Thursday. October 10, 1968
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Page 3
UVs Tuesday -M
CHAPEL HILL - A special
television version nf hp.
'Diary of a Madman" win k.
presented on WUNC-TV
CarohnarThe Arts" series.
Play, which
presented on stage here last
spring, will be televised at 9
P-m. i uesday,
special repeat
scheduled at 3
Oct. 20.
This will
Oct. 15. A
broadcast is
p.m. Sunday,
be
the first
television
version of thp
complete work. The
production was adapted by its
star, British actor Michael
Meneaugh, and UNC English
Professor Richmond Crinkley,
from the translation by"
Andrew MacAndrew. The
television version was
developed by Roger Koonce,
executive producer and Bill
Nannah, producer- director.
A study in comic isolation,
"Diary of a Madman" tells the
story of a Russian clerk (c.
1840) whose mind disintegrates
because the people around him
neglect him so completely.
i ne original music
was
written by British
Robert Comford.
composer
Michael Meneaugh is 22
years old and an Oxford
University graduate. He began
his theatrical career at age
three as a cherub in a
Christmas pageant. Since then,
he has played a variety of roles,
including a long list of
Shakespearean parts and
Columbia Pictures version of
"Dr. Faustus."
xvieneaugn admits ne enjoys
Diary of a Madman" more
than any of the other plays he
has done. "The character is so
rich and full that one very
quickly forgets one is acting
it," he said. "The powerful
parts affect me-I have to make
a conscious effort to relax
when it's over.
1
I itbiiitAit
iarouna
WINNER
OF 3
ACADEMY
AWARDS!
stiv4
SHOWS: 1:30 -
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACBOS3
1. Selected
6. Exchange
11. A good
Hood
12. Kind ot
cooler
13. Birds
14. Season of
. . our
discontent"
15. Marry
16. KetUe
17. Land
measures
18. Effigies
21. Dish of
tomatoes,
peppers,
seasonings,
etc.
23. In this
place
27. Relative,
28. Capital of
Delaware
29. Apportion
30. Bolts
31. Thinner
33. Resort
36. Humor
37. Swab
40. Nucleus
42. Volume
43. Change
44. Small finch
45. Examina
tions 46. Enc6unters
DOWN
1. Gullet
2. Lifted
with effort
3. Dutiful
4. Little girl
5. Printer's
measure
6. String
7. Flowed
8. Sweetsop
9. Roe or
caribou
10. Blunders
14. Salary
16. Heraldic
term
19. Overnight
stop
20. Push
21. Machine
part
II
Vj
18
19
21
21
22
27
29
V?
31
21
33
34
35"
V
AO
43
4S
77777
PERIOD OF THE J A FAN AT RINK51P6 SHOUTS UjHUr ! f1 ' J DEROGATORY REMAO&!
I W H0CKEV A PER06ATOfW REMARK- . 7 A J J o '
T'LL FOLLOW VER GOWN) I f NER LCOKIN A U II fl I IT'S ALL RIGHT, ''S
T THE PUBjCKALKlE -L BIT TIREtVFLp V kLrCE 1 M ' NOT LETTIN" THE
RET ME ONE IN LW ""TEU-EBScSsi 'ST'V USlbE bOWM'
'a-to f
Crinkley, who originally
staged the drama, likes to
emphasize the tragic comedy
of the piece. He believes it
makes the overall tragedy of
the play "much more searing."
n 4tAfter laughing at
Poprischichin's delusions, the
audience gets appalled a little
bit at themselves as well as
what's happening," he noted.
Gogol himself went mad. He
drew on it and everything he
wrote is tinged with the
bizarre."
Redwoods Preserved .
SAN FRANCISCO (TJPI)
The California Redwood Asso
ciation says 142,000 acres of f
nriQCf fAln, , I V
auwuuu ia.uu. are pre
served in government parks
and reserves.
On Sanitation &
1936
The sanitary ratings of
restaurants (December 1936)
were published: Carolina
Coffee Shop in the lead with
98, University Cafeteria a
close second with 97.5,
Harry's right in there with
96.5, the Carolina Inn with
90 and Sutton's with 39.
Half and Half pipe
"mixlure" ("one swell
smoke! makes your pipe
chummy") ranked high in
popularity with the campus
crowd.
Company
Strowd Motor
sold its '35 Ford Coupes for
$450 and its Model T's for
$05
m. . ...
The movie page of the DTH
Proclaimed: Shirley
dances... Shirley sings...
She's for you and you're for
her . . . Shirley Temple in 'The
Littlest Rebel' (You'll cheer
TODAY ONLY
mi -tia'AmsoioX
A CONTINENTAL DISTRIBUTING. INC.
RE RELEASE
4 - 6:10 -8:30
22. Bewail
24. Always
25. Soak
flax
26. Bitter
vetch
28. Force
30. Wading
bird
32. Jugs
33. Widow
in
r I Be Mr tgfe g
A c EM TTpcrrr T
icTrTeis t JsIe n ste
GUT
SNE
YettterUay's Aiwr
cards
34. Goddess of
volcanoes
35. Acting and
others
38. Leave out
39. Enclosures
41. Profit
42. Mound
44. Samarium:
sym.
8
to
VTA
20 Y
7?
4
24
2S"
26
28
4
32
36
31
38
39
44
io-io
V77
11
YA7A
i
!
,
Michael Neneaugh as
. . .In TV Production
More Memorabilia
when she defies the whole
yankee army, you'll love her as
the little belle of Old Virginny
and your heart will do strange
things as she does her best to
be brave.)"
Frank Bucks starred in
"Fang and Claw"-(a ton of
thrills from the land of the 10
ton beasts.)
And an irate alumnus (class
of '05) severly criticized the
year's issue of the Buccaneer:
"When a college publication
touches on either of the two
most controversial of all
subjects religion (whether
symbolic or otherwise) andor
politics, it's time to crack
down!" (No statement was
available from Dean Bradshaw)
1947
Dance regulations for the
school year of 1947 were
established almost
immediately. (1) Chaperones
must be approved by the Board
of Chaperones. (2) Any girl
desiring to leave the dance hall
during any evening dance with
the intention, of returning must
be accompanied by "a
chaperone during her entire
stray from the dance.
(3) Anyone showing signs of
drinking will be dealt with by
the dance commission.
Meetings were called for
students interested in staging
protests and taking "drastic
action" against the "current
invasion of long skirts."
Advertisement: "The
Shack Just a whisper off
Franklin Street."
The- student handbook
arrived five months late.
Student body president
Tom Eller warned students
against gambling and drinking.
He asked that students not
fall prey to
professional
gamblers and people who have
no real interest in the
university." In regard to
drinking at football games, he
stated "the general public will
and should censure our
indiscretions."
1958
The year 1958 began in
style when two State students
were arrested for trespassing in
Kenan Stadium. The students
told police "they had never
seen beautiful Kenan Stadium
and decided to ride to Chapel
Hill to have a look at it." No
mention was made of the large
"S" which was burned into the
field the previous year.
Demands for a new student
IT.
Gogol's 'Madman
Staged By Prof. Crinkley
Security
union increased. An editorial
summarized the problem:
"Every year there is a great,
deal of outcry from the state
about wild frat parties, about
panty raids, about drinking and
about other activities that
would tend to shed a bad light
on the university, and every
year the legislature
appropriates money to many
causes without remembering
the need for a healthy outlet
for the excess energies of the
students."
"Harry's where food is on
its best behavior."
"You can get clipped for
less at the GM Barber Shop
(Just $1)."
Dorm security was
somewhat jeopardized when
night watchman John P.
Carson was found guilty on
charges of assaulting a co-ed.
They will see boys who do
nothing but play 7 card'stud in
the dorm rooms, fraternity
men who have little more to do
than drink a tall Bud, dorm
women who are too busy with
petty problems to offer
anything to the school, sorority
girls who make a farce out of
the campus code, and teachers
who care nothing for the
individual."
Trio To Participate
In Thailand Meeting
Three University of North
Carolina faculty members will
participate in a two-week
communications workshop in
Bangkok,
Thailand in
uecemDer.
The workshop is being
conducted by the Carolina
Population Center of UNC here
and the School of Public
Health at Bangkok's University
of Medical Sciences. The study
will focus on communications
aspects of family planning
programs.
The international faculty
selected to conduct the
workshop includes Robert B.
Blake, director of the
Population Center's
Educational Materials Unit,
and lecturer, Department of
Radio, Television and Motion
Pictures; Dr. Wesley H.
Wallace, Chairman,
Department of Radio
Television and Motion Pictures;
n
By BRYAN CUMMING
TH Staff Writer
M.Intxateity Council
, mgnt discussed
Dronoi r
IUI a semester
-uajnon Drncn-nrr. , j
y the Csmnitc tt-.o
nistrv, the t
a-d-Jc "3
bouses, and the problem of
noise m fraternity houses late
John Butler, one of two
E Prs with the
2S CamPus Ministry,
rttt the IFC on the
possibility of sponsoring a
campus wide program on any
selected topic for a semester
Project, similar to the
experimental college.
Butler. thelFH f!hari; f.
1968-69, has introduced similar
programs at other schools, such
as an eight-week forum on
sexuality conducted at
Michigan State Universitv
k Butler described the idea as
anything that would stress
humanizing encounters in the
fraternity system."
IFC President John Callan
expressed his approval of the
idea.
Assistant to the Dean of
Men Richard Baddour was also
present at the meeting. He
WUNC
Highlights
THURSDAY
7 p.m. - THE CREATIVE
PERSON: "Wesley Duke Lee."
From Sao Paulo, Brazil, to
Venice, Italy, this program
follows the achievements and
experiences of Wesley Duke
Lee, a leader of Brazil's
younger contemporary artists.
9 p.m. - NET FESTIVAL:
"L'Ajo Nell Imbarazzo."
Donizetti's comic opera
derived from the timeless
situation of an over-protective
father and the covert rebellion
of his two sons.
FRIDAY
8 p.m. - NET PLAYHOUSE
presents "Thirteen Against
Fate The Consul." A fledging
Turkish diplomat arrives to
take over his country's
consulate at a provincial
Russian seaport during, the
Stalinist purges and is plunged
into a maelstrom of intrigue
and violence.
and Mrs. Deborah W. Stirling,
publications specialist for the
Population Center, and lecturer
for the Department of Radio,
Television and Motion Pictures.
The workshop is designed to
provide intensive, practical
training for information
specialists serving health
ministries and family planning
agencies,
Information specialists from
15 nations in the Near
East-South Asia region and the
United States will participate.
"We have nothing to fear
but fear itself ... and the
boogy man."
Support this simple savior
of America's destiny. Buy
his official, profusely illus
trated campaign manual-biography-platform
at
bookstores now. $2.95
KrtgenFrtti 461 N Cino, Beverly Hills. Cat. 90210
inigtFY
rail
lMMf
Jul.
addressed, the IFC
representatives on the subject
of grade reports and the water
shortage.
The report stated that the
Spring, 1968 academic averages
were as follows: for all male
undergraduates, 2.335; for all
male undergraduates minus
fraternity average, 2.334; and
for all fraternities, 2.357.
Concerning the water
shortage, Baddour issued a plea
for conservation,
recommending that each house
use paper plates and cups.
Baddour also mentioned
that the fraternity system used
2.87 billion gallons per month.
The house that used the most
water was Phi Delta Theta.
Steve Hope, Treasurer
of IFC, gave a report on a bill
to increase pledge fees and
other dues to compensate for
the increase in the cost of
Uving-
The bill added ten dollars to
the annual dues of each house.
IFC dues were increased from
$25.00 to $30.00.
Another topic of discussion
was complaints that have been
Special Low Priced "Super-Right"
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ANN PAGE FRUIT FLAVORS SPARKLE
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ANN PAGE BRAND
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SWEET, RED
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U.S. NO. ONE
ALL PURPOSE
jiiriL
produced by noise from juke
boxes late at night. The Chapel
Hill Police and the IFC both
intend to crack down on
offenders.
The Chapel Hill Board of
Alderman recently passed an
"Antinoise Ordinance" to
preserve the "repose" of
citizens of Chapel HiflL
IFC President Callan termed
the problem "very serious."
Fraternities who are tried for
Cai
pus
WUNC radio is taking
applications from students
interested in announcing,
engineering, music
programming and other aspects
of radio broadcasting. No
experience is necessary.
Applications may be made at
Swain Hall, west entrance.
UNC OUTING Club will
hold a rope-work practice
session Saturday. Members are
asked to meet in the
Planetarium parking lot at
CHOOSE FROM MANY
Marvel Ice
JANE PARKER GOLD OR MARBLE
Pound Cake
FRESHLY BAKED l-L-B. 8-OZ.
JANE PARKER 8" PIES
PEACH
Ea.
jfl
CUT-UP
QUALITY "OUR FINEST"
0
09
6
3-Oz.
Pkgs.
DODg
LARGE SIZE
- 29c Fresh
FRESH CRISP
39c Carrots
Hd.
1
l
Pound
Bag
PRICES IN THIS AD EFF. THRU SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12th
laws
excessive noise by the IFC
Court may be fined a
maximum of fifty doSars.
The IFC also moved to
purchase the traditional two
pages in the yearbook for each
fraternity at th$ cost of
$200.00.
The IFC meets every other
Monday night in Gardner HalL ;
Council President Callan wishes
to emphasize that any student t
may attend the meetings. ;
Calendar
12:30 p.m. for rides to Durham ;
Fire Tower.
ENGLISH conversation
class for wives of foreign
students and foreign visitors
begin today. Classes will be
held during the moming hours
twice monthly in Chapel HiH
residents homes. A supervised
playroom and nursery for
preschool children will be
provided.
AFRICAN BALLET at 8
p.m. in Memorial Hall.
FLAVORS
Milk 43c
55c
-Lb. 9-Oz.
Size
POTATO
Ea.
0)
6-Oz.
Pkgs.
Quart
Jar
(Hi-
y) (p)c
JANE PARKER SLICED
VARIETY BREAD
(o)(ple
l-Lb.
Loaves
O
CRACKED WHEAT, VIENNA
SEEDED RYE OR
WHOLE WHEAT
Celery 2 29c
2 Pound i C
Pockoge 3Q
II
WW