At The English Be partment It Was A 'Prank 9 TMmm Could Be Verse- By PETE IVEY Special To The DTI I Amid the commotion of the celebrated Paull Squall, Ray mond Adams has found the time to write a poem about his troubles. An authority on the works of Thoreau and a teacher of American literature here for the past 45 years, 68-year-old Adams was inspired to verse by a message from a kins woman. Adams has a niece who saw his picture in Life magazine and she wrote him a saucy bit of verse about his role as acting chairman of the Eng lish Department which inves tigated assertions about grad uate student instructor Mich ael Paull. A Raleigh TV sta tion reported Mr. Paull had assigned freshmen students to write a poem on "How I Would Seduce a Girl" based on a 17th century poem by Andrew Marvell entitled "To His Coy Mistress." A faculty investi gating committee has cleared Mr. Paull and returned him to his classroom. 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Angell St., PROVIDENCE, R. 1. 02906 LAY AWAY ANY BULOVA . TIL CKaisiriASi ' Y LEADIM UCT "BA" fin 21 wel watch. tikw or wnit. A practical 17 iwl J wttch. Wtrproof. I Self-winding. Uimlpow. wnue. This year - miss thi Christmas rush! Choosa your Bulova now from our complete watch selection. Our Watch Experts will gladly help you make this a happier Christmas. When you know what makoi watch tick, you'll buy Bulova. T. L. KEL1P Jewelry a l.Vi V.. Franklin It m i- s Titow or wi n. gators, plus delegations peti tioning him for instantaneous action on a variety of mat ters. During the past three weeks he has confronted dai ly newspaper reporters, TV newsmen and cameramen and magazine reporters. He called the campus cops when a Life photographer tried to snap a picture from over a classroom transom. He has been on the hot spot and ad mits he may be the "fall guy" in the publicity and contro versy. To commiserating col leagues, he said, "I'm rather enjoying it." Here is Dr. Adams' reply (also in the language of Mar vell) to his niece: Thank You, Peggy "Had we but world enough, and time," I'd thank you, Peggy, for that' rhyme; "But at my back I always hear" The news reporters drawing near, Or LIFE men wanting word of Paull, "Coy Mistress" holding me m thrall. "We would sit down and think which way," Except, "like amorous birds of prey," No one will give me time to plan Where to consign the TV man. "The grave's a fine and pri vate place," I'll let him go to hell apace. Adams said that the Paull issue takes on all the charac teristics of a literary plot. "We have here the dramatic clash of opposing ideas, sex, mys tery, academic freedom no tions, suggestions of in loco perentis, TV-press squabbles, instigations by campus acti vists." He added, "The only thing I haven't been able to detect in the drama is the role of heroine." ARCH TYPE Raymond Adams looks like the archtype of the peda gogue: countenance . solemn and , s slightly shy; shoulders stooped; speech soft, cultivat ed, voice well modulated. He wears a tweed coat, and a muffler in cold weather. His bulging brief case goes with him everywhere. Looks are often deceiving, and Adams is one of those docents who may appear the absent-minded professor type, but he is seldom absent and never ab sent - minded. With a poker face, he can utter unexpect edly comic phrases, shafts of wit that lighten the conver sation when he sits down at coffee with colleagues in Le noir Hall. One day he picked up his individualized coffee mug from a shelf on which RICOH 35mm. Camera. Excel lent condition! Semi-automatic, flash terminal, self timer, leather case, speeds 1-4 -1-300 sec. $40. Call 942-5929 after 6. TYPE A GARRARD automat ic turntable, Shure Gard-o-matic cartridge, base, cover like new. $50 to first call Price new, $126.90. Call Dur ham 489-3509 collect, Floyd Rhodes: VOLKSWAGEN and SAAB service. Guaranteed, quality work at. reasonable prices. Factory trained, qualified mechanics. FOREIGN CAR CENTER, INC., 409 E. Main St., Carrboro. Ph. -929-1462. . FOR RENT: Tired of trying to' sleep and study in all the confusion? We have several ru:w 2 bedroom air-conditioned mobile homes for rent. Telephone :J2W. or 'M2-I743. formation fall WW.tti after r. it I-.: 'J U: i- V IfffiMABSI 'VWWlKfV ; - y , i 1 -Yt : . . 'J Raymond Adams the name "Adams" was print ed for his daily use, he filled up the mug with coffee and walked to a table where oth er faculty members were as sembled. There he was intro duced to Chancellor Paul F. Sharp, who also had acquired a coffee mug with the name 'Sharp" on it. "I am glad to meet you," said Prof. Adams. "I would know that mug anywhere. Over 40 years ago in Chapel Hill, Adams, then a young in structor, suddenly found he had no chalk in his classroom. The University was economic z ing on supplies including chalk which was rationed to departments, and the English Department's supply had run out. Adams dismissed the class. He then walked to .the South n men waucea io me uia ilB'Sli tary of the University, Robert B. House, what he had done and why. , Years later, over coffee in Lenoir Hall, Chancellor Eme ritus House reminded Prof. Adams of his indignation at that time. "Is that what Thoreau would have done?" asked House. "That is exactly , w h a t Thoreau would have done," said Adams. BIG LIBRARY Adams was once President of the international Thoreau Society. He owns the world's largest collection of works of Henry David Thoreau, includ ing over 2,000 volumes. When Thoreau's bust was unveiled in the Hall of Fame, Adams was invited to deliver the eul ogy. He admits to a certain emu lation of his hero. But he doesn't carry it too far. He says he doesn't live near a lake, like Thoreau lived near Walden Pond. "But I do have a bird bath in the yard," he said. One day a friend accosted him in the super - market. "Would Thoreau approve your buying these fancy groce ries?" asked the colleague. "Yes," replied Adams. "He would have liked the do-it-yourself aspect of marketing." 2i fr3 r PIN Rare Roast Beef, Thick Slice Baked Potato with Sour Cream Dressing Tossed Green Salad Rolls and Butter .' Ml TiB'ti !: .1 '. i , i ( 1 1. In His Library Prof. Adams is also a fre quent lecturer at gatherings of Unitarian Church congrega tions. Once in a sermon, he quoted Henry L. Mencken's advice: "If you want to make my poor ghost happy, forgive some poor sinner and wink at some homely girl." A wink at some homely girl may be more Christian than you think, Adams told the con gregation. "It could even be called The Art of Christian Winking." He concluded: "There are moments in anyone's life when to have shortcomings overlooked and be regarded as a worthwhile person is life itself . . . Perhaps we can not forgive the sinner and give him a new change. Say to him: I'm not concerned about wbat aiiav done buthuSbanwho Cwas rejected thit Vwhat you wf and candor from tlNfcvma well ciit!; Jt Indian Warpath Crossed All-Star Cowboy Lineup FORT LOYON, Colo. (UPI) An unpublished manuscrpt and notes written by a 19th Century soldier and cattleman have shown that a 1868 - 69 winter campaign pitted an all star lineup of Indian fight Commanche and Arapaho tribes. But there is no indication that Kit Carson, Wild Bill Hic kock, Buffalo Bill Cody and met that year. Notes left by the late Luke Cahill say the campaign was the idea of Gen. Kit Carson. Oahill said Carson convinced President Andrew Johnson and a reluctant Lt. Gen. U. S. Grant that 'a winter thrust like the one he used to defeat the Navajos in 1863 was the only answer to the Indian prob lem. But before Carson's brain child was transformed into ac tion, he died at Fort Lyon. Cahill, claims in his manu script that he was holding the great frontiersman's head when he 'fareathed his ROOM Sunday end Monday C IT SI. 4.1 Si rviiif. r.:00-7:0 N GHTS nn RALEIGH What it was was a "Prank." That is. the title of a big, vertical (79-by-34 1-2 - Inch painting of splotches of color on a dead white ground. Done by J. P. Huggins of Chapel Hill, it is in the North Caro lina Artists Annual Exhibition at the N. C. Museum of Art through Nov. 27. Then the show moves to Winston - Salem for Culture Week, and the awarding of prizes at the second opening of the show Nov. 30. Rumor has it that J. P. Huggins will win a $500 purchase award for her work. : ' Brief biography of ; J. p; (for Jo Pat) Huggins, wife of L. V. Huggins Jr.: Born in Herford, 28 years ago. Professional training, Watts Hospital School of Nursing, Durham. Total painting experience to date: the 20 minutes it took her to paint "Prank." Jurors for the show select ed 58 works by 51 N. C. art ists from 600 submissions. On the jury were Theodore Sta mos, New . York artist repre sented by the Emrich Galle ry, Gertrude Rosenthal, cura tor of the Baltimore Museum and Fred L. Messersmith, chairman of the art depart ment at Stetson University in Florida. Color Ben William's face red. Williams, curator of the N.C. Museum, has been factotum of the Artists Annual for years. The statement from the jur ors declared all the works in the show "highly profession , al." At the recent vernisage in Raleigh, Williams was ob viously discomfited by my in terst in "Prank," and defend ed it as a splendid example of avant garde colorism in a contained poured style. Then he ran for the back room to inquire who had let the cat out of the bag. But Williams need not be apo logetic, for anyone can do one good painting. The fallacy comes in judging a per son's artistic ability on t h e basis of one work. Mrs. Huggins said she was going to try to do some more prize winning paintings. Her last" May 23, 1868. The plan devised by Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan that summer had Custer moving south from Fort Dodge, Kan., with his column: Bre vet Lieut. Col. A. W. Evans was to march from Fort Bas com, N. M., and a third col umn under Brevet Maj. Gen. Eugene A. Carr was to set out from Fort Lyon, Colo. Cahill said Buffalo Bill was a scout for Carr's column and Hickock was a scout for Bre vet Brig. Gen. Penrose, who coirimanded Carr's advance element. Cahill's manuscript then deals only with Carr's column. Cahill said the troopers never shot at an Indian that winter and became hopelessly slowed by. a bitter blizzard that swept bogged in the resulting mud. Cody became a hero in the campaign, staying with the column and providing buffalo meat wit hhis hunting skills. Seem AFET H ave Taken off her thinking. art supplies, I'm Mrs. Huggins did the work on raw unstretched canvas, which was laid out on a ta ble. She was using a surface tension break which Helen Frankenthaler had paint man- Art World By OWEN LEWIS ufacturer Leonard Bocour de velop for her. She put on the water base acrylic paint with a big brush, and the way the medium soaks into the can vas, there are no brush marks left, but a smooth unified sur face as it if were a piece of fabric. It is basically the same tech nique used by. Kenneth No land, Morris Lewis, or Miss Frankenthaler. The big differ ence is that Noland and Lew is used it in a hard - edged style, while Miss Frankentha ler and J. P. Huggins let the transparent wash bleed out to give the contained poured style. The end result is that in her extremely brief career . Mrs. Huggins has turned out an ex ceedingly good painting, which is likely to win a prize. , We were also authoritative ly told that George Bireline, who lives here and is teach-' ing this year at UNC will win the $1,000 purchase award. Bireline, whose previous work has been hard - edged color ist, has loosened up again, and his imagery is off center, his brush work broad and ap parent, and in general the style is freer. Bireline is re presented in New York by the Emrich Gallery. Taking up where Bireline left off is Russell Arnold of Wilson, whose big diagonal hard - edged shapes lead one to believe he has seen Eire line's prize - winning work of two years ago. SUNDAY PAINTERS Although, as usual, a few Sunday painters made it, the rage that the one ! two years 5 ago was, when only 34 works were chosen, and a number of them were pretty dread ful. HCAA, 1966, is basically a good show. It's varied, and there is a great deal of first rate work in it. Chapel Hill dominates the show, with 25 per cent of the works. This is quite a contrast to the Art on Paper show cur rently at UNC-G, which has not a lving soul from its bro ther campus represented. Greensboro is represented by Horace Farlowe of Bennett College with two masterful THE AR T GALLER Y OF CHAPEL HILL Art Supplies 10 percent Student Discount PRINTS 113 W. Franklin Street Remember, you can call home anywhere in the United States AFTER 8:00 P.M., or ALL DAY SUNDAY for a buck! Just be sure you dial the access code on the dial in front of you, so your call will be properly charged. Have a nice Thanksgiving vacation and drive carefully ! Find If Fast InTh. Yolfow Pages 1 1 It Seriously SU " " "" mi niiniinJ 3 n. i in ' r r 'Prank9 By J. P. Huggins Of Chapel Hill stone sculptures, one of fine ly polished spheres, the other rugged, massive and architec tural. Sam Yates has an im pasto colorist abstracted landscape. Joe Cox of Raleigh stole the show with a construction call ed Amp L'Etude, which has used moving baffles, high in tensity lamps and the effects of stage lighting. I whiled a way quite a bit of time cheer- ; fully pushing buttpns to see . 1 how many different, effects I "could get. Somebody said to' Cox, "Is it art or is it a gim mick?" He replied, "Where do you draw the line?" Anyway all us kids had fun playing with it. Why, if they moved all of Culture Week to Winston - Sa lem, the N. C. Artists Annual had to open a month earlier than usual in Raleigh, I don't . know. The versinnage in Ra- . leigh attracted about 400 per sons, but nobody much from the museum staff or the State Art Society, which is putting up $2,750 in prize money for the show. .. .. , FRAMING - Hand Painted Christmas Cards Hours: 10-5 Monday - Saturday THE CHAPEL HILL TELEPHONE COMPANY Starts Monday! Our annual showing of the most b eautiful books America can produce. Guaranteed to take your breath; away, even ; if you only iobk at the prices! 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