Saturday, September 22. 1962 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pasre PI aymakers To Depict Problems Need a Cab? Phone 942-4863 This Number is important because it is your key to prompt cab service J. J. Cab Co. Five major productions for the 45th season of The Carolina Play-, makers were announced this week by Director Harry Davis. 24-HOUR Located in the rear of the Carolina Coffee Shop on East Franklin Street 24 HOURS A DAY 7 DAYS A WEEK featuring STEAKS SEAFOOD SPAGHETTI REGULAR and SPECIAL SANDWICHES Complete Breakfast Menu WAFFLES! HOT CAKES "Good food served promptly in pleasant surroundings and at reasonable prices." curs a-c to i.uu siu Franklin & Columbia Streets Headquarters for ALL Your schools needs At Popular Prices ALARM CLOCKS DESK LAMPS LflUFJDRY BAGS S1J9 FOAM PILLOWS CIGARETTES All Brands $1.B4 a Carton Always check our Bargain Basement for Real Specials All five plays are concerned with problems of the Twentieth Century, with locales ranging from eastside New York to rural Georgia; from England and NOW SHOWING WHEN KlDSGETTHAT GLEAM MIDGIIiLS BEHAKELUCETHATVE NEVER BEHAVED... WHAT'S THE REASOli? THE NEW DANCE SENSATION THAT IS SIVEEPIIJGTHE NATION INTRODUCED BY..., France to Russia. Based on Damon Runyon char acters, the Broadway and motion picture musical hit "Guys and Dolls" opens in Memorial Hall on Oct. 26 for a three-night run. Directed by Kai Jurgeneen and Charles Horton, the Frank Loes ser musical shows what happens when a Salvation Army mission gets involved with New York's oldest floating crap game. "Tobacco Road" "Tobacco Road," Jack Kirk land's dramatization of the Ers kine Caldwell novel, will run in the Playmakers Theatre Dec. 5-9. Set in rural Georgia in the 1920's, "Tobacco Road" broke all rec ords when it ran in New York for seven and a half years. The Playmakers production will be directed by Harry Davis or John W. Parker. Eugene Ionesco's satirical comedy, "Rhinoceros," will be presented Feb. 13-17. A forerun ner of the "theatre of the ab surd," "Rhinoceros" will tour North Carolina and Georgia fol lowing its Chapel Hill run. Tom my Rezzuto will direct. - "The Chalk Garden," by Enid Bagnold,' will be presented March 13-17 under the direction of Fos ter Fitz-Simons. A psychological mystery, Miss Bagnold's play is set in England. "The Cherry Orchard," Anton Chekhov's best-known play, deals with the frustrations, jealousies and loves in a Russian household at the beginning of this century. "The Cherry Orchard" will be Dr. Peacock Gives Whitehead Lecture Old School Is New School Ai Hilton's mm otadted to ihues YOUR WM1 WHETHER YOUR INVESTMENTS ,&RE IN 5 OR 500 SHARE LOTS, LET US HELP YOU DISCOVER THE WIDE POSSIBILITIES FOR YOUR FUNDS LEMENS & - lit ItMtilEB SBCDRSTSES r Drop in mid pay us visit . . . we're right above the Rathskeller 'The big question you have to decide is how good are you going to be" was one o fthe challenges given to the Class of 1966 of the School of Medicine Thursday night at the annual Whitehead Lecture. Dr. Erie E. Peacock, Jr., asso ciate professor of surgery, point ed out to the new medical stu dents the "enormity of the bulk of knowledge which is to be set before you and the importance which any fragment of this knowledge may have in terms of health and happiness for those whom you will ultimately serve." Dr. Peacock, speaking in the Cilinic Auditorium of Memorial Hospital to the new students, laid before them the. lifelong chal lenge of the profession of medi cine. "You are faced with a problem of infinite proportions, and the sharp realization that there will never again be a point at which you can close your book and say, 'I have mastered that subject.' " He told the students that the very fact of their selection to ad mission at the University of North Carolina School of Medi- directed by Russell Graves. , Tryouts for The Carolina Play makers production of "Guys and Dolls," Frank Loesser's musical fable of Broadway, will be held Monday, Sept. 24, at 4 and 7:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall, director Kai Jurgensen has announced. Based on a story and charac ters by Damon Runyon, there are roles for over 20 people in the 1962-63 season opener, including non-singing roles. Nicely-Nicely Johnson, Sarah Brown, Harry the Horse, Miss Adelaide, Nathan De troit and Sky Masterson are just a few of the well-known charac ters. "Guys and Dolls" will be pre sented in Memorial Hall Oct. 26 28. Tryouts are open to all area students and residents. Charles Horton will be music director for the production. All members of the student legislature have been asked to call the Student Government offices at 942-1463 or Ann Lupton at 968-9030 to report their new addresses. Each member must receive material for the legisla tive session on Thursday night. cine placed them among the elite. Stressing the need for a plan of work and of achievement, he told the students "your objective is not merely to pass the work in this medical school. You have got to have a plan that has as its objective your becoming a superior student." "There is nothing easy about attaiining a medical degree," he said. "Both physically, mentally and morally, you will find it easier to attian doctorate status in any other field than medicine. You would not want it any other way. Only those things which re quire great sacrifice are worthy of the final objective and in choosing the objective of admit tance to the medical profession, you have also chosen, .sacrifice and hard work." " " Dr. Peacock put before the students the challenge that they be "unconquarable, . insuperable, indomitable." "Your accomplishments in the past leave great hope that this challenge will be met in full." The Whitehead Society, spon sor of the annual lecture, is named for Dr. Richard H. White head, dean of the School of Medi cine from 1890 to 1905. Its presi dent is Neil Benuder of Pollocks-ville. ft Vt- f " f Sports jackets herringbones in classic domestic wool and shetlands $45.00 Wool navy blazers with Old Well linings and unusual brass but tons $39.95 Worsted $62.50 wool herringbone suits Allen Issues Statement On Alcohol Use Each fall, the University ad ministration, the stadium offi cials, and the officers of the UNC Student Government have great concern about the conduct of University students in Kenan Stadium. In the past the con sumption of alcoholic beverages has been held to a minimum let's continue, as a body of re sponsible and mature students, and as individuals, to strive for this ideal. Certainly, ungentle manlike conduct will not be tol erated in the stands, end we all hope there will be no cases of a student being asked to leave the stadium. I hope we can all re member and honor our respon- sibilty to the University and to our friends, reserving for after the game, if necessary" at all; any instances of alcoholic sumption. con- HI-FI RECORD SHOP 334 W. Main At Points DURHAM FREE L.P. WITH 5 (Buy em One-At- a Time) THIS SATURDAY AND EVERY SATURDAY CHL Bo Diddley Jimmy Reed Ray CharlesJoan Baez Peter, Paul . & Mary Dr. Feelgood Folk Party Ventures Bobby Darrin Lettermen Shirleues Ben E. King Bobby Bland Checker Bruebeck Shearing Freshmen Lads Limeliters Harlequins. 1360 BRINGS YOU garoj jna- FOOTBALL This Week S. C 1:45 P. 0- M Play by Play jfflr N Bill Currie BY BROUGHT TO YOU O ORANGE SAVINGS & LOAN (with new offices at Rosemary & Columbia) MAULTSBY-PERRY TIRE CO. (On Main St in Carrboro) STEVENS-SHEPHERD (Carolina Foremost Fashions) MEBANE LUMBER COMPANY (The Company That Insists on Quality) PRE-GAME WARM-UP 1:35 DOWNTOWN CHAPEL HILL Alarm Clocks Pin Up Lamps Desk Lamp Floor Lamp Extension Ccrds Scissors Lamps Clock Radios Transistor Radio Water Heaters Coffee Pots Desk Fans s COriSTRUGTiOn coriiPflfiY 169 E. Franklin St. The I inkley Baptist I Worship each Sunday at 11 A.M. in Gerrard Hall on lA'C Campus VISITORS WELCOME emorial Ihuroh (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.) 1 FREE 45 i &? II I Yoiar I Money I Buys I More 1 at the 1 Intimate . - - - .. I . 11 1 " ANOTHER YEAR, ANOTHER DOLLAR With today's entry I begin my ninth year of writing columns in your school newspaper for the makers o Marlboro Cigarettes. Nine years, I believe you will agree, is a long time. In fact, it took only a little longer than nine years to dig the Suez Canal, and you know what a gigantic undertaking that w:?l To be sure, the work would have gone mere rapidly had the shovel been invented at that time, but, u,s we all know, tha shovel was not invented until 1946 by Walter R. Shovel of Cleveland, Ohio. Before Mr. Shovel's discovery in 1046, all digging was done with sugar tongs a method unquestionably dainty but hardly what one wouJd call rapid. There were, natu rally, many efforts made to speed up digging before JMr. Shovel 's breakthrough notably an attempt in 1912 by the immortal Thomas Alva Edison to dig with the phonograph, but the on!y thing that happened was that he got his horn full of .sand. This so depressed Mr. Edison that he fell into a fit of melancholy from which he did not emerge until two years later when his friend William Wordsworth, the eminent nature poet,, cheered him up by imitating a duck for four and a half hours. But I digress- For nine years, I say, I have been writing this column for the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, and for nine years they have been paying me money. You are shocked. You think that anyone who has tasted Marlboro's unparalleled flavor, who has enjoyed Marlboro's filter, who has revelled in Marlboro's jolly red and white pack or box should be more than willing to write about Marlboro without a penny's compensa tion. You are wrong. Compensation is the very foundation stone of the American Way of Life. Whether you love your work or hate it, our system absolutely requires that you be paid for it. For example, I have a friend named Rex Glebe, a veterinarian by profession, who simply adores to worm dogs. I mean you can call him up and say, "Hey, Rex, let's go bowl a few lines," or "Hey, Rex, let's go flatten some pennies on the railroad tracks," and he will always reply, "No, thanks. I better stay here in ease somebody wants a dog wormed.'? I mean there is not one thing in the whole world you can name that Rex Ekes better than worming a dog. But even bo, Rex always sendfe a bill for worm ing your dog because in his wisdom he knows that to do other wise would be to rend, possibly irreparably, the fabric of democracy. K's fiu same wr& me aad Marlboro Cigarettes. I Srink Marlboro's flavor represents the pinnacle of the tobacconist's art. I think Marlboro's filter represents the pinnacle of the filter-maker's art. I think Marlboro's pack and box represent the pinnacle of the packager's art. I think Marlboro i3 a pleas nre and a treasure, and I fairly burst with pride that I have been chosen to speak for Marlboro on your campus. All the fame, I want my money every week. And the makers of Marlboro understand this full wefl. They don't like it, but tbey nnderstand it. In the columns which follow this opening mstaBmerfi, I w23 turn the hot white light of truth on the pressing problems of campus life the many and varied dilemmas which beset the undergraduate burning questions like "Should Chaucer class rooms be converted to parking garages?" and "Should proctors be given a saliva tett?" and "Should foreign exchange students be held for ransom?" And in these columns, while grappling with the crises that vex campus America, I will make occasional brief mention of Marlboro Cigarettes. If I do not, the makers will not give me any money. c i 2 m . 77ie makers or Marlboro will bring you this uneenxored, free-style column 26 times throughout the school uevr. Dur ing this period it is not unlikely that Old Max uill step on some toss principally ours but ue think it's all in fun and we hope you will too.

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