Page 4 Acrylic Victor Huggins of Chapsl Hill was awarded the $400 pur chase Prize at the School of Public Health this past week end for his acrylic collage en titled "Monocular 58: Turn Baby." The winner of the P u b 1 i c Health's 1967 Exhibition has participated in 49 national and regional exhibitions and has re ceived 27 awards. This past year he was awar ded a Purchase Prize at the 28th annual North Carolina Ar tists Exhibition in Raleigh. This particular painting was then donated by the N. C. State Art Society to the Ashe ville Art Museum where it now hangs as part of their permanent collection. A native of Durham and a 1962 graduate of Carolina, Hug gins received his Masters in Creative Art here in 1966. He has taught sculpture in the School of Design at N. C. State University at Raleigh and is currently on the facul ty at Chapel Hill. A special first honorable mention was awarded Judy Smith of Chapel Hill for her polymer collage entitled "Sun bathers in." Other honorable mentions in clude William C .Fields of Fayetteville, for his oil paint ing, ""Pierre Densmore"; Victor Huggins of Chapel Hill, for his acrylic collage, 'Se bendy Sebm"; Donald Green of Fayetteville, for his metal : i ' . L4 ' 1 I' ) " - ' . . ... JUDGES WILLIAM TAZEWELL, Owen Lewis and John Brady (left to, right) evaluate a collage of stripes with a turn table center section by Chapel Hill artist Victor Huggins, which won the $400 Purchase Prize in the School of Public Health Art Exhibition. Title: "Monocular 58, or Turn Baby". M&vil Beats. In Tattoo MILWAUKEE, WIS. (AP) After more than 50 years in the skin trade, Gib Tatts Tho mas is an expert on the twists and turns of public tastes in tattoos. Sanctity is out; sat anism is in. "The trend now is toward the hideous." "The most popular design of all of them the one that everyone who comes in here wants is the devil. "I put a thousand devils on them for every head of Christ. I haven't done a Crucifixion in three years. "Everyone wants to rebel." Thomas, 66, stared over the waxed ends of his wispy mus tache and said, "Some of the things I put on people, I would not have on me if I had all the room in the world." He has no room. He ran out of ;it 30 years ago when he was a tattooed man travel ing with circuses and road shows. "Tattooing is not like it used to be," Thomas said. In his day, he has scrawl ed last wills and testaments on the backs of businessmen, discreetly placed identification marks under the arms of FBI men. And that's not all. "Amund Dietzel his partner and I have covered more peo ple for exhibition than any two people in the United States," Thomas claimed. Times have changed. "A few calls is all you get today." One of Thomas' last major jobs was on a man named Iwo Jima Eddie. The raising of the flag on Mt. Suribachi is now engraved on Eddie's back. Most of Thomas' clients are BQflDV'S EME-ffi Fresh Hoi 'N One Dontits Various flavors ready to be served or carried out OPEN DAILY CALL 942-5393 Just across from Brady's Restaurant where you can still enjoy the Businessman's Lunch Open Daily Except Mon. 1 111 Collage Is $400 Winner sculpture, "Tree No. 1"; Tho mas Hammond of Harrison burg, Va., for his intaglio prints, "Frost" and "Feeding Chickens"; Tran Gordley of Greensville, for his oil paint ing, "Blue Landscape"; and Leonard White of Chapel Hill for his collage, "Wreck On the Highway." The winning works will hang in the corridors and public areas of the School of Public Health through December, 1967. All other entires will be displayed in faculty offices This marks the exhibit's fifth year. It was envisioned more than five years ago when Public Health Professor of San itary Engineering Dr. Dan A. Okun, while in Holland, saw and savored the Dutch custom of displaying on their office walls, not degrees and cita tions or chamber of commerce slogans, but works of art. On his return to Chapel Hill, Okun transmitted his en thusiasm. When the new School of Public Health build ing opened late in 1962, inter esting examples of personal taste and effort began appear ing on the office walls. The three judges for this year's exhibit included John Brady, operator of the John Brady School of Art and Gal lery in Blowing Rock; Owen Lewis, a Mark Ethridge Fellow in the University on leave of absence as art editor of the Business sailors on the town from near by Great Lakes. But all kinds come. He is unimpressed by his clientele. "Fifty per cent of the peo ple who come in here can't spell their wife's name. They'll bring her in with them and turn around and say, 'Honey, how do you spell your name' Even if I know, I don't tell them. That's between him and her. I'm not Cupid." Ignorance is inexhaustible, as Thomas tells it. "A heart with a dagger through it is always a good de sign. People come in here and get them put on with their wife's or their girl friend's name. The heart with the dag ger is a Japanese design and it means death. But they don't realize that." Thomas admits to being bor ed by it all and soon he'll be out of the business. Tatooing will be prohibited in Milwau kee after June 30 for hygienic reasons. "Tattooing is not only dy ing," Thomas said, "b u t founding fathers all over the country are putting tattooers out of business. They're forc ing them out of the country and it's ridiculous. If sailors don't get tattooed here, they're going to get tattooed in Hong Kong. So what's the difference There will always be a de mand for tattooes, he said. But why get tattooed "You never ask a custom er why" replied Thomas. "I'm not a doctor. I'm not to judge them. I'm only to please them Cross G.E. PORTAGOLOR TUBE S2.CDDay cO.GOLlo. A. B. cper Cooper At f19 RO (After i;SS) Greensboro Daily News; and William Tazewell, also an Ethridge Fellow on leave as associate editor and art edi tor of the Norfolk Virginia-Pilot. National Ballet Saturday The National Ballet, under the direction of Frederic Franklin, will appear in Me morial Hall Saturday at 8 p.m. The company of 65, includ ing symphony orchestra, per formed here two years ago un der the auspices of the Chapel Hill Concert Series and was such a success that the Series directors are bringing the group back as an extra at traction of this concert sea son. The National Ballet was formed in 1962 and intended from the beginning to be an organic part of the cultural life of Washington, D. C. Pri marily a resident company, it spends only a small part of each season touring. Tickets cost $4, $3, or $2, ac cording to seating, and may be bought at Graham Memor ial. The National Ballet's reper tory of 23 ballets include both standard and contemporary works. A feature of Saturday's performance will be the new work, 'Othello', by choreogra pher Juan CorelU, especially commissioned by the National Ballet to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the birth of Shakespeare. Briefs From Around The Kiel, Dietz Speak On Experimental College Representatives of the Ex- . perimental College are now speaking - at residence ," col- leges and dormitories to . ex plain the college system. ' ' Dave Kiel and Jed Dietz spoke at Whitehead and Spen cer dormitories last week and described reception to the Col lege idea as "very enthusias tic". Thursday they will speak at East , and West Cobb. Morehead Watch Given To University A handsome, Swiss watch customnmade for the late John Motley Morehead has been presented to the University. Worth several thousand dol lars, the watch was presented to the University by Dr. Glen D. Bagley of Hendersonville, a retired engineer and close associate and personal friend of Morehead in Niagara Falls at Union Carbide Company. Morehead gave the watch to Dr. Bagley over 20 years ago. Dr. Bagley played a key part in Union Carbide's work on the atomic bomb and de signed and arranged for the setting up of the sundial at the Morehead Building on the University campus here. "Dr. Morehead was inter ested in all the mechanical arts, especially those con cerned with watches and clocks," Bagley explained in presenting the watch to Chan cellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. "He was familiar with the Swiss watch makers. When he saw their marvelous handi work was gradually dying out, he resolved to support it by giving the technicians of Announcing A CHANGE OF ADDRESS for your convenience Dr. William E. Beel OPTOMETRIST to 151 E. Rosemary St. Vision Analysis Glasses Fitted mm t'Miie mi toe PEnnsYLvnnmns 8 P.M.-FEB. 27-CARMICHAEL TICKET SALES BEGIN TOMORROW AT GM INFO DESK Reserved Seats $3.00 Reserved Section $2.50 General Admission $2.00 HALF PRICE TO UNC STUDENTS A GM PRESENTATION THE DAILY ... t LAZY AFTERNOON sunlight streams into a warm Bingham Hall classroom to find a lone the Patek-Philippe and Com pany of Geneva orders for watches to be constructed from his specifications." Morehead had three watch es made. Each was different. The one presented to the Uni versity was constructed about 1917 and was given to Mr. Morehead by his first wife for Christmas in 1925. Positions Open Ar WUNC Radio Applications are now being accepted from students who are interested in working with Carolina's education FM rad io station. Forms may be ob tained at the station which is located in Swain Hall, with entrances on the west side of the building facing the Scut tlebutt. WUNC Radio is one of the largest and most powerful university-located stations in the United States, w2th 50,000 watts effective radiated pow er. It offers training and experi ence for students with inter ests in music, journalism, ad vertising, business, political science, dramatic art, and various areas of mass com munications and broadcasting. Previous experience is de sired but not necessary. In order to be considered a stu dent must have a 2.0 "grade point" average. Your Student ID Card Is Good For A 20 Discount Off Any Meal Ordered Between 4:307:30. THE BEST FOOD MONEY CAN BUY W. T. GRANT CO. Eastgate Contact Lenses Phone 942-3260 TAR HEEL ' ' . ' i - ;i - ' i i j - " r II H "J Interviews for . various staff and departmental positions will be held Thursday and Friday afternoon from 2:00 until 5:00 p.m. See "Campus Calendar" for details. sAnnouncing, engineering; news writing and reporting, J special events and remote cov erage crews, music program ming, publicity and library work are some of the areas open to prospective staff mem bers. Jules Pascin's Works Exhibited At Ackland The first major retrospec tive exhibition of artist Jules Pascin's works will be shown at the Ackland Art Center Feb. 19 through March 19. An opening reception will be held from 2-4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 19 at the Ackland. About half of the 100 works on display are old paintings. ,The rest are watercolors, 'If Chapel Hill's J f-rl own I s21 TMB NATION'S R fCTL REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. Paul Moore Announces The Opening Of UNIVERSITY OPTICIANS Temporarily Located At 151 East Rosemary St. l( Our New Location April or May ''67 ... J UNIVERSITY SQUARE J ) 100 WEST FRANKLIN )J Thank you for your past patronage. I look forward to serving you now and in the future. PAUL MOORE P.O. Box 846 Tel. 968-8818 I! student taking advangage of the momentary peace and quiet after a long afternoon class. DTH Photo by Jock Laurerer Campus drawings and prints loaned by museums and collectors in Israel, France, Switzerland and the United States. Tom L. Freudenheim, assis tant director of the University k of California at Berkeley Art Museum, organized the exhi bition which will be shown at only five major art centers in the U. S. These include other than the Ackland, Berk eley, University of California at Los Angeles, Brandeis Uni versity at Waltham, Mass., and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. PLAY PROPAGANDA The Game That Makes People REASONable And Points Up The Real Meaning Behind The Written Word. inn v ARTHUR EASTGATE HOLIDAY INN now open and serving you ... We welcome the students and faculty of UNC. Across from Eastgate 923-2171 1 Work Camp Can Be Educational Want to do something this summer that will supplement your education, enable you to meet lots of people and travel extensively, and (get this!) cost little? Then try spending the summer in a work camp in Europe. Carolina student Tom Wor ley spent last summer in a work camp in Sweden and found it "a very broadening and educational experience", besides being cheap. His camp was at a Swedish resort and camping area on the North Sea. There were 17 students from eight different countries in the camp. They spent four weeks there provid ing entertainment and recrea tion for the Swedish people in the area. During the day the boys played games and the girls ran a nursery for smaller chil Hershey Favors Lower Standards RALEIGH (AP) The di rector of the U. S. Selective Service system said Tuesday the present mental standards for induction into the armed forces are too high. Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, who held a news conference in Raleigh after meeting with North Carolina Gov. Dan Moore suggested the mini mum score on the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AF QT) should be dropped from 16 to 10 out of a possible score of 100 points. Men who now score between 10 and 16 could be adequately trained for combat, Hershey said. He pointed out there are now over two million men reject ed from service because they fail the mental part of the pre induction examination. North Carolina, which has one of the highest reject rates in the na MEDICAL TECHNICIAN Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory College degree desirable (Major or Minor in Chemistry). Laboratory experience will substitute. Beginning' salary for qualified appli cant $4,536 to $5,484 de pending on amount of ex perience. Apply to Mrs. Minnie T. Moore, N. C. Memo rial Hospital Personnel Office, Chapel Hill, N. C. "Equal Opportunity Employer" 55 Today Is The 3rd Day ft Prices Reduced 10 EACH DAY for 10 DAYS! OVER 700 ITEMS OF Jetvelry-natobos-SilveruarG oc3 in nr:o did im Save Money and Have Fun Tool f ' Wenfvorfh & Sloan 167 East Franklin street Wednesday, February 15, 1967 dren. At night the group sang and put on skits. After organized activities broke up for the night, the students would gather for in formal discussions ranging from literature to religion to sex. Worley points out, however, that not all camps are song and games. The majority of camps involve construction of new schools, slum clearance, etc. He attended a camp of this sort for awhile and found that the spirit and closeness of the campers was no different from that in his camp, only that the work was harder. Cost can range from $500 to $700 for the summer. Anyone that is interested should come by 105 Y-Court from 9 a.m. 4:30 p.m. for further informa tion. tion, would have a great many more men eligible for service if the requirements were chan ged, Hershey reported. Asked to comment on wheth er world heavyweight cham pion Cassius Clay will ever be drafted, the Selective Serv ice director said, "Clay has a clever lawyer, but I think he's runing out of arguments." He predicted that Clay will even tually appeal to the Presiden tial Appeals Board and be clas sifed 1-A which would make him available for immediate induction. "He may refuse to step for ward then," Hershey said, "and we will have no choice but to turn him over to the Department of Justice." 3 pnncj Continues all this week, even if it snows! The Intimate Bookshop Chapel Hill open every night 'til 10 IF Bargain Sale!

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