Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 10, 1960, edition 1 / Page 4
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1 I pace rom THE DAILY TAR HEEL EASTERN REGIONALS MAY BE TELEVISED X THE SCREEN'S EXPLOSIVELY REAL h,.N.. DRAMA OF LOVE AND WAR! RATR HOLDEN- KELLY VltKDIUC MICKEY MAItCHROONEY PLUS TOM-N-JERRY CARTOON NOW PLAYING n OPENS FRIDAY JOSEPH C. LEVINS Mcwn r L S HLii.li !l!iic! SOON 'RICE" "THE MAGICIAN" "SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER" "GIGI" "THE GAZEBO" PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS J.vt-i-.ytvic.yw . :-.v. . . v'-v-v-v.. .-.v. ...vMv.vivrt LA PIZZA Phone 7-1451 n Pizzas, Sandwiches, . Beer IimmmS 3 CmmI Wtt. TT"!"" ROBERT 1AYLUK ,f NICOLE i JY1AU1W mi A OAVIO E OSE yl PKOOUCTtON THE HOUSE Hi! OF THE SEVEN iH-T urn nrr Li ' in.? f vj LAST TIME TODAY CALL TODAY FOR YOUR GERMANS' BEAUTY APPOINNTMENT Open Friday Till 8:30 mm Hurry In For A Beauty Treat And Treatment, Specially Priced m mf tk wi-icTa ftne$t uave$ 12.95 La Morick Custom Crema Oil Cold War "A" Shampoo and totf cuHt jV Protein conditioner and hoir spray Style set and La Marick Super Soft Hair Spray &)9S Check tho many features! See how mucf your beauty dollar will buy. Tho many extras included with this superb wave oro only found in higher priced permarvomtt. Other La Marick Specials Dalits Crm 04 Cold Wv 2.60 Value Dlux LoavliiW Oil Wv J2.50 Value .95 14 12 95 prices ttnri mi 1.95 We use onhy professional and notional ly odvee tised products: Helene Curti, Roux, Revlon, Cloirol and La Marick. USE YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT La Marick BELK-LEGGETT-HORTON BEAUTY SALON Phone 8467 IN DURHAM PHONE 2-2662 i " . THURSDAY, MARCH 10, I960 Pairings Announced For Grail-Mural Jamboree Ask for La Marick Shampoos and Hair Cosmetic in Leading Drug and Cosmetic Departments. Pairings were announced yes terday for the Third Annual Grail Mural Sports Jamboree upcoming March 16-17. 43 teams had enter ed at the time of the drawings, in which fraternities were paired with dormitories by lot. Three fraternities who entered have not as yet been paired with a dorm team since there were not enough dorms entered. They arc SAIL Phi Gam-2 and Delta Sig-2. Managers of those teams may con tact any dorm which has not en tered and get up a team. Not Entered Dorms which have not entered are Teague, Connor, BVP, Old East and Old West. Fraternities not entered are DKE, AK Psi, Kap Sig, Lambda Chi and Pi Kappa Phi. The pairings for the Jamboree presently are: Chi Phi and Cobb III, Chi Psi and Alexander, KA and Cobb I, Theta Chi and Grimes, Pi Lamb and Cobb II, Sigma Nu and Parker, DU and Joyner, Sig ma Chi and Lewis II, Beta and Law School, Phi Delt and Aycock, ZBT and Manly, ATO and Win ston I, SAE and Graham, Delta Sig and Avery, TEP and Ruffin; Lee Shaffer Named Player Of The Year RALEIGH (AP) Burly Lee Shaffer of North Carolina was named today as the Atlantic Coast ! Conference's basketball Player of the Year. The Atlantic Coast Sports Writ ers Assn. tapped thrt big Pittsburgh : blond to receive its annual Flucie Steward Award. He defeated runner-up Lcn Chappell, Wake For est sophomore, 50-16 in the balloting. Tarheel Coach Frank McGuire I credited the sharpshooting senior I with "carrying us for most of the 1 season." ; Shaffer, in addition to being' named on the Associated Ires.; All-ACC team, was picked on tournament All-Star fives in the Kentucky Invitational, the Dixie , Classic and the ACC champion- ' ships. j A star for three seasons, Shaf iier was most consistent this cam j paign and seldom had a bad game. , He was the loop's best scorer and was North Carolina's top rebound- er. SPE and Winston H, Phi Gam and Everett, Zeta Psi and Lewis I, PiKA and Mangum and Phi Kap Sig and Stacy. Practice Sessions A practice sesion has been an nounced for Tuesday, March 15. Courts may be secured by calling the Intramurals office. All events, both relays and sports tournaments, will be play ed on a doubles basis with a mem ber of the dormitory and the fra ternity. Numerous plaques, tro phies and a steak supper are some of the prizes offered. MURALS TODAY BASKETBALL PLAY-OFFS 7:00 Cobb-1 vs. . Everett-1, Sigma Nu vs. 2eta Psi. 8:00 Parker-1 vs. Ruffinites 1, Kap Sig vs. Beta. TUESDAY PLAY-OFF RESULTS CLASSIFIEDS FOR RENT FOUR ROOM FURN ished apartment. Close in. Mar ried couples only. $75. Call 9-5011. Zeta Psi 52. Phi Kap Sig 29; Beta 43, KA 31; Kap Sig 39, Delt Sig 28; Parker (1) 38, Cobb (2) 24; Ruffinites (1) 45, Cobb (3) 42; Cobb (1) 48, Lewis (1) 35; Everett (1) 46, Spodie-Odies 39; Sig Nu Mavericks 44, ATO (1W) 17; Phi Delt (1W) 33, Chi Psi (1W) 25. Teachers needed for all elemen tary grades. Also need high school teachers for Spanish, Math, Sci ence, Music, English, Home ec. Salaries $4400 to $70000. Positions in various Rocky Mountain and Pacific Coast states. Teachers Specialists Bureau, Boulder, Colo. NEED CASH? SELL US THOSE discarded paper-backs. The Inti mate Bookshop, 119 E. Franklin St. e - 41 V m4L. ' 4 ' 706 Rigsbee Ave- iiU ' " i ' " ny a p$ I WT Phone 2-4567 fSV SI'V 71 T heck With I1 Jk Durham '-V' ' j5r rv- i d J Mangerais ; QTaJ j " ' l food advertisin9'm going I JjK. IK, ,Vv fft un Ztonburger, le I 5 V jVaV sit 1 To set Zoombuf9er I v5t jPb. . i piece de resistance ' CVW irwX .V, 1 which is, after all, the I l i " f , I D ZOOM-ZOOM. j : iii -.'Mi ' 'Jl n i nn l zooM-zoflai ILbll Jl5 .-. . .. . . j C LITTLE ACORN Restaurant runswrew )$jtff PLENTY of PARKING fN 706 Rigsbee Ave. rtS Phone 2-4567 hv&Zv&F Meet your friends at Durham's most famous Restaurant The LITTLE ACORN for the best food and the most reasonable prices in this area. See You There! Those Who Know Do . . . Those Who Have Yet To Learn Soon Will VISIT DOUG CAROLINA GRILL and TAVERN Across Street In Front of Bus Station Sandwiches : Beer Open from 10 A.M. Till Midnite Doug Harding, Mgr. feS: fX 1" - K tlllft f , y K . fei . van FRANK CR0WT.HER GOODMAN TO TURN PRO I LOS ANGELES (AP) Johnny Goodman, the last amateur golfer to win the United States Open, j Wednesday disclosed he is turning I professional. See Tie Dinah Shore Cher, Show ,n color Sund,r,, NBC-TV-TW Pat Booe Chevy Showroom celly, ABC-TV A C K ' - SIX-PASSENGER CAR OR STATION SEDAN ...CORVAIR IS BOTH! nefrf foWinc teat mates every cars eat. Jost Me wk fSp and o i Am togsage ami parcel space to 28 J cube pKt as simply, yoa're back to comfortabJ m paiseager capacity. If s standard equipment and eslraonfaiarily practical. Corvair does ear-pool duty with tlte biggest od best of them. Going to work or school or mat for the evening, you've got a genuine nx-seater. As for carting around piles of stuff aasiead of people, juat look at Corvaira sUtion. wdan load space wifh the rear seat folded". Aid when that's full you can start on the trunk. Corvair, yoa see, is no ordinary compact ear. No others are so versatile, so ingeniously engineered with independent suspension at an iour wheels, an air-cooled rear engine that never needs water or antifreeze. You ran eompare anything else comin . I J ..i rt .c'. - o u.ee oays wita a Uorvair. Urive one . . . soon. For economical fjfipifQP transportation WQIi 1 BYCBCVROltT just out Mc-iSi jS lu , . riit is Corvair 700 i tkx Sedan Drive it-it's fun-tastic! See your Jornl tmthorized Chevrolet thaler for fast delivery, favorable deals. THE ABOMINABLE SNOWMAN is lose at KEMP'S and is given away records at Hr ----' , W ... 4 off regular price As Kemp Always Says, "When Comes the Snow, All My Records Must Go!" SO HOP ON YOUR SLEIGH, OR YOUR LENOIR HALL TRAY, AND MAKE IT TO KEMP'S MAN, PRICES ARE EVEN LOWER TODAY! n For those of you who think that I may have gone over to the enemy, having sold my type - set soul to LIFE for the next eleven V weeks, I would like to point out the following: LIFE is the maga zine many of us deride but most of us read, whether it be secretly in a dark corner of our room or cas ually in the Student Union at clos ing time. Let's just say. in my case, I've come out ir.to tho open. ONLY rN AMERICA I find it it most appropriate that our LIFE series begins with the March 14 edition (out today), for the lead article, "The Siege Over Civil Rights," includes an essay by North Carolina's Harry Golden, who sees the Negroes' "Ghandhi like policy of nonviolent, resist ence" as the major new tactic which will win for them in their struggle against the "last vestig? of the ante - bollum agrarian South." the southern white insist ence that the Negro remain 'ver tical.' The sit-down (or sit-in) strikes, which were initiated several weeks ago in Greensboro. N.C., have assumed national importance, affecting not only the economic future of the South but the current Civil Rights legislation which 18 Southerners filibustered in the U. S. Senate. Mr. Golden and the editors of LIFE, in an editorial ("Right To Vote Is A Must"), bring to our attention two undeniable factors in the Negroes' favor: first, "the Christian movement among white and Negro students has bonds' stronger than regional prejudice:" second, though "deeply ingrained habits and folkways cannot be re moved easily," every citizen must be granted the righf to vote "for taxation without representation is tyranny." Since Chapel Hill of late has felt the brunt of these dispersing protests, every member of the university community is urged to read these current observations in LIFE. Should one have further com ment, we shall welcome and print any letters. A PAUPER, TWO PRINCESSES. AND A PRINCE "It's 32 feet down, five feet through the tunnel, and the room is 15 by 20 feet and the gold . . . ." Thus Robert Jones, a 56-year-old Negro ex-GI once sta tioned at Fork Hauchuca, Arizona, describes a desert cavern into which he stumbled 19 years ago and in which he claims is a fabulous cache of gold ingots, possibly hidden there 100 years ago by Covotero Indians. The problem: finding the cave which, up to this point, has eluded a brooding Jones and the U. S. Army Engineers if it was ever mere to begin with. Our two princesses are Marpessa Dawn and Princess Margaret, the latter sharing LIFE cover honors with her ex-photographer consort-to-be, Anthony Armstrong-Jones. Marpessa, a graceful, faunlikc' beauty, daughter of a Negro mother and a Filipino father, is co:star of the film. Black Orpheus, winner of the Golden Palm at the Cannes Film Festival and a critical success in New York. (The picture appears next month in Chapel Hill.) The Prince is a 47-year-old African who last week was named a cardinal of the Catholic Church by Pope John XXIII. Born a pagan and educated by missionaries. Cardinal-elect Laurian Rugambwa. bishop of Tanganyika, is the first Negro prince of Catholicism. He speaks six languages. Were I editor of LIFE, I would have chosen Cardinal-elect Rugam bwa for the cover this week. It seems pitifully ironic that America, in her 184th year, cannot yet decide whether the Negro should be per mitted to eat in a public place or exercise his constitutional right to vote, while a Negrc who grew up in the shadow of Mt. Kilimanjaro ("the House of the Gods") in the UN Trust Territory of Tanganyika has been so honored in the year of our Lord 1SG0. if I may insert the sword to the hilt. In addition to two medium-silly pieces about the return of US 53310761 (Elvis Presley) and a collegiate concert of silence in De troit, LIFE has a story on the newly released 20th Century-Fox film. Can Can, (with an enticing picture of Juliet Prowse. dressed from head to toe in beaded tights and reclining in a wrought iron tree covered two pages in living color, as they say) and another concerning the Mennonite restrictions on their children attending a public school in Pennsylvania. FOR THE LADIES A nicely photographed color storv reveal ing how Ohrbach's of New York does a fast job of making its new Paris copies: several pictures of Jennie Ann Lindstrom (sibling of Ingrid Bergman) and her sudden ly acquired mate on a brief honey moon; health rules for home gardeners with green (or merely chartreuse) thumbs; and, as ever, the most expensive advertise ments in America, some of which are ingeniously presented. Finally, for the local sleuths, a question: Isn't that Bill Albans. Carolina track star of the middle '40's, who is the male model in the Kellogg's, Hertz and Arrow adds? J""" 1 - .miiri (Advertisement) ft A MfeailiifcjiillliltiiNA,
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 10, 1960, edition 1
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