Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 22, 1967, edition 1 / Page 4
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
Page 4 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Wednesday, March 22, 1967 Golden To AppesiF Harry Golden, the short, cig ar - chomping author, wit and philosopher who is an adopt ed son of North Carolina, ap pears on the CREATIVE PER SON on University Televis ion stations WUNC-TV Chan nel 4 and WUNB-TV Channel 2 on Wednesday, March 22 at 8 p.m. Harry Golden came to Char lotte in 1940 and launched a mineral-water business and his newspaper The Carolina Is raelite. The mineral-water enterprise proved to be a "good idea ruined, like teeth, by Coca-Cola," and the pap er, an erratic bi-monthly be came an off - beat personal journal a hodge-podge of reminiscence, anecdote, soc ial and political comment spic od with wit and interspersed with advertisements for kosh er salami and subscription reminders with bonus offers. While ordinary newspapers are dedicated only to the truth, the most recent issue of the - "Carolina Israelite' is dedicated tn the doctors of Charlotte who pulled Harry Golden through his recent ill ness. In 1957 at the age of 56, Har ry Golden published his first book, Only in America," which vas an immediate best-seller and projected Golden and the career he was already follow ing into the limelight. Since he had been writing all his life, and filing away the stor ies for future reference with rare equanimity, he now be gan publishing almost a book a year For 2 cents Plain," Enjoy, Enjoy, his biography of Carl Sandburg and more, with Ess, Ess Mein Kind the latest. An outspoken advocate of Civil Rights from the time be fore the 1954 Supreme Court ruling, Harry Golden offered the Golden Vertical Integra tion Plan which, like his oth er proposals, shows up with humor the foibles and absur dities of man's behavior. Late at night, after the tele phones in his rather seedy an te - bellum home-cum-office ID ? 1 fj- .cm 7J - m. $ 1 1 1 4 4. Harry Golden, author of World of Harry Golden," in "For 2 Cents Plain" and "En-, National Educational Televi- joy, Enjoy," is featured in sion's exploration into the "The Creative Person The world of the 20th century arts. 1- 4 Faculty! ' LE-EN !S'-By Stu3ehts 'Anidv! The 1967 Fine Arts Festival April 9-13 have stopped ringing, Harry Golden and biz friends sit and talk. Since both Harry Gold en and his greatly - admired friend Carl Sandburg each like to talk, they have reached an agreement for "equal time" when they meet. Fifteen min utes for Sandburg, then fif teen minutes for Golden, as they talk till the early hours fo "settle some of the affairs cf the world." As Ralph Mc Gill says, "Harry Golden is a rare bird, who talks as well as he writes." The World of Harry Gold en,' in the National Educa tional Television Creative Per . son series shows Harry Gold en at home in Charlotte, on a nostalgic return to his boy hood home on New York City's Lower East Side and indulging in some of the talk and reminiscence that has made him famous. Chess Club Wins Match Over Durham The UNC Chess Club claim ed its fourth victim Monday night at the Allied Arts Cen ter in Durham. The UNC players defeated the Durham Club by a decis ive 4-1 score. Our undefeated team won 3 games while drawing 2. On board 1 Seymour Kell erman used a Ruy Lopex and subtle tactical threats to de feat his opponent. Jim Hughes trapped his opponent's way ward knight early in the game to coast to victory on board 2. Peter Nassiff, using a Si cilian defense on board 4, reached a complex position in which he sacrificed a pawn to win a rook later on and ulti mately caused his resignation. Leonard Parker and Alan Marsh, on boards 3 and 5 re spectively, each faced a Pet roff defense in which they could only manage to draw. The Chess dub meets in Graham Memorial Wednesday nights and is open to all in terested people.. EXPO BALLET MONTREAL-Famed Danc ers' Rudolph Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn -will . team up here June 7-10 in the Royal Ballet's production of 'Tara dise Lost," created especially for them by French choreog rapher Roland Petit The pro duction will be a feature of EXPO 67. the Montreal World's Fair. fl '- .."CS f l u 171 s""""' " ' """"" "" """ 1 r ppin da trim While doing business with our Loan Dept. We pay the tab. DURHAM'S OLDEST PAWNEE0KEE3 Fl5 FGITJfO W. MAIN, AT 5 POINTS ENTRANCE ON CITY PARKING LOT vnlh fccld Clzn Plaids fsatarias Dacrcn! Get the best of two worlds. Authentic comfort of Post-Grad styling. Unin hibited look of a big plaid. 65 Dacrorfooivester and 35 Avrlrt-avorv $R at uninhibited stores. Pr.css-Fra Post-Crsd by h.Ls One of the most widely read novelists of our time, author of The Man and The Prize and the forthcoming The Fist now writes of t - IDE 21 MOMENTS OF TRUTH, among them: The Man Who ttatsd Hemingway Don't Call Her Madam The Man Who Swindled Goering ail in the pages of mm- jTLE A GYinVIHG WALLACE "...Wallace writing at his best" Library Journal "...a feeling for mood and charac ter; a responsive eye; a recording ear; an individuality..." Los Angeles Times "Amusing and expert..." London Times "...well-written, altogether human anaaDsoroing..." New York Post "...consistently interesting..." Chicago Tribune $595 original edition now "HPT A Published by POCKET BOOKS First in Paperbacks . . r . . ,vv i - i ' S. 4 - fciiv ii tm&l&.i - -! I. i i i - i I mil, i ii i f. "Me rMm A Loi ; ' To Cheer About Ballots-Ballots. Volunteers sort out the vari-colored ballots prior to the night counting marathon. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer New Sad-Happy Novel, 6 Waldo 9 Coming In April By DICK COLEMAN Special to DTH Head Cheerleader Dick Starnes had a lot to cheer about this past weekend. At 2:44 p.m. Saturday his wife Brenda (Beatle) gave birth to an 8 pound, 3 ounce baby girl at UNC Memorial Hospital. Courtenay Sue Starnes check into this world "just raising cain," presum ably over the Tar Heel efforts in College Park. "I wanted to send the team a telegram saying we have a big, fat baby girl. She was born crying, 'Beat B.C.' Now Take's Courage For Snake Laws HONOLULU (AP) -Hawaii, which supposedly doesn't have any snakes, has just passed a law making it possible to im port them for public exhibition at zoos. The House of Representa tives chose St. Patrick's Day to vote for the measure 29-20 after amending it to limit repr tiles to two non-poisonous males. how about a big fat win'!", Starnes said, "but I didn't get a chance." "I didn't find out until about 4, or get to see my wife until about 5, or the baby until about 6. I was just too nerv ous." Starnes seems anything but nervous now, handing out ci gars. 'You're looking good you survived it fine," he wad congratulated by a friend. "Yes sir, I feel fine. Didn't hurt a bit!" he beamed. Three cheers for Dick Starnes! Canal Opened TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) Boatmen new can navigate 150 miles along Florida's Gulf Coast as a result of completion of a fivc-and-a-haH-mile stretch of Intracoastal Waterway at Venice. The water route was opened when a canal, spanned by three drawbridges, was com pleted. The Intra coastal Water Way begins near Tarpon Springs and continues to the Caloosahatchce River, near Fort Myers. "If I were going to give God a grade on the Uni verse, I'd give him a C-mi-nus. . This statement comes from a new sad - happy novel call ed Waldo, its author is one Paul Theroux, and the book is scheduled for release April 12 by Houghton Mifflin Com pany. Waldo will be called a sur realist novel. It is not one. It is about nouns we know and see, not about nouns we dream Striped toothpaste vi brating on an electric tooth brush, a fat lustful Mother of the Year, a writer on display behind plate glass typing for pleased onlookers. These are hilarious, but dis turbing because they are not surreal. They are with us. . This is the story of Waldo whom we first meet in the glass - galled Booneville School. for- -Delinquent? Boys, . committed bn charge v y of "truss burning, bank screw ing up, and oil pouring," all of . which outrages were per petrated on his hopeless fa ther or his pathetic, wall-eyed mother. After taking part in a riot in the prison cooking class, and being nearly roast ed in the oven in which he was hiding from the guards, Wal do's sentence is lengthened. Recuperating in Booneville's infirmary, he talks to Dr. Wasserman, eye doctor and head - shrinker. Waldo's trou ble is diagnosed as "nothing HELP WANTED! We are now interviewing1 male and female for per manent fall or part time employment, beginning June or September. Knowledge of hobbies or crafts beneficial. HILLY nnniun EASTGATE to do" in a world where to be busy is to be sane. Waldo stays poised at the edge of savagery. After leav ing Booneville he meets, in Dr. W's waiting room, the middle-aged ex-starlet Clovis Techy, who becomes his mis tress and patroness. She sends him to Rugg College in or der to give him "something to do." Waldo wants to be come a writer and more or less does so, in the process of which he tries to shuck off his bewildered family but be comes embroiled with far more bewildering groups of students. He succeeds in be coming the hack writer of ''hu man interest" stories, front page grotesques which cause critics to rave and hail him as a "blazing new talent." His duties as Clovis' lover are the price he has paid for his success. He is left, aloft i in his glass i'writer's. cage" In a night club, sparse-haired, scruffy, physically a bit smaller, typing for a widly ap plauding audience. Dr. W's advice, "do some thing, anything," is a cure as well as a malaise; from the glass prison to the glass writ er's cage Waldo has suffer ed the essence of laughter, which is pain. Here is a bold, funny and perceptive tract for our times. Paul Therous has lived wide ly in his 25 years. He was born in Medford, Massachusetts. After graduating from col lege in 1963 he taught in Italy for a summer, in Nyasaland (Central Africa) for two years, and is now lecturer in Eng lish at Makerere University in Uganda (East Africa). Therous has written for the Christian Science Monitor and for the Internationalles Afrf kaforom in Munich as a cor respondent, Black Orpheus (Nigeria), The Examiner (Rhodesia), Transition (Ugan da) and Presence Africaine, published in Paris. His poems and articles have also appeared in The Virginia Quarterly Review, The New African, The Transatlantic Review, and Prairie Schooner. THE NEW YOBS UTS ajreat on your campns u a rood man to know. Write . . . Phone . . . Yfa&t GEOSG2 &. COZnSAB. CX.U. 203H East Franklin (Over Dairy Bar) Ph. t43-t& NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY f A blindfold test for beer. If anybody ever says you can't pick Budweiser with your eyes shut, you can call his bluff. First, stick vour nose close to the foam of each glass of beer and take a sniff. Notice a difference? The one with the clean, fresh aroma is Budweiser. Now taste. This gets a bit tricky. But the one beer that tastes like beer without any one flavor jumping out at you (like hops, or an extra sweetness, or some times a sour or sharp taste) is Budweiser. That's because Budweiser is blended . by our Beech wood Ageing. We want you to taste the beer, not the recipe. If anybody pulls a beer-tasting test on you, now you know how to 'win. Just follow your nose. BudVeigen KING OF BEERS ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. ST. LOUIS NEWARK LOS ANGELES TAMPA HOUSTON IF YOU TRY IT YOU WILL BUY IT Grants food is excellent and your student I J), card is good for 20 dis count 4:307:30 YM. W. T. GRANT CO. EASTGATE WANTED Secretaries Clerics Hospital Saving Association, Blue Cross and Blue Shield, may have that better job opportunity which you will want to consider. Tremendous growth during the past year has created a number of openings for SECRETARIAL and CLERI CAL personnel. You should be a High School graduate or better. Experience is not required. Hospital Saving provides 7 paid holidays per year plus liberal vacation and sick leave plans for. its employees. The Association contributes part of the cost of the employee group insurance programs. Excellent working conditions, office facilities and convenient parking areas are provided for employees. Even though Hospital Saving is a rather large business, the individual value of each employee is recognized. Salary, responsibility, and promotions are based on individual merit In return for the compensation, benefits, and opportunities all that is expected is the sincere application of your abili ties in the performance of assigned job responsibilities. To explore the possibility of working at Hospital Saving, call 942-4121 or come to the Home Office on West Franklin Street anytime between 8 A.M. and 5 P.M., Monday through Friday. Ask for Mr. Herman Preston or Mrs. Pat Williams in the Personnel Department. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER TPJAWGLE VOLKSWAG EM With the largest MOST MODERN SERV ICE DEPARTMENT in the state. Our repairs are FULLY GUARANTEED. Customer satisfaction is a must. TRANSPORTATION is furnished to both DURHAM & CHAPEL HILL for the convenience of our customers. Our SERVICE DEPARTMENT is open Thursday nights till 9 P.M. for those who find it difficult to come in during the day. Triangle also possesses one of the most modern Body Shops in the area. Where guaranteed repairs are made on all makes and models. Bring your car home to Triangle where genunine Volkswagen parts are used. Where we are now pledged to give the best possible service for the lowest possible price. TRIANGLE VOLKSWA 3823 DURHAM-CHAPEL HILL BLVD. PHONE 489-2371 N. a DEALE3 NO. 1343
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 22, 1967, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75