i in i Li! L .StltfbAV, NOVEMBER 18, 1956 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THES Covering I he Gampus CHRISTIAN CHURCH CANVASS The United Congregational Christian Church will have its an nual "Every Member Canvass" to day. Members and friends will be given the opportunity to subscribe their personal pledge to the goal of $15,000. WAA TENNIS All second round tennis matches must be played by 6 p.m. tomor row. ' s BIRD CLUB ' ! The Chapel Hill Bird Club will meet today at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Gerald R. MacCarthy, 107 Ledge Lane. The program of the meeting will consist of a report on a trip to Lake Waccamaw by Mrs. Harold W. Walters. John Trolt will talk on "Death by TV." WUNC : 7:00 Great Music of the Church 7:30 Let There Be Light 7:45 The Organ Room 8:00 The Third Programme 10:00 News , 10:15 Evening Masterwork 11:30 Sign Off WUNC-TV 9:45 Back to God 10:00 Sunday School 10:30 The Pastor 10:45 Organ Prelude 11:00 Church Service 12:00 This Is Life 1 12:30 Sign Off 6:30 Big Picture 7:00 UN Review 7:15 Manners Aboard 7:30 Shakespeare . 2:15 Greensboro Symphony FREUD FRAUD? Jim was so conceited that he had cold lips from kissing mirrors. Until one day he asked himself, "Am I truly superior? Do not girls turn me down daily? Twice on holi days? Am I not, in actuality, profoundly inferior?" . So he decided to consult the famous psj-chiatrist, Dr. Hy Pertensive. "My boy," said Pertensive, "your Rohr schach test shows you are going batty from collar wrinklosis. It is incurable. In fact, you are incurable. Nothing I can . do for you. $10, please." Then Jim read an ad for a Van Heusen Century Shirt. He read how its soft collar won't wrinkle ever . . . how you can maltreat it like a maniac and it still won't wrinkle . . . how without a bit of starch it's impossible to wrinkle it. "Gee whiz, I am saved," said Jim, and he ran to his haberdasher to buy one. "$3.95 please," said the clerk. Today Jim is as popular as money. And he still has his Van Heusen Century shirt be cause it lasts twice as long as ordinary shirts. Sge it at better stores every where, or drop a line to Phillips-Jones Corp., 4 17 Fifth Avenue, New York 16, N. Y. Makers of Van Heusen Shirts Sport Shirts Ties Pajamas Handkerchiefs , .. Underwear Swim wear Sweaters. WE ARE THE EXCLUSIVE VAN HEUSEN DEALER IN CHAPEL HILL f 14 9 EAST VmAHKUM Sl. f t MM ....T .jMrypyff jum DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Sharp and harsh 6. A fabric 11. Marketable price 12. Communi cation means 13. Man's name . (pass.) 14. Paleness 15. Feline 16. Purpose 17. Greek letter 18. Donkey 19. Moral 22. Girl's nam 25. Small . sandpiper 26. Once more 28. Unhappy 29. Hospital resident physician 31. Contend 32. Cry of pain 33. Book of Masses I G7. Footlike . part 39. Inhabitant 40. Spoken 42. Setting: 43. Scene of the crime 44. Cut wood 45. French river DOWN 1. Hail 2. City in India 3. Charles Lamb 4. Cor rod 5. Exist' . Change from Spanish t9 Whitman 8. Not working 9. Tawny animal 10. Peer 14. Italian, city 17. Botch 18. Treated sewage 20. Concealed 21. At home 22. Swiss river 23. Prehistoric animal 24. Afresh 27. Earth as a god dess 30. African river 33. Fail to hit 34. Peruvian ?trM"TpU rifts fTilt'Stir s!lIatv rfergtt..-elbi5br Indian 35. Merganser 36. Rational 37. American author (poss.) Sa(rdr' Amtrfi 38. Sea eagle 41. Southern general 43. Girl s nickname 7 7" 1 s 77? 7 d ? io -r-r?& 4 1 1 1 -EH 111 t Dr. Walter Starkie bhown above is Dr. Walter SUrkie, British lecturer and specialist on gypsy music. He will give a lecture and demon strations here tomorrow and Tuesday. Gypsy Music Expert To Be Here Monday A world - famous authority on gypsy music is lecturing here to morrow and Tuesday under aus pices of the Romance. Languages Dept. Dr. Walter Starkie, eminent British Hispanist, lecturer, scholar and writer, will speak and play the violin as an accompaniment. Dr. Starkie was for 15 years di rector of the British Institute in Madrid. He has taught Spanish and Italian literatures at Dublin University, and is a former direc tor of the Abbey Theater Move ment. In Chapel Hill Dr. Starkie's three appearances will be as follows: "Ritual and the Theater" Playmakers' Theater, 8 p.m. tomor row. The Wandering of Don Quixote and Sancho: A Visit Today to the Scenes of La Mancha" (Illustrated with slides): 111 Murphy Hall, 12 rioon, Tuesday. "Gypsy Life, History and Music" (illustrated with violin music): Hill Hall, 8 p.m. Tuesday. Dr. Starkie is currently on a tour of the United States, appear ing mainly on university plat forms. Dr. Sterling A. Stoudemire is chairman of the Dept of Romance Languages. Kenan Professor W. L. Wiley is in charge of the Starkie program. The public has been in vited. Lutherans Will Hear Child Care Specialist The Lutheran Student Assn. will meet today to eat dinner and hear a child care specialist speak on "Lutheran Welfare Services.' The association will meet today at 6 p.m. to eat a pre-Thanksgiv-ing meal. The speaker will be Al Broten, assistant director of the School of Social Work child care project. Members of ,the Lutheran Stu dent Assn. at Woman's College will attend the meeting. Before The Duke Game After The i)uke Game Meet Your Family And Friends At THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 235 E Franklin St. Open Till 10 P.M. -aggiM swan? g.gjgra Playmaliers' Set Cast For O'Neiil's Play Cast for . the Playmakers' pro duction of Eugene O'Neill's "De sire Under the Elms," to be pre sented . here Dec. 14-18, has been announced by Thomas Patterson of the Carolina Playmaker's' staff . Foster Fitz - Simons, " associate professor of Dramatic Art, . will portray Ephraim Cabot, a strong old New England Farmer who had conquered barren rock to . make it into fertile land. Jo Jurgensen, wife -of another Dramatic Art as sociate professor, plaj's the role of Abbie, his new young wife. Al Gordon, graduate student frjm Greensboro, enacts the part of jEben Cabot, Ephraim's son and, 'until Abbie arrives, his heir. Simeon and Peter, brothers of Eben who give up their claim to the household and leave for Cali fornia in search of gold, are play ed by Charles Barrett of Hickory and Chapel -Hill, and Ken Lowry of Troy, Ohio. Others in the cast are Lloyd Skinner of Burlington as the Fid dler; Dick Rothrock of 'Spring dale, Ark., as the Caller; Pete O' Sullivan of "Valhalla, N. Y., as a drunk man; Nancetta Hudson of Goldsboro, -"Mary Finley of Mar ion, and Mary Ruth Johnson of Eupora, Miss., as the women; Jim my Sechrest of Thomasville, Dan Seaton of Valparaiso, Fla. and Australian Classicist Comments On Studies George Gellie, senior lecturer in classics at the University of Mel-( bourne, Australia, has been, visit- r ing this week at UNC, observing American procedures in teaching Latin and Greek, and translation courses in English. Gellie is visit-, ing a number v of representative Canadian and American colleges and universities, under the terms of a Carnegie Fellowship. Commenting on the. difference i between undergraduate training in the classics in America and Aus tralia, Gellie said: "I am impressed j by the wide range and flexibility! of the American classical curri-j culum, as, compared with our own, which is modeled primarily on the conservative British university sys tem. He expressed amazement at the exchange of staff in American uni-! versilies. "Almost every faculty member seems to have had experi ence at two or more universities," he said. "In Australia, the eight universities are each hundreds of miles apart, and their staffs tend to be permanently settled in one establishment." Jerry Young of Marion as the men; Betty Jinnette of Goldsboro as an old woman, and Jim Heldman of Durham as the Sheriff. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE: SHOTGUN STEVENS .410 model 58, 3-shct clip, bolt action. If interested, call Ralph Hunt, 9-5294. Have You Seen Those Handsome ' CHRISTMAS CARDS 10 for 25 at THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East Franklin Street Photo Finishing Service AS CLOSE AS YOUR MAILBOX GUARANTEED SERVICE. ' Any 8 exposure roll develop ed and 8 JUMBO PRINTS; only 50c 12 exposures 75c 16 ex posures $1.00. FAST 6 HOUR FINISHING FREE ALBUM WITH EACH ROLL OF FILM FREE MAILERS HOME PHOTO SERVICE Box 3803 Park Plact"5 Greenville, S. C. DR. GUY B. PHILLIPS ...receives $1000 bill Professor Gets Service Award A $1000 bill was presented this week to Guy B. Phillips of UNC by the State School Boards Assn. in recognition of his services as secretary of the statewide organi zation. Dr. Phillips organized the assri. in 1937 and has served without pay the past 19 years. He is a pro fessor of education in the Uni versity and is director of the UNC summer "fechool. 'Androcles' Ends Run Tonsqh 'Androcles and the Lion' will , complete a five-day run at the ! Playmakers Theater tonight. The I play gets under way at 8:30 p.m. The play will be the annual tour play of the Playmakers this sea son. The tour will, begin Nov. 26 and end Dec. 7. The play will be presented in Augusta, Ga., Hock Hill, S. C, Wilmington, Goldsboro, Rocky Mount, Raleigh, Danville, Va., Marion, Lenoir, and Greens boro. , - - In "Androcles ' and the Lion," Androcles, a Greek tailor, helps a lion by removing a thorn from' his paw when they meet in the forest. Later, when Androcles is sentenced to death in the martyrs' arena by Emperor. Caesar, he fatws a wild beast fresh from the forest, the lion whom he befriended who, for-. tunately, has a memory like an elephant. . . Appearing as Androcles is Dick Newdick, of Augusta, Me., who played Puck in last spring's "A Midsummer-Night's Dream" by the Playmakersi The lion is played by David Small, of ilorehead City, who had a leading role in "Seventeen" last Vear. Caesar is comically por trayed by John Sneden, of Tenafly, N. J., who has appeared in "A Midsummer-Night's Dream", "On dine", "Anastasia", and other Playmaker productions. John Whitt, of New Bern, portrays the captain. 'S". N A i COME AND GET 'EM AT KEMP'S BIG , PRE-THANKSGIVING SALE! ALL HI-FI PHONOGRAPHS AND EQUIPMENT ON SPECJAL ... 207 E. FRANKLIN CLOSED THURSDAY I JOHN WHITTY . . . as the captain SEE George Bernard Shaw: Man of the Century By U.N.C.'s Own Archibald Henderson at THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin St. OPEN TILL 10 P.M. 1 1. W k. ., r fir lex '111 l 1 I II I ) A I V 11 n C r-11 I f (ggins JdDEillG says "ferity, a Professor j among magazines!" . Julie Andrews, twenty-on-year.crfd British gW1, plays Eliza Doohttle in th sensational Broadway 84ccess "My Fair Lady" . a musical adaptation of Georg Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion. Q. Miss Andrews, had you ever been away from your family before you arrived in this country two years ago? , A. Never, and I still become dreadfully homesick. But I do talk with ttiem several times a iveek. ' Q. By phone? . , . . . ..... . A. No by phonograph. We talk into recording machines, and airmail the records. They are so dear lean even hear my brothers argu ing in the back -ground about whose turn is next. It is as if wt were all in one room. Q. You never exchange the usual kind of letter?. A. Very seldom, I'm afraid. But we post back and forth bits of particular I interest like newspaper reviews, and favorite articles from The Reader's Digest. ' Q. Just the Digest? . . v . .., ,. . ., . A. Oft, no, there' are others sometimes but the Digest is our magazine. Mummy and Daddy have always read it, and I began when 1 was tu-elve, playing music halts. I had to miss school, and my teaching governess wen t through every issue with me on the run.. It was part of my lessons. CL Do you still read it on the run? .. ...... A. Oh, yes waiting for assignments, waiting for buses, even waiting for curtain cues. I hope I never have to be without it. When I wish to be amused, the D igest amuses me; and when I need to be scolded or instructed, I can always find an article that talks to ms like Q. Like a Dutch uncle? . ,J . - . . A. No, much more delightfully more like Professor Iggina in "My Fair j Lady" showing a new world to Elim'Doolittfe. ia tidvts&tr Emir's t!t dsa't e&s: a t-'-u 'no o n V rs r r CONDENSATION FIOM FORTHCOMING BOOK: "IHt ONE THAT GOT AWAY." TJhe all but incredible story of Nazi fighter pilot Franz von Werra how he broke out of a British prison camp, auda ciously attempted to steal a place . . . and finally did escape. REBELUON AT PC2NAN. Here are eye witness accounts of the June uprisings that may be a preview of the eventual end of the Communist empire. ' TWO-EDGED DAGGER OF YUSOP MUSSCJH. Eerie experiences of a British officer in the Red-infested jungles of Malaya, THI ANDREA DORIA'S UNTOLD STORY. Heart-rending drama of Dr. Peterson's futile 5-hour struggle to save his wife pinned under wreckage in their state room as the giant liner slowly sanlt. ARE YOW A ROSE? I. A. R. Wylie show ways we unwittingly bore others, and how to make yourself more interesting. WHY THERE CANNOT BE ANOTHER WAR. Pulitzer Prize-winner William L. Iau rence tells why, in the awesome light of an exploding H-bomb, one thing stand clear: thermonuclear war means cer tain suicide to the aggreuaor. Oeacteif's Its popularity and influence are world-ui&i