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THE DAILY TAR HEEL
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Ounce Taught In Saigon
By SHARI WILLIS
o The Daily Tar Httl StaS
"I discovered a sort of
fatalism in the Vietnamese
students," said Dean of
Women Katherine Kennedy
Carmichacl, who taught at the
Faculte des Lettres in Saigon
from August 11 until May
mi.
Omen by Congress for a
S m ith-Mundt Professorship,
she taught American literature
and the English language.
The Smith- Mundt
Professorship is a program by
which Congress aids foreign
countries by sending some of
the finest American scholars to
teach in those countries for a
nine-months tenure.
Miss Carmichael said she
had visited Vietnam in 1952
and was therefore already ac
quainted with Southeast
Asia.
'The conditions there in 1952
were vastly different from
those In 1961, she said. "In
1952, the Viet-minh and the
French were in conflict."
"When I went up the Saigon
River on the USS Marseilles,
gunboats fore and aft were re
quired for protection."
In 1951, Miss Carmichael
taught 150 "eager and in
telligent Vietnamese
students.
"They were all interested in
studying languages," she
said.
"All of them spoke French
and Vietnamese, and most
spoke some English and
Chinese."
She found the students
devoted to the French culture,
language, and literature.
"They looked to Paris for in
spiration as Indians look to
London."
"The students were
responsive and learned within
their own sphere," said Dean
Carmichael. "Sometimes I,
instead of they, felt hopeless
when meditating on their con
ditions ofliving."
She felt especially sorry for
young anti-communist refugees
from the North.
"If anyone wants to know of
the terror of leaving Hanoi, I
suggest they read Dr. Tom
Dooley's three books." These
books give a picture of the ex
odus of refugees from com
munist Hanoi to the freedom of
the south.
"One factor in the Viet
namese picture too often ig
nored today i3 that the quality
of sanctuary and freedom of
Saigon has declined," said
Miss Carmichael.
The Faculte des Lettres had
built a large new campus at
Binh Hoa, 15 miles outside of
Saigon, but it was cut off from
Saigon by communist fighting
before Miss Carmichael got to
see it.
She wasn't even allowed to
cross the Saigon River without
government permission.
Dean Carmichael thought the
quit?
Vietnamese were
people, "industrious and
courageous.
She said the Vietnamese
girl 5 were "very pret
tv almost ethereal. But the
men," she said, "were taa
fragile by American standards
of good looks."
She greatly respected the
select group of Viet
n a me se the college
students that she kr.ev.
Eighteen months after Dean
Carmichael left Saigon, the ad
ministration of South Vietnam
changed because of the
assassination cf Ngo Dmh
Diem.
"It is difficult for me to
relate the Vietnam of today to
the Vietnam of 1962 there
have been so many
changes."
Asked if she enjoyed her
stay in Vietnam, Dean
Carmichael replied "It was interesting."
n
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Lost And Found
V
64 Triumph
Spitfire Roadster
Radio, heater, red finish
black top
Was $1095.
Now $895,
Holiday Imports
I Durham-Cnaptl Hill Blvd.
01r. 51 423-2734
I Authorized BMC Dealer
' 1 1 - n ii
FOUND:
Three watches (women's),
Granville Towers key ring with
keys, cigarette case, contact
ring. Apply at towel room of
the Women's gym.
Pair of men's brown glasses
outside of scientific supply
room in Venerable Hall. Call
933-2319 or come by scientific
supply room.
One pipe tobacco pouch in
Saunders Hall on Dec. 4. Call
Sam Fulk at 968-9109.
lens case and Barbara Gaddy's
LOST:
Man's 23 jewel Bulova watch
on campus Friday evening.
Reward offered. Phone Dan
Leonard at 966-8318 or 987
1552. Mod Civ text (Brinton,
Christopher, and Wolff),
library copy and Monarch
world civilization notes. Call
Jim Smith, 747 James at 942
3737. Pair of dark-rimmed glasses
in brown case. Please contact
Rick Johnson in 636 Ehr
inghaus or call 933-3506.
Parker Fountain Pen
(Black). Loaned to a boy at
2;00 on Monday, Dec. 4, at pre
registration in South Building.
;s Please return to Jeff
Boardman, 128 Ehringhaus.
Two rings. . One men's class
ring and one princess ring.
Left in ladies lounge of library.
Reward. Call Jo Sadler, 968-9009.
with
Brown leather wallet
identification, a $50 govern
ment check you cannot cash
and eight dollars cash. You can
keep the cash, but please
return wallet to Harry Dif
fendal, 519 Ehringhaus, 933-3514.
Dean Katherine Carmichael
. . . Vietnam of 1962 changed.
Rowan Plays In Recital
Carolina and University
Symphony Orctr$:r 'San day
zi A p ni.
phony, directed by Ikrjaml
SaIis. u .'.I ptcicv.l Edvin J.
Strirgham's -.Xvcijrse Xa. 1"
Ecesco'i "Run zr.'.ir.
Rhapsody II" and ta-; vral
selections by Miss Carol SU:art
who made her state debut -with
this performance.
Miss Stuart will sir. 5 Et
Incarnatas Est" from Mczart's
Mass In C Minor. K. 427 and
"Rejoice Greatly"' from The
Messiah.
The University . Symphony
Orchestra, conducted by David
Serriss, features Mozart's
'Concerto for Violin and
Orchestra1' K. 219 with pro
fessor Edgar Alden cf the UNC
Department of Music as violin
soloist.
The program also will in
clude the overture to ''Russian
an Ludmiila" by G 1 i n d a ,
DaBussy's 4Pre!ude to the
Afternoon of a Faun and
Beethoven's 8th Symphony.
These symphonies are a
service of the 4 R e p e a t
Program" series on WUNC
FM-radlo, 91.5.
far a.
y.
! t :v. t ...
13
Saturday, Dec. 9 a..m-
-9 p.
VTeir.cs ay. Dec
Tiidr, Dec. Z
Tuesday, Dec. Z5-
S.tndav, Dec.- 1. ar.
ar. Jin. l-CLOSZD.
T
9 2.
Tuesdav,
ACC Schedule
For Weekend
SATURDAY GAMES
Carolina 12-01 vs.
Vanderbdt ! 2 - 0 i at
Nashville. Tenn,
Scuth Carolina (1-0 vs.
Marvland l-2) at Col'ege
Park. Md.
Duke (2) vs. Alabama
( 1-0) at Tuscaloosa. Ala.
Auburn (0-2) vs. Wake
Forest (0-2) at Winston
Salem MONDAY GAME
South Carolina (l-0 vs.
Virginia (1-1) at Charlot
tesville, Ya.
Jin. 2-5
T
Wednesday. Jin. 3-
Fantastic
Christmas Gift !de3 fcr
your parents and friends
A SERIES OF
PHOTOGRAPHS OF
YOU
ON THE UNC CAMPUS
Quality
Work
Reasonable
Prices
Call or Write
JOEL S. SIMPSON
418 Whitehead Circle
Chapel Hill SSS-3C37
At 8 PM Sunday in Hill Hall,
pianist Barbara Rowan will
present the third .of eight
Beethoven recitals to be of
fered by faculty members of
the Department of Music.
Indian Film Theme
Played By Shankar
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Atomize
fi. Adjoin .
10. Plague
11. Repetition
12. Bret
13. Great
name in
poetry
14. Sloths
15. Dis
remember 16. Ex-" '
tinguisher
19. Music
note
20. Arum
plant
21. Brew
23. Conceals
25. Travels
26. S-shaped
molding
27. Dogie
23. Ahead
29. Deform
32. Lathered
35. Spawn
offish
38. Nor
wegian dramatist
37. Twin
crystal
39. Charles
Lamb
40. River
4L Bade
42. Accumu
late DOWN
1. Blemish
2. Induce
3. Rodent
4. Mother
of Peer
Gynt
5. Archaic '
pronoun
6. Sandarac
tree
7. Resound
ing sound
8. Spoke
9. Seesaws
12. Owns
13. June
bug
15. Nourished
17. Liberate
18. Religious
law:
Roman
21. Cummer
bund
22. Compels
23. Native
of
Indian
apolis 24. Vile,
25. Verb
form
27. Spanish
hero
29. Nesf
30. Parts on
Broadway
31. Golf term
33. Orient
34. Juicy
fruit
H6lRlAlLnsopA,s
LSARE JAM OMA
aIdve n TCgJyg n
HeJeC t olopeN p
e 0 1 1 ctT!e aIgTlTe
RlOlO D
HIE V E A L E
A P E StlT U
MERE STD
S LIVIE RLi
S3
Yeiterday'a Answer
37. Hebrew
letter
38. Frank
ie's second
40. Music
note
The India Association will
sponsor two Indian films Sun
day at 7:30 p.m. in Carrol?.
Hall.
The first is "Satyajit Ray '
about Indian filmmaking, and
the second is "Pather Pan
chali," a drama, with music by
Ravi Shankar. Tickets are $1
at Graham Memorial Informa
tion ;-desk or at Carroll Hall
prior to the show.
In "Satyajit Ray" (13
minutes) the director, Ray,
narrates and discusses his at
titudes toward, cinema: why he.
maxes turns and
'-himself ;igains "from them . He
discusses ' the " problems of '
casting, planning-of shots and
editing. Included are sequences
of "Pather Panchali" and con
. siderable footage of Ray at
work during actual shooting.
"Panther Panchali" (112
minutes) is the first film of
Satyajit Ray's brilliant
triology, based on a two
volume novel by Bibhuti Ban
' nerji in 1934. It is a story of an
Indian family and their strug:
gle to survive, but the story
itself takes a second place to
the poetic and compassionate
way in which it is told.
Its lyrical development is
further enhanced by the
equisite and often stunning
photography. Even Ravi
Shankar's musical ac
companiment, its wizardry
being better known to musit
listeners than movie-goers,
joins, the inviting global
familiarity of this film spectacle.
Noticeably, however, its ac
tion is quite wordless when the
rectangle cf the screen tells us
the most; for example the se
quence when Apu and his
sister, - outside' their Bengal
village, get caught in one of
the dense Indian downpours,
and the. girl, with the , proper
lacking, dies from
contracted. "
what, he fmedicine
lI J'-'--' Tflv '-'ii:-' -ltL
me liiness
The smallness and isolation
of his village home, after his
sister's death, oppress the
young Apu. He has received
hints of 'a greater world, a do
main of learning and more
dynamic happenings where
people do not simply wait
around to die.
In international festivals,
"Pather Panchali" is one of
the most honored films of all
time. Among others, its
awards include "most human
document award" at Cannes,
Best Film and Best Director
Awards at San Francisco, Best
Film at Ontario, Best Film at
Vancouver, Special Award
Edinburgh.
The series is offering a cycle
of performances of the com
plete thirty-two sonatas, writ
ten by Beethoven throughout
his life.
Mrs. Rowan will perform
five sonatas, ranging from the
early Opus 2, No. 3, to the
transcendental Opus 27, No. 2
(the so-called "Moonlight"
sonata).
Mrs. Rowan began teaching
piano at UNC in 1964 following
study under Egon Petri and
Alexander Libermann in piano,
and Darius Milhaud and Leon
Kirchner in composition. She
holds a graduate degree from
Mills College in Oakland,
California, where she also has
taught. She has been a
Fulbright Scholar in Paris and
has performed extensively in
the San Francisco Bay area.
The concert is open to the
public without charge. ;
Personality
Posters for
Christmas
What greater sacrifice could a
man make than to give his be
loved Steeve McQueen for
Christmas?
You'll find our Print Room just
. full of inexpensive ideas . for
Christmas giving. Come and see!
The Intimate
Bookshop
.119 East Franklin Street
Open 10 AM. to 10 P.M.
fez -fez
I'1
F flllil
fill"
-1 1 1 W M
College Relations Director
co Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
Please send me a free Sheraton Student I.D. Card:
Name:
1 Address:.
We're holdin;
the cards.
Get one. Rooms are now up to 20 off with a
Sheraton Student I.D. How much depends on
where and when you stay. - , .
And, the Student I.D. card is free to begin with.
Send in the coupon. It's a good deal. And at a
good place.
Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns
155 Hotels and Motor Inns in major cities.
THURS.-FRf.-SAT.
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