Thursday, February 22. 19C8
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By SIIARI WILLS
of Th Daily Tar Heel Ptdff
This afternoon you may see
a bunch of students cavorting
on a mule-drawn wagon. You
may also wonder who they are,
and why they are doing this.
These students are members
of the Society for the
Preservation of Buck Taylor's
Mutton and Shoats. The wagon
ride is a traditional precedent
to their banquets and the
winter banquet will be held
tonight.
This is an eating society
established in 19C5 that
espouses the qualities of wit,
i m a gination, gregariousnes3 .
and good taste.
The organization is limited to
15 members. This year's mem
bership in the Groaning Board
consists of Chief Chitterling
(president) Nat Norton, tjie
Silk Purse (treasurer) John
Egbert, the Sow's Ear
(secretary) George Teague,
Charles Brethen, John Callan,
Brooks Carey, Andy Gaylon,
Bruce Logue, Henry May,
Grant McClintock, Jeff
McNelly, James Parott, David
Poer, Robert Winton, and John
Yates.
Several black-tie banquets
are held during the year, as
well as fall and spring picnics
held at the home of the
society's advisor, or Chaw
Bacon, Dr. Stephen Baxter,
and at the gravesite of the im
mortal Buck Taylor, first
steward of the University.
It seems that Col. John
"Buck" Taylor (of George
W a s h i ngton's Continential
Army) was in 1793 a patriot
out of work. So he took a job
as chef at the newly organized
University of North Carolina
and apparently served in this
capacity quite creditably for,
UNC Student
Will Exhibit
A graduate student in art at
the University of North
Carolina has had a sculpture
accepted for exhibition in the
annual Ball State University
Drawing and Small Sculpture
Show, which opens in Muncie
Indiana, on March 10.
The piece done by Frederick5
Dail Dixon, Jr., a native of
Raleigh, is a plywood sculpture
"Microenvironment."
DAILY CROSSWORD
AC2053
1. Treat for
Miss
Mufret
6. Privtltsra
11. Pungent
vegetatla
32. Peace
goddess
13. One's heir
14. Dauphin
13. Exclama
tion v
16. Poured
icy rain
17. Excl&ma.
tlon
19. Ululate
20. Amphibious
campaign
site in
wwn
22. Knight's
title
25. Dissuade
23. French
river .
23. Being
23. Large,
brown
bears
51. Small
Island
52. Greek
letter
53. Besmirch
S3. Alleged
force
37. Opine
3. Equal
49. City in
Ohio
41. City in
' Switzer
land 43. Bock,
ginger and
others
44. Floating
DOWN
1. Together:
prefix
2. Steady
3.
Grande
4. Put on
6. Tin: eya.
C. Forest
ranger,
for one -
7. Sprite
8. Aperture
9. Formerly
10. Bamboo
like grass
14. Till
15. Dwelling
16. Worsted
suitings
18. Strikes
5TANDINS BESIDE
THERE ScR GO AGAIN
IM A OP XER
NO THOUGHT FOR AMYEOV
BUT NUMBER
IToniE;
no
two years.
But in 1735, a "whigish"
group of undergraduates, spoil
ing for a protest, staged what
is believed to be the first
i; " - - - . Jv" ''
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- r-.
if
Industrial
The immense range of the
product designer's influence
"from bobby pins to space
capsules" will be the subject of
slides and two lectures to be
given here by a noted in
dustrial designer on February
22 and 29.
Walter P. Baermann, Presi
dent and Treasurer of Walter
P. Baermann Associates, Inc.,
industrial designers located in
Raleigh, will speak at 8 p.m. in
room 115 Ackland Art
Building.
Baermann, who is Senior
Professor of Product Design,
at ;- North Carolina S t a t e -University,
will talk about
human engineering, con
servation of materials,
21
Com.
pass
point
22. Fly
aloft
23. Antique
. , con
tainers for
writing
fluid
24. Do over
Yesterday's Aaiwer
a lawn
27. Greeting
SO. Malt
beverages
31. Ethereal
fluid
33. Palmyra
palm
34. Body of
water
35. Measure
of land
33. Bench-like
seat
39. Constel
lation 41. Bleat
42. Exclamation
n
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ad a gtef fly ens
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fVTHiNKIN CUTlAKPS
A mmm m A
recorded student uprising in
the country.
Taylors "mutton was too fat
and his shoats were too
tough," the students
:'
Buck Shoaters prepare for banquet . .
Designer
engineering mechanics, new
materials and their meaning
and the impact of exploding
technology. Baermann ' hopes
also to "convey cultural -implications
and , above all,
ethical implications" of new
technological systems.
Baermann Associates has a
staff of eight industrial
designers who specialize in
product design, reseach, and
development rather than ap
pearance design.
Recent work done, by
Baermann includes design of
medical equipment, luggage,
industrial packaging for
television tubes, phonograph
amplifier,'" hew" : inventions of
plastic lock, office and hospital
INTERNATIONAL Forum at 8
p.m. in the ISC (Carr
Dorm). Informal discussion
, on the possibility of a united
Europe, led by Jeffrey Obler
of the Political Science
Depart. Foreign students will
be participating. Coffee will
be served and all interested
students are invited.
MATHEMATICS . Colloquium
on "Exterior Powers of
Formal Groups" by Prof.
J.D. Lubin of Brown
University at 4 p.m. in 332
Phillips. Coffee and tea in
385 Phillips at 3:30 p.m. All.
invited,.
SOPHOMORE nurses will be
waitresses at Chase
Cafeteria from 5 p.m. until 7
p.m. to raise money for a
service project.
"MODEANE Gunch Variety -Show"
sponsored, produced,
directed and presented by
the freshman nurses,
premieres at 8 p.m. in Mor
rison social lounge. All in
vited; 25 cents charge.
WASHINGTON'S Birthday
Bash in the Naval Armory, 9
to p.m., with the One-eyed
Jacks. Admission 22 cents.
INTERVIEWS for president of
the Graham Memorial
Activities Board will be held
in the Grail Room from 2:30
p.m. until 4 p.m. All in
terested students are urged
to fill out application forms
FEBJN6 THE
ACE THR00)6 A SNCXOBALL
ATONE OF HI5 MECHANICS..,
O o
. o
MATE
MS.
M I . ' ' V
H ITCY AN MAKES
VONsPSRON I
j '
declared. .
So they overturped
outhouse ana ran mm. r.
Chapel Hill. He was
buried "standing up" atop a
J" V- V.
. '
T. "Vat
s
DTH Photo by Steve Adams
To
furniture, development of new
construction and automatic
assembly of upholstered
furniture, and design engineer
ing of agricultural grain feed
system.
Dr. Baermann who holds the
Ph.D. degree from the
University of Munich, has had
35 years experience in private
industrial design practice. He
has been chief designer with
several leading U.S. architec
tural and design offices, in
cluding that of the late
Norman Bel Geddes. He is the
former director of. the
graduate schools of design, at
California Institute of
Technology and Cranbrook
" Academy " : - - ; !
Speak
Campus Calendar
and to sign up for interview
at the GM Information
Desk.
MULTI-PURPOSE Center on
Church St. needs volunteers
to move furniture from
Chapel Hill to Carrboro any
morning this week. Call 942
2155 if have questions.
FRESHMAN Honors Program
at UNC will be discussed in
an open meeting at 7 p.m. in
the 7th floor Morrison
Lounge. All students,
especially past and present
honors students, are in
vited. BEL AIR, Md. school system
will recruit prospective
teachers at the School of
Education.
HARKNESS Ballet at
Memorial Hall, 8 p.m.
'AH, WILDERNESS' at
Playmakers' Theatre at 8
p.m.
CAROLINA DeMolay Club
meets at 6:30 p.m. at Chase
Cafeteria. All DeMolays are
invited.
TUTOR training meeting for
all Y tutors at 4 p.m. in
Murphey Auditorium. All
tutors are expected to at
tend. MEHER BAB A Henry
Kashouty, a judge and
lawyer from Hampton, Va.,
will speak on his master
Meher Baba at 8 p.m. in
Gerrard Hall.
ACTUALLY GENERAL P3iiNS
JICT MATE5 TO SEE VS
THROWING
...EVEN IP
IT'S JUST
-V o tool
a o
1 rv
1 F f
iamd9
hod overlooking Chapel HjH so
that "he might keep an eve cn
the slaves working in the fields
below."
The several banques held by
the society are preceded by a
ride on a mule-drawn wagon.
From the banquets,
members bring in their own
chef, food and wine (usually
transported from Washington
ia a '59 Chevy).
The society's winter banquet
will be held tonight at the Blah
House. The chef will be Dr.
Robert Logue, renowned Atlan
ta heart specialist and father
of one of the members.
Tonight's menu consists of
Shrimp Bisque; a salad of
hearts of palm, mushrooms
and bib lettuce; Tournedos
Rosini aux Madiera;
Artichokes et Petit Pois;
Potatoes Nicoise; Charlotte
Malakoff aux Fraises; and
Grand Mariner. With the soup
and salad, they will have a
white wine, Pinot Chardonnery
1964; with the filet, a red wine,
Beaujolais Chateau Portier
1966.
'NY- Cafe Sponsors
Movie ComBetition
The Cafe Figaro in New
York, in order to give non
professional film makers an au
dience, has begun a series of
monthly film competitions. The
films will be screened nightly
at the Cafe Figaro as part of
its film program. And at the
end of each month the film
judged to be the superior sub
mitted that month shall be
awarded a prize of $100.
At the end of twelve months
an annual prize of $1,000 will
be awarded to the best of the
twelve monthly winners.
The film entered must be 16
mm, 100 feet (black & white or
color), uncut, not edited or
spliced or arranged and
without benefit of "special"
laboratory processing, but one
continuous film made in the
camera.
The film will be judged by: "
,,(1) The artist's approach to
ALL GRADUATE men are
cordially invited to a mixer
at Kenan Dorm from 8 p.m.
to midnight.
COFFEEHOUSE Rendezvous,
a short film on student
operated coffeehouses will be
shown at 7 p.m. in the
Fellowship Room of the
Presbyterian Student Center.
All members of the
Crossroads Cafe Planning
Committee and other " in
terested students are urged
to attend. An informal
discussion and planning
session will follow.
CAROLINAChristian
F ellowship (Inter-Varsity)
meets at 7:30 p.m. in the stu
dent lounge of the Episcopal
Church (Chapel of the
Cross). All are welcome,
refreshments served.
JUDEA Reform Congregation
Sabath services will be held
Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Temple Baptist Church in
Durham. Guest speaker is
the Rev. Juluis Corpening on
"The Role of the Congrega
tion in the Community."
CANCELLED is the lecture
to be given by Hector A.
Murena, managing editor of
a Buenos Aires literary
magazine. The meeting was
to be held at 8 p.m. in Dey
Hall Cancelled.
' i
36th
Annual
: SPRING
BARGAIN
S
Now Showing
10 a.m. to 10 p.m.!
The Intimate
Bookshop
Chapel Hill
LE!
By FRANK BALLARD
cf The Daly Ter Heel Stiff
A large red balloon
behaved like a lost dog, with a
friendly passerby brought
laughter and murmurs of ap-
proval from Film Society
members at the season's se
cond program Monday right.
Written and directed by
Albert Lamorisse, "The Red
Balloon" won an Academy
Award for the Best Original
Screenplay and Special Awards
from the Cannes and Edin
burgh Film Festival in 1S3S.
The friendly passerby was
Pascal Lamorisse, a mop-topped
bright-eyed little Parisian
boy. He's the type that aunts
and grandmothers coo over
and spoil.
Scrambling up a light-post to
untie a stranded balloon,
Pascal begins a friendship that
death will end and "all the
balloons in Paris' will
mourn.
As long as they are together,
the balloon gets his rescuer in
trouble. Forbidden to carry it
on a street-car, Pascal runs to
school and is late.
Jealous schoolmates and
street urchins persistently try
to snatch the prize from him.
The old lady who takes care of
him forces him to leave it
outside their apartment.
The balloon solves the pro
blem it has created by "learn
ing" to follow the boy at a
distance, gliding along with a
JL
the medium of film as an art;
(2) Content, though completely
unrestricted, should have
meaning to our judges as well
as the audience; (3) The use
of the camera under the
restriction imposed; (4) The
success of combining the first
three critiques.
The film for any month'
contest must be mailed to the
Cafe Figaro with the negative
and the name of the processor
before the 15th of that
particular month. The film will
be returned on request.
The three judges (whose
knowledge of film and-or ex
perience qualify them) each
with one vote will decide on the
winning film on the last day of
each month. The audience
shall have one. vote and so will .
the owner of the Cafe Figaro.
The film receiving three of the
five votes will be judged win
ner. The negative, of course,
will be examined.
The reasons for the restric
tions is to narrow the dif
ference between the amateur
and the professional film
maker. Also, we hope the
restrictions of making this sort
of film "in the camera" is a
challenge which might lead to
some new ideas in the art of
film.
For further information
write: Tom Ziegler, c-o Cafe
Figaro, 186 Bleecker Street,
New York City, New York.
cio08 00 w)
INTERVIEWS FOR
GMAB PRESIDENT
ANNOUNCED
. Mary Ann Fulton, President
of Graham Memorial Activi
ties Board, announced today
that applications for next
year's president are now
available at the Graham Me
morial Information Desk.
Persons Interested in the
position should pick up an
application and sign up for
an interview. Interviews will
be held Thursday, February
22, from 2:30 until 4:00 p.m..
and Monday, February 25,
from 5:00-6:00 p.m. in the
Grail Room.
cf its Cipro. The frkr.dl
baJooa learns to obey lis
rsrsters wishes and thereby
survive the hazards cf the ci
ty. like a puppy eager to exhibit
new tricks, it waits outside
forbidden places when the boy
aggies his firrer to it and ex
plains that he'll soon return.
When the boy shrills "balloon,
balloon" it races to his side in
obedience.
But like all things magical,
their friendship cannot last.
Wylaid by a gang . cf older
boys, the chOd is captured
after a breathless run through
the dark, narrow allyes. and
vacant lots of the city. ..
Squirming and flailing, he is
held and forced to watch his
wonderous new friend
destroyed. Stung by a sling
shot, the brilliant scarlet skin
begins to shrink and blisters,
and finally melts into a dull
red lump quivering before an
urchin's dirty boot stomps it
gleefully.
At that monent of senseless
degradation, balloons
throughout the city are seized
by the same life force which
infected the red balloon. Jerk
ing from their, owners' hands
and floating to the red
balloon's death scene they sur-
round the boy before he
has
time to mourn his friend.
. The boy clutches with
eagerness so many sym
pathetic balloons that he i3
lifted first a few inches, then
completely
above the
off ; the : ground,
roofs and dirty
streets below.
Charles Aznavour starred in
the second film of the pro
gram, "Shoot The P i a n o
Player." New . Wave artist
Francois Truff aut directed this
I960 movie, writing the script
and dialogue.
A . timid, intense concert
pianist reduced to playing
spint
iProjectBiue Blood
Pledge form for the blood
Towers. .
Name '
Phnna
Campus Address '
(Parental Permission forms will be sent to all persons
under 21 years of age at a later date.)
Clip this form and send it to Box F, Granville
Towers, if you want to participate in the drive.
Most Any Tima Day or Uit
Stop by Our
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BOBBY GENTRY
snd
Glen Campbell
To Appear
The newly-formed Bobbie
Gentry Show, led by singer
dancer Bobbie Gentry and
jnaking its first major con
cert tour will be appearing
in Carmichael Auditorium
at 8:00 p.m. Wednesday night,
March 6.
Appearing with Bobbie
Gentry will be Glen Camp
bell, well-known for his
guitar and banjo expertise
and identified with such hits
as "By the Time I get to
Phoenix" and "Gentle on my
Mind."
Bobbie Gentry will be per
forming "Ode to Billie Joe,"
the song which won her 10
Granny nominations. She has
been praised for the subtle
intensity of her songs, and
she has been talked about
and written about by virtual
ly every major magazine.
Mademoiselle also gave her
the M'lle. Award as one of
the outstanding women cf
the year.
Tickets for the concert go
on sale Wednesday, February
21, at the Graham Memorial
Information Desk.
March 14
THE MITCH RYDER SHOW
With The Good Earth Trio (formerly UNC's The Virginians)
March 30
THE SAM AND DAVE REVIEW
fcery-ak in a Paris dive,'
A2-avocr and a barmaid are
hcuaded by two thieves seeking
Amavour's brothers.
After double-crossing the
pair, the brothers seek
refuge cne at the bar where
Ainavcur works. He gets
Amavour sufficiently involved
to be spotted by the baddies
before escaping to the family's '.
farm.
The crocks attempt to force
Aznavour and the barmaid to
lead them to the brothers.;
Eluding them, the employees
discover that each has kept an
eye cn the ether but has been
afraid to display feelings.
At the girl's apartment ap
propriate affections are ex
changed and Aznavour
discloses the reason for swap
ping concert halls for smoky
bars. His first marriage soured
his talent when it ended in the
suicide of his wife. She jumped '
from a building after con
fessing that she'd slept with a
booking agent to insure her!
husband's job security.
Willing to try love once
more, Aznavour plans a new
life with a new wife, the
barmaid, but when the cocpla
returns to the bar to quit their .'
jobs, the owner tries to
strangle his piano
player,( Aznavour) for
ccr-
rupting the barmaid.
After killing the bartender in .
self-defense, a dazed Aznavour
is taken to the farm by his
over. She Returns toe next day
m luae w,w uaiU a
gun Datue oeiwcen me
brothers and their former
partners.
Aznavour knows when to
quit. Returning to the bar, he
submerges into his protective
role of a good honky-tonk piano
player who minds his own
business and never thinks out
loud.
drive sponsored by Granville
Age
' WW I M
itwo - o y
HARKNESS BALLET
Thursday, February 22
8:C3 p.m.
Memorial Hall
Tickets available at
GM and at the rJo:r.
WEEK END FLICKS
FRIDAY El Cid
SATURDAY Thrills 2nd
Laughter plus
' MuEMngss Dsttlfhsm
SUNDAY CINEMA
Animal Farm
3