Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 11, 1968, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, January n, i968 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pass 3 UNC Senior JCilg By STEVE PRICE of The Daily Tar Heel Staff For a fellow whose first work with a movie camera was a visuai takeoff on James rher, scnior Jom itokes has come a long way Now he's a professional free ze movie producer, who has done films . far the North Carolina Population Center Murdock Center and the Na tional Aeronautics and Space Admimsitration. "I guess it started When I was in the Air Force," he begins. "I played a little with a camera then, bait it was just a hobby. 1 "Then in 1964 I came to vYi . uiu to study Radio leievistiom and Motion Pic BRING THIS COUPON OUT TO THE AIRPORT Pilot a Cessna 150 for $5 We are making this special offer so that everyone might get to know the fun experience of piloting a plane ... the free feeling of a gentle bank left or right, the power of a climb, the tranquility of level flight ... all under your own control! A licensed instructor will explain the operation of the plane. After takeoff, he will let you take control and fly the plane yourself. When the instructor has landed, your flight time will be entered in an official Pilot Flight Logbook which is your to keep. -3 TARHEEL S AVIATION Chapel Hill Airport See: Woody Woodall Carl Travis iii DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Portion 5. Presi dential name sakes 9. Melody 10. Sufficiency 11. Baking chambers 12. Adduce 14. Gets through a storm 16. Perform 17. Half ems 18. Congeal 19. Strange 20. French coin 21. Snow runner 22. Com mence 25.1943 conference site 26. Wild ox 27. Grampus 28. Small fish 29. Epoch SO. Not many 33. Music note 34. Vacate, a la Dunkirk 36. Gazo 33. Mends, as a bone 39. Metal 40. Noble man 41. Mold 42. Italian actress DOWN 1. Sanctuary 2. Regions 3. Fluff 4. Style 5. Ablaze 6. Storage places 7. Sprite 8. Tobog- ganist 11. To be . in . debt 13. Roundup 15. Shield . 19. Japanese island group 20. Little girl CnriRTWWA6LEPlNSeA6... THAT BCTlS ME... J ' rHI,aoI,MNOTSTDPPlNy,,ERPENbAL0T OF 1 I TtH WE I - I'VE JUST POPPEW TIME ON "YER OWN, - zgHZL ( JjlPP J BACK FOR ME r-ff yY KNOW, PET AVE HZK ONE kll ffij S! ": CREVC& a, EVER THOUGHT TOE'ouseV teJffi J&3C m.n jl. Jfr : oW- JL Mnj$ LE jl MTMVP 11. it FI tures. I had always been in terested in movies, and in 19G5 I bought my first movie camera. The first thing I did with it was a five minute visual takeoff on "A Thurber Carnival." A short while later John worked on his first professional film, a 23-minute color pro duction on family planning for the N.C. Population- Center. He was editing and sound engineer for the film, which left ham out of the actual shooting, but he was paid for his work, and it was a start. The film had its first showing i3 Singapore. "My first really ambitious film attempt started in July, 1967, when I started working on a film for the Murdock Center. It started out pretty simply, but gradually we uplifted our standards and pretty soon we were making film for national distribu tion," The film, now in its final editing stages, is a 5()-minu!te show on mental retardation in chUdiren. John put in about 180 hours of work on it including shooting, editing and sound recording. "NASA contacted the depart ment and asked them Ito supply a photographer to cover the astronauts work during their tucky,- lies deep in Appalachia. stay at Chapel Hill," John Its people are descendants of says. "I got the job of being the men' and women who set the photographer." tied the country in Revolu- "They supplied me with the tionary times and their ways film and all I did was follow have not changed much in the the spacemen around in the past two hundred years. They Planetarium and to their news are good Christians, according conference, (recording .to their lights Bible Chris everything they did on film." tiaras. They do mot hold with John admits he had a lot of such vanities as church fun doing the job, and spent denominations and salaries for about 10 hours actal shooting preachers. The Bible says time. He was later commended nothing about denominations by NASA for "fine shooting un- and nobody paid the Apostle der adverse conditions." Paul for preaching. So it is not For the future, John has the surprising that the preacher at Murdock film to complete, and Broke Neck Mission made few is negotiating with Benson converts. Aircraft Co. to do a film on The preacher was a good their one-man gyrocopters. Christian too, according to has His long-range goal is to lights, which were firmly fixed work on the production level in on a narrow range. He could television and films . with the not understand why he became Radio and Television Com- so freouentlv and vMenHv em- massion of the Southern Baptist Ctarwention in Font Worth, Tex - as. - He's come a long way since those early days with the Jams Thurberi film. 21. Manned air defense group 22. Polishes 23. Eccen tric 24. Fellow 25. Frac tured 27. Domesday "laioiwiL rpiAiMis I CjUR I O fALTA TIE urT N M.sl5, W- ETDiTCitelirps 2k A 2 Eel 5. WlZ rTe l i eFjQGLTojw o ; 3 u is HEIR E a j msTlLlE GJn e S LOO PlHNlOlMlA p T E NO Rf IS L ATE fc-jplEllMlvt .SiDIGIEt Saturday's Answer 34. Winged god 35. Two toed sloth 37.Con-stel-. la- Book money 29. Occur rence 30. Exhibi- tions 31. Endeavor: Scot. 32. Man's nickname tion m y. m W Wy irsr t 1 1 1:1 1 1 1 M&r&s FreeiinceF Amd New Kern tucky 'Tale Broke Neck. Ken. orouea wjiuu suioiey r awier, a leading citizen of 'the ' com-. munity. Anybody in Broke Neck would tel. you that Sud is a good neighbor and a good family man. But, as his cousin Froney says, he lis "the ail outest man, whatever he does, the Lord ever made." Whether Sud is hoeing corn or hunting squirrels or rounding up votes for the Republican Party or picking his guitar, he does it with all his heart, and anyone who gets in the way usuaMy wishes he hadn't. It was the preacher's bad luck to tangle wfflh Sud on several occasions. After the business with the hound dogs - A.. PENNANTS I 'I I i I RED & BLUE NIGHTSHIRTS BEER MUGS yZJ ' Freelancer John Stokes . . . shoots a scene for one of his movies. Book Tells and the polecat he should have known enough to stay dear, and after the cow got stuck on the stairs he surely should have. But the preacher was just plain foolish about what he called "folk music," and Sudley knew the old songs "Shady Grove" and. "Foreign Landers" and the others and was a master hand with a guitar. So the preacher kept coming back until , the naghit when everything broke loose. After the. arrest and the shooting the' newspapers and television took it up and made ' a big thing of it. But if the preacher had only stayed where he belonged, there wouldn't have been any trouble 1 or anyway, not so much. Janice Holt Giles, who knows Appalachia from the inside, shows it to us through this story of a people who don't like to walk proud but will always stand by their own. SHADY GROVE is a novel that is in its way a social document, but one that makes us laugh at the same time it touches our heart. Whether Mrs. Giles & s writing about early days on the American frontier (as in HAN NAH FOWLER) or the Civil War (RUN ME' A RIVER) or Appalachia 40 ACRES AND NO MULE) or the Rocky Mountain fur tradling country (THE GREAT ADVENTURE), her books are distinguished by their authenticity ' and a wonderful feeling for the coun try and She people she describes. TM SO PROUD I JUST PICKED. OUT A UNIQUE GIFT FOR 1IY GIRL FRIEND FROBI ANIMALS Campus Calendar ; There will be an important but short meeting of the . Academic Affairs Committee today at 4 p.m. in Roland Parker 3. All members are re quested to attend. CWC, Booklet Committee on ly, will meet in Roland Parker 3 from 4:30.to 6 today. - Auditions are now being held for the University Gleecnen. Contact Robert Porco of the Music Department' for an ap :poinitment. - ; "' ' - Applications for Corning Glass Works Foundation Traveling Fellowships must be .turned in to Dean C. S. George in 100 Carroll Hall before Feb. L- f The first Art Class of Odum "' Victory Village Day Ctr., on Mason Farm Road The class includes work in pen amd ink,. &affieoal and water .color pain- mi yout college fetters here Today Z3L3IJ(5 : now at your local store Train for six months. And we'll give you about worth of assets to manego. How's that sound for reoponsibility? Here's the deal. You successfully complete Atlantic i Richfield's Marketing Training Program which takes from four to six months. Then, you'll be responsible for the success of about 15 Atlantic Richfield Service stations. Worth about $2 million. You'll make them grow. Recruit dealers. Turn them i into successful businessmen by guiding them in sales, financial and operational management. , And from this assignment, you can grow into line and staff management of sales, advertising, market Sparks are flying at AtfanticRichlieldGompany Jpakina things happen with petroleum cnorciy A I 1 A. Sfudi TTD Bt DICK BROOM -Specie! to The DaUy Tar Heel John Carberry is a roan in love with the United States and with UNC. This affair began last fall when be came here from Australia to work on his M.A degree, in the Department f Radio, Television and Motion Pictures. He claims to be "from all over no place in particular," but his deep British accent narrows that down to som e p 1 a c e in the United Kingdom. ' - For the past three years, this middle-aged man with greying hair and lively blue eyes has worked as the agricultural ad visor for a 5,000 square m2e district in Australia. He was' the "general prac titioner of agriculture," having obtained his license to practice , a degree in agricultural economy from Oxford University. His main job was to help farmers with problems concerning crops, livestock and fertilizer deficiency. "Farmers would contact me about all kinds of matters, but . the most prevalent problem was the need for more artificial fertilizers," he says. He found that in order to give advice to more people more quickly, it was worthwhile to tape farm pro grams dealing with the most widespread problems and to broadcast these throughout bis district. "This is how I became in terested in broadcasting. It's very exciting." Last summer Carberry recorded several- agricultural scripts in London. They were flown to Australia, and broad cast by the Australian Broad casting Commission to all nairts of the oountrv. The BBC has asked him to produce three television pro- grams on oimerenic aspects oi, 4 v IMPORTED $95 aND $K95 : 77 P 7TI - flii . u. yjt3T Hgisr nir e JbroaoicasiiiMS Mere American agriculture. . -"So far, 1 havent been abje to come up wi-i any good ideas," he said. "I don't really know where to start," Why did John Carberry come to UNC? 1 had the radio on coe morning while I was eating breakfast The announcer said something about a broad casting course at a school in America. I didn't even know there was such a thing, but I thought it would be interesting So, here I am." Druing his spare time, he works as an anaouncer for WUNC-FM. When Carberry leaves Carolina, probably at the end of the summer session, he will have "Che big job of looking for H DOWNTOWN hi' Hi DURHAM The Quality Sale oi the Year Our Greatest H to 7 on our entire stock of Famous Brand Men's O o JL luterwearo Shirts o Sweaters Nowhere In this area will you find a clearance with so complete a representation of famous-make men's fine clothing, furnishings, and hats. All are from our regular stock of such famous names as Society Brand, .Eagle, Kingsridge, Cricketeer, J&F, French Sarin er, Dobbs Daks and many others. Here are savings too good to miss! So the earlier you shop, the greater the selection. Student Charge Accounts invited or use your BANXAMIRICASI GREAT ST0tS TO SERVE YOU 2 million resssrch, sales promotion, real estate, training and employee relations. From tht word "go," it demands a take-charge kind of guy. Responsible. Persistent Able to do it your way with only limited supervision. If it's responsibility you want ask your Placement Office to arrange an interview with the Atlantic Richfield Marketing representative. He's due on your campus on February 12th. tro tuv mmt a job," as he puts it He would like to combine his knowledge fof agricu-ture with work in broadcasting possibly on a television farm program. But no natter what he does, he wants to remain in the United States. The people I've met here are the finest I've ever met anywhere in the world. Why, I'm more at home here than I W3S at home." A sunken ship becomes, in effect, an artificial reef that provides a heaven for fish. Fishing experts experimentally are dumping old streetcards, automobiles, and other bulky refuse into the ocean to pro vide more homes for marine life, thus betr fishing. jNCaTHGATE m 'opcoats Agent ortcoats o Hats ii A V
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 11, 1968, edition 1
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