Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 12, 1962, edition 1 / Page 3
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I? - v :-T v ""v i ' . . it Don't be a meat-head! Get Vitalis with V-7.lt keeps your hair neat all day with out greas. Naturally. V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery.' Vitalise with V-7 fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents" dryness, Keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try it' n s . . .. is f: for r a i o ?' '" I call 7! s for o -,r"?) I of. Beers! W M ' f; tvlicro there's iife ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC, Joan Baez: Waif Or Protest Singer (Editor's mote: The following .ctrmment on Joan JSaez .was written -by iwell-kjiown Caro lina ffoIksinger Mike Ilall.) The lights of 'Memorial Hall dimmed, .the curtain parted slight ly. She stepped up to the Tuicro phone . to .sing and the one of the few sounds recently to have been heard in Chapel .Hill over the throbbing din of combos rang through the auditorium. She was 1 1 w near om, Sic. CORMORANT'S BROOD, a wow ser of a North Carolina historical yarn, , that is virtually painless to buy! OURPRICE $1.00. PAY .PACK AND FOLLOW, the autobiography of North Caro lina's j favorite .'novelist. Full of stuff about old tlays in the South. f Our yJJPECIAL fPRICE ... $1.49. A -FIELD GUIDE TO THE BIRDS, by Roger Tory Peterson. Always 'treasured "by "garden "lov ers, and it seems tailored for North Carolina gardens. . . $4.95. SONGBIRDS IN YOUR GAR DEN, by Chapel Hill's own John K. Terres. Tells how to attract the birds you want, and add to the beauty of your garden, all at one time! $4.95. THE ANTIQUES BOOK, edited by Alice Winchester. Information on rceramics, .furniture, glass, sil ver', pewter and other old treas ure. Published at $6.00. INTI MATE BOOKSHOP PRICE $3.49. OLD AMERICAN HOUSES 1700-1850, by Ottalie and Henry Williams. How to recognize the important details in old Ameri can .houses, and how to restore them. Published at $6.95. OUR SPECIAL $2.49. We'll gift-wrap them free, and mail them for a pittance. The Intimate Bookshop Open Till 10 .P.SL 3 all they had imagined, the wistful dark-haired -waif pleading "don't sing love songs you'll wake my mother . . ." In jcl world where ar tists of any sort .from Paul Gau guin to our own time, have secured their popularity as much on their personal image as on the quality of their work this "Orphan .Annie plus guitar" carved her own. niche and bound herself uniquely within it as she slipped off her shoes to continue her program clasped to the hearts of her public. sUnfortunately, at least to some of us, Joan Baez like the frazzle haired Orphan of the comic strips could not help getting tangled up with her daddy W'arbucks (Pete Seeger) and a great social cru sade. Her second stage image (not yet projected into her recordings) of the patron saint of world unity and the dignity of man began in her opening song phrase "Last Night I Dreamed the Strangest Dream I ever dreamed before, I dreamed the world had all agreed to put an end to war." Her abstracted, dis jointed and very unorganized re flections on "life" and "living" might better have not been said, though the majority of uncritical student evaluations of her program insist that at least she was "sin cere." And what about this purist busi ness? There is no denying the pure beauty of her voice nor the rich blend of her voice and the sounds from her aging Martin Guitar, but how does a purist reconcile the CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE: 1955 PONTIAC CONV., R.H., complete power, clean. 1957 Dauphine, heater, mechanically very good, engine recently over hauled. Contact Don Rosenzweig or Neil Ruttenberg, 9G8-9025 or 967-3528. FOR SALE: MONOCULAR LEITZ Miscroscope. Four objectives. Me chanical stage. Two 10-power eye pieces. Lamp and carrying case. Asking $175. Call or leave message, 968-9181. 232 Teague, Rudy Albert, Med. 2. FOR RENT: ATTRACTIVE CA- bins near Medical School ($65) June to June. .Exceptionally attrac tive house ($175) June-January. No shorter terms. Write Occupant: 1503 Mason Farm Road. 3. Macaw A, Disclosing ; 5,-Balance ,paa 6. Small dog: shortened 7. Little plaguera 8. Low cast Hindu O. Lower world river 11. Torments Arnold 24. Touch end to end 25. Noah'3 first eon (var.) 56. Bitter vetch 28. Seward's purchase G5. Hindu 17. League 20. Tcnni3 month 19. Sagacious stroke 37. Slipped 20. Dutch 32. Greek letter 38. German, painter S3. For sale: river 21. Sound, 40. Hotel as a 24. Full-grown 42. Samuel's dovo pike teacher Ally CROSSWORD ACROSS 3. Macaw 22. Gen. . l.At-a distance 6. Land points 10. Enticed 22. Heavenly body 13. Serious 14. Abundantly 15. Man's nickname 18. Wicked 18. Half -dozen ltf. Statement of relin- - cfguishxnent 1 Quite cool 23. Facilitate "27. Desert garden spot 28. Brownish yellow 29. Unroll 30. PhotogrspJi holders 31. Child's walker 33.Wing-l&9 part 36. Flat-topped hill 37. Compass point: abbr. 39, Girl's nickname 41. Toll 43. Frosting1 44. Extempor ize 45. Cassia 46. Flood or ebb, e.g. DOWN 1. Seaweed 2. Roll up tightly C HApy S Hffxiyrp, i g p a! vLr7 Moj i I AjgovSSui nite'd i eMtiwii HfOnma. TTzi NkOjNfr i srrit n!k tl ;,QfMv AlNl I QmQ L gjs" DIP ''.jf eK seoo pie p)r t ntIsqpIups aba rleFCa eis et t aJUeIsLIsMeJpJs Yesterday' Answur 12 3 4- to 7 8 9 " !L.ll!E Z-ZZ In 21 ZX C13 2.4- 25 2.t A 1 1 1 vMA 1 1 of a traditional ballad like don resulting was not a testimony smgmg Barbara Allen with the fall-out protest "what hapuened to the rain." The pressure on folk singers today to join protest movements is terrific. This pressure stems from the participation of men like See ger in labor protest movements through the depression when their only patronage was often from unions or revolutionary political movements. In the Tar Heel interview print ed Friday, Miss Baez is quoted as evaluating folk singers according to "the intent of the individual." The most poignant question raised about her performance must be, what is HER intent? Is she a con cert spokesman for the beauty that can be found in traditional music, or has she perhaps decided that her guitar makes a good U.N. flag to brandish across the stage. What if any, was her intent in closing ask ing for audience participation in the Battle Hymn of the Republic? As I consider this question I ask if it was a masterful piece of pro gramming or merely a faux pas. I concluded, "neither." It was just a young performer tempted to the challenge of whether her personal prestige could right long-stranding wrongs. The permissive participa- NOW PLAYING A. THE dORY AND THE GALLANTRY --fOF THE GREATEST fcMGHT OF ASH C -mmm, icorp y f r, ' v ii V 1 -r I 1. ta M-C-" hM May-25-26-27-28 teg!Bi-..IM,'l?.HiWt. j to the sudden establishment of a new utopiai world and miraculous healing of .real or imagined north south wounds but only to the cour tesy of an audience that would cater to her whims out of respect for her musical talent. The stereotype reaction was why not "Dixie?" But the more reflec tive and perhaps more let-down only preferred the waif image she was when she first stepped into the lights over the awkward crusader image she left upon her exit. Aside from the drift into social therapy the rest of Miss Baez's pro gram was filled with high spots. Her "Wreck of Engine 143" was ja very straightforward working of a little sung railroad song, and her "Black Is the Color" was a most lirmmml trpntmpnt nf n snncr snn so often poorly. Wetle Scholarship (Fund Initiated A scholarship fund in honor of Jake Wade was initiated Thursday by the staff of the Charlotte News. Wade died Wednesday cof an .ap parest -:heart .attack while -driving from Raleigh , to Cbapel iHHl. .He was 61. ?The rfund was launched by sports editor iBab Quincy and staff .mem ber Julian Scheer of the Charlotte afternoon paper and other contri butions have been invited. Hhe scholarship, in ; memory of the UNC sports .-publicity director and longtime . figure in Nort h Caro lina sports, .will go -to a ;male stu dent showing jan .interest in sports writing ,as a career. NOW SHOWING GifiL meets BoY.. (with ymoons) NOCHJMJ) iTaIfcDisnes w n II - I ) 3m 3 11 Pi i i - i I .15 .v.'.s-.l.-. :.:.? -: ;-. v. : , . . 1 w. - ..! wvUI VI lb uanutEKimoucTica . costs less than imanualitop jobs!) .Name: Rambler. American "400" Convertible. .Power-operated top.iPrice: Lowest of any U. S. convertible. Travel restrictions: None (has d 25 '. HP overhead-valve engine :plus 'five transmis sion choices. -Bucket seats, optional).,Honors: Economics (has won.both major 1962 economy runs beating all other compacts entered). In terviews: At your Rambler dealer's. 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Product tf 3& iis&xacovyey Juu- U our tniidlt mmmt . activity, since it does not .require that the whole girl be beautiful. For example, if you. decide; to specialize in knees, you watch only beautiful knees. (The doorman above appears to be an aie.$pecialist.) Whatever your watching specialty, make sure your smoking specialty is Pall Mall's natural mildness it's so good to. your taste. Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your teste ! So smooth, so satisfying, iso dovnriglrtism6keable! 1 4 T 3irr? mm IMI it O " " C'Kl HUB OF CHAPEL HILL FjyNTAiSTIC iCorne See, Come Save iEverythingjlsiNowiOn Sille Greatest Sale Ever In Chapel Hill i .523 n
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 12, 1962, edition 1
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