Saturday, Novemhpr 19, 1966
THE DAILY TAh iEEL
Page 3
Are TV Commercials
Better Than Shoivs?
It has been said that some
television commercials are
better than the programs they
sponser.
UNC students may find out
for sure this month when the
the. Seventh Annual American
Television Commercials Fes
tival are presented in a 35
minute film.
"The National TV Commer
cials Test ... or Is Any
body Selling Anything?" will
be shown in Swain Hall, class
room 1A, Monday, Nov., 21 at
3 p.m. and Tuesday, Nov. 22
at 4 p.m.
"These (commercials) are
lessons in communications,"
RTVMP Department Chair
man Dr. Wesley Wallace said.
"They offer the student an op-
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NOW PLAYING
the
sncKest,
A.
swingin'est
con-man
'yjMMi,,' w? world!
COIUMBU PICTURES Prewnts
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EASTMAW COLOR
portunity to observe techni
ques of aural and visual com
munication when great effort
and considerable sums of mon
ey have been expended to ac
complish these objectives."
Wallace says that some of
the commercials may be fa
miliar, but students may not
have seen them all and had
a chance to compare and con
trast techniques.
There were 1,891 commer
cials entered in the Amercian
competition and 221 in the in
ternational category by adver
tisers, agencies, stations and
production companies.
Winners in categories rang
ing .from coffee and cosmetics
to color cinematography and
video tape editing were se
lected by 9 regional panels of
prominent advertising men
and women.
Entries were judged by
"professional standards for
evaluating advertising effec
tiveness." This is the third year a fest
ival film used in RTVMP
and Journalism classes has
been shown to the public. This
year's showings will be follow
ed by a discussion led by fa
culty members of the RTV
MP department and Journal
ism school.
LUMINISCENT INK
FOR STAMPS
WASHINGTON (UPI) Spe
cial phosphors heretofore used
principally in color television
tubes will become an element
in the production of luminis
cent ink for U. S. postage
stamps in the near future.
DINING ROOM
Luncheon Special for Today
BEEF POT PIE
Choice of Two Vegetables
V' Salad w' Dressing'
Beverage Bread & Butter
Homemade Layer Cake
97c
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Transports
6. Crustac
eans 11. Bracer
12. Soon
13. Roam
14. Substance
15. Street sign
16. Young lady
17. Wife of
Sham ash
18. Balcony
20. Alder tree:
Scot.
21. Medicinal
plant -
22. Underworld
river
23. Gelderland
city
24. High, crag
gy hill
25. Stand up
27. Select
30. Bitter
vetch
31. Well-known
reindeer
32. Thus
33. Lend
34. Man's name
35. Confine
37. One's
enemies
. 38. Paris river
39. Fruit
40. Elms,
maples, oaks
41. Watering
spots in
deserts
DOWN
1. Layers
2. G-man
3. County:
Scot.
4. Pastry
dessert
5. Palmetto
State:
abbr.
6. Stop
7. Rodents
8. Skill
9. Blurred
10. Vocal organ
of songbirds
14. Isinglass
16. Nutmeg
husk
19. Drive
20. Out
rageous 22. Pres
ently 24. Comparative
conjunction
25. Oppose
26. Presser
27. Common
swift
28. Calm
29. Rubs out
31. Skin
openings
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Yesterday's Answer
33. Smooth
breathing 36. Bind
37. Friar's title
39. Italian river
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25 26 Z?. 27 28 29
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C'MON, LET'S 60 1 PAV
ATTEMTlON TO 4tKR 6AFETY
PATROL... C'MON.LET'S 601
Student Records Ballad
me
peaker Ban
.Fight
Is Set To Music
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BUI Dale And His Guitar Bomb The Ban -dth Photo By Jock Lauterer
NY. Students Start Drive
To Equip Viet Nam School
By JUDILYN SIPE
DTH Staff Writer
The notorious "Speaker
Ban" has been the direct
cause of quite a few protests,
committees, editorials, news
stories and comments. The
most recent outgrowth of the
trouble with the ban takes
place in the form of a ballad.
"The Speaker Ban Ballad"
is a new song written and
sung by Bill Dale and re
corded by Jimmy Capps Pro
ductions in Raleigh. Bill, a
senior English major from
Asheville, has been playing
the guitar and singing since
high school. He has been writ
ing his own lyrics and music
for a couple of years.
He will sing his composition
for the first time today at
10 p.m. at the Morrison So
cial Room. The concern is for
the Toronto Exchange visitors,
but the campus is invited.
"I started thinking about the
ballad early this fall. I wrote
it last spring and decided this
would be the best time to re
cord it since the court case for
the ban will be coming up
in January.
"December 1st has been
set as the projected date the
records will be available to
the public," Bill added. The '
flip side of the record is a
song, also written by Bill,
called "Till You Look Back
Tomorrow," a song which
claims that worrying about
trouble is like trying to stop
the sun it won't get you
anywhere.
Bill transferred to UNC last
January from Davidson Col
lege with the plan of major
ing in English. After gradua
tion next June he would like
to go to graduate school and
gradually work his way into
the field of higher education
administration.
" 'The Speaker Ban Ballad'
is my only protest song," said
Bill. "We are pushing it on
the campuses throughout the
state and also into other states
where the same problem may
arise. Since it is not com
pletely limited in scope, we
think other universities can
use it as well as we can
here."
"Talk has died down to
some extent on the ban now.
and with the court case com
ing up soon, we want to stim
ulate the smdants into think
ing about it and not let them
forget it. We will need a lot
of help to get rid of the law.
We don't want people here to
grow complacent."
Bill has been singing pro
fessionally for about six
months. He worked in Ashe
ville this past summer for .'he
Red Carpet Rocm and r.i.-de
several appearances on
WLOS-TV in Asheville.
The ballad is his first re
cording. If it does well, he
would like to try his hand si
the business for a while be
fore settling down but "sing
ing is purely an avocation
with me now."
"Most singers or groups
don't start out the way I'm
doing it," he said. "Take the
Virginians, for example. They
got a large company to back
them first. Then they really
started. I'm starting out
small, making all the plans
myself and hoping."
When the first records are
ready, they will be put on sale
here and sent to radio sta
tions over the state. If they
are popular and sell well,
more copies will be made.
"The flip side, 'Till You
Look Back Tomorrow is the
one we hope people all over
the state will like. The ballad
is more or less localized to
universities."
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HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (UPI)
A letter from an old grad
now in Viet Nam prompted a
drive by students at Hofstra
University here to help equip
a school in Viet Nam.
The letter came from Ma
rine Lieut. Donald F. Pierce,
a 1964 Hofstra graduate who,
as Civil Affairs officer of Ma
rine Aircraft Group 12 in Chu
Lai is helping the Vietnamese
people to complete and equip
Finer Diamonds
come from
WELDON'S JEWELERS
Ask About Our
Special Student Terms
WELDON'S
JEWELERS
327 W. Main Durham
Students' Jewelers 27 Years
the seven-room Ly - Tin Dis
trict High School.
Pierce, from Flushing, N.Y.,
wrote Hofstra President Dr.
Clifford Lord that the nearly
completed school had no sup
plies, and added: "This school
is being built with material,
purchased by the Marine
Corps. All of the labor in
volved comes from the Viet
namese. They receive no com
pensation. It is hard, slow
work; tools are scarce and
often homemade tools must
suffice."
When Dr. Lord spread the
word the students decided to
chip in, via collection boxes
placed throughout the campus.
Proceeds of the annual school ,
dance Nov. 4 also were do
nated. Students who headed the
drive said it was one way of
answering demonstrations by
some young people against the
United States effort in Viet
Nam.
Drive chairman Joan Sheer
on said, "We don't look upon
this as just another charity
drive but an indication to the
people of Ly-Tin that Hofstra
students. . .are personally in
volved with their efforts."
TUNNEY TROPHY
NEW YORK (UPI) The
Tunney - Muldoon Trophy was
established in October, 1928, by
Gene Tunney on his retirement
as heavy weight boxing cham
pion. William Muldoon was the
chairman of the New York
Boxing Commission.
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TODAtf e SATURDAY
HOO BLOCKHEAD
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i'll go an get
f US A PACKET OF
V CRISPS EACH, PET,
InO, FLO, I CAN'T LET VER
DO THAT lER VE BEEN
BUW THE BEER
ALL NIGHT -
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f- 'ERE'S ATANNErA KTHE LA3T
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XMSOWN ISPEN&ERS
Spcprts hero loses girl to mild-mannered math major
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DEAR REB:
I'm a big football star, and I've found a girl who suits me to a T. But
I've been blocked out of the play by a math major. He knows math
from A Pi R2 to E MC2. Now she says he's found the formula
for'success with her. All he has to do is mutter "Coronet RT," and
get thrown for a loss. Believe me, this is no equilateral triangle
that I'm in. Outside of telling me to bench myself, have you any
advice?
FALLEN STAR
DEAR FALLEN STAR:
Now's the time to plunge. Coronet RT isn't his ex
clusive formula. Your nearby Dodge Dealer has it,
too. And it comes almost as easily as the cube root of
27. Then how can the g;rl of your dreams resist tvo
superstars . . . you and your Coronet RT? From
there on out, your math major will be the victim of
diminishing returns. Huddie with your Dodge Dealer
now, and get your signals straight.
And why not ? Look what you'll have going for you in your Dodge Coronet RT, convertible
or two-door hardtop. All standard, too. 440-cubic-inch Magnum V8 engine. Dual exhausts.
Heavy-duty brakes and suspension. High-performance Red Streak tires. And exclusive RT
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So get with your Dodge Dealer, and your problem will solve itself.
DODGE DIVISION
MOTORS CORPORATION
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