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THE DAILY TAR HEEL Tuesday, March 14. 1967 Page 4 Hell Week Ends After Wild Hunt By DONNA REIFSNIDEIt DTH Staff Writer From the days when Thom as Wolfe roamed the wilds that was this campus come hair raising tales of the or deals the fraternity had to endure. pledge But after an unfortunate ac cident that resulted in the ultimately demise of a young pledge, brothers have soft ened initiation to what is known as Hell week. Hell week's really that, ac cording to certain of those who know, but if the frat hope ful is cheerfully enduring and compliant, happily he'll reach the inner "heaven" that is the brother fellowship. The following is a list of articles pledges in a certain local fraternity were asked to obtain in a scavenger hunt recently. Pledges were di vided into two competing teams one dark night and given three and a half hours to find the enumerated Your Father's Mustache Big Time For many years the "over night" success of a talented ' college student who makes a ' hit record has been a common place story in show business. But, leave it to the collegiate to come up with a new twist. Your Father's Mustache, a national chain of banjo nigh ' clubs, staffed and operated by students fromi colleges and un- iversities across the country, , is now in the big time record 'business. - The big twist here is that 'the group did not make a re cord and them go on to a "series of college concerts and nightclub engagements. They, namely Joel Schiavone, 30, Yale and Harvard grad, and approximately 120 current col- lege students, started their re- - cording careers by first open- ing their own night club. The f success of the first club and J subsequent banjo emporiums led RCA Victor to put this ; "established" group on a re- cently , released album entitled, -iDf'course, Your.Tathetfs Mus- Instead of the students com ing to the studio, RCA Victor came to Your Father's Mus- tache in New York's Green J wich Village. There they re ; corded the collegiates gathered ; from other clubs in Boston, j Chicago, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Denver, Cape Cod, New Orleans, and Somers Point, New Jersey. The stu dents, who all work part-time , at the clubs as musicians, I managers, bartenders, 'floor-. men and waiters, were to be " transformed from nightclub en , tertainers to RCA Victor re- ; cording stars They brought their banjos, sters, grades one through six. With the help of these chil ' ' dren and the steadying hand SHE MEANS IT LONDON (UPI) An in genious and persistent suitor is Thomas Ballard, 23. At the request of the object of his ardor, Gillian Arrowsmith, a court enjoined Ballard from telephoning her. It later, again at the girl's request, enjoined him from calling upon her at home or at the job. When once more the girl asked for legal relief from -Ballard's attentions, he was enjoined from talking to her in the street. Yet again court help was asked and given this time enjoining Ballard, at risk of jail, from parking his car outside or near Gillian's home or in any of the eight parking spaces near her place of employment. Serine) Tables Full of low-priced temptation! Prices start at 50c, most titles about half-price or less! Come for a browse and get in on the Fun! The items.The team who returned with the most of these items won. The losing team would have to do an exhaustive -number of push-ups. Specified items included one Duke coed, one Duke parking sticker, one worm, one empty birth control pill bottle, a dead bird, a bouquet of flowers from a grave, a pair of stockings, 1-2 ounce toe-nail clippings, one garter belt, a door knob, a lock of red hair, a live animal (other than a Duke coed!) and oth er items a bit to risque to mention here. One rather indelicate item sent the boys searching in a cow pasture with a flash light. As things turned out, a slight technicality in the size of a feminine undergarment caused the teams to tie. Now it's all over and the once lowly take particular pleasure in giving the order. Clean that spitoon, pledge! tubas, wasnboards, trombones and singing voices into New York from Northwestern, Har vard, Drexel, Penn, LSU, Den ver School of Mines, St. Louis U., DePaul, NYU, and other schools and recorded an album full of singalong foot-stomping, Mustache favorites. More than twenty songs from the Twenties spin their way merrily down nostalgia lane on the album. The World's Finest Banjo Band (copyrighted name for Your Father's Mus tache banjo bands) twang along with such numbers as Down Yonder, You Are My Sunshine, Bill Bailey, Battle Hymn of the Republic, Bye Bye Blackbird, Beer Barrel Polka, When johnny Comes Marching Home, and even, Hava Nageela. "The World's second largest light club chain," (second only to Playboy), has brought America back into the age of the banjo through a group who never lived in the original ban- io era. the 1967 collegiate. " "r.: .- i ll Latest Switch: Kids Do Teaching By WES LEFLER Children teaching teachers . . .that's the newest ap proach to teacher education. Gone is the textbook that told their teachers how to teach. In place of the textbook is a class of bright-eyed young- of a university, one dozen young college graduates will become elementary school teachers. It's all part of a bold new program in teacher educa tion that makes a clean break with tradition. The experimental program, financed by the federal gov ernment, will be conducted by the University of North Carolina here. "The real break with tra dition comes in the approach we will use," Dr. Thomas D. Price explained. Dr. Price will direct the program when it begins in September. "In the past you could not be a teacher without first taking courses, in teaching methods," he said. "But we won't be telling these young people to go and argain onanza! Intimate Booksh op Ml tast Frnklin Skrt Chapel Hill, North Carolina Open Nights Until 10 Spring Scene 'Lillabiilero' I Print Second Issue Soon The spring issue of LILLA BULERO, the new literary ma gazine published and edited in Chapel Hill by UNC students, will go on sale Wednesday, March 15, at the UNC cam puses in Chapel Hill and Greensboro and in bookstores all across the state. LILLABULERO will also be available through selected bookstores in various parts of the country, from Cambridge, Massachusetts, to - Sausalito, California. The price per copy will continue to be 75 cents; for a 4-issue subscription, the price is still $2.75. Since the first issue of LILLABULERO was completely sold out in less than a week and has now be- come a treasured collector's item, everyone should be sure to buy several copies. Featured in this, the second, issue of LILLABULERO: a story and five poems by Wil liam Faulkner, a story by Ralph Dennis, a remarkable selection from the remarkable BINZWAGNER TALES by Ru- bin Barker, poems by Lucius Shepard, Dabney Stuart, Matt Hughes, Edmund Skellings, Ed imitate the old master in the textbook," he said. "We'll say to them, 'Here are your students. Teach them. Be original. Be crea tive. But teach them,' " Prof. Price said. "One day we can hopefully get .away from the worn-out practice of teaching by imi tation," he said. As a clinical professor, Dr. Price will work with student teachers going into the class room for the first time. But as a starter, these stu dent teachers must be hold ers of a college degree. "Then we will give them a round of background courses such as government, art, mu sic, health, physical educa tion, history and geography," he said. "This will take one year." The whole program will cover two full years, lnclud- ing one summer. And at the end of two years the student gets the Master of Arts in Teaching degree.' iiSDffif 6 to 1Q3 P.O. oaili Catering Pizza Large Plain Pizza and A Pitcher of Beer or Cider E. FRANKLIN STREET Professional Bldg. 942-5578 THIS BOY and his dog are looking for something. It could be nature or self-identity. Or perhaps he just takes pleasure in pipes. DTH photo by Steve Adams. Leimbacher and John Hoy, plus reviews of new fiction and poetry, plus PORTFOL IO 2 a selection of Shaker xquck and Shaker Inspirational Drawings, with explanatory notes by Daniel Patterson. , LILLABULERO 'S June is sue will present Malcolm Cow ley on William Faulkner, new fiction by Dennis Trudell. poems by William Pitt. Root, Stanley Cooperman, Robert ; from La Palta, Maryland; Poe Morgan, Lucius Shepard and try Editor, Edward Ellis, UNC- others, new translations of Stefan George by Wallace Kauffman. PORTFOLIO 3 drawings by the Colombian ar- tist, Arturo Esquerra and a special extra - length re-. view section devoted exclus- ively to new books published by the "Little Presses", LILLABULERO's fourth is- sue will be a special North Carolina Issue, with new work from the Dixie Underground, f 5 1 3? . I TV t- wuuuing xiuuun uy u u c k. :r Adams, LeornRooke, Ralph. Dennis, Max Steele and Ru bin Barker, poetry by R o o t e, Shepard, Morgan, Brookhouse, Sanderlin, Chappell and others, plus ORTFOIOA. w&nd in c 1 u dtnlTeviews; polemics; gimmicks, etc. Future issues will be pres-j enting an interview of Joe" Tex, poems by Robert Peter son, fiction by Calder Willing-1 ham, drawings by Arthur Yan off and many , others. , Staff members are: Editor, 1, Russell Banks, UNC-CH, sen ior in English, from Concord, J N. H.: Associate Editor, Wfl- UNC Debate Team Victors The UNC debate team swept ' to victory this weekend at Eas-" tern - Kentucky . University. Team president, senior Craig 1 Bradley and freshman Tom Foster went undefeated in six rounds of debate, out-talking such powers as Clemson and U. of Kentucky. In addition, Bradley easily won the trophy for top speaker of the tourna-: ment, amassing 149 speaker points compared to 140 for the , second place speaker. Bradley and Foster, debat ing the negative side of the topic pertaining to US foreign policy committments, teamed, up with the UNC affirmative team of Brenda Hauser and Jim Moore (2-4) for an over all record of 8 wins and 4 losses and second place trophy for the team. on TAUEQD i niLi ;aziine Will liam P. Matthews, m, UNC CH, graduate student in Eng lish, from Cincinnati, Ohio; Associate Editor, David Malli son, UNC-G, graduate student in English, from Greensboro, N. C; Associate Editor, D. Newton Smith, UNC-CH, gra duate student in English, from Greer, S. C; Fiction Editor, Steve Hawthorne, UNC - CH, senior in politifal science, CH, senior in English, from Chapel H31, N.C.; Business Manager, R i c h a r d GatUng, UNC-CH, junior in English, from Memphis, Tenn. I mean You're reailyon we way, BUDDY8M ALL1H0SE IDEAS YOU'VE ."BEEN HITTING- ME CHAK1CEJ WHAT COULD BE GREATER? 'i-; V : fe J s n: AND WHAT COULD BE CLA9SIER, "WAN SAYING'llMWITH &ENERAL TELEPHONE&aECTRONI(S?THATS 5TATL3! WHAT C0HDT0P THAT? At General Telephone & Electronics, we want people who have learned how to think. We help teach them to think bigger. GEE Sonny and Cher are head lining Talent International's Spring Spectacular of Stars at Dorton Arena, Sunday, March 19, at 8 p.m. Also star ring in the show will be Mau rice Williams and the Zodiacs, Raleigh's own Embers, and the Catalinas of Charlotte. Salvatore Bono (Sonny) quit school in the twelfth grade be cause he wanted to write and arrange songs. In 1957, he landed an A & R job with Specialty Records. While with Specialty he wrote several hits, including "You Bug Me Baby" and "Needles and Pins." Phil Spector, one of the legends of. the recording in dustry, offered Bono a better job, and he took it. About the same time he met Cher who was at the time young, beau tiful and wanting to become an actress. A storybook ro mance followed. They became Mr. and Mrs. Bono a year and a half later. Spector hap pened to hear them doing back up parts for a group and immediately he knew that with a little practice,1 these two could become one of the hottest acts in the country. It took a little time, but Spector proved to be right. They recorded their first song as Caesar and Cleo but it was not a big success. Then, in 1965, "Baby Don't Go" was penned and arranged. This time they used Sonny and Cher. The rest is history. Their second national bit, "I Got You Babe," sold three million copies, becoming one of the all time best sell- ers. A long string of hits and international fame have fol- lowed. . What makes Sonny and Cher? Is it their groovy ward- WITH ! MOW&YOUR A NEW SCOOTER. A NEW SCOOTER. GENERAL TELEPHONE OPERATING COMPANIES - GENERAL TELEPHONE DIRECTORY COMPANY AUTOMATtr ELECTRIC LENKURT ELECTRIC SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODUCTS GT&E LABORATORIES GT&E INTERNATIONAL Goings On Avon Privette robes which they design? Or maybe their unique male-female combination. They try to be themselves. They sing of love and the feelings shared by a man and a woman. Both personify the young action generation. TOURED EUROPE They recently toured Eur ope and were an overwhelm ing success. This month they have appeared on the Andy Williams Show and The Man From Uncle. Their . movie, "Good Times," will be re leased in May or June. Advance tickets are on sale at the Record Bar. Equally fabulous is the Rightous Brothers' Concert at Dook Indoor Stadium, Satur day, at 7 p.m. The Rightous Brothers, Bill Medley and Bobby Hatfield, became fam ous three years ago with "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'." Since then they have perfected their unique style of soul and had a barrel full of hits, including "Unchained Melody" and "Ebb Tide". Headlining this week's night club scene is the appearance of the Shirelles at the Jokers Three, Friday. Also Friday the Monarchs are at Club The G.M. Rendezvous Room Presents: archy and a one-act cabaret musical March 17th and 18th 8:00 and 10:00 p.m. Admission free to UNC students and dates YOlAE GOT ITACED! WORKING WITH THE REAL PROS... THE GWS WHO KM0W UJHAlfe HAPPING- IN RESEARCH EXOTIC METALS AMD ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY. WHAT COULD BEAT IT? ' AND THE MONEV' ! yOULL BE tfOLLING IN BREAT)! WHAT'S GOING- TO BE YOUR FfEST MAJOR PURCHASE YOU BRIGHT-TALENTED-YOUNGEXKUTIVE YOU? Fantasia (formerly the Dog). The Embers are featured at their Club, Saturday. The Scene hosts Herman and the In Crojvd on weeknights (no cover charge) and The Af fairs this weekend. The Kays of Kenly are on tab at the Jokers Three, Saturday. FLICKS Michael Caine, who defi nitely has been the best all around actor in 1966, stars as Harry Palmer in "Funeral In Berlin." Though it is not quite as spine chilling and deep plotted as its predecessor, "The Ipcress File," it is ex citing and jammed packed with Palmer's dry wit. Cur rently at the Village Theatre, it is the movie of the week. Thursday's openings include "The Wrong Box" at the Var sity and "A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum" at the State. "Blow-Up" begins Friday at the Rialto. "Endless Summer," Bruce Brown's documentary on surf ing will begin at the Rialto in a couple of weeks. Film strips shown from it on the Tonight Show were really great. mehitabel A NEW -SCOOTER. SIX NEW SCOOTERS. f I s 6 i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 14, 1967, edition 1
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