to JJjfcNoveriiber 29, 1966 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 3 Mates To 1 - - J SMSiiiaMa (,' -Tiimmi , , , mwvm m mrT- COUNSELOR Rev. Tom Miller, associate minister of the First Presbyterian Church in Chapel Hill will leave in Janu ary to serve as campus minister of the University of West Virginia in Morgantown. He has been counselor of the lo cal Westminster Fellowship for three and a half years. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer ft inasnsaess es Wh says Lots of people do. Some right on your campus. And for rationale, they point an accusing finger at business and say it lacks "social commitment." Social commitment? We wish they could visit our Kearny, N. J. plant, where we make cable and apparatus for your Bell telephone company. But we have time for other thoughts, other talents Like the situation in nearby Newark. With civic and business leaders, we be gan buzzing with ideas. "Let's teach higher skills to some of the un-employed and under-employed. Say, machine shop prac tice The could qualify for jobs that are going beting -and help themselves as well " We lent our tool-and-die shop, eve nings We found volunteer instructors. A community group screened PP Another supplied hand tools. The Boys Rev. Tom Miller 'MP & V JT Club donated classroom facilities. Another company sent more instructors. Some 70 trainees enrolled. Their incen tive? Self-improvement. Results to date? New people at better jobs. Happier. And this is only one of dozens of social minded projects at Western Electric plants across the country, where our first job is making communications equipment for the Bell System. So, you don't give up ideals when you graduate. If anything, at a company like, say, Western Electric, you add to them. And it's not just a theory. It's practice. Satisfying. Come on and find out. And watch a feathered cliche fly out the window. eave -me- Jnuuut By JOCK LAUTERER DTH Staff Writer "It's hard to leave the old Hill," explained Presbyterian Associate Minister Tom Mil ler, "But I've always wanted to be. . .on my own." Tom Miller has been serv ing the UNC campus for the last three and a half years counseling students and lead ing the active Westminister Fellowhip. In January he will leave Chapel Hill for the Uni versity of West Virginia where he will assume the duties of campus pastor. "There are no pressures on my leaving, this has been the best working relationship I've ever had," Miller said. "Working in an academic community is exciting. There's never a dull moment, never the daily round," Miller laughed. "No one approaches the questions with the same old shibboleths, get that, shib boleths." Tom Miller's easy grin and friendly ways- will be missed at the University Presbyteri an Church as well as on the campus where Miller has served in the Residence Col lege Chaplaincy Program at Ehringhaus and Mclver The church in Morgantown, W. Va., is unique in its own way. "We've got a coffee 1 "M Western Electric MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM house on Main Street named the "Last Resort," where stu dents present poetry and thea ter every Friday and Satur day nights They just pack 'em in every weekend." The students center also has a gymnasium, a library, a study room, and "all that jazz," as Tom Miller put it. The Morgantown campus is unlike the Univrsity at Chap el Hill because there are ac tually three campuses in one spread out all over town. The school has fine depart ments in mining, forestry, nursing, and medicine. "It will be interesting to serve all disciplines of the various branches," Miller said. Miller is a graduate of Dav idson College. He is from Hapeville, Ga. and is married. He and his wife, Evon, have a 21-month girl, Michelle. . Arts Festival Week Named 'Interchange' Outstanding representatives of the fine arts from all over the country will be featured in UNC's second Fine Arts Festival to be held from Ap ril 9 through 14. The first festival, produced in 1965, included a play, films, a concert, and Colum bia University Provost Jac ques Barzun, poet Karl Sha- piro, Pulitzer Prize - winning . composer William Shuman, I author Louis Rubin and New York Times critic B o s 1 e y , Crowther. The 1967 festival slogan "Interchange: The University and the Arts" symbolizes the University community's celebration of its participation in the arts, both as patron and producer. Over 75 stu- 1 ents and faculty members are -presently involved in the plan ning and presentation of the festival, -which is directed byl'y Travis ' Abbott, - a senior from oii Asheville. -;- , " The University's participa- T tion in fine arts will be seen . in the festival's inclusion of i musical compositions by UNC ; Music Professor Roger Han- , ney, whose works have been presented at Carnegie Hall, ; and of the Carolina Playmak- ... ers' production of "The Bat tie of the Carnival and Lent," written by Dramatic Arts ( Professor Russell Graves. Two major presentations of the festival from outside the University will be a concert . of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra- and a performance by the famous Cunningham Danoe Company, UNC art major Frank Faulkner, a junior from Peachland, is designing a fes- v tival symbol, which will be . released soon. The festival ! also will include an awards ceremony, at which student ' and faculty awards in the fine arts will be presented, as well ' as the UNC-sponsored Nation- ' al Student Graphic Arts Com petition and a modern film showing. Would you believe "College Men Only"? COLLEGE LIFE INS. Co. 151 E. Rosemary 947-3173 I 1.. ... I Free to College Students 25 to others A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda tion, tells which career fields lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other what starting salary you can expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This 24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor tunities in Selling," will be mailed to you. No cost or obli gation. Address: Council on Op portunities, 550 Fifth Ave., New York 36, N. Y., UNC-11-28. Photos By ERNEST H. ROBL DTH Staff Writer "The approach is journalis tic; I just try to show things as they are," photographer Michael Mauney says of his work. But the current ex hibition of his work at the Wesley Foundation shows Mauney is being modest. The 35 prints entitled "Pho tographed in North Carolina" show not only a thorough un derstanding -of the medium but also a deep insight into the subjects. Mauney, 29, has been a Charlotte Observer staff pho tographer for the past five years and was recently recog nized by Editor and Publisher magazine as one of a number of outstanding young photog raphers. As Mauney describes it, composition and tonal ' range "carry" a picture and this is quite evident in his photo graphs being shown. The ex hibit is by no means limited entirely to journalistic work, but one of the news photo graphs is unquestionably the most dramatic picture of the entire show. The life-size print shows a Charlotte fireman who had carried a child from a burn ing home as he is being told that the little girl died of i i ii tin il ll!lil,!liilll,GODDeeiEF ll lll.illil, iilli! hi ; iifi'K. I :i!ilUUnill;l,:li,!i!ll!!l!;i!!''l Af L'-ll M ' : J IN l(mm'J ' jl, I i.i,fj j, I ; ! fz) frt W 1 " : jig i' iKit iff- ii 'More Than Journalistic9 smoke suffocation on the way to a hospital. It is difficult to conceive a better portrait of tragedy than this soot-stained face. Mauney's selective eye for composition is demonstrated in another photograph entitled 'Reynolds Coliseum, 1962." The print shows only the hands of a basketball player dunking the ball into the bas ket, yet the photograph man ages to capture all the action and tension that goes into a game. Again turning to an entirely different subject, Mauney de picted the delicate steeple of a church overwhelmed by tow ering office buildings around it. "First Presbyterian Church, Charlotte, 1962" is a simple photograph with tre mendous impact. It is as much a visual comment as it is a recording of a scene. More than half of the pic tures in the show are of chil dren including four photo graphs of Mauney's daugh ter and it is here that Mauney ir really in his own element. "I really enjoy be ing with them, and I try to get good pictures of them," he said. While it is easy to get a cute picture of children, Mau ney manages to1 produce meaningful photographs. BUT VER PC is ANOY W - fiy pgr o BELK-LEGGETT & CO., Durham THE HUB of Chapel Hill, 103 E. Franklin St. VARLEY'S MEN'S SHOP In only 35 prints, the show manages to show the versatile talent of a single photograph er. The pictures range from a portrait of poet Carl Sand burg to a portrait of a name-iiiiiiilliililiiililiiiiliiiii 6 ousin Pete's Tuesday only REG. 4 INDIVIDUAL DINNER 3 big pieces of Kentucky Fried Chicken, creamy gravy and 2 hot biscuits! Si SiiiiiiiiiiiiiMMimiijiiiiiimmiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiC CAN COME IN AN1 WAIT FOR'IM IF VER LIKE 'E SOMETIMES CALLS IN ON IS WAV T THE PUB .... .,. .,. Ac lit4 less little Negro boy; from fashion to sports. Mauney said that he had displayed as many prints as there had been space for; one could only wish there had been more space. iilllillililiilillif.lUlllllllC Bell pml l10 LMaW AKE HOMESS Kentucky fried kibn 57 ... ,Yi