rPage 4 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Sunday. October 23, 1966 71- 2 TUS-n- 1L a r I""'; "V. j , hi- I 1 T : .a II- V CS o " PACKING 'EM IN The third weekly poetry The open reading is the brain-child of profes- forum in Bingham drew another excited crowd sor Forrest Read who has been acting as that spilled out into the hall as it grew. WUNC moderator. The next session will be November Radio even showed up to record the session. 3. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Clean-Up Mam Suggests Penality For Littering By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer R. A. Faucette spends his days picking up what others throw away. He is one of three campus clean-up men whose job is to keep campus lawns and walks clear of paper and other trash. Faucette puts a 40 - hour week into his job, except after big weekends, which mean overtime for the crew. "If we didn't have help dur ing football wekends, we'd never get done," he said in reference to the large crews who work cleaning up the sta dium area after home games. He feels that the main rea son why there's so much trash thrown is ignorance of the WGdstS M0(Br yim mwL my aao3 wbi That's when the IBM interviewer will be on campus. When he'd like to talk with you whatever your area of study, whatever your plans after graduation. You'll find job opportunities at IBM in six ma jor areas: Computer Applications, Program ming, Finance and Administration, Research Whatever year immediate commitments, whatever your area sicnupferycurcn-eampusinterviev7ithIDLlf now. If for some reason, you aren't able to arrange an interview, drop us a line. Write to: Manager of College Recruiting IBM Corporate, Room 810, 1447 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30309. IBM is I Equal Opplrmni loyer. maintenance work involved. "You never realize just how much work there is until you have to do it," he said. He once suggested a $5 fine to help control the litter prob lem. Later, though, he softened the suggestion, saying, "you have to be light on students," and proposing a 50 cents or maybe even $1 fine for litter ing. "A lot of students are kind of poor and even those who aren't don't have a lot of mon ey to just throw away on fines." The smaller fines, he feels, would not put a great hard ship on anyone, but would serve as a reminder to put trash in cans. Though a system of this yaa H (tHfi'Jti -d type would heip a great deal, "it's not really all that bad now," Faucette said, consider ing the fact that there are over 13,000 students on the campus. "I think they do mighty well," he said. "Besides, students are no worse than anybody else." Many people just traveling through Chapel Hill come onto the campus and litter it un consciously, he thinks. He continued to praise the student body and people in general, pausing only to give away a half pack of cigarettes he had found on his morning rounds. "I don't smoke but I figured there'd probably be somebody who might want them. No use in just throwing them away," he said. on and Development, Manufacturing and Mar keting. Some of these areas may not mean much to you-now. But just let the IBM interviewer explain a few of them. One may be just the career you're looking for. It could be the start of something big-your future with IBM. CARRBORO Victor Hug gins Jr. of Chapel Hill paints in circles. Why? "The primary reason is that the elements can work in a more dynamic relation ship for me," he said, "but this would not necessarily be the case for others. Any paint ing done on a rectangular ground has a stable border. It imposes a limited vertical horizontal order on the work. Each of the four corners be comes a shape which must work, and this limits you. "When you start with the circle, all the edges are con sistent. You see no corners unless you look at it through square glasses. The circular field is open. Spatially the circle tends to have no determined areas near or far. Any area in a circle is as near or far as any other, whereas in . a rectangle you always have a foreground and a background. "I'm left to determine all space relationships myself. Another advantage is that there is no base plane on which forms tend to be stack ed. A dynamic equilibrium is set up by having no ground plane as reference," he said. The Art Gallery of Chapel Hill has a show of 12 large paintings of Muggins's through Nov. 19. All are circles except for one capsule, and they are from his "Monocular" series. "The paintings I'm doing now are like a cross - section of what would be a three-dimensional form. There is a derivation of the form from an anatomical shape. One form relates to another in a composition as in a machine where one form is functioning in juxtaposition to others," he said. Huggins will do as many as 100 quick little sketches in working out an idea for a of study Art World By OWEN LEWIS painting. He does them on old envelopes, paper towels, or whatever is at hand. "I keep them around and synthesize from them," Huggins said. Huggins builds up varia tions in texture by gluing bits of canvas to the canvas on which he's working. He also sprays on variations of the col or in which he's working, in a sort of mechanical glazing procedure. "I spray from the side," he said, "to put empha sis on the texture of the can vas." Huggins does his work on the second floor of the Carr boro Town Hall, which UNC has rented for faculty and ad vance painting students' stud dios. This semester while nationally-famous sculptor Rob ert Howard is on leave, Hug gins is teaching three courses in sculpture at the university. The transition was easy, he said, "because I've always em-" phasized form so much in my painting. Huggins, 30, is young in ex perience he first painted on I ri I f Hold that crease? jk j f You bet it will. ffh I If the fabric is one of the great, . V 'J r&5 f new permanent-press blends '4$M 1 of 2-ply polyester and cotton jJt masterminded by Galey & Lord. a'jO h I For the new dimension ""TV I V in collegiate slacks, ''Sii; For the fifth big week. iixtm Open for canvas in 1961 after returning to school from service. But now he has the M.A.C.A. de gree from his hometown uni versity here, and has won a large number of major region al awards for his paintings. "It makes it rough on the students," he said, "who see ALWAYS SEND A STIli 6flQD tlitam RESTAURANT Presents live dinner music for your dining and dancing pleasure. Harry Clifton and His (The big band sound, not another rock 9 To 1 A.M. 9 To 1 A.M. Saturday 8 To Midnight Sunday ALSO, NOW PRESENTING - liv, Piano Dinner Music Monday through Friday - NO COVER CHARGE Mttg RES iy2 MILES FROM CAMPUS PITTSBORO ROAD Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Every your work and realize that you're doing everything in vi olation of the rules you're teaching them. "You teach these principles of design and certain academ ic stnadards you might have felt at one time valid in your own work and in general ac- ANOTHER WEEKEND LIKE THIS PAST ONE AND FIX PUT ON ANOTHER 40 YEARS Friday In the Glass Slipper Ballroom Regular King William Menu Served Cover $2.50 Per Person Couples Only TAUEANT ceptable in so-called art cri teria for good or bad," he said. But his own painting? "It's a non-art image. Sometimes the image happens to fit ac cepted art standards. Usually: it doesn't. But that's just as good as far as I'm concerned. I think the imagery is just as important whether it's an art one or not," he said. TYPIST wanted immediately for responsible position. Must have experience and the abil ity to type accurately and work effectively with people. Jiours 1 to 9, Monday through Friday and rotating weekend work involved. Salary $328 per month. Excellent fringe bene fits. Replies confidential. Ap ply to University Personnel Office, 103 Steele Building, Chapel Hill, N. C. PIANIST NEEDED for GM's production of Hansel & Gret el. Rehearsals twice a week. Contact Anne Peacock, 968- 9132. ' : 1 1966 TRIUMPH TR6C 650 cc. Brand New! $1000.00 MUST SELL, have other expenses. Phone 929-3275. WANTED: 2 GIRLS TO SHARE new, 3 bedroom trail er with owner. Trailer locat ed in small park outside Cha pel Hill. Reasonable rate, Pets allowed. Call 966-8515, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. FOR RENT: For $55 a month, unfurnished house, four rooms and bath 10 miles south of Chapel Hill on 15-501. Call 942 2165 or night 942-6351. FOR RENT: 2 air-conditioned mobile homes. One new, available now $90 per month. Second available Nov. 1 $75 per month. Call 942 3268 or 942-1749. .fcS.v. Orchestra V roll combo) Day.

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