Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 9, 1968, edition 1 / Page 3
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Wednesday. (W.w n 1968 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pae 3 Tempo's Tracy Bragg 6 .Hey Trace Hub 9 09 gryo rrnm By JOHN REB1LER DTI 1 Staff Writer -wty Jrace' short Bu" What re havin', Fargo?" . What kind of whiskey you drink, gin?" y y "No, Scotch." uood, I you." can drink with f j it u sir n or it DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schmbel Tracy Bragg Takes A Break From Duties , . . Chief Sandwich-Maker At The Tempo Room. Campus Calendar PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM will be held at 4 p.m. in Room 215, Phillips Hall. Professor Donald S. McClure will speak on 'Spin Wave Spectros copy in Antiferromagnetic Crystals.' j YACK photo appointment cards may be picked up from 12-5 p.m. in Y-Court today through Friday. ; BOTANY SEMINAR will be held at 5 p.m. in Coker HalL Professor Th. Eckardt will DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Extend 5. Soreness 9. Smooth J.O. Jaws 12. Outer covering 13. Verrazano Narrows, for Instance 14. First-rate 15. Canal between N. and Bait. Seas 16. Pronoun 17. Engaged, as gear teeth 19. Notch 21. Printer's measures 22. Lively dance 23. Peak 26. Meaning 27. Jacob's son 28. Lair 29. Incite 30. Christian festival 34. Denial 35. Partly open 37. Crooked 38. Bowler's hazard 40. Terrible 41. Scoff 42. Some derelicts 43. Secretary, for Instance 44. Cuchulain's wife DOWN 1. cut 2. Parts of windows 3. Conjunction 4. Compass point 5. 160 square rods 6. "The Hour," 1934 play by Lillian Hellman 7. Concealed 8. Jet and others 9. Child's carriage I DON "THINK HOCKEY PLAYER AT AM v - Tracy Bragg may not have invented the sandwich, but as far as the Tempo Room is concerned, he's the one that has made it popular. ("Tracy, I thought talis were 45 cents." "No, I'm sorry, That's what you get for thinking. It's a bad thing.") Tracy started cooking 11 " 1 11 ' h- ft ;! V speak on 'Problems in finding natural relationships within orders as demonstrated in the Centrospermae.' Tea will be served at 4:45 p.m. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB meets in Chase Cafeteria at 5:45 p.m. The program is the" International Film Series. FRIENDS of the College concert at N.C. State University features 'Fiesta Mexicana' at 8 p.m. tonight. 11. Colonize 13. Offers 15. Lear's faithful follower 18. Pauses 20. Even: poet. 23. Rings loudly 24. Rever berate 25. Poetic time 26. Scorch 28. Letter opening 31. Thread 32. Solecism Yetterday'a Answer 33. Cereal grains 36. Yank 39. Golf mound 40. Not bright 42. Pronoun mm -1-l , -Pm. n '" 'I'M1!""!?! ClATNTAlD I AINU R A EYE OA PfTijJ Q I TaIi ns? JhSiI VA V f h fef ' ' a " i'5 WZZWJZZW n '8 25 14 2S W1 ir 52 3i Z .J&'L ?M WM T THAT WRE A T OLfA rffrS 7ST IUn REAL HOCKEY L T A V PlAVEfc! J VS0 WN7 1 -J1 J l -J Flg SHOW 1-3-5-7-9 years ago at the Rathskeller as a means of relaxing from fixing juke boxes. ("Fixing juke boxes is confining work people call you up at night to come fix their juke box.") Later, while he was working for the Alcoholic Beverage Control as an undercover agent, he met Pete Galifianakis, one of Nick .Galifianakis younger brothers. ("My job was to locate places handling alcoholic beverages illegally moonshine and so on. My father and wife made me quit because it was risky sometimes.") Galifianakis bought the Tempo in 1964 and Tracy went to work for him. He's been making sandwiches and talking to students ever since. "I try to joke with the kids and talk to them so they like the place. I try to recognize them when they come in. It makes them feel like they have a place." Tracy (he jokes that he was named after Fort Bragg) is a big man. With his tie, dress shirt and cigar, he looks like a football coach or old timey politician. Tracy weighs 222 lbs. now, but when he played fullback for Durham's Hillside High 20 years ago, he weighed 230. ("I live differently now," he says explaining his weight loss. "I get a different kind of exercise now.") "I was pretty good. Against Wahington High in Raleigh (now Ligon High) I ran one, let me see, 82 yards. That was my best gam a I forgot the year that was." He was good enough for North Carolina College to offer him a scholarship. ("Hi shorty, how're you doin'," he greets a female customer.) "I never like to spoil a female. They can very easily be spoiled," he says to a customer talking to a girl. "I never argue with one, either. When my wife gets angry with me, I walk off." Tracys size and his experience as a Golden Gloves boxer helps him cope with . potential troublemakers. "I have very little trouble. Mostly it's when people that aren't students and don't have too good an education start talking to a student about something. The student makes his points and sometimes the other one doesn't accept what .the student says." ("Tracy, what's wrong with the picolo." "Nothing." "How Scot Dance Lessons Begin Introductory classes in Scottish Country Dancing will be offered for the first time this fall at the University of North Carolina here, every Sunday evening for eight weeks, beginning Oct. 13. The classes will meet from 7:30-9:30 p.m. in Roland Parker Lounge in the Graham Memorial Building. Teaching the course will be Dr. and Mrs. David Onn of Chapel Hill. Onn is a research associate-instructor in the Physics Department His wife is a graduate student in the School of Social Work. Both are members of the Triangle Scottish Dancers of Durham, an affiliated group of the Royal Scottish Country Dance Society of Edinburg, Scotland (R.S.C.D.S.). Sponsored by the Carolina Union, the classes are open to all members of the UNC community, who have no about turning it up just a Utile, then.") . a "We keep it a decent place. We always like for parents to come in. When Pete took over the Tempo, the place had a reputation due to the sortjOl people that came in. No respect for girls, loud talk and such, always embarrassing females." ("Tracy takes care of girls who come in here by themselves," a girl sitting at the bar says.) "I meet a lot of people down here. I enjoy learning people," he says leaning against the bar. "I get close to people before I know their name." "Trace, you see Johnny Carson last night? You see Tiny Tim on last year?" "No, don't watch it Don't like it That Tiny Tim, he can't show me nothin' " Somebody at the bar asked Tracy if the clock wasn't a little fast "We run the clock 10 minutes fast more or speed people up." less to ("Hey, . Trace, fix me somethin i good.") "It's illegal to sell after a quarter til midnight" "Hey, Tracy, that clock's a little fast." "Thank you." Tracy put two slices of bread in the toaster, picked up his knife and spread mayonaise on a bun. "I once made a combination sandwich with five different items on it: ham, salami, bologna, turkey and pastrami. It fed four people. Cost the customer $3.50." ("You've got to watch Tracy," said one person. "When you're not looking he'll stick toothpicks in your sandwich.") "Tracy, how many you have?" "Four." "How many wives?" Tracy laughs. kids do "Evervbodv used to kid me. They'd call me the father of Orange County." Sometimes students come in and talk their problems over with Tracy. He doesn't mind, though. Like he says, he enjoys knowing people. "There's nothing wrong with drinking if you're strong enough to control it," he says. "To get intoxicated to solve a problem isn't a cure. Come back to your common sense and you've still got the problem." "Trace, I'm hungry. What's good?" "Oh, 'bout everything. How 'bout ham and cheese?" experience in Scottish Country Dancing. Interested persons should pay registration fees of $2 for the course as soon as possible. No new dancers will be admitted after the third class meeting. Many of the dances were first written down in Scotland about 200 years ago, although the earliest verbal tradition of that land makes their origins hard to find. The traditional dances had almost disappeared when, in 1923, the R.S.C.D.S. was formed and collected more than 400 compositions from ancient libraries and fading memories. The society now has 20,000 members worldwide. New dances are again being composed in traditional, and not quite so traditional style. Some of these more recent dances will also be taught in the course. Scottish dances have been r S V ... i r v I t jr THE NATIONAL ENSEMBLE OF night at 8 p.m. in Memorial HalL it i 7 . . . , lui orcnestra seats) and 1 (for '69 Maid Of Cotton Search To Come Here October 26 By MARY BURCH DTH Staff Writer Representatives of the National Cotton Council are beginning their annual search of the major colleges and universities for qualified candidates to participate in the 1969 Maid of Cotton Contest. Maid of Cotton Tour Manager Trudye Weaks will be interview qualified candidates here October 23. Anyone who is interested in applying should contact Assistant to the Dean of Women Lynn Lanham before Miss Weak's visit. - The girl who is chosen Maid of Cotton 1969 will be a representative and ambassador for the National Cotton Industry for six monthsr She will go to New York Tor "a months preparation before opening her tour in Canada. She will be outfitted in a high fashion all-cotton wardrobe for her travels, which will take her to 28 cities in the United Stat.s besides appearances in Canada and overseas. At the end of her reign, the Cotton Maid will drive home in her 1969 Ford with a complete wardrobe designed and created for her by some of the world's adapted and integrated with other dances in the lands where Scotsmen, who migrated from the country years ago, settled. ..J Luxurious arolma NOW YOU CAN ENJOY MOVIES EVEN MORE BECAUSE OF "ULTRA-VISION" More Vivid Color Constant Ligfe Flow Mere Depth . No Distortion Startling Realism "ULTRA-VISION" WED. OCT. 9th Sir Laurence Olivier in William Shakespeare's t 'j V v r. MALI will perform tomorrow at sneeial studpnt rates nf S2 balcony and rear downstairs). ' r leading designers. given a $1500 She will be educational award. In order to be eligible for the Maid of Cotton selection a coed must never have been married, be between the ages of 19 and 23 inclusive, be at least 5 feet 5 inches tall and have been born in one of the following cotton-producing states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas or Virginia or have been, born in a cotton-producing county in Illinois (Alexander, Jefferson, . Massac, Pulaski, Williamson, Madison) or Nevada (Clark or Nye Countiesj.t- t x.-:: if a girl qualifies, she should fill out an official application form and mail it with photographs of herself before December to National Cotton Council, P.O. Box 12285, Memphis, Tenn. 38112. Twenty finalists are selected from the applications - in December and invited to participate in the finals held after Christmas in Memphis, Tenn. Following two days of Some men think the only way to get a good, close shave is with a blade. If that's what you think, we'd like to tell you something about the NorelcoTripleheader Speedshaver. In a very independent laboratory, we had some very independent men shave one 1 1968 North American 0 . These authentic African dancers tour, and this appearance will be personal interviews, the winner is chosen on the basis of beauty, personality, background and training. A tour manager and a secretary, carefully selected 28 In Toronto Group The names of members of the 1968-69 Tornoto Exchange were announced Sunday by co-chairmen Jane Patrick and Steve Barefoot Twenty-eight regulars and four alternates were selected to host the Canadians during their visit to Chapel Hill Nov. 21-25, and then travel to the University of Toronto semester break. Those chosen were Nancy Aycock, Kathy Ayers, Sally Bland, Bobbie Colten, Beth Feree, Kay Giddens, Susan Kayler, Caroline Lane, Toby Newton, Bett Sanders, Bonnie Schultz, Mary Sitterson, Ellen Sugg, Tay Wilkins, Danielle Withrow and Dianne Woods. Also Domodar Airan, Stan Davis, Chris Ferguson, Sam Fulk, Steve Fuller, Ben Hawfield, Cri Hilmer, Stan Hubbard, Bill Lee, Larry side of their faces with a lead ing stainless steel blade, and the other side with a new Norelco Tripleheader. The results showed the Tripleheader shaved as close or closer than the blade in 2 out of 3 shaves. The Tripleheader has three rotary blades inside new, thin, MicrogrooveTM heads that 'float,' so it follows your face, to shave you closer. Philips Company, Inc.. 100 East 42nd Street. New York. N.Y. 10017 v t have just completed a European their only one in the area. and trained by the National Cotton CounciC chaperone the Maid and take full responsibility for schedules and day to day arrangement for the winner. Lynch, Gary Macbeth, Bob Manekin, Phil Metcalf, Doug Morgan, Bill Riggan, and Ran Smith. "I don't see how the caliber of applicants could have been better," said Barefoot. "The committee had a very difficult time making the final choices. About 245 persons applied, with 175 coming through interviews. This is a large increase over last year and we hope it's an indication of the growing interest in the program." "There were many not chosen who would contribute greatly to the Exchange," he said, "but there necessarily has to be a limit to the number participating. We hope those who had to be turned down will not lose interest in the program and will take part in activities during Exchange weekend." The Tripleheader has a pop-up sideburn trimmer. A bandy, coiled cord. And a 1 10 220 voltage selector. It comes in both a Cord and a Rechargeable model. And it won't pull or nick or cut. Because it shaves your beard. Not your face. Worea oreiccr you cant jj x any closer
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 9, 1968, edition 1
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