Page Four 5frff' TP HwiJ. .4r Reporters Discuss Fundinjr A -- 4 l o ft iiriiaiisi s - o oiiciemn u i in omiroi r W .. . j t- j i w Sj r - . r . - Action in Yesterday's Dook Kinnuir From a Conversation Richard Kinnaird with An artist might well be described as someone who likes to talk about his work. In the case of UNC's Richard Kinnaird it would seem that he knows what he is talking about. An exhibit of Kinnaird's work, sponsored by the Gallery Committee, is being shown in the South Gallery ot the Union until March 21. The show is representative of several styles Kinnaird has used over a 15 year period. It includes the Youe r.iENu Week Of MAR. 2 Open 7 Days A Week LUNCHEON SPECIALS Monday - Friday MONDAY Braized Beef Ribs 2 Veg., Soup, Salad, Rolls TUESDAY lA BBQ Chicken 2 Veg., Soup, Salad, Rolls WEDNESDAY Roast Beef on Bun Soup, Salad THURSDAY Veal Parmagiana WSPAGHETTI Soup, Salad FRIDAY Filet of Flounder 2 Veg., Soup, Sal.. Rolls Or Corned Beef on Pumpernickle Soup, Salad NIGHT SPECIAL: 7:30-9:00 MONDAY Eye Round Steak 2Veg.. Salad. Bread $1.45 TUESDAY Spaghetti Salad, Bread All You Can Eat $1.40 WEDNESDAY lA B-B-Q Chicken 2 Veg., Salad, Bread $1.45 THURSDAY Pizza Special Plain or Pepperoni Vi PRICE 104 W. Franklin St. CLIP ME OUT Be Sure And Visit THE BACCHAE Entrance: Behind Zoom Off Columbia St. HOURS: 3:00-11:00 P.M. Mcnday-Saturday Happy Hour Every Day 3:00-6:00 P.M. ! r 5 - Carolina Basketball Game am JL works he considers to be the best from a variety of techniques. One thread he weaves through the pieces is that of composition. Kinnaird shows an interest in position meaning; he finds polarities and their points of conflict particularly fascinating. There are reDeated textures in many works, the kind of things you want to go up close to. But along with the serious critical viewpoint he takes of his work, there is also much good humor and fun to be found in it. Take his own casual references to that "feisty" piece a pleasant collection of. orangish shapes standing in the midst of a bright, yet soothing blue background. There is' a self-portrait of the artist complete with fingers in corner of mouth, tongue extended in a "bleh" attitude. 3 College orehead College students from Kernersville, Washington and Oak Ridge, Tenn., have been named winners of 1970 Morehead Fellowships in Medicine at UNC. They will enroll in the UNC Medical School this fall. The fellows are William Griffith Bo wen of KERNERSVILLE, Charles David Collins of OAK RIDGE, TENN. and David Thomas Tayloe Jr. of WASHINGTON. All are dean's list students at NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEftlY AWARDS 1 COLOR PAWVISXX Hi v. SHOWS: 12:35-2:43-4:58 7:16-9:34 Telephone 489-2327 ( 1 V d R M i v .-. t i r s ilpv; Showing! i - A V..' i " J) r rr: - - il a jJ Sees Scott and VVuycik About His Art On one wall you are faced with a grid design which from a distance seems to be a Mondrianesque exercises in balance. But on closer inspection you see that the narrow lines randomly curve and some squares are not completely colored, apparently well-ordered The and perfectly arranged pattern is only a deception. Kinnaird says he chooses a particular form for expressing an idea if he enjoys working with it. Collage seems to be a favorite "release" for him, something he always wants to have around. But at the same time he sees that technique as being extremely materialistic and ultimately a rich form for expressing today's values. Kinnaird is perceptive enough to see those values for what they are something of today, now, something changing. And he sees himself, Students Medicine Fellowships their respective colleges. Each fellowship is valued at $10,000 plus tuition and fees, to cover expenses of four years of medical school. Financial need is not considered in the selection of winners. Morehead Medical Fellows are selected by trustees fo the John Motley Morehead Foundation, headed by Hugh G. Chatham of ELKIN, and a special committee at the UNC School of Medicine. The medical committee is composed of Dr. John Chambliss of ROCKY MOUNT; Dr. John Hall of CHAPEL HILL; and George Oliver of CARY, a graduating Morehead Medical Fellow. Companies Recruit Here 1 The following companies will recruit on campus during the week of March 9-13, 1970: MONDAY, MARCH 9 Central Carolina Bank & Trust Company; The Free Library of Philadelphia; Arthur Andersen & Company; State Farm Insurance Companies; Peebles Department Stores; Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company. TUESDAY, MARCH 10 '.Associates Investment Company; First Union National Bank; Abraham & Straus; W.R. Grace & Company; Arthur Andersen & Company; Wilmar, Incorporated; Wyeth Laboratories; Camp Tomahawk; American Oil Company. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11 Drexel. Enterprises, Incorporated; The South Carolina National Bank; Yale-New Haven Hospital; JIMEA it i 3 ! 3 ALL YOU CAM EA7! 4 Mcsfs, Vegetsbfes, Saladt, Dessert Tea or Cof fca 12:00 Noon-3 P.M. 4:30 p.m.-7 p.m. $2 95 Adults Children $1.50 WW itiiLk from Town Hell Va Mi. N. on N.C 86 Chapel Hil! M C 'dPEM"7 DAY5.A.&EEIX For Reservations 942-5155 A discussion between three v;el!-known reporters concluded on the note that the "DAILY TAR HEEL" has not changed into a radical paper as claimed by the paper's recently active critsci. rm own w rtr . 1 i oia Bv KEN RIPLEY DTH Staff Writer Chapel Hill will only see a partial eclipse on March 7, but people in Greenville will view a total solar eclipse, discovered those who attended the with respect to his style, as equally subject to change. Kinnaird has been teaching at Chapel Hill for 5 years. He studied at Carleton College, the Art Institute of Chicago arid University of Illinois and taught at Auburn before coming to UNC. From a teaching perspective he likes having his students view his work because it is their only chance to "get back at him", or in more academic terms, criticize him. From the artist's retrospective selection of his work for this exhibit one gets an interesting look at the man's personality. If that were all, it would be, in the case of Richard Kinnaird, a happy experience. Combined with his serious concern for a meaningful form of expression through art Kinnaird's one-man show is enlightening as well as entertaining. Awarded Selections criteria include scholastic ability and achievement, personal qualifications, motivation towards medicine and promise of distinction in the profession. The three new fellows will be the fifth group chosen since the program was established in 1966. The first three fellows chosen will be graduates in June. They are William Jarvis Busby of SALISBURY; George Motley Oliver Jr. of CARY and John Richard Leonrad III of LEXINGTON. The new fellows join nine others now studying here. The Foundation plans to keep 12 fellows in medical school here continuously. Ameerican Oil Company; Weyerhaeuser Company; The Procter & Gamble" Company; Wachovia Bank & Trust Company; Pillsbury Company. THURSDAY, MARCH 12 Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Company; Rose's Stores, Incorporated; Thomasville Furniture Industries, Incorporated; Travelers Insurance Company; S.S. Kresge Company; Wachovia Bank & Trust Company. DL017 Y0UHSILF UP TO POSTER SIZE 2x3 & $3.59 3x4 Ft. $7.50 lV2x2 Ff.- 52-50 Send any black and white or color photo, polaroid print or maaozine pnoto.- A great Gift idea ... A splendid Gog . . . ideal room decoration . . . perfect for parties. Poster mailed in sturdy tube. Your original returned undamaged. Add 50c for postage and handling for EACH item ordered. Send check, or M.O. (No C O D ) To: PHOTO POSTE3 INC. GeptY 210 e. 23 St.. n.y. mm V V Kf : K Sun Dick Hatch of "United Pres International." Ed Voder of the "GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS." and JoeDosterof the "Winston Salem Journal." discussed the DTH controversy on "Nonh Carolina This on t UNC-N ASA presentation. "All About Eclipses." Friday and Saturday at the Morehead Planetarium. Greenville lies in the middle of the "path of totality." the lecturer Henry Aldridge explained, but Chapel Hill misses the narrow band of the moon's shadow that sweeps across the state. The sky will still darken and the moon will blank out the lower portion of the sun shortly after noon next Saturday. Cities in the "totality" belt will observe the moon blocking most of the sun, leaving only a thin ring the Sun's "corona" showing. "All About Eclipses" explained the nature and causes of solar and lunar eclipses. Using the Carl Zeiss Model VI projector, the audience was shown a variety of different eclipses, including a visual demonstration of the March 7 solar eclipses from both Chapel Hill and Greenville. The program was written and produced by Aldridge, coordinator of 'the UNC-NASA Space Sciences Lecture Program. Total solar eclipses, which are rare and relatively difficult to predict, occur when the moon comes between the earth and the sun. A lunar eclipse, more frequent than solar eclipses, takes place when the earth comes between the earth and the sun. The actual eclipse on March 7, Aldridge explained, will last only three minutes, but the whole process of eclipsing will last over two hours. The Chinese, the audience learned, originally believed that a dragon was eating the sun. Sec " 1 eclipse J THE m DAILY I &0 TAR 3 HEEL H i T1 jfSiiiijip iJUUAM nnnn n Week." a weekly teietion program concerr.irig state and local issues. The program was broadcast Thursday night on Wt"NC-TY. cr.a nne ! four. Yoder is a former editor of con traversal the DTH. His editorials on the a:mosphere of the sports program at UNC and his'critism of the hiring of Jim Tatum as coach forced a recall vote on his editorship. Yoder won the vote. All three journalists were opposed to control or any changes of rule on the DTH. Doster mentioned the Committee of Nine and their criticism of financial support of the DTH. He pointed out Classified '67 Camaro SS350 Convertible. Must sell. Call 933-5377 after 9 pm. Wranted: Experienced soul singer, sax player, trumpet player and organist interested in combo work this Spring and Summer. Preferably in-state with decent grades. Call Burt at 933-4091. SUMMER IN EUROPE! $199. NY-London-NY. June 10-Sept. 2. N.C. EUROPEAN FLIGHT. B'ett Sanders 933-5271. After 5 and Sat. and Sun. SINGLE MEN WANTED! Dating can be fun. Tell us the type of women you would like to meet All matches are from Chapel HilL For free details write: Nationwide Dating Service, 177 lfJth St. N.E., AUanU, Ga. 30309. bugiish (Mint Seat) riding lessons Special group rates for adult beginners. Sheffield Farm 942-2079. CRAZY DUDE: I.C.Y.B. Oh boy! Tommorrow's the day! FOR SALE: Stereo Radio AM-FM. One amp-2 speakers. Excellent Condition. Call Murray -9 68-91 17 n 1 f 3 I ?5 ' sr. j r. mm i UUL ( n ) i vry news out o i or ri i r nan. sucj worker's NEWS i in tike. food. ine use oi coarse "stringers" by wire services and newspapers to report o.i UNC campus has increastd ever since the Columbia student uprising. u was pointed are part time out. Mrsr.j reporters ;ers for that the cafe: thus Town and Campus Apartments 15-501 At Garrett Rd. 2 bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished, carpeted, all electric, refrigerator, range, disposal, master TV antenna, laundry facilities. Office open 7 days a week Mon.-Fri. :00-12:00 1:00-7:00 8 fiES 489-0800 rf-'pj ANNOUNCES! CM 11?- W- kJ i. ..72 1 li t r DOWN cover a r i, . in: nur.v reevhe n-.ore mor.e works-.; a stringers instead of wr;:r the DTH. ThU was said b. one of the problems facjr. DTH in koepisu it's ro-v-s Ha; i! ;e Oi or chanced and the DTH ui!h il of itself. cesr;u cr;i Lvrs a TJmo to chsnrp your ccono? A Is n j0: ' t i ' ; I. i ' '3 DON'T until you'vo soon.. Sat.-Sun. :00-12:00 1:00-6:00 lEfiT, im. or 408-6207 ft f i H j il j LJ vi ui Li Li O If ... Bvi . tm 9