Sunday, September 1,1963
Symphony Audition
Judges Are Named
A panel of experts to serve as
judges for the North Carolina
Symphony Auditions for adult so
loists was announced today by
Benjamin Swalin, director of the
State Symphony.
Comprising the adjudication
committee to hear vocalists are:
Paul Peterson (chairman), chor
al director, Salem College, Win
ston-Salem; James Cobb, chair*-
tnan of the Music Department,
Atlantic Christian College, Wil
son; Miss Geraldihe Cate, De
partment of Music, St. Mary’s
College, Raleigh; Miss Sophia
Steffan of High Point and the
New York City Center Opera
Company.
Instrumentalists will be heard
by a panel composed of Loren
Withers (chairman), prominent
pianist and faculty member at
Duke University, Durham; Earl
E. Beach, chairman of the De
partment of Music, East Caro
lina College, Greenville; George
Dickieson, violinist and orches
tral director, Greensboro; Claude
K. Cook, pianist and faculty
member at Guilford College.
The auditions for instrumental
ists will take place Saturday,
September 2th beginning at 2
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p.m. in Dana Auditorium at Guil
ford College. Vocalists will be
heard on the same afternoon be
ginning at 2:15 p.m. in the recital
hall at Guilford College. Instru
mentalists must provide an ac
companist and will be required
to play from memory a concerto
on the approved list for the 1964
season. Vocalists must also pro
vide their own accompanists and
should be prepared to sing arias
and songs from the current rep
ertoire.
Musicians between the ages of
17 and 35 who are interested in
entering the auditions should
write to the North Carolina Sym
phony Society, Box 1211, Chapel
Hill. Conditions and lists of con
certos and vocal literature will
be sent upon request. Entries
must be postmarked not later
than September 14th.
Through its annual auditions,
since 1947, the North Carolina
Symphony has presented sixty
auditions soloists in concerts.
Dr. Swalin said the auditions are
not a contest but “represent an
opportunity for aspiring young
musicians to be heard and judg
ed by a committee of expert
artist musicians.”
I Bob Quincy I
Fellow I know says you can bet on only two things
with assurance: (1) that the sun will rise, and (2) that
the sun will set.
There is one other which almost always pays off.
Recommend a restaurant to a friend and rest assured
he’ll get a lousy meal.
Anticipation, without reserve, leads a man to trouble
as surely as walking into a mine field. I offer an ex
ample :
Some years ago, I headed south to cover the major
league baseball camps. Driving through Florida is an
exciting experience, especially in the orange grove region.
The smell of orange blossoms, the thousands of oranges
hanging for plucking stirred a man to thoughts of drink
ing maybe a gallon of juice at the first stop; perhaps
even taking an orange juice bath.
The drugstore was small and tidy. It had those old
fashioned tables, the ones with glass tops with merchan
dise displayed beneath. It wA$ not air conditioned, but
a large fan in the rear did a coifimendable job of cooling
the marble floor.
“I’ll have,” I smiled at the waitress, “a large glass
of orange juice.”
This is what I’d been waiting for. Refreshing,
nourishing, delightful.
It was then I noticed the counterman. He lifted a
can of orange juice from the refrigerator, opened it
and poured the contents into a paper cup.
That entire community survived by working the
orange groves. The town’s lone drugstore served can
ned juice, probably packaged in California.
* * *
Another low moment was experienced in Wisconsin,
a beautiful state which boasts of its roads, its lakes and
its cheese.
My party had departed Chicago early one morning
and chose to take breakfast after several hours of driv
ing. It seemed that every quarter mile a billboard rec
ommended the famous “Cheese House.”
You can bet we made it a must.
The “Cheese House” would have been the capital
of the United States for a mouse. There must have been
ten thousand pounds of cheese packaged and waiting
for buyers.
“I’ll have a cheese omelet,”’ I .said without consulting
a menu.
“Sorry, mister,” said the waitress, “but we don’t
have omelets. We gut fried eggs and scrambled eggs.
Or we got hot cakes.”
“You also are knee deep in cheese,” I noted. “You
could pave a road from here to Galax, Virginia, with
cheese. Why can’t I have a cheese omelet?”
“Because it ain’t on the breakfast menu and wnat
we serve is on the menu. I can give you a cheese sand
wich.”
I had ham and eggs. Scrambled. Plain.
* * *
There is a roadside case between here and Charlotte
which features an outdoor barbecue pit, located to the
rear of the main building.
“BUY IT WHOLESALE,” the sign urges.
I had done this on several occasions and found the
barbecue very good.
Couple of months ago I stopped again.
“Pound of barbecue,” I ordered, sensing the roasting
pig in the nearby shed.
The waitress stepped into the kitchen, had a brief
conversation with the chef and returned.
“Sorry,” she apologized, “but we hardly have enough
for our sandwich customers. I doubt if we have any
for a couple of days.”
I asked her if she wasn’t cooking pig in the pit at
that very moment.
“Oh, no sir,” she advised. “We don’t cook here.
Man comes around every Thursday and sells it to us
frozen.”
* * *
The world is full of odd-ball places.
There was one in Florida advertised as a combina
tion zoo and lunch room. The billboard shouts: "Alliga
tors, snakes, monkeys, hot dogs.”
In San Francisco, there’s a restaurant which adver
tises “genuine Kosher Chinese food.”
Country stores are best. Few cracker barrel estab
lishments remain, but in the mountains you can usually
find one which offers over its soft drink stand: "We
don’t know where Mom is, but we’ve got Pop on ice.”
when Requested
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THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY
FISHING RODEO
The Chapel Hill Jaycees will
sponsor a junior fishing rodeo
Saturday, September 7, from 9
a.m. to 12 nooh. Any child In
Chapel Hill or Carrboro is wel
come to enter the rodeo, and
should come to the Glenwood
School at 9 a.m. Fishing will
be at Fred Abernethy’s pond.
For results that please, use
the classified ads.
p V-V .
School Os Hard Knocks
. . . Wildcats In Blocking Practice
CHIIS Begins Last
Week Os Practice
By JOE SPRANSY
As the CHHS football team
goes into its final week of pre
season preparation, it is evident
that many improvements must
be made by the squad before it
faces Orange High School of
Hillsboro on Friday.
In preparing for this initial
tangle of the 1%3 football season
the team staged a two hour
scrimmage Thursday night at
Lion’s Park. This contest featur
ed the tentative first unit, con
sisting of mostly returning start
ers, versus the tentative second
unit. Although these units are
still flexible, the coaches receiv
ed a good view of what was to
be expected from each boy and
the team as a whole.
‘“We weren't too pleased with
the performance. Our big prob
lem is the need to improve our
fundamentals,” stated Coach Cul
ton after the lengthy workout.
Although the majority of the
team did not rate commendation
by Coach Culton, there were a
number of boys who did a Very
nice job. Those singled our by
the coach were both of the first
unit guards. Joe DiCostanzo and
Phil Partin, who hustled and
gave a 'heartening showing.
"The ends’ performance was
comparable with the guards’.
Eugene Hines and Gles Black
. burn looked - real good, ” Also
singled out by Coach Culton for
their performance were tackles
Tim Farmer and Bill Hoover,
and the four first unit backs,
Danny Leigh, Donnie Clark, Tim
Riggsbee and David Gibson. At
quarterback Leigh did an excep
Mrs. English Bagby’s Dance Classes
SCHEDULE OF CLASSES BEGINNING MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH
Fundamental Dance Education for Girls
This includes rhythmic, folk, acrobatic, and
character dances, as well as basic training in
posture, lightness, balance, flexibility and beau
ty of movement.
Kindergarten (four and five year olds)
Monday 2-3 p.m.—Little Red School House,
or Tuesday 2-3 p.m.—Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten.
First Grade
Monday 3-4 p.m.—Little Red School House,
or Tuesday 3-4 p.m.—Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten.
Second Grade
Tuesday 4-5 p.m.—Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten,
or Wednesday 3-4 p.m.—Little Red School House.
Third Grade
Monday 4-5 p.m.—Little Red School House.
or Thursday 3-4 p.m.—
Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten.
tional job leading the ground
game, but his passing did not
seem as sharp as halfback Riggs
bee‘s did. Clark and Gibson shin
ed on their large gains and power
running.
In light of the weaknesses re
vealed in the scrimmage, Fri
day's schedule consisted of dum
my scrimmage in-the early prac
tice, with emphasis on the timing
and the familiarization of the
plays. Rough drill on blocking
and tackling took place later that
evening.
Saturday the squad staged an
other full scrimmage after which
it was divided into two separate
squads, the varsity and the jun
ior varsity. “The junior varsity
team.” as praised by Coach Cul
ton, “will enable our school to
catch up with the other schools
in the conference who have jun
ior high teams to experience the
boys before they reach high
school level. Our sophomores are
two years behind the boys of
the same class level in other
schools because the others had
a junior high program to play
in.
“We are displeased with some
aspects of our development, but
we are pleased with the hustle
and desire of our boys, and that
in itself is 50 percent of our
program,” Coach Culton said.
Cheerleaders
According to head cheerleader
Kay Marley, the CHHS cheer
ing squad has newer and more
attractive uniforms and a
“whole bunch of new cheers and j
chants to go with them.” I
11th Golf Tourney
Today, Tomorrow
The 11th annual Orange County
Open Golf Golf tournament will
be held today and tomorrow at
Finley Golf Course, sponsored by
the Chapel Hill Jaycees.
The tournament will be held
ih six different, flights, with first
place and runner-up trophies to
be awarded in each flight.
Prizes, donated by local mer
chants, will also be given away
to other players in a drawing.
Qualification playing will be
held today, tournament play to
morrow. The tournament is open
to any golfer. A $5 green fee
will be charged, covering both
days of the tournament.
GOLF WINNER
Randy Host, the son of Mr.
and Mrs. B. H. Host Jr., won the
third flight championship in the
Annual North State Golf Tourna
ment, held at the Wildwood Coun
try Club in Raleigh last week.
Personalized Service
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PHONE ♦
Day 489-2134
Night 489-2068
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Our prescription for home harmony ... an
occasional box of candy . . . perfume ... a
cosmetic set. Stop in we’ll help you select
something to please her.
Classic Ballet
Ballet I, Wednesday 4-5 p.m.—
Little Red School House,
or ltiursday 4-6 p.m.—
Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten.
Ballet n, Monday 5-6 p.m.—
Little Red School House.
Ballet 111, Tuesday 6-6 p.m.—
Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten.
Toe, Thursday 5-6 p.m.—
’ Mrs. Wettach’s Kindergarten.
Social and Square Dancing for Boys and Girls
(Held Chapel Hill Country Club Oct. thru Apr.)
Fifth Grade: 7-8:16 p.m. First and Third Fri
days of each month.
Sixth Grade: 7-8:15 p.m. Second and Fourth
Fridays of feach month.
Seventh Grade: 8:20-9:45 p.m. First aftd ’rtiifd
Fridays of each month.
Eighth Grade: 8:20-9:45 p.m. Second and Fourth
FYidays of each month.
Use the Weekly classified ads.
For savings that are designed
for your own special needs be
sure and read the Weekly classi
fied ads every Issue.
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for the answer to this, and
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Page 5