Page 6
the daily tar heel
Friday, March 25, 1966
It'll Take 6
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The Buildings and Grounds
Department, after failing to
keep a promise to plant ivy
around a cyclone fence beside
Carmichael Auditorium as soon
as the fence was finished, has
said, it will plant the ivy Mon
day or Tuesday but it will
take at least six years for ivy
to cover the fence.
The four foot high wire
fence which was begun late
in February brought protests
from people who thought it
would be too ugly a contrast
to the rest of the University.
At that time, John A. Ben
nett, head of the Buildings and
Grounds Department, said "the
ivy will be planted as soon as
the fence is completed so that
Coming
Death's
By WILLIAM FESPERMAN
DTI I Religion Editor
The coming of Easter is the
coming of the meaning of
death.
Grunewald, the 15th century
German artist, comprehend
ed the moment of death fully
in his paintings of the cruci
fixion. The Christ of his can
vasses is of a body drawn
and contorted, green with the
horror of rotting flesh, punc
tured and wealt-beaten, bleed
ing from the pressure of
grotesquely huge and entan
gled thorns.
It is as if the emaciated
Christ of Grunewald reaches
out from the canvass, graps
out from the canvass, grasps
fully into the face of the ob
server, "this is death."
The death Grunewald paints
is the death of Christ. It is
a death that one can sluff
off. But there is another death
that cannot be sluffed off. And
that is our own death.
When this realization pre
sents itself in its fullness to
Firms To Interview
Six firms have representa
tives on campus today to re
cruit students.
The six are American Red
Cross; Springs Cotton Mills;
City of Detroit; Aetna Casual
ty & Surety; Linder & Rulnick;
and Winn-Dixie Raleigh.
On Monday Ortho Pharma
ceutical; N. C. State Personnel
Department; General Electric;
and Ford Motor Credit Co. will
be on campus to interview stu
dents. Any student wanting an in
terview should come by 204
Gardner to make an appoint
ment. ALL
MONO
6
STEREO
1EMFS
it will be well on its way to
covering the fence by this
spring."
The fence has been com
pleted for the past couple of
weeks.
According to University
landscapper, Walter J. Duns
more, the ivy "will take root
and start growing this year
but it will be at least six
years before it covers the
fence."
Soil has already been laid
around the fences but Duns
more has to get some ivy
first.
The fence was constructed
to keep people playing on the
intramural field from running
into the drive.
Of Easter Means
Meaning Coming
a man, what is he to do? 'Do
not go gentle into that good
night Rage; rage against the
dying of the light" says the
poet Dylan Thomas in a truly
human cry. We are all in
bondage to death. This is
particularly what the coming
of Easter means.
The artists knows about the
bondage of death. No matter
whether he speaks out of the
canvas, the orchestra, or the
sonnet, the artist confronts
the meaning of death for his
life.
This marks a point between
the artist and ourselves. The
artist cannot, for the sake of
his art, forget about death.
The composer, Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart understood
this fully. For it is in his last
Mass in D minor, that Mozart
breaks away from the cate
gory of the courtly musician
into the fullness of life by
singing to death.
The senior choir of the
Chapel of the Cross will per
form this profound work at 8
p.m. Sunday, March 27. The
choir, under the direction of
musicology student Jerry
Baab, will be accompanied
by strings, brass, winds and
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Friday -Saturday -Sunday
MAR. 25
10 - 9 P.M.
MAR. 26
10 - 9 P.M.
Years
At the time protests were
raised J. A. Branch, Univer
sity Business Manager, said
"we wanted to cover the
fences on the drive side with
some type of hedge or shrub
bery, but the fence posts have
already been put into the
ground in cement."
The fence couldn't be moved
back to make way for shrub
bery because, according to
0. K. Cornwell, "it would take
part of our intramural field.
We need every inch of ground
we have since some of our
fields were taken in by the
new Carmichael Auditorium.
Instead the University set
tled for the ivy which takes
six years to catch on.
percussion. Soloists will be:
Walker Glenn Weigel, sopra
no; Susan Quinn, alto; Wayne
Zarr, tenor; . and Kenneth
Smith, bass.
The story of the composition
goes as follows:
It was fashionable in Moz
art's time for greedy mem
bers of the aristocracy to
commission works by well
known composers so that
they could pawn them off as
their own.
A certain Count Franz Wall
segg zu Stuppach commission
ed Mozart to write a requiem
for his dead wife. The count
sent as an emissary his man
Leutgeb to the seriously ill
Mozart. Leutgeb concluded
the contract.
The servant dressed rather
gloomily and Mozart is sup
posed to have come to asso
ciate the person of Leutgeb
with the figure of Death.
Consequently, Mozart came
to feel that he was composing
this "missa pro defunctis" for
himself. In truth, he was; for
Mozart died after completing
only eight measures of the
Lacrymosa.
MAR. 27
1 - 6 P.M.
205 EAST FRANKLIN
CIIAPEL HILL, N. C
Lay Philosopher
Speaking
By WILLIAM FESPERMAN
uin religion Editor
The Department of Religion
the YM-YWCA and the Wei
ley Foundation are sponsoring
today, Saturday and Sunday
a visit by a Catholic lay phi
losopher, Michael Novak.
The overall purpose of his
Top Professor
To Get $1,000
Charles McFadden, director
of the Student Government De
partment of Educational and
Cultural Affairs, was appoint
ed chairman of the Excellence
in Teaching Commission yes
terday. McFadden. a senior from
Hickory, was appointed bv
Student Body President Paul
Dickson.
The commission will give
$1,000 to a teacher who shows
"excellence in teaching in the
classroom and willingness and
excellent in assisting individ
ual students in the academic
and intellectual search outside
the classroom."
The four students, will in
clude one graduate student
and three undergraduates
one from each of the areas of
Fine Arts, Humanities, Natu
ral Sciences, and Social Sci
ences. Any student, undergraduate
or graduate, may recommend
a teacher for the award by
Government offices in Gra
ham Memorial, or by contact
ing McFadden in 304 Man
gum. The award will be made in
late spring or at commence
ment, according to Dickson.
Every step in crafting,
the Florsheim Imperial is
carried out with infinite
care and skill. The result
is total elegance, along,
of course, with the ex
tra long wear that makes
Florsheim Imperial a
truly practical economy.
147 E. FRANKLIN ST.
ALL
LABELS
TAKE HOME
CIGARETTES
$1.94 Per Carton
Today
three day visit is to discuss
the new awakening in the
Church, especially the Catho
lic Church.
Novak will speak on three
occasions. Friday, March 25,
he will lecture on "Belief and
Unbelief" at 8:00 p.m. at the
Wesley Foundation building lo
cated at 214 Pittsboro Street.
Saturday, March 28, from
2-4 p.m. he will be at a panel
and informal discussion at the
Wesley Foundation. The dis
cussion will center around
some issues raised in the pre
vious address.
Sunday, March 27, Novak
will lecture on "A New Gen
eration: American and Cath
olic." The meeting will be in
111 Murphey Hall at 8 p.m.
The movement of the church
in history is always one of rise
and fall, i.e. of decay and re
building. This unique charac
ter of the church, to rebuild
itself, is the prime movement
of the church today.
Two elements are necessary
for this rebuilding. First, there
must be a recognition that the
Church is ineffectual for its
age. The first ripples of this
movement appeared in the
19th century with Soran Kier
kegaard. Then the rise of cap
italisitc Christianity in Amer
ica and of national fascism in
Europe met head on in this
century to dissolve the opti
mism of the 19th century.
Secondly, any reawakening
in the church must be a the
ological reawakening.
UNC
BEER MUGS
SCARFS ANIMALS
PENNANTS
RED NIGHT SHIRTS
RECORD BAR
FRIDAY, SATURDAY, AND SUNDAY
LL COLUMBIA CLASSICAL LP's
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Colombia Artists include Bemstein.Qrmendy, Stern,
Lasadesas, Szell, Stokowski, and many others
SALE ENDS 32766 AT 6:00 P.M.
Sale Good in Chapel Hill Store Only
Complete Variety of 4 and 8 Track Tapes
THE RECORD BAR
Across from the POST OFFICE on Henderson Street
DURIUH, Uptown JA0KS0IIVILLE, FLA. DURHAM, Wolions Villago
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There will be a compulsory
meeting of all residence col
lege treasurers in the Wood
house Room of GM from 5-6
P-m. This is an extremely
important meeting for orien
tation purposes.
The Baptist Stndent Union will
have its regular supper
study at 5:45 p.m. The topic
discussed will be the "Death
of God Theology."
The Sinfonians' Festival of
Contemporary Music is now
underway. At 8 p.m. this
evening there will be a re
cital of Modern Works by
Members of the Faculty of
the Department of Music in
cluding works by Martinu
(1890-1959) and Jack Jarrett,
born in 1934.
Carolina Christian Fellowship
at 6 p.m. in Lenoir. Blair
Reed of High Point Chris
tian Home for Alcoholics
will continue speaking on
the "New Birth in Christ."
Catholic students: All are
urged to attend as many of
the Michael Novak discus
sions as possible. Tonight
at 8 p.m., "Belief and Un
belief at the Wesley Foun
dation. H i 1 1 e 1 Foundation Sabbat
Eve services at 7 p.m. at
Hillel House.
Interviews will be held for
chairmanships of commit
tees on the Graham Me
morial Activities Board on
March 28-April 1. Sign up
at GM Information Desk.
Tickets for the Ford Caravan
of Music, starring Roger
Miller are on sale now at
Graham Memorial all day
and at Chase Cafeteria from
5-7 p.m. They cost $1 for
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students and $1.50 for gen
eral public.
Vandervoort's of St. Louis
Missouri is looking for girls
who would be interested in
spending the summer work
ing for them and gaining
training in fashion, sales,
eling. If you are interest
ed, please contact the Place
ment Office in Gardner Hall.
Indian students in the School
of Public Health will present
a program. "Introduction to
India" at 8 p.m. in the Stu
dent Lounge. The public is
invited.
Get "slicked up" for the week
end. Sigma Nu is sponsor
ing a car wash from 2-5
p.m. behind the Sigma Nu
House. Pick up and delivery
service will be at your dis
posal by calling 968-9077.
GET Oil THE
BAND WAGON
THE HUB extends to
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Try one on you'll enjoy
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Dr. J. H. Crawford. Jr., of Oak i
Ridge National Laboratory
will speak at the UNC Phys- .
ics Colloquium on "Radia
tion Effects in Semiconduc
tors" at 4 p.m. in 215 Phil- '
lips Hall. Tea and coffee will
be served one half hour be
fore the talk in the Lounge,
Room 277 Phillips.
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