Sun day. , The Ridgeland Singers will sing at 9:30 p.m. in the Gallery Coffee Shop of the Wesley Foundation. National Merit Scholarship Committee will meet at 5 p.m. in the upstairs room of Lenoir Hall. All members must be present. The University Party Execu tive Committee will meet in Roland Parker III at 6:30 p.m. This is an extremely important meeting. Observ ers welcome. HARVEY STONE Comedy Wit NOEL COWARD'S TONIGHT AT 8:30 Three plays of love and laughter directed for NRT by Jack Sydow, G. Wood and Nina Foch. "Ways and Means" is a sparkling tale of professional house guests on the Riviera. "Still Life" is the fragile love story filmed as "Brief Encounter." "Fumed Oak" tells a hilarious tale of a henpecked husband who flies the coop. EUGENE O'NEILL'S ATOUCHOFTHEPOET The first national tour of a great American play. In New York, the critics wrote: "Once more, O'Neill gives . stature to the theatre" Daily News. "Drama on a big scale" Times. "Here is a play to cherish, to see again and again" Daily Mirror. "Drama of enormous power, insight, and sheer emotional impact" Post. Mea. $2.50; Bale. $2.00, 1.50, 1.00 DATA - trIUr ui. w ..MWItVIV OT.lll tum trauaii;nM - Californians. If you get can arcano data for you any campua-to the United otograpnical sketches and .... . yrmii no arU CVBHIS 9XQ programs are fYnYt Cm available on request. obligation the Data-Date -State- - ; . Calendar Rides to services at Binkley Memorial Baptist Church are available at Y-Court, BSU Center, Chase Cafe teria, and Nurse's Dorm 15 minutes prior to eafh serv ice or by calling the church office at 942-4964. Church school 9:45; Morning Wor ship 11; Supper-Seminar 545 The Ridgeland Singers folk music group and Forrest Reed's poetry reading group will perform at the Gallery Coffee Shop, 214 Pittsboro St. beginning at 9 p.m. ad joining the art exhibit fea turing Chagall's prints. The campus religious groups Film Forum will sponsor a discussion of Fellini's "The Nights of Caberia" follow ing the 7 p.m. showing in Carroll Hall. Dr. Charles Wright of the English De partment will lead the dis cussion in room 200 of Car roll HaD. Coffee will be served. . Cosmopolitan Club Reception for members, foreign stu dents and host families in GM at 4 p.m. MONDAY The UNC Gleemen invite all men interested in singing, especially tenors, to join their group. It is worth an hour's credit: Plans include in- and out-of-state pro grams including several tours to women's colleges. Rehearsals are Monday, 4-5 p.m. and Wednesday, 5-6 p.m. in Hill Hall. Interviews for the GM Music Committee will be held Monday, Tuesday and Wed nesday afternoons. Inter views Monday will be at 4 5:30 p.m. Sign up for the interviews at GM Informa tion Desk., Campus Briefs Foreign Service Olcott Hawthorn Deming, who has just finished an as signment as United States Ambassador to Uganda, will be in Swain Hall Monday after noon to interview students and to discuss job opportunities in the Foreign Service. He will be in Room 01 Swain Hall from 3:15 to 4:30 p.m. for those interested in discussing the Foreign Service. Umstead John Umstead Hospital at Butner is seeking volunteers, both men and women, from the UNC campus. They will spend one or two mornings or afternoons a week working with patients in counseling re creation, occupational therapy and academic tutoring. On Thursday evening Dr. John E. Biggers, director of the hospital volunteer service, and John Guy, chairman of the Umstead Committee of the UNC YMCA-YWCA, will be on hand at 7:30 p.m. i n m m it w NOW PLAYING M-G-MwesB A MANN-LAURENCE-WASSERMAN PRODUCTION :-r-:-:-:-:-:-:-x-.-:-. a MOP For Your After Church Dining Pleasure. SUNDAY HOURS: Breakfast: 8-11 Dinner: 11:30-2 Supper: 5-7:15 Remember There Is Always A Good Meal At Critic Calk College,, Art A Collection Of m TT T XT . Thomas Hess of New York. editor of Art News magazine, was in Greensboro recently to judge the national invitatioh-al-competitional "Art on Pa per" show which opens Nov. 6 at the Weatherspoon Art Gallery of UNC at Greens boro. Asked if he noted any trends in the submissions to the show, Hess said, "There has been a total absorption of the pop iconology and mood into the populace whence it came, now stripped of its irony and sense of the banal "Camp" and given back to the exotic, obsessional look." He observed the increasing impact of university art de partments in professionalism of techniques and the propa gation of styles. He saw "dif ficulties with color, a part of the intellectual side of art." He noted also "a great fa cility with line, an indication of the availability of collec tive feelings of despair, ter ror, joy and of course, in all its forms, sex." The influence of mass med ia communication was evi dent, also, he said. Hess, 46, has been with Art News since 1946 and has a degree in art history from Yale. He has had two books DORTON ARENA MONDAY, OCT. 10 8:30 P.M. tickets INCLUDE ADVANCE TICKETS $3.00 - AT GATE $3.50 ADMISSION TO THE FAIR Tickets on Sale at: Thiem's Record Shop, Patterson's Record Shop, Honeycutt's, 1918 Hillsboro, Penny's of Cameron Village. The Record Bar in Durham and Chapel Hill. HAREIISS-CONNERS HAS GONE VOLUME- Malibu Sport Coupe Come See Our HARRISS L t II tltl Hmg tUtam RESTAURANT STEAKS CHICKEH SEAFOOD imported and DOMESTIC BEVERAGES SPECIAL THIS WEEK : RIB-EYE STEAK :: Served with Tossed Salad .v. :: (Choice of Dressing) I French Fries Rolls and Butter &: $1.25 SUng RESTAURANT 1V2 MILES FROM CAMPUS PITTSBORO ROAD Ohm (n. lt.L(..k i ...-k and Dinner Every Day V2 MILES FROM CAMPUS LENOIR DINING LEMO k4 .Vthedeath of his predce" Art World By OWEN LEWIS sor, Alfred Frankfurter The magazine is well - known tot its presentations of artists at work. "We try in the contem porary field," he said, 0 give as much primary work as possible. We give the art- n 3 lorum for themselves." n-we nature of criticism as offered in his magazine, he said, "All criticism is val ue judgment. It is impossible to say anything about art without making value judg ments. Modern aesthetics and linguistic analysis will hold with this," he said, u "J criticism is not any body s gasp or gulp, but high ly intellectual, just as art is intellectual. What we choose to write about is a valu judg me"t in itself. Whom we OPENING NITE OF M.C. STATS FAIR more everything for you plus A Large Selection USED CARS '67 Models Today! CONNERS tlitam ON PITTSBORO ROAD :i:i:i:i:S:!55:? W.V.W.Wi HALL Emotion choose to have as critics is a decision which give- the mag azine its character," he said. Asked ahout the role of the critic, Hess said, "I must quote Matthew Arnold and say it is to make the creative act easier to create a medium through which idea are ex changed and clarified. Art ex ists in c cultural milieu that is either for or against it. The United States has been tradi tionally anti-art. and it is the role of the critic to improve that situation." Hess went on, "There is a terrible situation today in which critics are trying to promote a doctrinaire avant earde point of view on the one hand, or a conservative one on the other. There is John Canadav on one side and Cle ment Greenberg on the other, and we're fighting both these extremes tooth and nail "We're for everything in art except the idea of exclusivi ty," Hess concluded. REPLACED RUTH WASHINGTON (UP I) George Selkirk, general man ager of the Washington Sena tors, replaced Babe Ruth in the New York Yankee outfield in 1934 and went on to com pile a .290 lifetime batting av erage. SAT. AND SUN. ALBERT R. BROCCOLI HARRY SALTZMAN '1AM FLEMING'S "RR Uf" MITBV HUM Will I1W TEPg8aVw UNITED ARTISTS with Old Spice Precisely what things depends on what you have in mind. Whatever it is, Old Spice LIME can help. Its spicy, lime-spiked aroma is very persuasive. . . but so subtle, even the most wary woman is trapped before she knows it! Worth trying? You bet it is! Old Spice LIME Cologne, After Shave, Gift Sets. By the makers CONCEBT TONIGHT FEATURING THE TOKENS POPULAR - II . M fi W J - i f- b 1 i j 0 UNIVERSITY SEAL nar.ipus wardrobe w.. m GREAT UtVi rlblitb Ur UAU0n Whether you're neaamg ior the Tokens . . . University eai nas that appeal... rcai - - ... .uauhuus, snape retaining blend of 70 r Tk. Ufolliar a cuuincrinc WTinklp resist- flrlnn 9ni; I B vontes nj a.r.w., - - o - o . . . X CCO nrnn nrtlwocfnr : x. l e-1 ant HopsacK uiazer ui jj-o """x" , Mgm dl f33! 45 Wool. One button styling, triple stitched UNIVERSITY SEAL. STUDENTS DIVISION. 1 0TH wmms mm. MUST SELL: 1966 Triumph TR6C. 650 cc, 300 miles. Best offer. Ph. 92275. FOR RENT: 2 NEW air-conditioned, 2-bedroom mobile homes. One available imme diately $80 per month. Sec ond available Oct. 8 at $30. Call 942-32S3 or 942-1743. FOR SALE: HONDA 90, equip-, ed with luggage rack, chrom front fender, excellent condi tion,:, for $200. Can be seen at F & F Automotive. Call 942 4917. MUST SELL: 1958 VW BUS. Radio, new rear tires, good battery, new transmission, in remarkable condition. Call 942-2945 for further informa tion. Tfca Only Tiling Thai Ueold Tako Load off my Back Is a ,t B X S IS . iV uai u. u,m.iB m ana nacwng tiap pockets... all at a suroris- me mhu ot auus mg w.vv. (B) BRO0KFIELD INDUSTRIES, INC, 1230 A,enc BOOK FEAT u" A Scholar's Library of American Colon ial and Revolution ary Literature Here's a library that we con fidently expect will be one of our most important offer ings this year. Drawn from the collection ofl great scholar and much admired professor, now re tired, this lot includes early imprints, early editions or important books, and care fully chosen books of com ment and criticism--many now in the rare class It should be a golden treasure for every student of the Co lonial and American Revolu tionary periods. Part One of this library goes on sale on October 9th, Part Two goes out the following week. THE OLD BOOK CORNER in The Intimate Bookshop 119 East Franklin St. Open Till 9 P.M. 3 of original Old Spice. OR The Princeton, a dashing vested anu ouy0 wool worsted priced DuPont Reg. T.M. cf the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 iw .3' m V I V 4 fx

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