Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 28, 1967, edition 1 / Page 3
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
1 1 v. 1 rr -" Friday April 23 1967 I First President's Portrait On Display '- An nriainol i. s ', H"i ira t of Carolina's first presiding pro fessor, then the equivalent of president,, is now on display at the Southern Historical Library0" f ' the University The University recently ac quired the portraits of David Ker and his wife M a r v Boggs Ker, who resided in 5wsel HU1 during the late Although the artist's iden tity is unknown, the por traits are said to have been painted during the years 1795 96, at the time of the Uni versity's founding. The portraits of Ker and his wife were left to the Uni versity by the will of Ker's great - great - granddaugh ter, Miss Sarah Duncan But ler of St. Francisville, La., who died in 1966. Contacts with Miss Butler and other Ker descendants were maintained for a num ber of years by Dr. J. G. de Roulhac Hamilton, direc tor of the Southern Historical Collection, and later by Dr. James W. Patton. presently director of this collection. Edward French; assistant director of admissions of UNC-CH and a relative of DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Fleece 6. Muscle contraction 11. Verbose 12. Formerly the Hermit Kingdom 13. Candlenut trees 14. Of the teeth 15. Encoun tered 16. Beseech 17. Chinese mile 18. Part of speech 20. Peruke 21. Tree 22. Space race goal 23. Admis sions 27. Birds 28. Metal 29. Churchill sign - 30. Careful (of) 34. Verbal ending 35. Part of 36. Wing 37. Pull up to the curb again 39. of the Apostles 40. Artless 41. Put forth effort 42. Spirited horse 43. Flat topped hills DOWN 1. Marsh 2. Greek poet 3. Muse of lyric poetry 4. Notices of sales 5. Sante Fe, for one:' abbr. 6. Ancient dagger 7. Small horse 8. Skill TIuiWEB V HI'VER.ANOV 'OW jfSHE STIUL A VBUT THE DOCTOR ITOGOOb) some of the Ker descendants, has also maintained con tacts in Louisiana and Missis siDDi which were instrumen tal in securing th portraits. Born in Ireland in 1736 Ker was educated at Tri nit v Col lege in Dublin. He entered the Precbvterian ministry and immigrated to North Carolina about. 1790. He settled in Fay etteville as a preacher and teacher. He became presiding pro fessor in January, 1795, and remained so until July, 1796. whn he resigned because of a conflict between his Jeffer ponian political Drincioles and , the strongly Federalist princi pips of the Board bf Trustees. He also became unsettled in h's religious beliefs, re nounced the ministrv. and re Dudiated the Christian reli gion. After leaving Chapel Hill, he spent some years in Lum Wton and later moved to Mi.:issiDDi where he became a cotton planter, studied law, and was appointed bv Presi de Jefferson to the office of territory judge. r Ho died in 1805 from ill ness contracted while hold--ine court in an uriheated house. 9. Large seal 10. De fames 14. Turkey leg 16. Rod 19. Ship shaped clocks 20. Court 22. Be have 23. Subter ranean hollows 24. Stuff oneself 25. Born 26. Drain 30. Bogged down pi i iAiN;Ens!w'0;p;D! I NGphJJc A M E O SHODjObpN imc I Excite OiT T EP i RETqT srl: K e n o qsORirE E NjA C TtlRjATTSjE" SffY TTFTfrpjOL s nTeTeTrTIl a T H I T hTeIrOTIA B RAD I aTTjtTTO AMENT,TeH PER yIeIaItIsLJd'e.E P S 1 ' 1 1 1 ' xd 31. Confronts 32. Radical 33. Endures 35. Breaker 38. Dessert 39. Hewing tool 41. Type measure I 2 3 4 5-6 7 8 9 iQ !L l!L . 2- 18 19 20 wmzzziwzzzz 23 24 25 ZS ZZMzCZZZZ 37 38 39 HI 11 WM 1 1 1 AXSN MAY 7th IS TOE.lflSf BAY' .0QBEQiDG flBflCSDB B plim vob'ei mm fr - UNCLE's Mr. Waverly TV's Oldest Actor Has Busy Schedule HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Leo G. Carroll at 75 is the oldest regular star in television, but not so ancient that he doesn't appear in two series simul taneouslywhich is more than can be said of his younger colleagues. As Mr. Waverly, the master mind behind "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." and "The- Girl From U.N.C.L.E.," Carroll works five days a week. Born in the midlands of England, and still a British subject, Carroll and his wife Nancy have been married 40 years. They live in a duplex high in the Hollywood Hills. Originally it was one large home with six bedrooms which Carroll had rebuilt 25 years ago. It sits on an acre of gar den that s has seen better days when Carroll could devote more time to it. Mrs. Carroll decorated the house long ago in Edwardian style. Most of the furniture was brought here from Eng- 4 r THE DAILY Professor Ker UNC's first presiding professor gland, and very little has been changed in the past decade or so. Her husband is fond of say ing, "We're comfortable but not spectacular." Neither the actor nor his wife is interested in keeping up with the modern concep tion of gracious living. The producers of the NBC TV series take into account Carroll's age, giving him a minimum of physical action in the shows. "I don't do very much in the shows," he admits. "My principal job is to explain to the boys and girls (Robert Vaughn, David McCalium, Stephanie Power and Noel Harrison- what THRUSH is up to and what our position is. Then I punch a few but tons and send them off on their derring-do. The young sters do most of the work." Still, Carroll puts in a stren uous work week. He arises at about 5:30 a.m. to report to MGM studios by 7:30 after a half hour drive acros the busy city. Carroll is somewhat sentimental about Metro; it was his first studio when he came to Hollywood in 1934. On long days the old gentle man stays on the job until 7 p.m. Sometimes he's in front of the cameras most of the day with very little letup. The Airlines Need Pilots 1 New Class Starts June 12 Professional Pilot Training In Just 17 Weeks Be ready for Airline or Commercial Employment Commercial Instru ment Multi Engine In structor. FAA approved Flight & Ground school Individual personal at tention All new equipment and facilities Write for free brochure Financing available Aviation Academy Of North Carolina, Inc. Raleigh-Durham Airport 919-833-6656 Box 200 Morrisvffle, N. C. 27S60 TAR HEEL Students' Work Is Displayed Th work of three UXC art students will be on exhibit in th two main rooms of The Art GaiJery ?nd in the Print Room Sunday through May 10. The exhibition which in cludes drawings, prints and pointings is the first student show at thp Gallery, a com mercial gallery which fea tures the work of regional art ists. The show includes the work , of Frank M. Faulkner, Donald H. Evans and Mary Beth Wiebe. Faulkner, a senior art ma jor, specializes in hard-edged colorism. He has exhibited at th Durham Allied Arts, the Erdahl-Cloyd Student Union at State, the Mint Museum in Charlotte, the Pembroke Col le?e Art Competition and the Ackland Center. He designed the symbol for the 1967 Fine Arts Festival. Evans is a graduate student who has exhibited at the Knox ville Fine Arts Festival, the Second Annual Alaskan State Show flt Anchorage, the Pied mont Grannies Show, the Al lied Arts Show in Durham and th. Herron College National in Indianapolis. His most recent exhibition' was in Chapel Hill's Sidewalk Art Show and the National Student Print Show in Ack land. MarjL Beth Wiebe. a gradu ate student, has exhibited in a one-man show at Virginia Intermont and was one of the 15 fialists in the National Mademoiselle Art "Competi tion. . The public is cordially invit ed to a receDtion for the artist from 3 to 5 Sunday at the Gallery. Slogans Take Over Alumni Desk Tops Alumni , Building is t h e Do it today tomorrow it home of many student phil- may be against the law. osophers. Some even write Save your Dixie Cups the their statements of wisdom on South will rise again, desk tops there. Support Mental Health or Here are a few examples: I'll kill you. The Old Well has frogs in Man will never fly. Birds it. The end of the world has been postponed ; due to the lack of trained trumpeters. The Soviet Union is in real ity a Polish buffer state against China. Donald Duck invented so ciology. Saint Peter has taken over in a palace coup. Satan has returned, and a coalition gov ernment has been set up. Elections for the top offices will be held in the future. The Beatles are more popu lar than J.C. because their music is better. You can buy a license plate for $2 reading ECU. For $2.50 you can buy a diploma. Death is Nature's way of telling us to slow down. Only forest fires prevent bears. Play Napoleon and keep your hand in your own shirt. Always enter before leaving. Is Your Oirl oming For J'ibilea Weekend? Sometimes your tough old bookseller finds himself plumb starry-eyed when he looks out across the campus and sees all that stuff in bloom, and the grass so green and all that. Especially on special occasions like Jubilee Week-End, when femininity and romance add an extra glow, we wonder what's happened to those rugged individualists who roam our shop ordinary days. And the biddies looking at you, so happy and proud what a moment for everybody! Chum, you'll never realize how much like that means to a member of the fragile sex. If YOUR girl is coming to Jubilee Weekend, give her something to remind her of you always. Like maybe a Personality Poster of Peter Fonda, or Dracula, or Rudolph Valentino. ftilllLME D88EIQP 119 East Franklin Street German A Bank A Day BONN (UPI) This year's booby prize in bank robbing probably will go to three arm ed mep who burst into a Ger man savings bank one day recently only to discover that all but 2,000 marks (1500) had just been removed to a clear ing house. Thsy rushed back outside and found their escape route barred by a tree knocked over in the storm they had hoped would cover their getaway. But most other German bank robbers appear to be do ing nicely. In 1966, according to a sur vey of the West German state criminal police offices, an average of one bank robbery was attempted every day. Most of them were successful, and about half remain un solved. The bandits got away with about 2.3 million marks ($545,000), almost double the amount of loot they garnered in 1965. Indications are that 1967 will be even more profitable for the bank robbing business. It began with four men kidnap ping 12 bank employees and their families after hours and forcing the employes to hand over the keys to the safe in a savings institution, from which the thugs removed al most 100,000 marks ($25,000). While waiting for their fel lows to signal the all-clear, two of the robbers served their victims coffee and bran dy, also stolen. Why are bank robberies on the increase? West Germany is prosperous, with little un employment or poverty. Ac cording to police the few who are poor don't rob banks "the robbers usually are people whovhave acquired huge debts iiy. Men drinK. The Great Society is all' around us. So is the flu. , Silent . Sam is blind. The Red Baron is making a fortune selling dex. Come alive, you're in the Dex generation. The Batmobile is a dis guised VW. Snoopy is having fun host ing pot parties. Attention Grads ! Moving To Charlotte? We Rent Over 2,000 Apartments Let Us Show You .The Advantages Of Living In Selwyn Village SP ANGLER REALTY CO. 1028 S. Boulevard Charlotte, N. C. 28203 Phone 704375-3736 Open Till 10 P.M. 1 Bank Robb Last by living beyond their means, and can't see any other way out of their trouble. Bank robberies noticeably increase just before holiday Carnival Money Wolfgang Schneider, a 23- Plarmahers Set Original Productions Jubilee weekend on campus will be capped by the presenta tion of three original one-act plays by the Carolina Play makers. The plays, which are to be presented Sunday and Monday evenings at 8 in Playmakers Theatre, have been chosen from Prof. Thomas M. Patter son's playwriting course and will be student acted and di rected. The production of student plays has traditionally been an important part of the Dramat ic Art program at the Univer sity and dates back to 1919 when "The Return of Buck Gavin," an early work of then student Thomas Wolfe, was produced. The current evening of plays will be the 212th Series of New Productions by the Play makers. Represented playwrights are William Watson of Sanford, with "A Piece of Flannel" with "A Piece of Flannel"; Jeannine Van Hulsteyn of Chapel Hill, with "The Shell Game"; and Carl Thompson Jr. jot Falls Church, Virginia, with "The Cannon." Following each play there will be a short discussion pe riod with the playwright. There is no admission charge, and the public is cor dially invited to attend. LENOIR HALL Saturday Night Specials . ..-.Lilts j Only Oith Obili 1l0Eaol Served Saturday 5 To 7:00 P.M. Win a free trip home to 9 money I (Or enough Sprite to throw a loud party every night for a semester.) Don't write home to get money. Just write a colleee newspaper ad for Sprite. You may win a free to ask for the money in person. What should your ad say? How tart and tingling Sprite is. And how it roars! Fizzes! Bubbles! Gushes! inA taetsel And hnw! I Hot too sweet. Not too innocent. S128 1st PRIZE 500 IN TRAVELERS CHECKS or 5.000 BOTTLES OF SPRITE 100 PRIZES OF S25 IN DIMES ...so if you can't go, home in person, youcan use the telephone to make your point. Q RULES . .. Write your ad the way you think would interest college newspaper readers. Give it a contemporary, sophisticated flavor. (A few swigs of Sprite will give you the idea --though you don't have to buy anything to enter.) Neatness counts a little. Cleverness counts a lot Your ad can be any length--if it fits this space. (But remember you're not writing a term paper.) Send each ad you submit to Ads for Sprite, P.O. Box 55, New York, New York 10046. All entries become the property of The . Pnfa.Cola Comcanv. None will be returned. Judges' decision final. flat May 2, X I I I name spritf is P2CS 3 MliL ers Yea r year-old worker of Waldbroehl. robbed a bank in a neighbor ing town because he needed money to take his wife to a carnival. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. ONLY ONE SHOWING Sidney -poitier RALPH MlSDYS KST MTCW SiWrtt KiTitt S IK) t mm Ihs 'Pulitzer . Prize-rV7Innin3 eMusical Comedy 38 i THE Ki&'SCH CCRPCRATISR THE DAVID SWIFT PRODUCTION OF PUUYISISr CSlCibT Detail 1 Binaurals SHOWS AT: 1:003:03 5:007:059:17 NOW PLAYING mum inn m i ii www )tf n -:: Is i get trip home i7 Entries must be received by 1967. Be sure to include and address. Winners will SPRITE. SO TART AND TINGLING WE JUST COULDN'T KEEP IT QUIET. ncr.iiT(Rco iof a or rnc coc COi Compaht '". I. 1 fx 1 4 1 ' UrlSU. J , V f A TLa i X Wi AS ?hf
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1967, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75