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Thursday. March 9. 1967 Page 6 THE DAILY TAR HEEL i VST" v r lf i M 7 "Mill J! J ays Tonight Med 41 .1 r ' er'r-i- '' Violinist Mischa Elman will appear in recital at Hill Hall Saturday night at 8 P-- . His performance is third in a series of Artist Seminars sponsored by the Department , of Music this year. He will al so conduct a master class for advanced string players at 2 p.m. Saturday. Mischa Elman is something of a legend among concert artists. He was born in 1891 in Russia, and first played a violin at the age of three. At six he was deep in serious study of the instrument, and at ten he was the first of the great Leopold Auer "wonder children" making history at the St. Petersburg Conserva tory. He astonished the mus ical world with his debut re cital in Berlin at the age of YOU MIGHT HAVE THOUGHT yon were out on the farm yesterday if you happened to spot the tractor sitting out in McCorkel place. But don't worry. .It's not really unattended. That great guard of Carolina's integrity is there to protect it. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan. Fine Arts Festival To Feature 'Nude' "The Nude in American Art" is the title of a unique program of sights and sounds to be presented by Universi ty of North Carolina graduate student Don Evans at the 1967 Fine Arts Festival on April 12. Evans, a 1962 graduate of the University of Tennessee, designed the program as a project last semester for a seminar in the history of American art. Tape record ings and some 200 slides are used to trace the portrayal of the nude in American art, showing its antecedents in Eu ropean sculpture and paint ing. The program is narrated by Evans and accompanied by a wide variety of music includ ing pieces by Bach, Gersh win and the Ventures. 1153 ' " " (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie Gillis," etc.) WHO'S GOT THE BUTTON? I'm sure it has not escaped your notice that underlying the adorable whimsy which has made this column such a popular favorite among my wife and my little dog Spot, there is a serious attempt to stay abreast of the problems that beset the American college student. Many a trip have I made to many a campus talking to undergraduates, listening to their troubles, hearing their grievances, reading their buttons. (Incidentally, the sec ond and third most popular buttons I saw on my last trip were: "WALLACE BEERY LIVES" and VFLUORI DATE MUSCATEL." The first most popular button was, as we all know, "SCRAP THE SCRAPE" which is worn, as we all know, by Personna Super Stainless Steel Blade users who, as we all know, are proud to proclaim to the world that they have found a blade which gives them luxury shave after luxury shave, which "comes both in double-edge style and Injector style, which does indeed scrap the scrape, negate the nick, peel the pull, and oust the ouch, which shaves so closely and quickly and truly and beautifully that my heart leaps to tell of it. ,(Lf per haps you think me too effusive about Personna, I ask you to remember that to me Personna is more than just a razor blade ; it is also an employer.) But I digress. I make frequent trips, as I say, to learn what is currently vexing the American undergraduate. Last week, for example, while visiting a prominent Eas tern university (Idaho State) I talked to a number of engineering seniors who posed a serious question. Like all students, they had come lo college burning to fill them selves with culture, but, alas, because of all their science requirements, they simply had had no time to take the liberal arts courses their young souls lusted after. "Are we doomed," they asked piteously, "to go through life uncultured?" I answered with a resounding "No!" I told them the culture they had missed in college, they would pick up after graduation. I explained that today's enlightened corporations are setting up on-therjob liberal arts pro " gt ams for the newly employed engineering graduate courses designed to fill his culture gap for the truly en lightened corporation realizes that the truly cultured em ployee is the truly valuable employee. To illustrate, I cited .the well-known case of Champert Sigaf oos of Purdue. f1tt When Champert, having completed his degree in wing nuts and flanges, reported to the enlightened corporation where he had accepted employment, he was not rushed forthwith to a drawing board. He was first installed in the enlightened corporation's training campus. Here he was given a beanie, a room-mate, and a copy of the com pany rouser, and the enlightened corporation proceeded to fill the gap in his culture. First he was taught to read, then to print capital let ters, then capital and small letters. (There was also an attempt to teach him script, but it was ultimately abandoned.) f From these fundamentals, Champert progressed slowly but steadily through the more complex disciplines. He was diligent, and the corporation was patient, and in the end they were well rewarded, for when Champert fin ished, he could play a clavier, parse a sentence, and name all the Electors of Bavaria. Poised and cultured, Champert was promptly placed in an important executive position. I am pleased to report that he served with immense distinction-not, however, for long because three days later he reached retirement age. Today, still spry, he lives in St. Petersburg, Florida, where he supplements his pension by parsing sentences for tourists. 1967. Max Shulman Here's a sentence that's easy to parse: Subject "you." Verb "double." Object "your shaving comfort when you use Burma-Shave, regular or menthol, along with your Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades." twelve, and at fourteen he captured the hearts of London society, joining the distin guished company of such mus ical celebrities as Caruso and Melba. Elman was seventeen when he first came to the United States. The year was 1908; after his New York debut, he played twenty-one more con certs the same year in the same city, a record that has remained unique. In the years since then, Elman's name has become synonymous with violin artis try. He has played more con certs in the United States than any other living instrumenta list. As to whatever philosophy Elman brings to his playing he says, 'Technique is im portant, but without heart a performance cannot touch and uplift the audience." This "heart" is perhaps the secret of the famous "Elman tone," a byword the world over. Time has not dimmed the brilliant performance that has kept Elman at the top level of fame. In 1963 the New York World Telegram and Sun critic de clared, "Last night he played like a god a 72-year old god for whom age is an illusion ... I don't recall a tone to match Elman's this season, or one to accomplish such marvels of delicacy." All appearances of Mr. El man at this third Artist Semi nar are open to the public without charge. Ties School Extends Hospita With An affiliation between the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and Char lotte Memorial Hospital has been extended so that fourth year medical students now now have an opportunity for training in Charlotte. A six-week tour of duty is being offered to seniors in the medical school here as one of several options during their training in the Department of Medicine. Presently, the program is limited to two seniors at a time. Dr. Louis G. Welt, chairman of the Department of Medicine at the UNC medical school said in commenting on experi ence with the extended pro gram in Charlotte so far that the students are having "an exciting and valuable clinical experience in general." When the teaching link bet ween the medical school and the Charlotte hospital was es tablished last summer, one UNC resident in medicine was assigned to Charlotte for the final year of his advanced taaining. In addition to training, Ihe affiliation has involved the appointment of Charlotte Me morial Hospital physicians .to the UNC clinical faculty. Al so, members of the medical faculty here have gone : to Charlotte for hospital lectures. The affiliation with Char lotte Memorial Hospital in Charlotte and the more recent affiliation with Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital in Greens boro represent one more step in the process of developing closer educational ties between the UNC Medical Center and communities of the state. . Shaw, Wilde Drama Will Be Presented Long's Sec. 'Fits In Nicety9 (Continued from Page 1) music, appear to be far more British than Dean - of-Men-ish. "I like the Beatles" she A wilde Evening With Shaw, a dramatization of the lives and wit of Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw, will be presented on Sunday, March 12 at 8 p.m. in Memor ial Hall. The performance is free to UNC students with ID'S. The show was co-directed by the late Sir Cedric Hardwicke and is dramatized for the stage by Richard Gray and Mayo Loiseau. It is laced to gether with anecdotes, ideas, and comments from letters, newspaper clippings, essays, and speeches into a laugh provoking story of two men who wrote about the world as they saw it. Many people do not realize that Wilde and Shaw knew each other, and the differ ences in their personalities and the range of their ideas NASSER WANTS TREES CAIRO (UPI) President Gamal Abdel Nasser has or dered a drive to plant millions of trees throughout the United Arab Republic. Saplings will be planted on roadsides and on the banks of irrigation canals and drains in a campaign to double the na tion's timber yield. I I " ' - ' if- ' . ; .MMIIIJ',fc"'"'''nT ' t ' y . . jr'm" -J 0 f', Iff 1 - "J',vy - --- , - J . j RICHARD GRAY AND MAYO LOISEAU CLIP OUT- LA PIZZA STUDENT SPECIAL it Small Pizza it 1 Ind. Salad 'At Soft Drink TODAY ONLY La PIZZA L C L I P O U T J For Delivery Call S37-1451 make clashes the order of the night. The linking dramatical ly of these two men is a first for the stage. A Wilde Evening With Shaw comes to Carolina in its fourth post-New York touring sea son. Richard Gray and Mayo Loiseau are both successful performers in several media from television to Broadway and were actors-writers in residence at Duke this Fall. Campus Briefs TOD A Y There will be a meeting of the Model UN delegates today at 4:30 in the Woodhouse Room at Graham Memorial. UNC Young Republicans will meet in 203 Alumni at 7:30 p.m. tonight to select dele gates to the state conven- f tion. Carolina Christian Fellowship CInter-varsity) wll meet for supper at 6 p.m. in the Epsilon Room of Chase Cafe teria. Following supper, there will be a group Bible study on "The Nature of Sin." Everyone is welcome. Any persons interested in. be : coming members of the Pub lications Board will be in-1 terviewed in 201 Graham Memorial at 2 p.m. today. The Murdoch Committee in vites all students interested in .working with mentally retarded children to meet f with the committee at 2 to day in front of the Y. FRIDAY Interviews for president of Graham Memorial will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Sign up at the GM Informa tion desk. The Shireiles will be playing at the Granville Towers Cafeteria from 8 to 12 to night. Tickets are on sale at the Granville West desk after 6 p.m. for $4 a cou ple. SATURDAY Hell and Iredell Houses of Morrison are presenting the Englishmen at a combo par- ty in the downstairs social lounge of Morrison this Saturday night. Tickets, $1.50 per couple, can be bought at Chase, Y Court, and 928 Morrison. SHORT STORY LIVERPOOL, England (UPI) It wasn't so much a qestion of style when nuns of the 100-year-old order of Little Sisters of the Assump tion decided to shorten their ankle-length habits by 10 inch es. "It makes motor scootering easier," said one nun. i. mf ' LalwiltiWii ' 'fi train- riTiihiiiiiiiii'Tir r The Merrie Month of March Unfolds Milton's Inimitable Spring Exclusives! t j"jt- i Diamonds are a man's best friend and Milton's dia mond hopsacks will cata pult you into the Cup board's better dressed cir cles choose from nautical navy, commodore blue, golden dubonnet, Dart mouth green, blue olive, bear brown, desert tan, golden twine, harvest wheat $55.00. English import silkwool blend in smart houndstooth of sand navy terra cotta $60.00. New window pane sport coat in golden olive with tangerine window- pane $50.00. New white ground da cronwool plaid sport coat with antiqued gold and navy $50.00. This is but a fashion teaser of the wonderful world of spring unfolding. tlton'g othing Cupboard r era SORORITY SHACKTIME TODAY (Remember Regular Shacktime Tomorrow) I" '' l n't ' t " 1 r - v '" ' . - - - ' I r K v v y so. J t J Mayo Loiseau, who will be appearing with Richard Gray in A WILDE EVENING WITH SHAW Sunday, March 12 in Memorial Hall at 8:00 P.M. Show is free to UNC Students with I.D. admits, "but not out of this world into the next." Rosalyn blushes when she talks about what she likes to do, "because it makes me sound so homey and homely, but I do like to sew a lot. I even make most of my own clothes, but that sounds so bad to say so." i Her employer thinks she "fits in here beautifully. We have really been very pleas ed with her." "In case people come into this office thinking it's a pretty grim place, Ros alyn fixes that," Dean Long said. ' -I IMPORTS REPAIRS VW, TRIUMPH, MG, AUSTIN HEALY, Etc HOLIDAY IMPORTS Durham-C. H. Blvd. 433-270(4 IF YOU TRY IT YOU WILL BUY IT Grants food is excellent and your student I.D. card is good for 20 dis count 4:30 7:30 P.M. W. T. GRANT CO. EASTGATE Jit L squire : announces a "WELCOME WINNING TAR HEELS". SPECIAL featuring appr. 14 02. PRIME RIB of BEEF Baked Potato or French Fries with your choice of dressing The Famous Squire Salad and choice of four dressings Squire Bread plain or garlic Tea or Coffee plus Hot Fruit Cobbler fl $2.50 complete 5to7 Mon. thru Thurs. THE COUNTRY SQUIRE-34 mi. from Eastgate on Dur. Blvd. VARSITY MEN'S WEAR 1,ln,"'r ' """" ONLY A FEW WEEKS REMAINING Everything Must Be Sold! Choose from fresh stocks of nationally famous brands of men's wear, including many new Spring fashions at UNBELIEVEABLE PRICES mats vaC 0?i MiK, m& m mm 11 lon't Lliss This Great Sale! ) Sorry: No Charges No Layaways All Sales-Final' laramt Mens Wmr Clothiers of Distinction Chapel Hill Franklin Street
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 9, 1967, edition 1
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