Thursday, August 2, 1962 If New Club Organized At UNC Aims For Political Reform mwmseers THE UNC NEW& jfii- y If f " 1 ' 'J PI.AYMAXER3 Dorothy Worthy as Isabelle explains the beau tics, of nature to her pupils in . the Carolina Playinakers production of "The Enchanted." (Photo by UNC Photo Lab). akers Slate Ghost- Play Wed. The love affair of a ber.cvo I.tJt shot wit'i a beautiful yaung school trjch.v provides the ac tion in the noxt Playmakers' pro- Phone Listings Now Due For Directories The Chap?! Hill Tc-kphorv? Co. recently notified! all UNC depart ments to com-V.ete their new tele phone directory listings, giving the name for their department and individual mmes together with the address and telephone numbers. Deadline for i'.:c!j!rjn of such listings was iir.r.ounceJ as August 15 with the understanding that lrjmcs cf departments or individ uals not .hav.n a.i sjch lists would Le omitted fro;n the next issue of the directory scheduled for December 1 distribution. Department heads uho did not receive such listing requests have been asked to notify the directory office, telephone number 912 5363 immediately. Since the current departments comprise the mailing lists, out of a total of 23 departments, 33 de partments have yet to- submit their departmental listings, ac cording to a telephone spokes-man. duction, "The Enchanted," Au gust 3 and 9. The play, a sum mer fantasy by Joan Giraudoux, deals with the efforts of the town inspector to rid a French town of the ghost and the efforts of the town to keep him. Assisting leading lady Dorothy Worthy, UNC student from Char lotte, will be seven little girls, ages 9 to 12, from Chapel Hill and Durham. Some of them have never been on stage before, while o'.hcrs are veteran actresses. Russell Graves, associate di rector of the Carolina Playmak crs, will direct the play. Tech nical director will be Gene Lo minas. from Ashei!le, a for mer. UNC graduate in dramatic arts and a summer school in-, structor. Rhoda Blanton, a ris ing senior majoring in drama will be stage manager. She is from Shelby. And Sally Cook, a UNC graduate student who teaches at Virginia Intermont College in Bristol, Va., during the winter, will be assistant stage manager. Other leading characters are Oskie Cramer of Chapel Hill and Tommy Thompson of Durham. Carl Hinrichs,. Jan Langston, Edna Gark, Sally Cook, William Senkus, Ed Cathell. and Charles Finley will also appear in the play. Tickets for "The Enchanted" are available at Ledbetter-Pick-ard in Chapel Hill and 252 By num Hall, as well as at the box. office on the evenings of per formance, for. $1.50. -:- CLASSIFIED ADS -:- FOR SALE: USF.D MOBILE TEACHERS. NEEDED: ROCKY liomc 8x13 American, 2 bedrooms.!... r, . . ?.,. c.wof ' .Jit. area, Coastal Spates, SautnwesL air-con Jitioninj optiwal. Screened! . , ii :,. Salaries $3009 up. Need high school Vorch, largj private nt ta walking. ; dUancj o? c3.rpus. 6!3 Airport .and grade teachers. Teachers Spe-j Road, pVj.n 31M331. Jcialists Bureau, Boulder. Colo. By BILL 1IOBBS A small group of undergraduate and graduate students met last Monday evening to map plans for the organization of a new political group in Chapel Hill the Chapel Hill Progressive La bor Club. The club is part of a national council of Marxist groups organ ized around the magazine Pro gressive Labor, a monthly pub lication emanating from New York. The Chapel Hill group is one of the only two clubs in the South; the other is in Atlanta, Ga. At present there is no form al organization and no officers, although undergraduate Dennis King of Chapel Hill and gradu ate student Dave Bland have been designated as spokesmen for the group. King said there were eleven members, of. the club but that they hope to expand in size and scope of activity this fall. "Truly Revolutionary" He said the national group was attempting to organize a "truly revolutionary" national party bas ed on "improving the condition of the workers along socialist and Marxist - Leninist lines." The group feels that existing socialist and Marxist groups in this coun try, including the Communist Party, are not presenting a "uni fied vanguard to further social ist objectives." "We are completely open and above board," said Bland; "We will not and are not engaging in any. conspiratorial activities." The members feel that the ten dency of many other "leftist'" groups to go underground "has just fed propaganda to their ene mies." They plan to publicize all their activities and hold open lneeVmss. Seiji Shiki Will Be UNC's Delegate Seiji Shiki, who won the mas ter's degree at the University of North Carolina in 1913, will be UNC's official delegate at a celebration of the 80th anniver sary of Waseda University in Tokyo. Shiki's appointment to represent the University was. made by President William Fri day. Publisher of a newspaper in Japan, Shiki was in the United States several years ago at which time he paid a visit to Chapel Hill. DIRECTORIES Student directories for both sessions are now available at the YMCA and the Graham Me morial Information Desk. Each directory sells for $.25. Rc-Painled GOLF BALLS 4.G0 - 1 doz. All Brands. 30c. eacli: ROSE'S 5 & 10c The Chapel Hill Club began meeting around the second week of June this summer. Most of its members are former mem bers of the New Left Club, a dis cussion group which disbanded this May but may be reorganized next fall. "Political Action Group Nick Bateson, a graduate stu dent in the Club, said there was a "great difference between us and the New Left. We are a political action group, where they were a discussion group. Many of our members were members of the Marxist seminar of the New Left. We did not grow out of the New Left, but would have started even if there had never been a New Left Club." The club sent a six-man dele gation to a national Progressive Labor meeting in New York' in the first week of July. The Chapel Hill delegation was the largest in attendance. The pur pose of the meeting, the first of its kind, was for the delegates to discuss the formation of a polit ical party on a formal basis. The delegates . decided to wait for a year before actually organizing a party. Move Into State They returned to their .local areas to "explore the possibili ties of starting such a party and broaden our activities." ; The Chapel Hill group had or iginally planned to work only with students but has now de cided to move into the integration and labor union movement in the state as a whole. They have discussed tentative plans for the formation of; inte grated "Worker's Councils" in the state and are presently dis cussing a platform of improve ments for labor conditions in the state. King said another national con ference has been scheduled for this fall. The purpose of this meeting would be to formulate a national program. "We feel that the lack of a concrete program with specific ends and steps to achieve them has been one of the chief failures of other socialist and Marxist groups in this coun try," he said. King urged any students inter ested in socialism or Marxism to contact himself or David Bland. BeofQafors' Haven " ItOm . . . just for TUESDAY cad THURSDAY Prime ,-; r j - J ( Lrytif AU JUI rceoiN timc it o rm unoay i to nt rtt HALIIGH OUHHAM HYW. TC 4-117 Sliaryn Lynn . 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