Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Oct. 13, 1963, edition 1 / Page 11
Part of The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Sunday, October 13, 1963 - 'V bfc A jp CjfltJr - jt *- } ENGAGED Mr. and Mrs. Dale C. Morter of Chapel Hill announce the engagement of Mrs. Morter’s sister, Brenda Joyce Rudisill, to William Dale Good rich, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Winston Goodrich of Carrboro. The wedding will take place November 16th at 8 p.m. in the Carrboro Baptist Church. Miss Rudisill and Mr. Goodrich are both graduates of Chapel Hill High School. Mr. Goodrich is employed by the U. S. Census Bureau at the UNC Computation Center. Women’s Club Will Hold Tea Thursday The University Women’s Club with the Newcomer’s Division will hold its first tea of the year Thursday, October 17, from 4 to 6 o’clock in the banquet room of the Morehead Building. Wives of staff members of the Department of Classics and School of Journ alism will be hostesses. Receiving will be Mrs. William C. Friday, wife of the President • ROOM the PINES RESTAURANT Charcoal Steak Open Until 11 P.M. Ph. 942-2251 (Advertisement) BY ALICE STONE If you have fine hair it is very likely soft-sheened and sleek, but it poses a number of problems of its own. Odd weather loads it with static electricity, heat leaves it limp and you are probably in a never-ending search for props to give it body. We might suggest frequent wash ings and cream rinses to provide more body, but we caution against vigorous yanking on shampoo snarls as fine hair is even more fragile when wet. Also, be care ful of too-energetic brushing and combing which only adds to fric tion troubles. Fine hair responds nicely to a permanent which is soft and loose and free of frizzling tendencies. This type permanent as is true of any permanent is properly and expertly given at Aesthetic Hair Styling Salon, 133% East Franklin Street Phone 942-4335. THIS WEEK’S HELPFUL Hint: A small dose of fabric softener or liquid detergent added to the final rinse water, lessens the static electricity and clinging tendencies of nylon slips in cold weather. ————■— — I BABY DIAPER SERVICE WE DELIVER TWICE WEEKLY ONE WEEK’S SUPPLY Your Diapers __ $1.75 Our Diapers $2.25 Call Burham 383-9881 ————————————— , of the University; Mrs. William B. Aycock, wife of the Chancel lor; Mrs. Clifton H. Kreps Jr., President of the University Wo men’s Club; Mrs. David W. Brown, President of Newcomer’s; Mrs. Albert I. Suskin and Mrs. Norval Neil Luxon, wives of the heads of the hostess department*. Pouring coffee and punch ait the table will be Mrs. Robert J. ■ Getty, Mrs. A. H. Shepard Jr., Mrs. Urban T. Holmes Jr., Mrs. J. Carlyle Sitterson, Mrs. Robert B. House, Mrs. James L. God frey, Mrs. C. O. Cathey, and Mrs. Hugh T. Lefler. Assisting from the hostess de partments will be Mrs. J#hn B. Adams, Mrs. Wayne A. Daniel son, Mrs. Charles Henderson Jr., Mrs. Ross Holloway, Mrs. Henly R. Immerwahr, Mrs. Hubert SA. Martin Jr., Mrs. Joseph L. Mor rison, Mrs. James J. Mullen, Mrs. Kenneth J. Reckford, Mrs. Walter Spearman, and Mrs. John E. Ziol kowski. Other hostesses will be Mrs. Bernard Boyd, Mrs. Maurice T. Van Hecke, Mrs. W. H. Branch, Mrs. Erie Peacock Jr., Mrs. Joe M. Galloway, Mrs. Robert L. Mc- Curdy, Mrs. Thomas Davis, Mrs. Richard E. Richardson, Mrs. Nor man F. Weatherly, Mrs. Werner P. Friederich, Mrs. Earl A. Slo cum, Mrs. Clifford P. Lyons, Mrs. J. Burton Linker, Mrs. Gordon D. Kage, Mrs. C. Hugh Holman, Mrs. Everett D. Palmatier, Mrs. Dudley J. Cowden, Mrs. William G. Long. Also, Mrs. Robert L. McKee, Mrs. Ralph Mrs. Nich olson B. Adams, Mrs. Joel J. Car ter, Mrs. David Y. Hughes, Mrs. Robert L. Hilliard, Mrs. James Rush Beeler, Mrs. Julian D. Ma son Jr., Mrs. James Dickson Phil lips Jr., Mrs. James W. Prothro, Mrs. Rucker Sterling Hennis Jr., Mrs. John N. Couch, Mrs. Cory don P. Spruill, Mrs. Fred H. Weaver, Mrs. W. Reece Berry hill, Mrs. Peter G. Phialas, and Mrs. Frank W. Klingberg. There are many special interest groups in connection with the Newcomer’s Division in which members of the University Wom en’s Club will have an opportuni ty to sign for participation at the tea Thursday. Petite Musicale In GM Tonight William Bennett will conduct a concert of chamber music in the main lounge of Graham Memori al tonight at 8. The concert will be the first Graham Memorial Petite Musi cale of the fall Works to be performed are by Arensky, Grieg, Copeland, Walton, and Britten. Admission to the concert is free. The musicians are provid ed through the courtesy of the Musician’s Performance Trust Fund. Anne Basile DrawingsAt Jane Haslem Some thirty minature draw ings by Durham artist Anne Basile are now on exhibit at the Jane Haslem Galtery. The drawings, primarily satirical, were created in recent months and were inspired by study with Marshall Glasier at the Arts Students League in New York City. iMrs. Basile also had works accepted for the current juried art show at the Winston-Salem Gallery of Fine Arts. Lee Nordness, director of the Nord ness Gallery in New York City and editor of Art U.S.A., was the judge. The Orkney Springs Art Fes tival held in Orkney Springs, Va. awarded Mrs. Basile a second prize recently for a collage in that competition, and etchings by Robert Broder son of Durham are also on ex hibit at the gallery. These are Mr. Broderson’s most re cent works and will be viewed here for the first time. An assistant professor of art at Duke University, Mr. Bro derson was bom in West Hav en, Conn., and studied at Duke University and the State Uni versity of lowa. Mr. Broderson uses the full potential of the lithograph technique. His works are unique in their strong contrast of light and dark opposed to the sub tle reality of their sinjects of which "A Child With Flower” and "Study of-Man and Animal” are good examples. His etch ings rely less on contrast and more on soft merging tones and form defined by line. He touches on such sensitive sub jects as “Family Gathering,” and “Mother and Child.” The Jane Haslem Gallery is the only Southern outlet for Mr. Broderson's work. Gallery hours are 10:00-5:00 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 1 , Thursday, Friday, and 2:00- 5:00 Sunday. bPv • c V/ ®s§ Hk m 1 E JtSi ANNE BASILE gp I The Chapel Hill ft (MCERT SERIES Ti TEMH SEASOI, 1963-64 MOSCOW CHAMBER ORCHESTRA, November 1 SEASON TICKETS CLARAMAE TURNER, Contralto, February 18 on Sale at DANZIGER’S ..... or Write Box 893, Chapel Hill ISAAC STERN, ViolilllSt, MdrcH 16 •S.OO and <9.00 CHNA BACHAUER, Pianist, April 10 Special Family Rates ‘4.00 and <6.00 (All Performances at 0:00 P.M. Memorial Hall) Telephone 942-2865 THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY t m 9 Muriel Wilson As Ernestine A Star Was Born Between The Wars By JOHN WHITTY Muriel Wilson is very noncom mittal about her age. She refuses to go any further than to tell you that she was born sometime between World War I and World War 11. The aura of glamor and mystery which surrounds her quite befits this young Durham woman who has been cast in the role of Madame Ernestine von Liebedich in The Carolina Play makers’ production of “Little Mary Sunshine.” This rollicking musical is, among other delight old, worn-out operettas in which the men were all stouthearted ful things, a take-off on these and the fragile damsels never re vealed their ages or their ankles. Having apeared on Broadway in a production of “The Vagabond King,” and later in Durham Theatre Guild productions of “Naughty Marietta” and "The Fortune Teller,” Mrs. Wilson fits right into the mood that Director Foster Fitz-Simons is trying to create in “Little Mary Sunshine.” The versatile actress and singer has also appeared professionally in supper clubs in the New York area, with the Alley Theatre in Ft. Lauderdale. Florida, and with the Brevard Light Opera Com pany in Melbourne, Florida. While in Florida, she appeared on the Southern Belle Showboat doing impressions of Lillian Rus sell and Lilly Langtry. A Brooklyn-born redhead, Mrs. Wilson has iost all of the “vocal color” which often identifies a person from that particular sec tion of New York, and with a broad German accent which the role of Madame Ernestine calls for, she stops the show with her rendition of “In lzzensehnooken on the Lovely Essenzook Zee.’.’ Although the role of Madame Ernestine is described as a “fad ed opera diva,” Mr. Fitz-Simons feels that she is perfect for the part. Watching her in rehear sal. though, the first thing that occurs to you is how this vivaci ous beauty will ever manage to look faded. Tickets for “Little Mary Sun shine," running in the Piaymak ers Theatre from Wednesday, Oc tober 23 through Sunday, October 27, are available to season ticket holders starting Monday, October 14. They go on sale to the gen eral public on Thursday, October 17, and are available at The Play makers Business Office <214 Ab ernethy Hall) and at Ledbetter- Pickard in downtown Chapel Hill. WMS MEETING “The Year of Jubilee.” cele brating 150 years of Baptist life m America, will be the topic for discussion at a general meet ing tomorrow at 8 p.m. of the Women’s Missionary Society of the University Baptist Church. diaries designer-craftsman _____ in am,>er alley—near the rathskeller Museum Members Are Being Sought A drive for new student mem bers of the Museum of Modem Art in New York City has been launched at Ackland Art Center. Employing Pop Art raw materials to focus attention on the cam paign, John Allcott, professor in the UNC Art Department, and Neal Thomas, art instructor, have assembled a large scale collage on the corridor wall in the east wing of Ackland. On first glance the massive sculpture looks like a crazy con glomeration of junk; a closer in section reveals its real promo tional intent. The reason for using Pop Art subject matter to provoke interest in the Museum of Modern Art membership was, according to Mr. Thomas, “to make people aware of the revolt that's going on in the art world right now. Pop Art is forcing a re-evalution of many aspects of American life. This first new art movement since abstract ex pressionism uses the comic strip, mass-media advertising, Holly wood, the dollar bill, billboards, and other images that have been looked at so long they have be come accepted, overlooked, and finally unseen.” This display combines dirty furnace filters, a worn out broom, open book with a nail driven through the pages, a picture of St. Magadalina, 7-Up Advertise ment, plaster hands, silver Christ mas ornaments. Coca Cola bottles, comic strip clippings, to symbolize the advantages of Mu seum of Modem Art member ship. Membership in the museum which is open to ail students in- School Menu Lunches to be served in Chap el Hill schools during the com ing week: MONDAY Hot dogs with chili or mus tard, cabbage slew and potato sticks, apricot cobbler and milk. TUESDAY Chicken and noodles, green lima beans, cheese biscuits and butter, pineapple upside-down cake and milk. WEDNESDAY Meat loaf with Spanish sauce, rice and gravy, eggs on butter ed spinach, french breed and butter, coconut bbirthday cake and milk. THURSDAY Sliced turkey, southern dress ing and giblet gravy, green peas, hot rolls and butter, am brosia and milk. FRIDAY Grilled cheese sandwich, veg etable soup, organc, crackers, peanut butter cookies and milk. eludes: unlimited free admissions to the museum, four free publica tions, discounts on other major museum publications, reduced art magazine rates, Penthouse privil eges and others. Since its found ing in 1929 the basic purpose of die Museum of Modern Art has been to encourage people to un derstand, enjoy and use the visual arts of our time.” Membership applications may be obtained at the Ackland Art Library through October 15. vp* is for Savings Accounts I 1 - t « • 4 | h V” »• » ** v .*. ■ ♦ / : ‘ V V; * . i ♦,**« :• i ♦ ,**»», * * * » • / *,* •. \ -T ,v --? , » * •'.v; ‘ * • ‘v...*; • f : ■ • % •• j I • m 3)" \ V ..VAViavA ‘•f"emm. /.v.viv.v. A ...V. .. ...> wjr+j.-,,.-. . .-.V .-. . ".V.l There is no better place for Wm yotir money than in a CCB / Savings Account. Your sav- hb ings dollars earn daily in- vißh terest, compounded quar terly, and each account is insured by the Federal De- - posit insurance Corporation. M«mb«r Federal Dcpatit Iniuranc* Corporation For guaranteed results, use the Weekly classified ads. They work around the clock for you. ONLY “Chapel Hill’s only qualified Rug Cleaner” Dial Operator, ask for Durham WX2OOO, Bern son Page 3-B
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 13, 1963, edition 1
11
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75