Thursday, December, 8, .1900
THE. DAILY TAR HEEL
Pago Five
Eut
vpe Trip
Inspector Doesnt Appreciate Atmosphere
ersistence
LITTLE MANON CAMPUS
emt)s
onsoi
ne it
Am
It Took E
Butr-He's
Condem Tied
ned By
UNC Group
A Summer trip to Europe,
lasting from June 12 until July
17, at a cost of $950, is being
sponsored by the Student Coun
cil of the Consolidated Univer
sity of North Carolina.
The cost of the tour, New
York to New York by way of
nine European countries will
include transportation, accom
modations, meals (except one
in each of London, Paris and
Rome), entrance fees, tips, but
it is exclusive of passport costs,
drinks not served with meals,
theater tickets and pocket
money.
Transportation across the At
lantic will be by air and in Eu
rope by chartered motor coach.
Students to Visit
Students will visit the fol
lowing countries and cities:
Edinburgh in Scotland; Strat
ford, Oxford, Windsor and Lon
don in England; Bruges in Bel
gium; Paris and Versailles in
France;
Berne in Switzerland; Milan,
Pisa, Rome, Naples and Flor
ence in Italy; Innsbruck in Aus
tria; Heidelberg, Bonn and
Cologne in Germany; The
Hague, Amsterdam and Rotter
dam in Holland.
Wade Hargrove, 30 Old West
Dormitory, is the campus repre
sentative for the tour this year.
Checks should be made payable
to 1 Edward G. Blakeway and
sent to Hargrove.
Students desiring further in
formation about the tours may
contact Hargrove.
By PAT CARTER
Eureka! I've done it!
With palpitating breath and shivering sacroiliac I
stood there with a wad of copy paper and a soft-lead,
black copy pencil in my hand and added up the figures.
Six million, seven-hundred thousand, four-hundred
and twenty-nine bricks fill the paths of the UNC
campus
you re Kidding," you say.
"Why should I?" I retort.
New knowledge and discovery
n no joke. It comes only after
hours, days, weeks and even
months' of careful, determined
and sacrificial study.
It wasn't always easy. But
then, what worthy uncovering
of truth is easy. You must keep
on Keeping-On.
I remember when this thing
got in my blood. It was while
viewing the 8th company of red
ants (no political intent, really)
as they drilled for the big ma
nuever undermining the entire
UNC campus.
The next morning at dawn
found me casually strolling from
the . first row of bricks on the
edge of the campus at Franklin
Street toward Howell Hall.
People didn't notice me at
first, but then some did. They
stopped to help me look. I did
n't have the heart to tell 'em.
They finally went on when " I
shrugged my shoulders as if to
give up the search for "whatever-it-was."
This daylight process was too
slow. I kept losing count when
a friend stopped to chat and
help me look for the supposed
missing article ring, false
tooth, shoe tap, quarter or pen.
. Finally I took up the grave-
V i -
yard shift. Starting at sundown
with a pen light, I worked my
way along, brick-by-brick.
The knees on all my trousers
began , to wear : thin. I just
patched them and kept on.
Sometimes it : was rough go
ing. I remember when I came
to Lenoir Hall and had to crawl
around there in the dark. Well,
you know yourself, , its hard
enough to walk upright around
there in the daytime.
Sometimes I had to start over
when the acorn I would leave
buried beside a row of bricks
was gone the next night. Those
darn squirrels! .
Bit by: bit, slowly but with
rising' confidence, I encompass
ed the campass. I counted every
one of those ruddy little build
ing blocks.- V "
'
During the process, I had wir
ed Dad seven times for cash
(new patches for my. pants),
flunked four quizzes, establish
ed a new.. market for Never
Ready batteries for my pen light
and had the prescription for my
glasses changed three times.
But who counts the cost? It's
for posterity . and nothing's too
good for posterity 'cause most
likely no one will ever devote
the '.time," energy, devotion and
complete disregard for health
and sanity to count the bricks
on the University of North Caro
lina campus again.
Just remember: six million,
seven-hundred thousand, .four
hundred and twenty-nine bricks
1. KfS-si .4SMfe.TZT
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L fife' 7.1-
1
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$e as for Kodak Camera . . , Filw .
ohoto old. Complete selection of
gift-packaged camera outfits, tool
fcl Uimmmi i i. n irri - r UtiMt'ttt illWlllinillillllii i .J
1
I BROWNIE
1STARMITE
i CAMERA
19
95
COMPLETE
OUTFIT $24.95
BROWNIE
STARMETER
CAMERA
$1050
buiff-in
exposure
meter j
COMPLETE
OUTFIT $11.95
I"WIP" II.HII.HII.IIIIIJ MIIWBMHW I IM.
t.i.L. l
4 i
nd picture the fun of Christmas
special
new-low
price
BROWNIE STARMATIC
CAMERA $2?'CS. 95
I
t
i Outfits include film, batteries, flashbulbs
Brownis 8 . $2450
See jJj S
Six Graduate In'X-Ray
Six women have graduated at
N.C. Memorial Hospital after
completing a. 15-month, course
in x-ray technology. : '
The graduates are Peggy Can
non, Newport; Carol Hunt; Dur
ham; Dorothy Hufham, Jack
sonville,, Fla.; Gloria Jones,
Laurinburg; Peggy Holt, Albe
marle; and Rachael ' Hawker,
Sutherlin, Va.
NlOvY (5T Our TICEAKIP JUSTIFY THE PAITW IKf YOU YOUZ
FPXti&Ze FINANCIAL SUfWfST HAS GWBti ME."
UNG
lO 1N3
Sends
AReg
Group
ional
"A dele'gatioh of 18 Carolina students ' played major
parts irrthe Carolinas-Virginia Fall Regional Conference
of the ' National Student 'Association last weekend at
Randolph-Macon College, Lynchburg, Va.
Hank "Patterson, ; - Carolina NSA co-ordinator and
Regional International Affairs Vice-President, led the UNC
group, who composed onethird;
of the convention delegates. r
Rashid Benouameur, gradu
ate student in comparative .lin
guistics, spoke during the con
fab on the effects of the Al-j
gerian War on the North Afri
can, students.- ' 4
He is president of the U.S.
Wing of the National Union of
Students of Algeria (in exile).
'. Leading discussion groups
v
president of the ? Cosmopolitan
Club; Jim Scott, Academic Af
fairs Committee chairman;
Wayne King,' ' Daily .w Tar , ieej
Associate Editor and Kay
SlaiigHtefairniaH
YWGA -U.N.-eommittee;---
Sjam Wongsoharsona, an In
donesian . exchange student, at
tended as a 'paijticipant in the
NSA Foreign Student t'Leader
ship Project:' l;-
" Official delegates to the meet
were Wayne King, Pete Thomp
son, Tony Harrington, Pat Mor
gan, Swag Grimsley and Ann
Maxwell. ; Alternates included
Jane Smith, Mima Bruce, Mar
garet Ann Rhymes, Bill
Straughn, Jim Scott and Dale
Hermann
Jim Kweder, graduate stu-
were Hans Frankfort, . past-j dent in political- science and a
Jl i 1 ' il.-J i " I a.i-'L-' J--j. i MPA 3
pasi-vice-presiaeni oi iorv, ciiiu
Don Smith of. the; University of
Texas, r a . present national vice-
presiaem oi ixo-n., aisu spunc
during the conference.
Schools represented included
N.CT State.-'Dti; Qfleens; "Wom
an's College of UNC. Salem
SwegV Briar, Randolph-Macon,
May Vj3aldwin, Virginia State,
Hoftinlj Randolph-Maccn Men's
College, and Bridgeport t(Va.).
Kemp's, has been condernhed!
The condemnation comes,1 riot
from customers empa'ning high
record prices But from a build-
ing inspector uiiuppietwuvc ui
atmosphere. '
Consultation with Kemp B.
Nye, proprietor of the music
shop, abodt tbe condemnation of
his quarters reyeals that the
205-207 Franklin Street French
man will erect a new modernis-
ic shop at that location.
He will also expand his busi
ness to include a book shop and
a branch store at Eastgate shop
ping center. . "
One of the last vestiges of
the ''village" bf Chapel Hill, the
old Patterson building present
ly housing Kemp's, y ill yield
itr. western frontier frame ap-
' ' ' . ' , r V '. .
pearance to a moqern, glass
fronted, "one-stpry buildirig "tir
ing the summer of i 9,(31. '
Architect s plans propose an
entry entirely of glass - except
for an off-center brick wall on
which rests a reclining "L" shap
ed figure supporting the words,
icemp's". ' ' ;
When questioning Kemp about
the movement . of his musical
stock, he half -jokingly propos
ed to let the customers do it
for him. No, he will not have a
going-out-of -business sale, but
JL
a going-into-business sale.
An ex-pharmacy major at
UNC, Kemp entered the music
business as a sideline while at
tending classes here. The switch
from medicine to music was
coincidental and not because
"music hath charms to soothe
the savage beast".
From Grassy Creek in west
ern N. C., Kemp spent nine
years in the Orient and has a
large collection of Oriental art
objects which he has exhibited
at various schools.
His Chapel Hill home off
highway 54 in Oriental. He de
scribed it as a one room house
complete with foam rubber beds
built into the floor, a suspended
fireplace, Oriental social screens
and of course, a hi-fi.
Kemp is a classical music
favorer but rarely listens to it
at home after a day's work in
his music shop.
WINS RACE, DATE
LONDON (UPI) Traveling
salesman Peter Beschorner, 19,
and auctioneer's assistant Roger
Wright, 20, Sunday held a
swimming race in wintry, tem
peratures across Hyde Park's
Serpentine Lake. Wright won
the prize a date with Vaudine
Agassiz, 17.
' -- :l - J
Enjoy Your Vacation!
Get Your Christmas Shopping
Done Now!
Toys for children of all ages,
sporting goods, power tools, house
wares, bicycles and tricycles, small
appliances, gift ware and glass
ware.
n pi yV 15 IzS W W iZsLr ?
PHONE 2-2920
FREE DELIVERY
"'i
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-' V f, If
-1
f n r
.'...V r . t.
ill
Christmas
MOVIE CAMERA SPECIALS
BELL and HOWELL 8 mm
390 TE Turret Electric Eye
Camera with f2.3 lens
Reg. $139.95 Now $89.95
393 E Turret Electric Eye
with f1,8 lenses
Reg. $169.95 Now $109.95
Kodak
ZOOM 8 CAMERA Automatic f1.9
Reg. $139.50 Now $99.95
V
1
IS b
CHECK-UP!
Bring in your old camera
and let us have a look at
it. It may be essentially,
sound, in need' of only a
minor adjustment. We'll
be glad to make any small
repair necessary to make
it ship-shape. We consider
this a basic part of our
Service, for we are cam
era specialists. We hope to
become your photographic
headquarters . ; f or life.
I FOISTER'S CAMERA STORE
161 E Franklin St. Phone 3176
1 . - v:.....rj
As 'f.
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:ff-'I:.'-.:', ..:.;.:'
-i'-C i-' ' . -.v -
Marking another Milestone
MJ fill
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Rich in history and rich w promise, too Grafs York
County, Pennsylvania.
And the telephone company covering this prosperous
and progressive community has recently become a
member of the General Telephone family.
York's pattern of growth is typical of the areas Gen Tel
serves in 31 states. Long : famouslfor its fertile fields
and well-kept farms, Itje. county lias enjoyed a remark
able industrial expansion since World War II.
typical, too, of these growing areas is their growing
need for more telephones. And that is where Gen Tel
comes in with the experience to? provide improved ser
vice and the willingness to invest in modern communi
cations equipmept '
This is just one of the ways we are working to supply
more and better telephone service for a growing
America - present and future.
GENERAL
TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS
rCENERAL
, SYSTCM
i
1
-1
of Chapel Hill
0
LfU
on on qd go
Fall & Winter
Our fine selection of famous brand shoes reduced
; -
b
88
to
MADEMOISELLE (values to $21.95) NOW 515.88
MADEMOISELLE LIZARDS
(values to $2p.95) NOW $17.88
CAPEZIO'S (values tq $15.95) NOW $12.88
PARADISE (values to $17.95) NOW 12.88
TOWN & COUNTRY (values to $12.95) NOW $8.88
DOLMODES (values to $11.95) NOW $8.88
DOLMODE LIZARDS (values to $16.95) .... NOW $12.88
I - - i
I
i ,-
Group
I. OILLER
Reg." to $32.95
CASUALS
FLATS
S83
o lQ (g) o a
Reo;. to $11.95
-!
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