U.fuc. Library Serials Dspt. Bor 87G Chap- 1 f ""mi y f f 4 y 1 4 4 t 1 n i (' 4 "- Set KT 57 fi 4 - t is & V Kemp's Alley Studio Kemp A Gool Art Photo and Story By JOCK LAUTERER The slim figure stood poised in the alley. Light from the two narrow openings poured into the high walled canyon between the two buildings. The figure slowly raised an object in his hand and . . . . -Larry Carroll began to paint. The 21-year-old Chapel Hill artist has solved the heat problem by retreating to the cool of "Kemp's Alley" between the Dairy Bar and Kemp's. "It's cool in here. Quiet too," said Carroll who has been painting for about six years. Cool Alley Carroll and his easel barely fit into the narrow two-foot wide alley. . "I like painting in here," he said in a clipped, low mono tone style of talking. "Wish all buildings in Chapel Hill were like Kemp's, rough and weathered," he said as if passing judgment on the town's proposed "beauty bill.' - - Chapel Hill probably has the tamest back alleys in the South. Two in town are used for business places. "Amber Alley," the most famous contains a barbershop, a print shop, a restaurant, and a jewelry store. . Twisted Tubes Carroll leaned over, selected a tube of dark red oil paint from a tool box full of twisted paint containers, squeezed, the tube and began to stroke the easel with sure downward movements, now spreading on the deep red. - "It's a - waterfront," he said. The deep maroons and blue blacks" of the East River were not hard to see. The sound of the reeling gulls and the smell of the salt seemed to jump at you from the painting. Music Through The Walls Sounds" of Franklin Street filtered down the -alley between the two buildings. Cars seemed far away in this narrow can yon. Music from Kemp's filtered through the rough wooden walls that framed the east side of the old alley. Kemp Nye, owner of Kemp's, told the history of the alley "When the Dairy Bar was being built, I was told that my building extended five feet into their property and that they were going to rip away part of my store. I had the property measured and they were wrong. I own the alley and the wall on the other side," Kemp said. He paused in his story to yell to his customers, Get em while they're hot!" Kemp continued, "Now it's Kemp's Alley. We re going to make it into an art gallery a sidewalk art gallery no, that wouldn't work. It'll have to be an 'alley galley.' "We'll "hang paintings on the wood wall, put in little seats and stones in it and. make it a one-way affair. You'll have to go in one way and go out the other way. Yep, we'll have an alley galley," concluded Kemp. Carroll put the finishing touches on his waterfront, its finished," he said simply. "It's done." "How do you choose the colors?" I asked. A quick smile which crinkled up the corners of his eyes flashed across, his face at my utter artistic lack of knowledge. "I don't choose colors. Just put it there," said Carroll, who taught himself how to paint. ' His deep-set eyes looked apologetic. "Gotta go up front to the store. Wash my hands," he said. He looked down at paint-splattered pants and shoes, tnen took his wet painting off the easel and trudged away, stoop shouldered leaving the empty easel stark and bare in tne alley - v 1 . .'VS. 4 9 S It "r-'.'-.s-i.-'? Alley' Is Studio Founded Feb. 23, 1893 Viet Nam Forum Set For Saturday Should the United States continue and expand or should it get out of the war in Viet Nam? This Saturday UNC students, faculty, and townspeople will have the opportunity to ex plore this question in depth, as Chapel Hill is linked with the nation in a day of in quiry on the war in Viet Nam. Order Taps 66 Friday At Old Well In an early - morning cere mony Friday at the Old Well, 66 outstanding UNC students were tapped into the Order Of the Old Well. Students are selected each spring on a basis of excellence in leadership in campus ac tivities and academic achieve ment. New members are Henry Aldridge, Ellen Allen, Leslie Baily Jr., Ralph Barnes, Vance Barron Jr., Eugene Barrier, Everett Baucom, Mil ton Bauguess, and Myrtie Bil bro. Also Hugh Blackwell, Alice Brown, Diana Butner, Helen Butt, Myrtle Cauble, Larry Coleman, Michael Chanin, Don Carson, William Camp bell, William Dannemann, Jefferson Davis Jr., and Wil liam Davis. Also Stephen Dennis, Jean Dillin, Charles Downton III, A. D. Frazier, Larry Ehrhart, John Froneberger, Britt Gor don, Judith Grape, William Hancock, Bayard Harris, and Charles Hassell Jr. Also Samuel Hunt III, Neal Jackson. Victoria Kins. Rich ard Kramer. Marv Lewis. Frances Lichtenfels, James Little, James Light, William Lowrance, John MacNicholas, Arthur Maillet, and Kenneth Mann., Also Edward Martin, Frank lin Martin, Armistead Maupin Jr., Wyatt McCallie, James Meade, Louise Menefee, Ed win Parker Jr., Geoffry Par ker, Robert Payton, Sonny Pepper, and Carolyn Plott. Also Nancy Raulerson, James Riley, David Robbins, John Shelburne. Farvl Sims. Ellen Solomon, Sharon Stan ley, Neil Thomas, Richard Trenbath, Helen Troy, and Warren Williams Jr. Seven Chosen To Fill Pub Positions The Publications Board an nounced yesterday that posi tions on campus publications had been filled for the com ing year. Mike Yopp, current associ ate editor of the Daily Tar Heel, will serve during the summer as editor of the Sum mer Tar Heel. Kerry S i p e, DTH managing editor, will be the business manager of the summer paper. Jack Harrington was chos en by the Board for the sec ond consecutive year as busi ness manager of the Daily Tar Heel. , Scott Castleberry was chos en for editor of the 1966 Yack ety - Yack and Dick Baddour will be the business manager. Co-editors of the Carolina Quarterly will be Lecius Shep ard and Ray Viass. Candidates for the positions wece interviewed last week and then voted on at regular sessions of the Publications Board. SDS To Meet The UNC chapter of Stu dents for a Democratic Society will hold its second meeting tonight at 8 in Gerrard Hall. The purposes of the meeting are to review the 25 informa tion sheets turned in by pros pective SDS members at the first meeting and to continue action necessary for being recognized as a legitimate campus organization. The majority of the infor mation sheets reportedly lndi cated that the primary inter ests, of the prospective mem bers lie in the problems of the university. The feature event will be a broadcast from Washington of a "confrontation" between McGeorge Bundy, key presi dential adviser on Viet Nam, and George M. T. Kahin, Di rector of the Southeast Asia Program at Cornell University and outspoken critic of U. S. Vietnamese policy. A "reactor panel" of six ex perts will question Bundy and Kahin and will join in discus sion of the issues involved. The debate is scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. and will be carried over WUNC-FM, 91.5 on the FM dial. In conjunc tion with this broadcast, a lo cal Viet Nam Forum has been announced for the same day. Gerrard Hall and Roland Parker Lounge No. 3 (at Gra ham Memorial) have been set up as central locations where people can come together to listen to the Washington de bate and then continue local discussion afterwards. Over 70 communities around the country will be conduct ing similar programs on ..the same day. Sponsors of the Chapel Hill "Forum" are the Committee of Faculty Concerned About the War in Viet Nam, the UN CYM-YWCA and the Car olina Political Union. . Acting co-chairmen of the Faculty Committee are Phys ic Professor Joseph W. Stra ley and Sociology Assistant Professor M. Richard Cram er. . Heading the YMCA's partic ipation is Jim Medford, pres ident of the "Y" and a sopho more from Waynesville, N. C. Most of the faculty and stu dents involved in the plan ning view themselves as criti cal of the -Government's . ac tions in Viet Nam. But they stress that the pur pose of Saturday's Forum is to "explore possible solutions to the present . crisis and to show our concern to the na- . tionV leaders, rather than to ' promulgate a particular view point or 'make a protest. " The public is invited to par ticipate in the local program, beginning at 12:30 p.m., a half hour before broadcast time from Washington, at either Gerrard Hll or Roland Par ker Lounge No. 3. x s Mangum Medal Competition will be held at 7:30 Tuesday night in Phi Hall, New East, for the Man gum Medal for Oratory to be awarded to the winning senior at commencement. The competition is open to all seniors, and applications for participation are available at the GM Information Desk and on posters located across campus. Judging will be based on a five- to 10-minute prepared speech by each contestant, de signed to put across an argu ment on a topic of the speak er's choice. The panel of faculty judges will comprise Dr. D. B. Har dison, Dr. John M. Schnor renber and William Geer. The gold medallion award was established in 1878 by the family of Willie P. Man gum, and is the oldest com mencement award. In the late 1800's and early 1900's all members of the graduating class were re quired to participate. The competition, held at com mencement, often kept as many , as 500 persons listen ing for a period of as long as five hours. The medal is presented on alternate years by the Di and Phi senates. The public is invited. Viet Nam Vigil A silent vigil will be held in front of the Post Office on E. Franklin Street from 2 to 2:30 p.m. today as a token sympa thy for the vigil being held in front of the Pentagon today by the Interreligious Commit tee on Viet Nam. . The DTH was informed that no campus or community group is sponsoring the sym pathetic protest, but that the vigil has the support of seven local clergymen. They are Rev. Jacob Viver ette, Rev. Charlie Jones, Rev. Vance Barron, . Rev. Robert Seymour, Father Clarence Parker, Rev. LaVern Taylor and Rev. J. R. Manley. "The i South1 s Largest CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MAY Chancellor, M eet Today Fof 2nd. - f J. iv.. vv: . , , , .. 5 SLURP IT'S WATERMELON TIME again as Mclver Hall. The trio of slurpers above are the Pan-Hellenic Council and the Carolina (left to right) Barbara Whyte, Phyllis Kesler, Women's Council get set for the annual water- and Alice Graham. Photo by Jock Lauterer melon feast today from 3 to 5 p.m. in front of Residence Hall, SG Speakers Tonight Sen. Ralph Scott of Ala mance County will lead .Y Dorm Speaker activity tonight with a discussion in . Ehring haus at 10.; His topic will be "The State: the University and the Legislature." " . Elsewhere on campus, the speaker program will present Chancellor Paul F.-Sharp, Dr.. Lewis Lipsitz and Philip Kennedy. v .1 ; Sharp will address residents of Joyner at 8:30 p.m. in the social room there. , His topic will be "The University's Re sponsibility to the Students." Kennedy, an instructor in the Department of Romance Languages, will be in Nurses' Dorm at 6:30 p.m. The folk lore enthusiast will discuss trends in folk music. He worked in the Folklore section of the. Library of Con gress for a year before com ing to UNC. Lipsitz will speak in Cobb at 8:30 p.m. His remarks will concern "The Limits of the Them,' Says Playboy Editor Hefner By NAT WALKER DTH Saff Writer "Life and sex are wonder ful. We are only around for one trip so we should enjoy life to the fullest. Sex is not an inhuman act, it is very human, a pure experience." Hugh M. Hefner, editor-publisher of Playboy magazine told this to an enthusiastic au dience in Memorial Hall Mon day night. Hefner appeared here in a panel discussion sponsored by the Carolina Forum. Other panelists were Dr. Clifford Reifler of the School of Medi cine; Rabbi Joseph Levine, di rector of the Hillel Founda tion; Daryl Farrington, assist ant dean of women; and Dr. William Fleming of the De partment of Political Science. Bill Schwartz, co - chairman of the forum, moderated the discussion. Hefner, whose "Playboy Philosophy" series began in December 1963 and has no end in sight, said that be cause of a sex revolution that is now in progress, the wom en can begin to play a fuller role in American society. "I do not think they have learned this yet," he added. The sex revolution has contributed- to the phenomenal success of Playboy, he . said. "We were in the right place at the right time." The first Playboy magazine appeared in December 1953 and sold over . 50,000 copies. Sales of the March 1965 issue topped 3,018,000. Hefner credits nearly per fect birth control methods with giving, man, for the first time, an opportunity to con sider the sexual act separate from' propagation.' "Reproduc tion belongs in the family but College Newspaper9' 5 Kr J . m , ..Vv -t, Johnson Administration," and he will include a discussion of Viet Nam, the voting rights bill and other measures of the present administration. "Pjroblems of the University and the: Role of the General Assembly" will be the topic of a panel discussion spon sored by. Student Govern ment's State - Affairs Commit tee tonight at 8 in Gerrard Hall. The Schedule Seniors! Graduation invitations will be distributed to Seniors today through Friday on the second floor of Y-Building. Or ders will be delivered and there will be a lim ited number of extra in vitations to be sold. we should reexamine sex on a much larger scale," he said. "The strong anti - sexual tradition is not essentially biblical. It began after Christ," Hefner responded to a statement by Rabbi Levine who said that in the biblical tradition the "mysticism" in sex was not separated from reality. Miss Farrington questioned Hefner about Playboy's em phasizing masculine identifi cation. The magazine presents a standard pattern of dress, "what to do, and how to do it," to be followed by the ser ious "playboy," she said. "A relationship between man and woman is an indi vidual matter. Sex should be connected, with love and de votion and unless something negative is brought in, sex in itself is not bad. It is wrong to exploit sex," Hefner said. "The 'Playboy Philosophy' has . performed a function of : educating people that pre marital sex is not sinful," Fleming said. But there is a tendency to "compartmental ize" and this is . being done with sex, he added. "Lives should be integrated and sex is a part of our whole exist ence." Hefner suggested that a young man should live as a bachelor so that when he does marry the marriage will have a better chance of being a happy experience. "The mores against pre - marital sex re lations force couples to marry younger than they should. Of ten a man is a different per son from what he may be in 10 years," he said. The two great "hang ups" in American: society are sex and money according to Hef 12, 1965 - L LL i -Vr , . if, . ,tJ , . . m. Jyaia .y xJLr. . ,i. :Z Panelists will be Rep. R.D. McMillan of Robeson, Chair man of the House Committee on Higher Education, Senator Ralrjh Scott of Alamance, Chairman of the Senate Com mittee on Higher Education and Rep. Don Stanford of Or ange, a member of both the Appropriations and Higher Ed ucation Committees of, the House. The panel will be moderat ed by Student Body President Paul Dickson, and it will at tempt to outline the long-range goals . and problems of the University. The 1963 Speaker Ban Law will be discussed, along with the community college sys tem, problems of University expansion, and faculty needs. State Affairs Committee Chairman Bob Powell urged all interested students to at tend, as this will be the last time such a program can be arranged before 1967. ner. "Sex is the great civiliz ing force," he said. Organizations and institu tions are the civilizing forces, Reifler suggested. "Animals have sex and are not civil ized," he pointed out. Flem ing added that society and civilization have developed out X" ' SEX IS FUN says editor and publisher of Playboy magazine. Hugh Hefner. The. author of The Playboy Philosophy," who spoke in Memorial Hail sponsored by the Carolina Forum, called for a reorganization of American sexual values. Photo by Jock Lauterer. Volume 42, Number 157 eadiers Talk Booth Set Up In Y -Court For 24 Hours By ANDY MYERS DTH Staff Writer Students for Teachers spokesmen will meet with Chancellor Paul F. Sharp this morning at 10:30 to discuss "goals and possible solutions to the problem of maintain ing quality teaching at UNC." A 24-hour booth was set up in Y-Court yesterday by SFT to distribute leaflets and provide a place where stu dents and faculty members could "discuss SFT issues" and sign the petition that will be presented to Sharp. As of 6 p.m. last night SFT spokesmen said they had "well over 1,100 names" on the petitions which are being circulated around campus. The petition, citing Dr. Goo dykoontz as an example of a "valuable and dedicated teacher," calls for a Univer sity policy of retaining and promoting teachers on the ba sis of their teaching. The Inter-Fraternity Council Monday night unanimously passed a resolution support ing the goals of SFT, as did the Student legislature last Thursday night. Frank Minard, who intro duced the resolution, said the only controversy in the 1FC about the resolution was whether the body should ac cept the resolution directly from SFT. He said the pass age that mentioned SFT in the resolution was struck out of the resolution, but the identi cal goals of SFT were re tained. Student Body President Paul Dickson announced at the SFT rally Monday he had contact ed "several state legislators" and that he intends to appear before the Senate and House Committees on Higher Educa tion and the joint appropria tions committee in support of SFT. Dickson said yesterday that his plans are still to go to Raleigh, but that he is wait ing until he has all "the facts and figures" on "teaching re lationships" at UNC. The Ra- ( Continued On Page 3 ) of differences between "mak ing love and having sex." "I don't favor free love or promiscuity," Hefner said. "What I have indicated is that lore can be right outside of marriage. The attitude in the relationship is the important factor." "J

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view