Saturday, December 2, IS 67 Card. O aw BBO JL U i ii TOT! DAILY TAB HEEL 11 a ii n. E3 fjj) - ' if , Backstage at Playmakers can be completely eerie when there's no one around. Especially at night. The ropes are all alone, illuminated by a .Rocky: . Hurtling WASHINGTON (UPI) Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York said Friday the current front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, Richard M. Nixon, may find much of his 'locked-in" delegate support actually belongs to Gov. Ronald Reagan of Claifornia. Rockefeller told reports that "anybody's beatbale" including President Johnson. "Anyone who counts their chickens at this point in terms of votes is unrealistic," the GOP 'governor said. Once again he said he would not be a candidate under any circumstances. Rockefeller told reporters that "anybody's beatable" including thinks his choice for the nomination, Gov. George Romney of 1 Michigan, can regain the position of leadership he held a few months ago. "I think Gov. Romney is going to do surprisingly well in the primaries with a major effort," Rockefeller said. Rockefeller himself brought up Reagan as a "factor to be taken into consideration when you consider , that Nixon's locked-up delegates may turn out to be Reagan delegates." Rockefeller did not question that Nixon was the current front- runner but said it was premature to say he would be the nominee wnen delegates to next August's been elected. "I'm just an observer of the scene," he said, reiterating, "I have said consistently that under no circumstances will I be a candidate." Asked whether he would accept the nomination if it were offered him, he said: "That's a bridge I haven't crossed because I don't think it's a reality." 1 PAn ii DELIVERY CALL 37-1451 1........ I DTH For Sale: Vox Panther Bass Guitar. White with black trim. Amp cord, strap, and case included. New condition. Very fair price asked. Call 968 3574. BUY A BUYER'S GUIDE dTiFad kTi " For Sale: Browning Automatic 12 gauge shot gun, 3 years old and in good condition. Must soli immcdiatelyb$25. Call Charles Silver, 929-6280. V x ) 1 s V ' w V DTH No Audience solitary light, standing out in stark relief against the dark curtains. And all is quiet. Rea Nixon national convention had not yet Symphony Orchestra To Present Concert The UNC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by David Serrins, will present its 1967 winter concert at 8 p.mi. Tues day in Hill Hall. ; Featured will be Mozart's Concerto for 'Violin and Orchestra, K. 219, a com position requiring great skill in style and balance for both orchestra and soloist. UNC Music Professor Edgar , Alden will ge the violin, soloist. First1 violinist with the North Carolina String Quartet, Alden is well known, to Research Triangle audiences. . HAPPILY SMASHING ALL INCLUDING THE "TOM COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents SIDNEY JAMES CLAVELL S PRODUCTION OF Ai THE YEAR'S No. 1 FILM (12th 13 5 7- Staff Photo by MIKE McCOWAN DeSua To Lecture On Modern Poetics Dr. William J. D e S u a , associate professor of Italian and Comparative literature, will be the featured speaker at the December meeting of the University of North Carolina Philological Club. 1 : - He will speak on "Sym bolism, ' Imagism and' Hermeticism: In Search of a Modern Poetics" at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the faculty lounge of Dey Hall. Try outs Scheduled For O'Neill Comedy Tryouts have been scheduled for parts in Eugene O'Neill's comedy "Ah, Wilderness." They will be held Monday and Tuesday nights at 7:30 and Tuesday afternoon at 4 in 111 Murphey. Production dates for the play, directed by Joseph Talarowski, have been set for Feb. 21-27 in Playmakers Theatre. "Ah, Wilderness!" was first produced in New York in 1933 and features a cast of nine men and six women. It is O'Neill's only comedy. Students, faculty, townspeople and anyone within commuting distance of Chapel Hill are invited to try out. Scripts are available for reading in the Playmakers office, 307 Bynmn. Geographers Select Carolina Professors Two members of the UNC geography department have been elected to top positions at a meeting of southern geographers held at Gainesville, Florida. Dr. David G. B a s i 1 e , chairman of the UNC geography department, was RECORDS AT THE RIALTO FANTASTIC RUN OF JONES!" POITIER 99 " f TECHNICOLOR THE No. 1 HIT SONG Straigbt Week!) -9 RIALTO, Durham WASHINGTON ( UP1 -The Justice Department Friday 8, me Court to uphold a law that could send draft card-burners to jaiL wraft card . .burning, however labeled, h conduct, not speech," it said. In a brief filed in the case of a Massachusetts youth, the department said that a 1965 amendment to Selective Service regulations that bans burning "does not inhibit any ? ii ee npnntoa- tradi tionally afforded protection un der' the First Amendm ent. . Surgeon Investigates eart. Special To The Daily Tar Heel Most patients who have au ing hearts opened up surgically for repairs can expect their body chemistry to be upset for a few yeeks, one of the na tion's foremost surgeons . said here in the first Luther H. Hodges Lecture on Vascular Surgery. . Some patients require months for their bodies to regain their chemical balance. But a few patients stay in congestive heart failure. "This last situation is not yet completely understood," Dr. John W. Kirklin told his au dience. . ' ' ' 'Basically, the problem . is that some patients remain in heart failure even though thir mechanical valvular defects have been repaired. elected cihairman . :of the Southeastem Division; Associa-; tionof American Geographers. He has been . currently serving as secretary; 'ol,ih.e ninestate 'organization, S'si Dr. Ridhard E. ; Lonsdale was elected to a four-year term as editor of The Southeastern.. Geographer, t he Division's journal. ; v Japanese Statistician To Address Meeting r A prominent J a p a n e ie statistics professor will speak before the statistics coUoquium Monday, at 4;00 p-m." in room 265 Philips HalL :. ; : Nariai Sugiura d!f Hiroshima University vitl discuss various test criteria based on a random sample from the miltivariate normal population, h ': r - - Coffee and tea wall be served 5? minutes gefore the talk in . Wsicj. lounge. UNC Prof Publishes Pound-Joyce Letters UNC English professor For rest Read has just edited a new edition of correspondence between Ezra Pound and James Joyce. ' "POUND-JOYCE: The Let ters of Ezra Pound to James Joyce, with Pound's Critical Essays and Articles About Joyce" is published by New Directions Publishing Corpora tion, New York, and contains commentary by the editor. The book reveals one of the most interesting personal rela tionships of modern literature, the friendship of two of the Twentieth Century's greatest writers. ; ; TH H A delicious steak, baked potato with sour cream, garlic bread, green salad and coffee, tea, or other non-carbonated beverage all for only MONDAY FRIDAY NIGHTS 5-7 ! 1 - ; : : -' Amendment freedom of speech. At issue is the appeal of David P. O'Brien of Frarn ingham, who was convicted for burning a draft card cn the steps of the south Boston courthouse March 31, 1955. O'Brien's lawyers from the American Civil Liberties Union claim the act was "symbolic speech." Therefore, they said, First Amendment protections : against inhibiting expression do apply in his case. The deoartment argued that there is only a limited number Failures "Research is being carried out to determine.. all the various phenomena involved in this and to search for ways to prevent it in the future." Dr. Kirklin, introduced at the lecture as "a surgeon's surgeon," is chairman of the Department of Surgery at U12 University cf Alabama Medical College. He formerly held a similar position at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. 'He has made major con tributions to the devel-pment of open-heart surgery and heart-lung machines. His 55-minute lecture was devoted to a naime of a por tion cl his heart research dur ing the last five years. The Hodges Lectureship was established by former governor Luther H. Hodges to bring outstanding authorities on vascular surgery to UNC. Cave Expert To Talk To UNO Zoologists The world's leading authority on subterranean marine caves will speak (at the UNC zoology seminar on Wednesday. Prof. Rupert R. Riedl, from the University of Vienna, will discuss "Exploration of Marine Environments in Sea Caves." An authority on triarinie ecology, Prof. Rledl has ex plored deep caves in the Mediterranean Adriatic, and North Atlantic, and is an ex pert skin diver. Coffee will be served at 4 p.m. before the seminar in room 107, Wilson HalL Aerospace Briefing Team Wilt Be Here One of the most respected briefing teams in the aerospace field the Aerospace Presentations Team from the Air University (at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama will highlight the activities of the United States Space Program here Dec. 5, at AFROTC head quarters on the UNC campus. The meeting is open to the public. Psychology Colloquium To Hear Duke Prof . Prof. 'Gregory A. Kimble of Duke University will give the second lecture in the UNC Psychology Colloquium Series Wednesday. Tr. Kimble, director r of I t o H ii a o 5 1 11 i P S in Psychology at Duke, will speak about "Concepts For Psychology of Volition." The colloquium will be held at 4 p.m. in room 112, Davie Hall. The First guarantees JVT LENOIR HALL CAMPUS STEAK ROOM of activities that can be treated as speech and they are ones which are inexiricab!y tied to all expression or where no reasonably effective alternative means of com munication is available." Draft card burning, the 4' I f i The junior class-Book Exchange sponsored print sale ended Frida.y About $1,503 worth of prints were sold, of which the junior class gets allsice . COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) Gov. Claude , Kirk of Florida Friday called potential third party Presidential candidate, George Wallace an "influence peddler" and a "tool of the President." Kirk said the Alabamian's campaign in Florida could have "the devastating effect of giving our votes to Mr. Johnson" by drawing support from whoever wins the GOP presidential nomination. "Mr. Wallace is a five per center, an influence peddler;" Kirk told an airport news con ference and later a youth group. "He is a willing or unwitting tool of the Presi dent." Kirk, here for an address to student groups and the state GOP exeuctive committee, noted that Wallace had once stood in the schoolhouse door W S3 Sell Anything $1 V) Q department said, ' has no time honored ritualistic con notations. Nor is It an essential means for the wide dLssirnina tiot of a dissenting point of view, since an array of ef fective alternative modes of expression exist." ! f Print Sale Nets 81,500 Called LB J 6TooF in an unsuccessful bid to stop school desegregation. ' "Now he is standing in the door of the voting booth he is telling people to throw ayay their vote," Kirk said. The Florida Republican governor said that for his part he would support whoever the GOP nominee happens to be. "It's un-American, telling people to throw away their vote saia Kirk. Kirk disavowed any desire to become the GOP vice presidential nominee "In 1968 and said he would refuse ths lot if it were offered to him. In his speech to the state Republican executive com mittee, Kirk said the great challenge of today is to defeat the threat to society brought by those who ignore the law. "Ours is a society and government of laws and the those laws, respecting the vast majority of us live within rights of others," he said. "But today this kind of socie ty has been challenged. . .by those who have taken it as their right to break the laws the best of us observe, whether it involves organized crime, f '1 1 YS(5,(M TONITE AFTER THE GAME IN THE TIN CAN $2 AT G.M. The department likened th language cf the 1363 amend ment against draft card burn ing to statutes prohibiting the destruction of public property and said th 5 amenament fered from vagueness. DTH Staff Photo by M1KK McGOWAN ' -V IL . " '. - - ( . Yi - aoout $150. Most of the money the class made will have to be used to pay for debts incurreS' last year, class president Charlie Farris said. operating on a nationwide basis, or inciting a city to riot, or a single act of isolated violence, the challenge is still the same." In prepared remarks Kirk said, "all is not well in America in 1967 and the lawlessness that ravages our country is only one symptom of the disease 0 f ir responsibility that is attacking this nation and its in situtions." He noted that a motorcycle gang in Palm Beach, Fla. had recently nailed a girl to a tree for holding out money from the gang. ANDREWS DUPLICATING SERVICE 419A W. Franklin St (Behind Leo's Rastaurant) Quick, Quality Duplicat ing Service. One day thesis printing service. Phone 923-3302 TC!(i "APPLE, PEACHES, PUMPKIN PIE" I J 7 ' V. j 1, I $2.50 AT DOOR Bum. r

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