Saturday, February 5. 197 1
,
I n -11
'SiL(S(Dl
In Memorial Hall
y
5 1
5 -
v.. y -.
' ' '
This rare photograph shows Baby Doe as she appeared shortly after her marriage
to Horace Tabor. Photograph is by permission of Bancroft Booklets, Johnson
Publishing Co., Boulder, Colorado. By the way, does she look smug?
Campus calendar
The Department of Religion presents
Dr. A. Leo Oppenheim this Sunday night
at 8 o'clock in the lecture hall at Ackland
Museum. Professor Oppenheim will speak
on "War and Peace in Ancient Assyria."
Dr. Oppenheim is known as a leading
Assyriologist. He has authored two major
studies: Ancient Mesopotamia: A Portrait
of a Dead Civilization" and "Letters
From Mesopotamia."
Professor Oppenheim is currently
affiliated with the Oriental Institute at
the University of Chicago.
Alpha Epsilon Delta will have a field
trip to Duke Medical Center to observe
surgery next- Wednesday, Feb. . 1C.
Transportation will be provided. Only a
limited number may . go. For more
information, call Jay Pringle at 933-4725.
Lost: A long brown , ladies' wallet.
Reward offered for return of papers in it,
including driver's license, social security,
etc. Contact Judy Leonard, P.O. Box
1234, Chapel Hill or call collect,
489-6977. '
Second semester yoga lessons begin:
this Tuesday, Feb. 9, in rooms 207-209;
of the Union for all those who have:'
previously signed, up for the courses..
There are a handful of spaces available for
the 9:45 P.M. beginning class. Miss Laura
Viernstein and Mr. Tommy Oates are the
instructors in the activity sponsored by
the Union Recreation Committee.
IUNC Basketball and Cheerleading
practice: Calling all basketball players,
cheerleaders, trainers, statisticians,
coaches, etc. Come ready to do your stuff
and meet at 1 1 this morning on the front
steps outside Woolen Gym . . . "Fricasee
DMC!"
Livingston Taylor will be here
tomorrow for two concerts yit 4 and 8 in
Memorial Hall. Watch LiCs he emerges
altogether in his Own right."
Women's Liberation new discussion
groups beginning Thursday, Feb. 11,
room 205 in the Student Union. All
women welcome.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
1 Squandered
6 Out of
date
11 Thinner
12 Beast
14 Indefinite
article
15 Milk farms
17 Conjunction
18 Stroke
20 Reproach
21 Expire
22 Greenland
settlement
24 Permit
25 Cravats
26 Citrus
fruit (pi.)
23 Lances
30 Beverage
31 Pronoun
32 Unite
securely
35 Figure of
speech
38 War god
39 River
island
41 Fur-bearing
mammal
42 French plural
article
43 Later
45 Music: as
written
46 Symbol for
silver
47 Went in
49 Latin
conjunction
50 Give
52 Putin
crate
54 Sodium
nitrate
55 Canonized .
person
DOWN
1 Lawmaking
body
2 Parent .
(colloq.)
3
4
5
6
10
11
13
16
19
21
23
25
27
29
Finish
Tidy
Tests
Covers with
coloring
substance
DiHseed .
Relative
(coiloq.)
Symbol for
samarium
Simpler '
Part of
jacket
Clayey
earth
Regret
Mexican
dishes
Daily
records
Retains
Abounds
Born
Greek
letter
ARAL TlO DMHIAISIHI
C A m ej 10 e
I&IBtESi POOP
SjelTA ' STji PP1E1S
pIaTtI 'Ip s a tI i In effffT
R A SOT A M. )
pfgTs R T Si R A Sg
iki! iIRiiI
GHAT O W T O Rjg
sIbItIsI jMlVlEt jOiMlElN
32
33
34
35
36
37
40
Dinner
course
A state
Beam .
Cubic meters
Newest
Puff up
Suffix:
adherent of
43 Poker stake
44 Rockfish
47 Dine
48 601 (Roman
number)
51 Symbol for
nickel
53 Indefinite
-article
jg?T"2 3 456 7 a 9 10
11 lj""""""13
18 19 20 I ! " 21
-"23 24" "
26 27 " 23 29 "
33 '"" 59"'0 "
42 43 "44 x 4j "
46 47 " 48 49
55 "ll" """""""
6 171) T!
Bmy
One of the most colorful stories in
American history will be revived as the
UNC Opera Theatre present "The Ballad
of Baby Doe this Friday and Saturday,
February 12 and 13, at eight both nights
in Memorial Hall.
Baby Doe was just twenty years old
and at the height of her beauty when she
PeiMiL
lett fcujr husband. Harvey Doe. and moved
to Leadville. Colorado. Baby had already
won a reputation as the "miners
sweetheart" when she came to Leadville.
When Silver King. Horace Tabor, met her.
he decided he was just a miner himself.
When Horace Tabor met Baby Doe. he
was in his fifties and the richest man in
n.
0
symposMinni .topic
Penal reform will be the subject of a
symposium scheduled for Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday in the Carolina
Union.
Over the three-day period there will be
a panel discussion on juvenile reform, a
India Night
scheduled
"India Night," an evening of dinner
and entertainment for UNC students,
faculty and the public, will be held
tonight.
The event, sponsored by the India
Association at UNC, will be at the
Presbyterian Student Center on
Henderson Street at 6 p.m. The dinner
and entertainment will last about two
hours.
Tickets, $2 for adults and 75 cents for
children, are now on sale at the Student
Union. Attendance is limited to 250; any
remaining tickets will be sold at the door.
"India Night" is now an annual affair
at UNC. The evening includes a menu of
rice, chicken curry, vegetable curry and
sweets; and both folk and classical dances
, of India. .
A special feature of this year's
entertainment is the Manipuri, performed
by Indu Maheswari. This is one of the six
major classical schools of Indian dance.
The Dhandya Ras, a popular folk dance
in Gujaret, a state in western India, will
be performed by Vidula Bangdiwala and a
group of dancers.
N.M. Lalu is president of the India
Association at UNC. Mrs. Kadambara
Manboodiri, a research associate in the
UNC School of Medicine, is in charge of
food for India Night. The entertainment
was planned r by Sushil " Srivastva, a
graduate '.student in statistics! "
PREGNANT?
NEED HELP?
YOUR QUESTIONS ON
CAN ONLY BE FULLY
ANSWERED BY
PROFESSIONALS
CALL (2 I 5) 87.8-5800
2 A hours 7 days
FOR TOTALLY C0NFI D
ENTIAL INFORMATION.
Ul Abcrtions Without Osiiy
Diatr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
fuss: ffi:4i
ft
TMOVV PLAYING
3d
4. .iM
I !' !! " IT ill "IK
tw .8 i liimnniiii i in. 1 1 i i,iiii..hiii .ii.ii-i.imiLi j
I n a 1
O
JuairfYrrK
' W.ETU!NS I
ALuN!7 IN IHt rww
UHh THAT UTTLt
o
o
AUTTEN5, AKP tOP CUM3
TD TME-TOP TKI5 HILL, AN
$UDEtXXJN0NATJS066AN,AVI?
GJHEM WE klERE 5UDIN6 OOkJN.AW1
IP PUT AW AiC AKoyKP KtK.AHv.
r- r o
o
'I THINK ME AN'CHAUOE
ii f cliPOUT FVA OUlCK
PET-WON'T BE LON&
r that's oaetmin I've
ASOUX CHALK1 -
WHEN TWO WIVES
ARE. TOGETHER -
WHO HAS THE
LAST W0R.0 J,Zn
7 I
-1
r
I
movie entitled "Men in Cages" and a
discussion with a panel of inmates from a
" Raleigh prison.
The symposium is being planned by
the Current Affairs Committee of the
Union and the Institute of Government.
Chuck Patrizia, chairman for the
symposium, said the Juvenile Panel (3
p.m. Monday, 202-204 Union) will
include, among others, Wade Brown,
chairman of the State Board of Paroles,
and Russell Rose, who is a graduate of
the youth corrections program in North
Carolina.
Lee Bounds, state commissioner of
corrections, will speak at 8 p.m. Monday
in . Great Hall on the subject, "Prison
Reform in North Carolina."
."Men in Cages" will be shown the
same evening at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the
Union Coffee Shop.
-The following day at 3 p.m. in Great
Hall the panel of inmates will discuss the
situation from their viewpoint. Later on
Tuesday at 8 p.m., Howard Gill, an
instructor of humanistic penology in
xWlshington will speak on "Reform in the
Uited States." Gill will speak in Hill
Hill.
Community corrections, a new style of
correction, will be discussed by Jim
White, commander of prison units in
western North Carolina. White is
experimenting with penal reform. He will
speak in 202-204 of the Union at 2 p.m.
Wednesday.
All meetings are free and open to the
public.
Colorado. Horace's wife. August j. was
dour and sullen. Wealth a d bvish living
didn't appeal to her as ii did to Horace
whom she had married 20 years before.
Baby Dqe was Augusta's opposite in
every way. Horace moved Baby to the
Clarendon Hotel across from his private
offices and rumors began to fly.
Augusta flatly refused to grant Horace
a divorce but he arranged the divorce
politically. Horace and Baby Doe went to
Washington where they spent over
S300.000 in one month. Their wedding
there was one of the most luxurious
affairs ever held in the city. Even
President Chester A. Arthur attended.
When news of the divorce from
Augusta broke, Horace laughed at society
and built a f mansion in Denver. Baby
Doe's daughter. Silver Dollar, was the
baby of the year. Her christening gown
cost S17,060.;'
When the 1 893 panic struck, financial
troubles for the Tabors began. Horace
supported William Jennings Bry an in his
campaign ' for President. But Bryan's
"Free Silver" plat form collapsed as did
Horace's fortune.
A happy Denver society stood by and
waited for Baby Doe to leave the
penniless Horace. She remained loyal.
When Horace died a few days later, he
asked Baby Doe to ho'd on to the
Matchless Mine. Baby Doc lionorcd his
request and in her later years walked
Denver's streets dressed in cast-off
miners clothes and gunny sacks trying to
find backing for the mine. She was found
frozen to death in a shack next to the
mine on March 7, 135.
The cast of the Douglas Moore Optra
includes Margaret Brookband of High
Point as Baby Doe, Julian Long of
Durham as Horace Tabor and Jean
Spearman of Chapel Hill as Augusta
Tabor. Joel Carter of Chape! Hill plays
William Jennings Bryan. Staging is by
Randolph Umberger with musical
direction by Robert Porco. Setting is
designed by Tom Bynum.
All tickets for "The Ballad of Baby
Doe" are SI. 50 and are available at the
Music Department in Hill Hal! and at the
Carolina Union.
DTM
.."..--
Use
G!
ass s line os
t
SSS vTODAY-4:30-7: 3015 H
(2)
Spanish Meat Loaf
Two Vegetables & Bread
Back of the Zoom
7
(UPtatootSDANTT
FT. x 3 FT. ,P 11 liE
I
: ( )
20 in. x 24 in. 2.50
(BIGGER THAN 1 Vi ft. x 2 ft.)
1 f t. x 1 14 ft. 2.00
3 ft. x 4 ft. 7.50
- i
Yes, we will blow up anyone you want . . .
your boy friend, sorority sister, family or your
favorite snap shot . . . into a GIANT black and
white POSTER 2 feet by 3 feet Great for gift
giving . . . great for wallpapering a room!
Send us any original black & white or color photo
up to 8" x 10" (no negatives). Original returned un
harmed with poster. Shipped in self-storing tube.
Send check or money order jfor prompt delivery.
Beautifully
Reproduced!
For prompt delivery,
put name and address
on back of photo.
, : .-ay
I The Blow Yourself Up Co. Dept. j
663 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 1 0022
I Please tend me.... posters (M $3.50 $20 j
j D $7.50 $2.00 plus 50c each for postage j
and handling.
l O mO M...i.j.ji..mm.WM.t". t.i tm w
Address .
City
..fafe .... ......... Zip ,
: :
.iilltHlf
rm.r(mimmtMu "1mrt,-. " - -- - ITT""
' i I
1 H
Wdds todti cite (Mm
2bun ErnigM ISs lhi
If you have a gift for people helping
them, guiding them Etna would like you
to consider taking an administrative posi
tion with us. i
Why insurance? Because insurance was
invented to help people solve problems.
Why Etna? Because we have an excellent
record in doing just that. Today, 27 mil
lion people look to us for a more worry-free
life. And that number is growing rapidly.
Etna has a variety ofadminisirative jobs
open today, both in the field, and in the
home office. Jobs that pay substantial sal
aries right from the start. They're chal
lenging jobs in a fast-growing company.
We suggest you read the Etna brochure
"The Whole Truth" that's in the Placement
Office. Cover to cover, it's an honest pic
ture of an honest business.
There's a special section in it called "Ad
ministration and Service" which will give
complete detailed descriptions of jobs for
you. Some will have you dealing with
firms, some with the public, some with in
dividuals. But all put a premium on versa
tility, sound judgment, and the ability to
originate and carry out plans and programs.
Coming with Etna could give you an
excellent chance to help thousands, even
millions of people. Including yourself.
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer
and a JOBS-participating company
OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE
w
4
LIFE & CASUALTY