Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 10, 1967, edition 1 / Page 3
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Friday, March 10, 1967 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 3 f nn t m nni Mai .eolm A- ppears Father Malcolm Boyd, "the espresso priest," and one of the new ' voices within the church, will appear with gui tarist Charlie Byrd Saturday, March 11, at Memorial Hall at 7:00 p.m. The "new voices" are being heard among the poets of San Francisco, within the jazz com mumties, and in Playboy. The new trend is toward mean ingful contact and involvement Father Boyd entered the spotlight in 1961 when he re signed as Episcopal chaplain at Colorado State University nfter diocesan officials de cided he was too far out of the realm of churchmen. Boyd has appeared at the Show Boat, a Washington night club, backed up by Charlie Byrd and his trio. With guitar ist Byrd he appeared in Wash ington's National Cathedral of fering prayers from his book, Are You Running With Me Jesus? to a crowd of 6,000. On Good Friday, 1966 at the invita tion of the protestant Council of the City of New York, the priest and guitarist did a three hour reading of prayers at the Broadway Church of Christ. He also appeared at a negro church on Chicago's South Side reading his prayers in alternation with jazz by Oscar In The Mail Painters In Morrison "Intruders To the Editor, One would have to search far in the annals of stupidity and incivility to find the par amountcy of the University Maintenance Department. Even this distinguished body has reached a new nadir how ever with the recent painting of Craige College. The readily apparent stupidity of such a project in general was greatly heightened by the circum- stances attending it. Not only where the residents forced to derange their rooms by piling all their wordly goods in the center thereof so that the painters might have access to the walls, but all this in the middle of the week, in the middle of the semester. Surely if paint were needed, paint could have been applied dur ing spring vacation or during the summer when use of fa cilities is at a minimum. This intrusion by maintenance made study virtually impossible, and this is after all theoretically what we are here for, with services such as maintenance merely to insure clean, safe, and healthful places in which this could be accomplished. Here we have permitted the tail to wag the dog. With books and notes piled up and disorganized, desks cluttered with other belongings, before, a&d the stench of paint every- Creighton Shirts are more traditional at The University of North Carolina Creighton The man from Reidsviile shows up with an important innova tion. ..the new Creighton Brookside collar. Its fuller, wide ned design has a look of inherent eood taste or tne comueu cua.uu.c. ,.-... stfpes a fabric created for fashion and function. buttoned! iiap pocket is another tailoring detail that epit omizes Creighton's traditional styling. . It's a Creighton inChapel Hill at T T 1 I hC JriUD cf. Tonrr. Campus oyd. Brown Jr. In 1962 Mademoiselle dub bed him a "disturber of the peace" in a feature-length in terview. For a month in the fall of 1966 Father Boyd became in volved in an experience which quickly assumed international significance. He opened an en gagement at San Francisco's cellar nightclub, the hungry i. On the same bill was comedian Dick Gregory, with whom he had been jailed in Chicago earlier in the year following a civil rights demonstration. He read prayers interspersing these with running comments on such themes as peace, race, sex, cinema and updated religion. Peter Yarrow of Peter. Paul, and Mary accom panied him on the guitar as he read several "secular med itations" from his book FREE TO LIVE, FREE TO DIE. Afterwards he invited the pa- irons in me nungry i to asK him any questions they had. He donated the $1000 a week he was being paid to the free dom movement. In a recent interview, Father Boyd admitted he was more at home on a university cam pus. "I think today's youth are more moral than today's adults - and this covers war where, after, study was ef fectively prevented, and this with medical and dental stu dents in the middle of exams. In addition to these small in convienences and the fact that the painters did a bad job, slopping paint everywhere, on books, papers and even some on the walls, in addition to leavings the rooms and bal- conies dusty, dirty and debris strewn, The painters are scheduled for a return onslaught to com- plete jthe job and some resi- dents of Craige have vowed not to let them m. One can hardly blame them. Burton Jay Rubin 1002 , Morrison ,; To the Editor This letter is written in ap preciation of the fine, well reasoned sensitive, in-depth campaign currently being con ducted in favor of THE PILL. This approach to the problems of sex and sexuality, birth con- trol and morality is not only enlightening but also in the best traditions of our democ racy. Free pills for a free so ciety. Why should only the rich be protected? And what better dispensary than the Univer- sity Infirmary. My only cri- ticism is that your approach is too narrow. What of the young man who fully and maturely Shirtmakers sopnisticaiion empn.. u. when this label's on tne tail. Coordinator 116 Avery B Sa - . "3- " FATHER MALCOLM BOYD as lie appears on the cover of Ms book, Are You Running With Me, Jesus. He writes prayers for free self, racial brotherhood, for the city. The Episcopal priest appears Saturday, March 11, at 7 and peace and sex and civil rights and many other areas where adults have sold out." Father Boyd was reminded that he had carried his minis try into campus beer joints and city discotheques and night clubs. "And now I'm on tour with realizes that he is not able to cope with the responsibi lities of fatherhood or the ex penses of paternity suits? If he so wishes, should not he have easy access to sterili zation? And surely the Infir mary should be able to per form such minor surgery. Again I thank you, Tarheel staff, for your courageous and enlightening leadership. Ahl Carolina! What brave new leaders you are providing for our Brave New World. Shirley Ackermann Jackson Circle To the Editor As long as I live I'll never be able to understand the mind of -1 Suzy Grit. I can easily see that she likes to conform, especially to manners of speech and dress, but I'll never be able to understand why she wants to change the whole world in her own image. It's bad enough having six states full of them, but the thought of an entire nation of Suzy Grits is disgusting. Being the mild-mannered-reporter from-the-Daily Planet type, I usually steer away from letter writing, but the rash of DTH editorials on Birth Control Pills has caused me to "engagement" (that's french, Suzy Grit, taken from John Paul Sartre meaning to take action on a cause: his cause (slap my mouth for use ing the word) was commu nism; mine is just mundane sex). .-J MM TIIEYHE 17AHTED F.lEfl Soft-spoken. Well-mannered. But extremely danger ous.Usually seen in the company of beautiful women. Prefer conservative dress, fine imported colognes. Specifically, Raffia, from which they take their name. ) J9fi7 HUNTLEY. LTD. V "i p.m. in Memorial Hall. my publisher," he laughed. "But, you know, St. Paul was on tour. He was on tour too. And this is part of the tour, baby. This is real but God, it can be rough. But I'm learning how to handle it. I cool it." 99 Why? Why? Why? Suzy Grit, do you say, No! the In firmary should not issue Birth Control Pills? Has the Prea cher back home or Momma been able to impress on your mind that sex before marrU age is so totally wrong that you're going to mount your "Stronger then dirt" Ajax horse (excuse the Freudian slip) and campaign for a better world as you see it? Granted, you may want to hang on to your most "Enshrined" pos sesion. But what about the rest of us unbelievers? Let me offer you a small suggestion: keep your mouth shut! If sex is wrong for you all good, and well, but don't, say no for someone else. Do you realize that if the Infir mary issued Birth Controls Pills you would not be forced to take them? Do you realize that the issuance of Birth Control Pills can in no way change your moral standards? By what God given right do you feel that you should in fluence the standards of others? In the final analysis let me say that, Suzy Grit, you are a most unsophisticated little girl in a most sophisticated and big world. Some day when a college professor holds your fossilized remains and says, "Class this is woman circa 1969 I only wish I would be there to raise my hand and say, "No Sir, thats just Suzy Grit." David A. Brewster Paris, France i JLLAJU U JLXJO r y jf 'Was Raffia Cologne and After-Shave. Lime or Bay Rum. ------ tOv v t-- - iima in TT"v ussia s FT. WORTH, TEXAS The Soviet farm program is perch ed on an economic tightrope and could be knocked off quick ly by a major confrontation with China or the United States, a Duke University authority in Russian affairs said here Monday. Dr. John S. Curtiss, James B. Duke professor of history, also warned that a revision of the price structure in the U.S.S.R. to secure a proper balance between production and consumption poses a ma jor problem to the agricul tural economy. These opinions were voiced in an address at Texas Chris tian University by Curtiss. His remarks were directed at "Main Trends in Soviet Eco nomic Life." Curtiss noted that Russian wheat production in 19 6 6 reached 171 million tons, a new record credited by the Soviet press to good weather and new farm prices which stirred en thusiasm among collective farmers. Against a history of famines which have taken up to three millon lives in one period, this high level of production has encouraged Soviet officials to under-take ambitious pro jects involving a basic shift "from an extensive agricul ture to an intensive one," he said. The total cost of the under taking, he declared, will be around $78 billion. Reduced foreign aid com mitments to China, the United v. ':."X : : v....... : v.r.v.v-v Beer Mugs Animals Pennants. Plaques Red & Blue Nightshirts DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Cord 5. Stylish 9. Hood, for one 10. Aircraft detector 12. Correct 13. Abscond 14. Hindu cymbal 3. Fastener 4. Conclude 5. Fisher man's basket 6. Corridor 7. Heathen, image 8. Gambols 9. Networks 11. Bind anew 15. Tap 17. Ripped 18. Man's name 21. Dunce 22. Injudi ciously 15. Piece of shot 16. First 19. Japanese measure 20. Classify 21. Melt 23. Liberian tribes 24. An age 25. Organ of smell 27. Tilled 30. From 31. Crash 32. Adrift 35. Transgress 36. Those who inherit 37. The white poplar 39. Lurk 40. Alms 41. Demands, as payment 42. Divisions of time down w y 1. Seneca, 77 z Cato, Ovid, 5 VZlL ' 2. Four-sided pillars 12221 1 I I ffn ' ' ' jC1 W'plfiii Oust look at) cm vr r v uvi v v n HF-T" " .r) J n'sms win' in m all ; Jf PA THAT GETS ME DVM, II 11 Tip fl i'iLil V FLO -I MISS ME KIP reax 10 Farming Arab Republic, and African nations, along with a rapidly growing industrial output, must be considered when asking how the Soviets can afford this expansion, Curtiss re flected. Curtiss said most Western economists do not give the ex panded program much chance to succeed unless Soviet au thorites establish a free mar ket guided by the law of sup ply and demand. A more efficient counting system for the collective farms has been viewed by Russians as an immediate need. Also, a more satisfactory basis for marketing the produce of the collective farms must be found, he advised. Regional procure ment offices the wholesal ers sometimes exploit the collectives in flagrant fashion. It NOW PLAYING Rnnzhl mimmmwm AN M'G'M PRESENTATION - IV METR0C0L0R LOVED IT! 24. Old . of length 25. Webster and Beery 26. Dis please 27. Kitchen utensil 28. Roman 29. Sand hills 31. Kegs SHE riARABr!RAHSr b1rev E IE IP I c s IlIaIcIE Sjj SjAM O A OcUte F I bp R T capT A I NQOPE ,3 A D D l?3 R I E pTo In C E P EL ETON U N jTTiL e aL" ': RE PE3E THEp r S " M A DTZj a yE S T QgLnRA V EN TENSE fAPORpr Spots JpIaIcItc Yesterday's Answer 33. Place 34. Algerian seaport 37. Affix 38. Feathered scarf OU TEAM ISN'T REAPV "TD START A NSO EA0M... (JE'RE JU5T NO I K&Kirt'- 9 to l mzz-w-zzm TS "?77i wzttztmzzz TT 777 -Kl i& r? Malcolm Boyd. Here Saturday night. Read about him on the front page. THIS S I I 1 Good Hismoi? These Colleges Had Students With Even Higher Earnings: MICHIGAN 8 - ....ir.tiTt1S7 98 CLOW'"" .. of . M wn. C0Llr FLORID STTE-ii .- tx,a i t li experience needed. You are Nothing to Invert . . . every- fully traised and work on routes thing you need is supplied free, with proven high earnings. HOW TO QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW 1. Minimum age 1& . 2. Need a valid driver's license and be willing to drive a clutch transmission. 3. Be in good physical condition. REGISTER NOW Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student Aid Officer to show you Good Humor's folder explaining this high paying job and to schedule you Tor Earnings for females have not approximate! in is average in mow .due to legal restrictions on working hours for women. An Equal Opportunity Employer-(MF) (OHERE DID THE TIME 60 ? COUV DOES THE SEASON iiAn- Tn trrKcrc cr enow? bier ram s 1 r rrnBCIA.&UISI ..kll . UNI, ur : V"' .... UHWt - . .iO" 3 0 e. V-own"" . 11M1U ...... 'OH,. '' 4S TP UNIVERSITY OF NNSYIVANIA-$U2.50 our campus visit WOOPNT g fiEAW if ra season 5TACTH IN NOVtMtK! -nl 99 PUR0UE UNIV.-$tS2.2l $139.04 V Tj 'HUM m . . unnon 21 J
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 10, 1967, edition 1
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