Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 13, 1968, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL Fridav. December 13, 1963 T DTH Book Review Black Reveals Inner-Soul r - i in , - - v i ' '' -T ( ' i V ', I -. ; I i Li V i I) m f ! j f J t V i i" 1 if By ROSEMARY ZIBART DTH Staff Writer On the. day before Thanksgiving Eldridge Cleaver was scheduled to return to prison. According to the California Adult Authority, the relevantly profane. The first concession which the condescending liberal reader must make is that Cleaver is extremely literate in fact quite eloquent. His very-enjoyable prose is imaginative, urbane and only DTH Staff Photo By Tom Scfmabel TICKETS FOR THE WIZARD OF OZ are on sale today at GM Carolina Union drama committee and is produced by John Haber, Information Desk and will be on sale tonight and Saturday night president of Carolina Union. So, follow the yellow brick road to at 8 at the door of Memorial Hall. The play is presented by Memorial Hall ... Upcoming Campus Calendar Events Black Panther minister of information had broken his parole in a clash with Oakland police last April. Cleaver appealed to the California courts claiming that his parole was revoked "without cause and because of his political beliefs, opinions and expressions as a member of the Black Panther Party of Self-Defense. The reaction to this event has been immense ranging from' the relief of "establishment" members across the nation because Cleaver wouldn't be able to fulfill his speaking engagements there to black and white students, militants, and Ramparts subscribers who are In the first section of "Soul on Ice," entitled "On Becoming" Cleaver describes the crime which sent him to prison as rape-on principle. But having determined his motivation, Cleaver is not satisfied; he can not justify the act his resulting search for humanity is the book. The appeal of "Soul on Ice" is its sincere frankness. As in an encounter with another human being, Cleaver understands the danger of communicating: "Getting to know someone, entering that new world, is an ultimate, irretrievable leap into the unknown. The prospect is terrifying. The stakes are high. The emotions are the American public with his souL His sentiments on personel experiences are like "religious conversion, more or less" and the letters to his lawyer, Beverly Axelrod, exhibit Cleaver as a whimsical, witty, tender personality. In "Blood of the Beast" Cleaver reacts to more objective matter including the black man in relation to Vietnam, the work of James Baldwin, and the heros of. white society. His philosophy, is neither pessimistic nor cynical. (In , fact, his enthusiasm for young white activists seems quite uncalled for.) : Cleaver demands acceptance; as he is "stripped naked". He. has made himself vulnerable by; desiring to be known. To; condemn him or glorify him on; any other terms is hardly fair.; ... : f 1 1 Earl Of Guilford ft IVisits Chapel Hill! By PROF. A. P. HUDSON This week, for possibly the first time since Lord Cornwall's assed through these parts, in 1780-1781, an English earl has visited Orange County, and he and his countess have spent a loudly protesting the decision, overwhelming. The two people peaceful day and night in Chapel Hill. But on either side of the are reluctant really to strip discussion how many of the themselves naked in front of very vocal partisans know the each other, because in doing so "political beliefs, opinions and they- make themselves OSTOMY CLUB being organized. In the process securing names of ostomates (individuals with an ileostomy, colostomy, etc.) interested in joining club. Write: Chapel Hill Ostomy Assoc. P.O. Box 245, Chapel Hill. SPEAKER'S PROGRAM-Professor Alan Price of the University of Belfast will lecture on, "Synge and the Power of Lie," in 104 Bingham Hall, 8 p.m. Grad Christmas party will follow. Prof. Price will also read Irish poetry "Yeats and his Friends" in the Women's Lounge downstairs in undergrad library, 4 p.m. CHANUKAH PARTY sponsored by Hillel, Sunday at 4 p.m. Latkes will be served. Entertainment will be provided free for members and $.50 for non-members. CHRISTMAS DANCE open to all students from 9 to 11 p.m. Saturday, December 14 in Ehringhaus, first floor lobby. Band is the TRUVARES. Free. CURRENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE meets Monday, December 16 at 4:30 in Roland Parker 2. SLAVIC CLUB to meet Sunday at 8 p.m. in upstairs Faculty Lounge, Dey Hall, Film about study and travel in USSR for summer 1969 will be shown followed by a Russian Christmas Carol sing. Everyone is invited. YOGA GROUP will meet in Westminster Foundation at 7 p.m. on Monday, December 16. New members,wlcome. DR. EARL WYNN OF RTMVP will read Dicken's "Christmas Carol" on Sunday, December 15, at 8 p.m. in the lounge of Graham Memorial. Everyone is invited. Refreshments wil be served. ANY INTERNATIONAL STUDENT unable to go home or get away during the Christmas holidays and who would be interested in spending part of the time with an American family should call the International Student Center ,(944-5097) or should stop by. CHRISTMAS PARTY FOR CHILDREN of UNC students will be given by the Carolina Union, Saturday, December 14 at 2 p.m. All children from ages 3-6 are invited for, supervised decorating and games , in the: Rendezvous Room followed by the appearance of Santa Claus in the G.M. lounge. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM on "The Injection of Hot Electrons into Liquid Helium" by Dr. David G. Onn of UNC-CH on December 18 at 4 p.m. in Room 215 Phillips Hall. YEAR-AT-LYON PROGRAM announces that application forms and brochures for the 1969-70 program are now available in 219 Dey Hall. General meeting for program applicants will be held in Faculty Lounge of Dey Hall at 4 p.m. on December 16. Former and prospective program members are urged to attend. PROF. FRANK MILLER of the Cornell University, School of Industrial and Labor Relations will be in the Placement Service on Friday, December 13 to interview students interested in doing graduate work upon graduation. Students desiring interviews should come by the Placement Service, 211 Gardner Hall, to make an appointment. JAMES B. ARDIS of the Univ. of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration will be on campus Friday, December 13 to interview students interested in attending graduate school upon graduation. Students desiring interviews should come by the Placement Service, 211 Gardner Hall, to make an appointment. RONALD G. SAMPSON of the Univ. of Connecticut School of Law will be on campus Tuesday, December 17 to interview students in attending law school upon graduation. Students desiring interviews should make an appointment with the Placement Service. A fee3 mm ldl A woman's body needs a woman's shaver. A Lady Norelco 15L. A shaver that's comfortable for a woman. A shaver that has two shaving edges. One for legs and one for un derarms. A shaver that shaves under arms as close or closer than a blade In 2 out of 3 shaves as tested in an Independent laboratory. (As does the Beauty Sachet 25LS on the right.) The Beauty Sachet 25LS is just like a beauty salon. It manicures, pedicures, mas sages, applies facial creams, buffs and files nails, and stimulates your scalp and muscles. But in another way, it's more than a beauty parlor. It also shaves your legs and underarms. A ivoreico 9 the close, fast, comfortable ladies' shaver 1 JSr X- ------v - - - - ..-".---: v-v-' - . . . - fr f - I " ' - ' i I ' J - K.L. POLL from Amsterdam will give a lecture on Friday, Dec. 13 on "Anti-Americanism among Europ e a n Intellectuals." The talk is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Dey Hall Faculty Lounge. expressions for which Cleaver was allegedly condemned. "Soul on Ice," a collection of essays and letters, written at Folsom State Prison, reveals Cleaver differently from any image conceivable from newspaper reports of a violence-prone, gun-loning, convicted rapist. vulnerable and give enormous power over themselves one to the other! Better to maintain shallow superficial affairs; that say. the scars are not too deep. No blood is hacked from the soul." "Soul on Ice" represents Cleaver's willingness to make the attempt, Students Honor Beethoven Maybe Schroeder as a Beethoven worshipper knows something you don't know the enjoyment of good music. Carolina students will also have a chance to appreciate Beethoven's talent in the first concert initiating a series of student recitals. In c e lebrating of Beethoven's 198th birthday, six talented UNC students will i give an informal recital with violin, piano, and vocal renditions of his works. Sponsored by the Carolina Union Music Committee,,' "Beethoven's Birthday Party",; will be held on Monday, December 16, at 4 p.m. in the Draham Memorial lounge. The student performers have won many musical distinctions and will present a varied and entertaining concert. Miss Ivey Geoghegan, a junior violin major from Raleigh and student of Dr. Edgar Alden, will play the opening movement from the Sonata for Violin and Piano, Opus 24, called "Spring Sonata." She is a member of the UNC Symphony and Dr. Roger Hannay's New Music Ensemble. Holder of the distinguished Lawrence Newman violin scholarship, Miss Geoghegan studied at the Academia Chigiana in Siena, Italy, during the summer of 1967. Miss Woody Durham, a junior piano major, will accompany Miss Geoghegan. Miss Durham, holder of the Whitaker Scholarship, is a member of the University Symphony and accompanist for the UNC Chamber Singers. A senior piano major from Charlotte, Paula Wise, will play the Sonata, Opus 27, Number 1. Presently a student of Mrs. Barbara Rowan, Miss Wise was s sophomore transfer to UNC i. .. : : This Christmas, Give Gay Prints by the 'Ghoulies" Man from Converse College. Vice-president of the Carolina Choir, she is also secretary of the 1969 Fine Arts Festival and a member of the Experimental College Co-ordinating Committee. To provide variety from the instrumental program, Robert Daniel, a junior voice major from Wilmington, will sing the Beethoven song cycle of six songs, "An Ddie feme Geiebte On Tuesday and Wednesday, the Earl of Guilford and his lady were guests of Professor and Mrs. Charles Zug at 711 Greenwood Road. They had been in Greensboro and its environs, participating in the celebration of the bicentennial of Guilford County and Guilford Courthouse. They are friends of Mrs. Zug's mother, Mrs. Kenneth F. Trimingham, who lives in Bermuda and with her husband has been friends of the Guilfords for several years. The whole party spent Tuesday driving around Chapel Hill' and the campus here. On Tuesday evening the Zugs invited their across-the-street neighbors, the Arthur Palmer Hudsons, to call and meet Mrs." Trimingham and their lordships, the Guilfords. They thought the5 visitors might be interested in hearing Professor Hudson's by confronting recording of the famous old Negro mock sermon "The Psaltre" (pronounced Peesaltree ) made by Holman Willis, of Roanoke, Va., in 1928. The visitors gave every sign that they were hilariously tickled. "Stop it, please! Just a moment!" exclaimed the Earl of Guilford after he had listened to a sentence or two and disappeared for a minute. He returned with a small tape recorder, and sitting down and placing this on his knee, commanded, "Start over, please from the beginning." And his and his fellow guests' chuckles and laughter were mingled with the "Negro" preacher's narrative and exhortation. When the sermon came to an end, the Earl remarked: "You know, I'm a church-warden of my parish in Kent, and we're looking for a new rector. By Jove, this fellow is good. When I return I will speak to the Archbishop of Canterbury about the preacher of "The Pisaltree." I'd like to hear him on Sundays." Thus, the Earl of Guilford has a different destination from the Earl of Cornwallis, who took off for Yorktown, Va. 1 (To my Distant Beloved)." He is a member of the. Carolina Choir and was a featured soloist in the Men's Glee Club recent concert. A student of Mr. Peter Schuetz, Daniel previously studied under Norman Farrow for three years at the N.C. School of the Arts. The four pianists are students of Clifton Matthews. Refreshments will be served after the recital. T-ski-or-not-to-ski-weekends. You don't have to know a schuss from a slalom to love a ski weekend. There are plenty of other fun things to do like tramping around the mountains . . . racing toboggans ... riding the lifts... and ganging up for snowball fights. the And whether j&A you or not, there's always parties... and people If you' re a TWA U.S. We also arrange places like Aspen and Vail Only TWA can take Europe. Gall your travel Ve been knocking 'em dead on the slopes all day ap res ski stuff... hot buttered things, log: fires, who like the things you do. 5050 Club member, you fly half-fare in the other very reduced rates. You can save plenty in bee below. v you co me Desc sKiing in ootn tne U.S. and 'tagent, your TWA Campus Rep, or TWA. upupandavW Sir x. v. grf'","sS!- 1968 North American Philips Company, Inc., 100 East 42nd Street, New York, New York 10017 Karl Smith, of Greensboro, is one of North Carolina's out standing creators of .decora tive prints. The complete display of his work in our Print Room includes a number of Prayers and wall mottoes, including the famous "From Ghoulies and Ghosties" print, a collection of U.N.C. sketches, and illuminated maps of the Robert E. Lee country, the Lincoln country, North Car olina, and the United States. The Price? Dont give it a thought The smaller items are $1.00 each, the larger $1.25 each and what more could you ask' for Christmas? The Intimate Bookshop 119 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill, N. C. Open Evenings 1 ' 7" mm V .'.Ov.v.v.v.v.' rn-A5pen Highlands-Lifts-lselin Ski School-Lessons-Brown Ice Palace-Skating ana Hdckey- Tne Kca union mcou 1 1 ie nnuuiiidiri anup oki neiuai Vail Associates Lifts and Lessons Gorsuch Ltd. Ski Rental Red Lion Weals .5 CLO LmeS.INC. Vail Coupon booklets available at the TWA counter, Denver airport, upon presentation of TWA 5050 Club Card
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 13, 1968, edition 1
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