Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 16, 1967, edition 1 / Page 4
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1 Page 4 - K Hi A YOUNG MONK, Brother Thomas (Rick Dula), offers a frenzied prayer over the mute, Pulcinella (Benjamin Keaton), in the Carolina Plyamakers production of "The Battle of the Carnival and Lent" which continued today at 2:30 and 8 and runs through Tuesday evening in the Playmakers Theatre. Tickets are available at the Playmakers business office, 214 Abernethy Hall, and at the box office one hour before each performance. Carbonyls Yenable Series Lecture Here Dr. Fred Basolo, F.'P. Ven- able Series speaker scheduled c Yossarian o If you had to ask, you prob ably wouldn't want to meet Joseph Heller anyway. ' He's the author of Catch-22, and he'll be visiting with us jat the . Intimate : Tuesday! eve ning. . . - . ..-, Morris West says of the book, ?"A wild, wonderful Rabelaisian 'book, full of belly laughs and heart-stopping moments of in jsight." .. We have a few copies, and Mr. Heller has graciously con sented to autograph them. Or bring your own. Or just come ;to yack. After dinner until 10. The Intimate Bookshop Chapel Hill Wh U li L RESTAURANT Next to the University Motel on Rt. 54 Invites you to dine in the relaxed atmosphere of the THREE CROWNS ROOM. Student business is always appreciated and we would like for you to try our... Ground Sirloin of Beef Teriyaki served with our famuos mixed green salad and French fries. or if you are more conservative ... One-Half Fried Chicken with a tossed salad and French fries. Open Seven Days A Week -6:30-1 1:00 Breakfast Served All Day Long "Where Expert To for Wednesday night at 8 p.m. in Venable Hall, has spent 24 years as aproiessumai cnera- ist and scholar. After receiving his inorganic chemistry PhD from Univer sity of Illinois in 1943, he join ed the Rohm and Haas Chem ical Company of Philadelphia as a research chemist. Since 1946 he has been on the faculty iijwii.ii in., liin igpi-a. iu tm. am NOW PLAYING e) ZERO AOSIfeL (6 PHILSILVERS JACK GILFORD BUSTeR KEATON i ii -i ln"A"MELVlRAK Production'' 7 tt Al PXltlWi THIWci 1 r ON THE WAY TO n-. THE FORUM J, A V rninoh. ruin.. I 'f COLOR by DeLuxc kLM. IIMITCn iDTICTC 'If) SUOGiSTEO FOB WATURt WMCNCtS, 1 k (' w.. - V aw w - , - , , Shows at: 1:15-3:11 5:07-7:09-9:08 OPENS WEDNESDAY ACADEMY AWARDS WINNER BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM 1966 a IVIan i it i ii '74 Pm p 1 i i i 3 Students are Always toss Button (And Wearer) Says 6 I Don By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer I DON'T WANT TO BE NORMAL" reads the button which may well summarize the potential market for a boom ing business button making. Buttons, ranging from the mild STUDENT POWER to the risque SAVE WATER: SHOW ER WITH A FRIEND to the political COMMIT LB J, NOT THE USA are appearing in mass abundance on college campuses all across the coun try as bumper stickers are out and buttons are in. And most come from a 28 St. Marks Place firm in New York known as Underground Uplift Unlimited. ' Randolphe Wicker started his growing movement just a couple of years ago with a couple of bumper stickers and a LET PROSTITUTES WORK button. - The idea caught on to the point where thousands are sold daily from coast to coast and Wicker is getting a kickback on almost all of them. Wicker says in a statement accompanying ' his catalogue "We (I) will sell anything . . . bought in small lots" on spe cial order. He continues that he will mass produce "only- Deliver of Northwestern University, where he is now Professor of Chemistry. In 1961-62 he took leave from Northwestern to do research in the University of Rome's In stitute of Inorganic Chemistry directed by Professor V. Cag lioti. In 1964 he won the American Chemical Society Award in Inorganic Chemistry. 17 Teachers Win Fellowships Seventeen teachers in col leges and universities in North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia have- been awarded fellowships for study under the Cooperative Program in Hu manities at Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Unique in the southeast, the cooperative program provides the recipient a salary and pays all expenses for study at Duke or UNC. It also provides for a replacement at the college or university which has grant ed the recipient a leave of absence. Award-winning research pro jects this year range from studies on the regional effects of the New Deal to the Society of Friends in North Carolina. The cooperative program is financed by the Ford Founda tino. Applicants must teach in a humanities department at one of the institutions of high er learning i nthe three states. Welcome" THE DAILY t buttons we agree with, find amusing or which sell well al though personally repugnant to us.' Wicker, who in 1960 was just a recent graduate, majoring in psychology, from the Uni '" ril III Mill f -A ( !: V DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS Buttons, buttons, buttons ... Stu Matthews wears buttons from Sascha Those who will begin studies in Durham or Chapel Hill at the opening of the academic year in September are: George L. Abernethy, David son College ; Jean ; Ruth Bu chert, UNC at Greensboro; Ernest M. Manasse, North Carolina College at Durham; George E. Melton, Pfeiffer College; Anne T. Moore, Camp bell College; Sylvia L. Rend er, North Carolina College; Clarence P. Walhout and Rich ard L. Zuber, Wake Forest Col lege; W. D. White, St. An drews Presbyterian College. Virginia recipients include David C. Jenkins and James J. Leach, College of William and Mary; Robert F. Hunter, Virginia Military Institute; George W. Ray III, Washing ton and Lee University; Mur dock D. Maclnnis, University of Virginia; and Gustavus.G. Williamson, Virginia Polytech nical Institute. Fellows from South Carolina are Carol Carlisle of the Uni versity of South Carolina and Harold N. Cooledge Jr. of Clemson University. Orphans Visit UNC; APO's Sponsor Tour The pledge class of Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity, took orphans from the Children's home in Winston-Salem on a tour of the UNC campus yesterday. The 31 seventh-graders were shown the Planetarium and lunched at Chase Cafeteria. The class was broken down into groups of four children to each pledge "to help create a friendlier atmosphere," ac Featuring: Sports Proven For Consistent Dependability EBSTOflTE' DilElBUjQQE TAR HEEL eing Normal versity of Texas, says he's "a businessman. "I think about only one thing, what will sell," but even his blatently mercenary interests won't allow him to sell some buttons, but they are few and if ' iA Jjl&.dt t iln Jit, inn cording to SamPortaro, Jr., an APO pledge. ; v ; Each pledge then:'toolr his group around the campus. Chess Club Extends Win Skein To 5-0 The UNC Chess Club stretch ed its record to 5-0 Saturday with a closely - contested 4 -2 win over VPI. The victory wasn't secured until the last match, when UNC's Seymour Kellerman won a complicated endgame. The match stood 3-2, UNC, with VPI still in a position to tie when Kellerman's match began. Other wins were Jim Hughes, who played a Queen's Gambit Accepted; Pete Nas siff, who outmaneuvered his opponent's French Defense; and Lou Rivela, who opened with a King Fawn. The Club meets East Caro lina in Graham Memorial Saturday at 2 p.m.. Their regular meetings are on Wednesdays from 7-11 p.m. UNC Students Go To Model UN Session (Earl Hadden and Baxter Lin ney, students at the University of North Carolina, will take part in the third annual Model United Nations Security Coun cil to be held at Hollins Col lege, Va. from Thursday to Saturday. They will play the role of delegate from the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Also expected are delegates from 16 colleges and univer- f -. . V .-"- f - rf if - CONVERSE Basketball Shoes High or Low Tops Only $8.95 AT EASTGATE SHOPPING CENTER Where you personally select your own steak In midtown CHAPEL HILL (151 E. Rosemary St See No. 87 on map) Also Peddlers in SaniordL Southern Pines. Wilson, Spartanburg & Fay etlerille far between. "Like, if someone wanted me to sell a GAS JEWS button. I wouldn't do it. I won't sell anything illegal." Illegality is about the only restriction, for buttons which many would find offensive, like STERILIZE LBJ NO MORE UGLY CHILDREN and PRO TECT YOUR LOCAL ABOR TIONIST appear in all the catalogues. The buttons seem to fall in to four categories: sex like IF IT MOVES, FONDLE IT: political GUNS DON'T KILL PEOPLE, PEOPLE KILL PEOPLE and JOHN WAYNE FOR SECRETARY OF DE FENSE; and drugs BANANA POWER and POT: HOBBY NOT HABIT. The fourth category defies description, except to say it focuses on the unusual. Stuff like SOCATES EATS HEM LOCK and BUTTON and ANTI BUTTON and the double-edged UNBUTTON and WEAR THIS BUTTON TO BUG THE BOURGEOISIE. Some of them take a lot of understanding, if they make any sense at all. , Like the one saying GO, GO GANDALF, the mythical wiz ard of T.R.R. Tolkien's Hobbit triogy, (and wrtten in runic, the language of the Hobbits) and TAO CHU KWANG (the man who supposedly shot John Birch in WWII). Some are serious BOMB HANOI and MAKE LOVE NOT WAR and BLACK POWER. Many are amusing, such as CORPS BUILDS OSWALDS (complete with Oswald super imposed) BURN POT NOT PEOPLE and 9 OUT OF 10 OLD MAIDS PREFER THE NEW YORK TIMES. And where is it all heading? Maybe the whole button movement is attempting to, in the words of one of Wicker's best sellers, STAMP OUT REALITY. sities throughout the southern and eastern parts of the coun try. . t '";. Keynoting the "Model Securi ty Council session will be Chief S. O. Adebo, permanent rep resentative of Nigeria to the United Nations, and prominent The model council sessions African spokesman, are held to give participating students and spectators a bet ter idea of the operations of the Security Council. During the debates, the students must assume the positions tradi tionally taken by the nations : they represent. An added feature of this years' security council session will be an adaptation of war games techniques. Delegates will be asked to respond to a hypothetical international cri sis to test their ability to "stay in character" of the country they represent. "1 Oopolds Coliseum N.C. STATE CAMPUS RALEIGH l7ED.APn.10p eveninq ! n n With. J.H1B IR1HMI1 EMM x ctrm WKIX Men of Music MC's TICKETS: $3.50 $3X3 $2.50 ON SALE AT COLISEUM BOX OFFICE, TH I EM'S RECORD SHOP, PENNEY'S LAY-AWAY DEPT, CAMERON VILLAGE, and RECORD BAR in Durham & Chapel Hill ReZiicfniif Cop Tries Hard To Avoid Nabbing Anyone By NANCY WARNER The Carolina-Chapel Hill area has at least one cop who has never arrested anyone, and doesn't really want to. Edward (Scotty) Scott, the Morehead Planetarium's se curity officer, admits he's nev er arrested, anyone, but says he would if he had to. "You just use common sense to keep from arresting any one. And that's the biggest part of my job . . . using common sense," he said. The Philadelphia native re tired from the Air Force in 1954 and has been working with the Planetarium staff since then because he "just loves the job of meeting every one." He stays at the Planetarium because "it's the prettiest building on campus" and be cause it's "one of the first of its kind ever to be associated with a University and it's the only one that trains astro- WliatV Doing Today SUNDAY College Life will meet at 9 to night at the Chi Omega House. The speaker will be Toby Blalock, staff repre sentative of the Campus Crusade for Christ. Every one is invited to attend. There will be an SRL picnic at the home of Dr. Hollister, Lakeshore Drive, at 4:30 p.m. The Carolina Political Union will meet at 7 in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial. Professor Michael Katz of the UNC Law School will address the group on "The . Non-Political Structure of a Free Society.'' The Gallery Coffee Shop, at the Wesley Foundation will present Cliff Evans, singing a program of contemporary folk music at 9:30 tonight. MONDAY The annual Valkyrie Sing will be held Monday in Conjunc tion with the spring tapping ceremony of the Order of the Golden Fleece, at 7 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Admission is Announcing " A CHANGE OF ADDRESS . .... for your convenience Dr. William E. Beel OPTOMETRIST to 151 E. Rosemary St. Vision Analysis Glasses Fitted ALWAYS SEND A erao THE BUCKET! 3600 Hillsboro St. 700 Peace Street New Bern & Poole Rds. Raleigh Sunday, April 16, 1937 nauts," he said. Scotty smiles in recollection and mentions asking a school teacher if he could take her students to a pep rally. He did and afterwards asked Bob Lewis to talk to them. "The kids loved it," Scotty said, "and that's the sort of thing I love." He did leave the Planetar ium briefly to run a gas station-grocery but returned be cause "I missed the campus and accomodating people. We have the best staff in the whole University." Morehead Director Tony Jen zano considers Scotty a great asset to the Planetarium. "He is very conscientious and is devoted to what he is doing. "He'll do anything to accom modate people and to make their visit more pleasant and fruitful. "Informally he is our ex tension man because he is al ways incontact with people," Jenzano said. free. Doors will be locked at 7. The Catholic Graduate Stu dents' Association will hold its weekly dinner-meeting in the upper back room of Len oir Hall at 6 p.m. While doing business with our Loan Dept. We pay the tab. DURHAM'S OLDEST PAWNBROKERS FIVE FOOTS ionne3.i::o. U9 W. MAIN. AT 5 POINTS ENTRANCE . ON CITY PARKING LOT T Contact Lenes Phone 942-52S0 ANOTHER WEEKEND LIKE THIS PAST ONE AND I'LL PUT ON ANOTHER 40 YEARS to 15 pieces of Kentucky Fried Chicken, 1 pint country gravy and 8 hot biscuits. (Also try our Potato Salad & Cole Slaw) TAKE HOMES 806 Ninth St. - Durham . 910 Miami Blvd. - Durham Franklin & Rosemary Sfs Chape! Hill f ii 3 75
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 16, 1967, edition 1
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