Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 16, 1967, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
i i Page 6 Going Abroad? Passport Plays Greater Role In Foreign Tr ips NEW YORK (UPI) More Americans traveled to foreign lands last year than ever be fore. Indications are that even more will go abroad this year. An estimated 1.5 million passports were issued or re newed in 1966 despite an ad ministration - backed cam paign to persuade Americans to stay home and help stem the dollar drain. This was a jump of more than 16 per cent over the previous record set in 1965. Recent reductions in air fares are expected to help boost travel overseas this year even more. In addition, many countries have reduced travel red tape during 1967, which i. ' . - Ah ( s 5f 4 .. - t, ' "V X . tr I MAGGIE PALMER AND JOCK LAUTERER will sing this Sunday night at the Wesley Foundation Gallery Coffee Shop at 9 p.m. Maggie and Jock, who write their own songs, ap peared in the premier of the Y Crossroads coffee house March 3. x DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer AN EXTRAORDINARY ENTERTAINMENT Douglas Netter presents , -, - . f7 Tchaikovsky's dazzling ' )tk . the J. Jay FrankeUilnt; ' 1 , ' 2tfi)rf I ? j. S?Ob2:T'"Xv , The World -Famed ' " JSL ( -V3. ""TT mi mm A Royal Films International Wed. March 22nd i mil i ii nun ii ii ii no n a with bold new colors f WES Get the best of two worlds. The authentic comfort of Post-Grad styling. The uninhibited look of new hues. 65 Dacron polyester, 35 Avriftayon. $8 at uninhibited stores. Press-Free has been designated Interna tional Tourist Year. An increasing number of tou rist - conscious countries no longer require passports from the American visitor. But a passport still provides the best documentary proof of identity and of nationality often need ed abroad as well as to get back into the United States. Even more important, it is an official U. S. government do cument which "requests all whom it may concern to per mit the citizens(s) of the Unit ed States named herein to pass without delay or hin dreance and in case of need to give such citizen(s) all lawful aid and protection." The blue-bound 6 1-8 by 3 3-4 7 i"' at. . .a jnrr ' X Release TECHNICOLOR Shows at 4-8 P.M. Tickets Now On Sale Adults $1.50 featuring Dacron? Post-Grad Slacks by h.i.s -EUENT! men Doofclet should be carried by the American overseas at all times, except when it must be surrendered temporarily in some countries for routine re gistration and police checks. It must not be fraudulently al tered or mutilated under pen alty of fine or punishment and its loss must be reported im mediately to the nearest U.S. government officials at home or abroad. The first recorded passport issued in the United States was dated July 8, 1796 and was in the form of a letter signed personally by President Washington's secretary of state, Thomas Pickering. Getting a passport these days is a lot easier and faster than ever before thanks in large measure to the efforts of Frances G. Knight, Direc tor of the Passport Office. Usually all that is required is the $10 fee, two duplicate black-and-white or colored pho tographs, and a birth certifi cate or other documentary proof of place and date of birth, or of citizenship if na turalized, and a completed ap plication form. The applicant must appear personally and establish iden tity through, a driver's license or similar document, or by a witness who has known him for at least two years and is a U. S. citizen. Incidentally, your passport pictures don't have to make you look like one of Ameri ca's most wanted criminals any more. The agency sug gests "relaxed and smiling" pictures and notes that a "good picture is better iden tification than a bad one." The passport usually is mail ed to the applicant within a week or 10 days after the ap plication is filed. In case of emergency, the procedures will be speeded on payment of an extra fee. Application forms can be ob tained in person or by mail without charge at any of the field agencies in Bos ton, Chicago, Honolulu, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York, Phi t ladelphia. . or . national head quarters inVasbington,TpXQ The passport is valid for an initial period of three years another two years on payment of a $5 fee. Further information on pass ports and visas may be ob tained by writing to: Pass port Office, U. S. Dept. of 20524. FERRARI FEAT MONZA, Italy (UPI) Ludo vico Scarfiotti and Mike Parkes piloted their Ferraris to a one-two finish in the 1966 Grand Prix of Italy here to give Ferrari its lone formu la one win of the year. Ca45 Mcute Liquu&i- cop: ttHm LIQUOR BOX UO0.BACT0vMnz("203 OF PER VOU? WHER-E" PROHIBITED BV LAW a ;: s x- .-.v.- The National Brewing Co. of also Phoenix Miami Detroit inmrm'v-mt 0000 aVfl-fl THE DAILY A ' NOW WAIT A MINUTE! Boys don't carry pocketbooks. Believe it or not, that's not real ly a pocketbook. It's a drag bag, or some- ow-L Unfolding a fascinating ci- nematic blow-up of the dazzl- ing' madness of today's Lon don, "Blow-up," the first English-language , film to be made by the internationally acclaimed director, Michelan gelo Antonioni, has become the most - talked - about pic ture of the year. Filmed in color and - set against the glamorous MOD ern London scene in authen tic locales, with Vanessa Red grave, David Hemmings and Sarah Miles in the leading roles, the new Carlo Ponti pro duction creates a spellbind ing mood and holds the viewer in a relentlessly absorbing grip. The story concerns a hand some and successful vyou n g London photographer, jaded and disillusioned by his easy success and uncertain about himself and his life spent in an exhausting race in a world of fashion, dolly girls, pop art,. beat clubs models and parties in London. . today's swinging One day, Thomas (David? Hemmings) , . the, photographer takeg -)plwpgrapji CCPn pie embracmg in a park, and when he develops the film sus; pects that he has been an ac cidental witness to a murder,? The girl, Jane (Vanessa Red grave), whom Thomas has photographed in the; embrace, visits him at his studio and makes a desperate attempt to get the film back, a visit which brings about a curious and enflamed relationship bei tween them. ;. Then she disappears, and in seeking her throughout Lon don, Thomas also seeks him-4 self, and in the course of events becomes, involved with 1 v Balto., Md. at Balto., Md. . afloflflaagg 'Bl yrawaaaaaaaar TAR HEEL t I a variety of men and women, ranging from the amatory ar- list's wife. Patricia (Sarah Miles), to an assortment of beautiful models, two teen-age girls who make themselves at home in his studio, the owner of an antique shop, a fashion editor and assorted other types representative of the modern London scene. The action includes a fas cinating glimpse into the pro fessional and private activi ties that go on in a photo grapher's studio, with other se quences encompassing the bed raggled invididuals of a flop house, a rock-and-roll session and a wild artist and mod els . party. Everything about "Blow Up" is arresting and unusual, including the exciting photo- graphy, the "Mod" costumes created by Jocelyn Rickards, but most of all the mood and mystery of a narrative which remains undefined, leaving the onlooker to create answers to his own questions. i: f i ..... . - : i - . .-,- p' Nam 'f"J'i W':I mil - wiiwksMi The G.M. Rendezvous Room Presents: "archy and mehifrabel" a one-act cabaret musical March 17th and 18th 8:00 and 10:00 p.m. Admission free to UNC students and dates nil 3U Trf'irragt ic--,----"':-'-' -r-U' 'i . ' " thing like that. It's a new fad-type affair just came in from California. Oh. well, some people will do anything. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan ed Best Film Among the supporting play ers in "Blow-up" are six of the world's most famous and beautiful models, who play themselves Verushka, Jill Kennington, Rosaleen Murray, Peggy Moffitt, Ann Norman and Melanie Hampshire. Also leaving a memorable imprint are the two teenagers deter mined to be photographed by Thomas at any price blonde Jane Birkin and brunette Gil lian Hills. The screenplay of "Blow-Up" was written by Antonioni and Tonino Guerra, who previous ly collaborated on "L'Awen tura," "La N o 1 1 e , " "L'Eclipse" and "The Red De sert." In basing their new story on a photographer, they chose the year's most topical subject. Once largely obscure figures in London, today they are the "in" profession. And never have they been given so penetrating and fascinating a portrait as in "Blow-Up", a unique and daring experience in film-making. Jock Lauterer, Daily Tar Heel mmm i 0 m; (tmsm. a Alumnus 're-War One of the major controver sies leading up to the Civil War is explored in a new book written by a University of North Carolina alumnus and published by the UNC Press- The book is the first detailed study of the Wiimot Proviso controversy of the late 1840's over whether slavery should be permitted in new territory which might be acquired from Mexico. Democratic Politics and Sec tionalism: The Wiimot Proviso Controversy is the title of a handsome volume which will go on sale Saturday, March 18. The author is Chaplain W. Morrison, an associate profes sor of history at Youngstown University in Ohio. Morrison holds degrees from Johns Hopkins, Georgetown and Emory universities and received the Ph.D. in history in 1963 from the University at Chapel Hill. He previously taught at Washington and Lee University. The author analyzes the de bate over , the Wiimot Proviso which drew the theoretical battle lines concerning slavery in the territories and which led eventually to secession of the southern states and the Civil War. The meaning of this crucial territorial issue is explored by treatment of its relationship to the politics of the Democratic Party from 1845 to the presi- dential election of 1848. Origin Slavery Issue The precise origin of the slavery issue in the territories in the form of the Wiimot Pro viso has long been in dispute among historians. The author shows that Da vid Wiimot, one of the Van Burean dissidents from Penn sylvania, conceived the idea in SCIENCE HEALTH 0;i t , r 55? I I k 000 (lie afl QtsOte F AW), Thursday. March 16. 1967 Explores issues August, 1846, and that he was supported by a small group of Democratic congressmen. Most of these congressmen were from New York and want ed to express th?ir dissatisfac tion with Polk administration policy of expansion in the Southwest. The Proviso's strong appeal derived from the fact that it symbolized the conflict be tween the northern and south ern social systems and the deep-seated fears about their ultimate survival. John C. Calhoun forced the Democratic Party in the South to make the repudiation of the Wiimot Proviso a condition of its continued co-operation with the northern wing of the party. Shaping of 1848 Campaign Morrison examines various actions of the state Democrat ic organizations in the North and makes it clear that the need to accommodate the southern demand, .without grossly offending the free-soil sentiments of the northern pub lic, shaped the campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1848. The election and its after math suggest that the conflict symbolized by the Wiimot Pro visoa conflict between two antithetical ways of life could not be resolved except by the ultimate surrender of one to the other," the publishers ex- plain. "The refusal to contemplate such an ultimate surrender led to secession and civil war." AUTO RECORD NURBURGRING, - Germany (UPI) The lap record for the 14.2-mile, tortuous Nur burgring auto race track is held by Scotland's Jim Clark, who set the 101.22 mph mark in a Lotus - Climax in 1965. mS)t Isn't that why you're here? But when the questions are about life and its pur pose, the answers aren't always easy. We'd like to tell you about a book that has helped many students on : our campus. It will challenge you to give up limited ideas about yourself and about God ... to wake up to the real meaning of life. It's SCIENCE AND HEALTH WITH KEY TO THE SCRIPTURES by Mary Baker Eddy. If you'd like to know more about this book, talk to the Christian Science Organization. Anyone there will show you how to get the most out of it. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION Piace Graham Memorial Woodhouse Room Tme Tuesdays 5;05 P.M. - Science and Health is available free on loan at our meeting place or at $2.25 from the college bookstore. Or you can send for a free pamphlet "The Time for Thinkers" which is based on this book. Write co P.O. Box 66D, Astor Station,. Boston, Massachusetts 02123. mm im mm 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 16, 1967, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75