Page 8-B First McLean Child Arrives Dr. and Mrs! John Marshall McLean of Chicago, formerly of Chapel Hill welcomed the arrival of their first child, Eliza beth Patton on October 21 at Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Hospi tal. Dr. McLean is serving a medi cal internship at Presbyterian- St. Luke's. The grandparents are Dr. and Mrs. Joseph A. McLean of Ayer, Mass, and Gibsonville, and Mr. and Mrs. David Sigrist of Verona, N. J. Milton’s Traditional Suitings with the Built-in Plus Oar own salt model embodies a truly natural shoulder, soft trim lapels, with the new ease—in the shoulder and armholes, plus a smaller body for the final cus tomized touch thus eliminat ing major tailoring adjustments. This coupled with Milton’s own exclusive fabrics make for ultra smart fall. Lightweight wool suits from 160.00. ffliltoti’g Q CfecHlftg Cupboard Downtown Chapel HOI HUGGINS’ says- You’ve read about Gerber baldes in THE NEW YORKER, BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS and HOLIDAY Huggins’ has the full line for you right here in Chapel Hill. I BY GERBER 1 Snickersnee is a carving blade and serving fork all in one. Handmade from steel 5 times as mB costly as cutlery steel it takes and holds a razor edge—slices meat with ease. Then without removing your holding fork m you serve the slices with f Snickersnee’s forked points. A real carving innovation! fftfeA k■ a. luL ffj|l L* •Ml IMh Snkk In mIM ... r. walnut dmt 'dO* Othw Hh in mIM walnut dust (ran $25 vp ■ There are 16 blades, three holding forks and a sharpening steel. These pieces are available singly and in set assortments in solid walnut chests. For example: The Snickersnee singly is «12. Pixie is 64.00. ABOUT THE GERBER BLADE A Gerber blade has the edge of a razor, the hardness of a file, and the flexibility of a spring. They are handmade and in dividually hand finished from the costliest steel ever used in cutlery. CHOOSE - GIVE, THE FINEST For your home, for gifts . . . choose Gerber Blades. Now with the holiday season of festivities and gift-giving nigh, resolve to grace your table and your giving, with genuine excellence. Choose them at Huggins’ Free Parking 11 IIMtIBH Self-Service while you shop I ■ ° r ask tOT wtth Huggins * U < kVW liM clerk-service —Looking Back — From the files of the Weekly: IN 1923 Town’s Greatest Building Year “This is by far the greatest building year in the history of Chapel Hill and the University . . . The total ( value of buildings completed, now in progress and projected) for all these three classes amounts to about $2,660,- 000. Roads as well as buildings are included . . . “ ’Except for boom towns, such as oil and mining settlements,’ says (H. D. Carter, member of the architectural staff of the T. C. Atwood Organization), “there is probably no other com munity of the population of Cha pel Hill that can match it present building activity (The total cost of completed buildings alone in the Chapel Hill Planning Area during the calendar year 1962 was -Ed.) IN 1933- Repealists Are Confident They Will Elect Cobb As Orange County’s Delegate “In this county the voter will make a choice next Tuesday be tween Collier Cobb. Jr., Chapel Hill contractor, who stands for repeal of the 18th Amendment, and J. J. Ward, Hillsboro groc er, who stands against repeal. “Whichever of these two gets the majority of the votes will be Custom-Made SLIPCOVERS and BgAPEIHES Carolina Fabric . Shop All Work Guaranteed Phone 942-4622 Orange County delegate to the convention in Raleigh December 6—provided there is a conven tion. Hie majority vote in the whole state will determine wheth er or not the convention will be held. If the proposal to hold a convention is killed at Hie polls, that will mean that North Caro lin has gone against repeal. “Repealists express confidence that they will obtain a majority for the convention and also for Mr. Cobb as a delegate. Anti repealists show just as great a confidence that Mr. Ward will be the delegate . . . .” . (Will Orange County vote “dry?” WiM the Stole? Will the bootleggers get a new lease on life? Tune to Wednesday—Ed.) IN 1943- Army Life By Joe Jones “A reader asks if I have to contend with reveille and that sort of stuff now that I’m, in an office job. The answer is yes . . . ‘We stand reveille at 6:15, have breakfast at 7, and go to work at 8. We have a rigid in spection every Saturday morn ings a week. We scrub the bar rack floor twice a week and take turns with the daily sweeping up of the squad room, hallways and office. All this before we go to work. “Foot lockers and wall lockers have to be kept in perfect order and bunks must be made up ac cording to regulations. Mattres- 1 ses and pillows must be put out to air once a week. Windows are washed weekly. Shoes must be kept shined, hair well trim med, and uniforms pressed. No more of the free and easy ways 1 used to know at Little Creek and at the casemate, where old faded denims set the tone. . . There seems to be a rule in this outfit that only buck privates serve on K.P., but they haven’t rung me in on it. Os course I’m not saying anything about it to anybody. However, I believe that some of the other privates, who are on K.P. a lot, have begun to cast envious looks in my direction. This bodes no good . . . “This place is more like a college campus than an Army camp. There are stately old trees, fine old buildings, grassy lawns, and concrete sidewalks. I live in a large well-heated brick dormitory that has all the modern conveniences. The lat rines have porcelain tile floors. “People will say I have it mighty easy for a soldier in time of war. I suppose they are right and that I am now a full fledged member of the chair borne forces. I still don’t enjoy being in the Army and I don’t know anybody who does. It’s just something that has to be gone through with.” IN 1953 “Lieutenant Robert Phillips, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy B. Phillips, went to the Sampson Air Force Base at Geneva, N. Y., this week for processing on the way to his assignment for flight training at Stallings Air Station at Kinston, N. C. “He is the fourth of the Phil lips brothers to go into the armed forces. Guy, Jr., was a major m the Army Air Force. Charles was a lieutenant and pilot in the Army Air Force and went on 55 combat missions in the Paci fic. Craig was a lieutenant in the Navy and was on a landing craft in both the Normandy and Southern France invasions . . It takes good health and energy to work hard. Reliable, full-potency vitamins from your druggist help keep you in tip top shape. LfS^SvENY-PHOMI 968-4455 ♦ CHAPELmiLjS THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY ■' a<* . : *o;' Jk£jA B M : ; ; . zTsW ' > - ■ 1" . • , v .. ;• .v; ■;. ’^ 4 £ v.- •••' ?]«.'•• a <■ ■■tfMH .an ON EXHIBIT One of the pictures to be on exhibit today at the reception for State Art Society members here i 3 Simon Potter’s “Lot and His Wife,” Art Society Members Will Hold Reception And Exhibit Villa Tempesta will be the scene of a reception and an ex hibition of Chapel Hill’s art treasures for N. C. State Art Society members and their prospective-member guests to day from 4-7 p.m. The art treas ures which will be on exhibit for today only will initiate a drive for Art Society members. From its founding in 1924 the State Art Society worked stead ily towards a permanent State art gallery and 32 years later, in 1956, the present museum in Raleigh was opened. The Kress gifts and the state collection were installed in 1960, and, fin ally, in 1961 the new museum was deeded to the State of North Carolina. The Art Society had more than fulfilled its goal. Since that time the society has adopted a program direct ed towards “improvements in education in the arts, in com munity interests, in the recogni tion of our creative artists and in private support for the Mu seum.” The primary source of income for carrying out such an ambitious endeavor is through membership subscriptions. Join ing the Art Society is a direct way of making a personal con tribution to the State Museum and to art education. Among the art treasures on exhibit during the reception will be paintings by Raoul Dufy, George Grosz, Marie Laurencin, Reginald Marsh, Jack B. Yeats, Diego Rivera, Steven Potter, Felix Alacron, and Rudy Poz- Strong To Preside Raymond E. Strong, director of records and registration at the University, will preside ov er the 40th annual meeting of the North Carolina Association of Collegiate Registrars and Ad mission Officers, to be held No vember 6 end 7 at the Jack Tar Hotel in Durham. Panel discussion sessions of the meeting will cover admis sion practices and problems, records and registration in small institutions, uniform blanks on medical and high school reports, research methods, space utiliza tion, data gathering, and the community college. loaned by Henry Lgforis. Shown with the painting are, from left, Miss Emily pollard, Mrs. George Welsh, and Mrs. Joseph Sloane. zatti, prints and drawings by James Whistler, Hans Enii, Edouard Manet, Henri Toulouse- Lautrec, Henri Matisse, Pierre Bonnard, Paul Signac, Eugene Delacroix, Frack Brangwyn, Johan Jongkind, Jean Chariot and Cuevez. A partial listing of the decorative arts includes: a Royal Meissen tureen, a Sat suma tea service, an eighteenth century silver coffee pot, an an cient Korean bowl, a Chinese tapestry, a Bakara saddle bag, and an old and rare chess set. A special feature of the event will be the first Norfh Caro lina showing of two paintings by Peter Paul Rubens and Nicolas Poussin from the private collec tion of Gerard Tempest, owner of the Villa. Among the townspeople lend ing works of art are: Mr. and RE ■47 DfSCOUtVr PRICES AT TIRE SALES & SERVICE 15-501 Bypass at Eastgate Phone 942-1951 W 60% “™“ ■■ Wmw / j mounting PREMIUM SUPERLUX DIAMOND WHITEWALLS Made by Goodrich WHEEL BALANCING 670 x ls rOS slßjlo FIRST L,RE WHITE-WALL SUPERLUX 710x15 38.75 18.29 750x14 36.05 18.01 TUBE TYPE 760x15 41.15 19.19 SIZE Retail SALE 800x14 38.75 17.25 670x15 $28.45 $13.62 800 x 15 44.90 19.99 710 x 15 33.45 16.69 All Prices Plus Tax and Recappable Tire 750 x 14 32.40 15.96 All Prices Plus Tax and Recappable Tire COMPACT SPORT KIN 6 1— I whitewalls MJSttk ALL NYLON SIZE . Retail SALE __ ___ _ _ 520x13 $24.00 $13.38 f BLACKWALLS 560x13 24.65 14.45 / i§kHHsr 670x15 $8.09 590x13 26.95 15.13 [ fig 750x14 9.80 560x15 26.70 15.31 U\y ®jjj K WHITEWALLS 590 xls , 28.05 16.58 670 x ls 9.74 Plus Tax and Recappable Tire 750 x 14 11.10 Plus Tax A Recappable Tire QUALITY RECAPS AT FAVORABLE PRICES. ALSO, MUD and SNOW TIRES. CASH SALES ONLY AT THESE PRICES TIRE SALES & SERVICE 15-501 Bypass at Eastgate Phone 942-1951 Mrs. John Allcott, Dr. and Mrs. Isaac Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Ar thur Fink, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eaton, Mr. and Mrs. George Watts Hill, Mr. and Mrs. John Manning, Jr., and Mrs. John Has lem, Mr. and Mrs. George Welsh, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sloane, Mr. and Mrs. Charles MacKenzie, Mr. and Mrs. Law rence Cramer, Mr. and Mrs. Ger ard Tempest, Henry Lewis, Mrs. A. C. Burnham, Janet Sloane, Mary Gilson, Frances Floore, Mrs. George Thrasher, Dr. Ker mit Knudtzen, and Emily Pol lard. Membership in the State Art Society is open to everyone. Applications for the various types of memberships will be available at the exhibition or prior to the event by telephon ing 942-4674 or 968-2706. Ackland To Have Mannerists Show By ALICE WELSH Prints and sculpture by the Mannerists will be exhibited at Ackland Art Center from Nov. 12 through Dec. 3. This exhibition of Mannerism comprising 32 prints chosen from the pirat col lection of the Metropolitan Mu seum of Art, New York City, and ten bronze sculptures from the Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore, is being circulated by the Amer ican Federation of Arts. The period of Mannerism (1520- 1590) included the years between the High Renaissance and die Baroque, a span sometimes call ed contemptuously, “an interval between two peaks." From its inception the term Mannerism (like the term Gothic) has had a derogatory meaning. In its original and narrowest context, Mannerism described an art re bellion in Italy led by Pon tormo, Rosso and Parmigianino. These artists were among the first, according to Professor Frances Huemer, of the Depart ment of Art, “to turn the ideal and monumental style of the High Renaissance into a personal and subjective one. With a disregard for the laws of harmony and bal ance they used the human figure for expressive purpose. Later, after 1550, the style degenerated, using endless repetitious com positions with a piling up of hu man figures and erotic over tones.” The Mannerists experimented freely. Their depiction of the hu man figure was to twist and con tort the body into a single plane, leaxing it no space in which to move freely. In this exhibit an engraving, Elijah and the Rav ens, by the Utrecht Mannerist Abraham Bloemart illustrates f p^Soiwll BARBER *2 I SH#P c&JPh 1 Flat-Top | K Expert* 9 | NOW 2 ///m S barbers Fj IT |_ Z >? to serve you \ £ Next to Vine’s Veterinary \ Sunday, November 3,1963 the artistic tension and instabili ty so typical of this style. The great Mannerist El Greco painted distorted and elongated bodies to create an atmosphere of vertical mysticism. By the end of the cen tury boldly clashing colors were widely used to produce strange and unreal effects. Asymmetry, vagueness and heightened sub jectivity and emotion were strik ing features of Mannerism. In the print, Amerigo Vespucci Giving'His Name to America, by Johannes Stradanus, these ele ments of fantasy, obscurity and imbalance are present. The Mannerist movement was carried to northern Europe via Italian artists emigrating to Fountainbleau, which became the “northern Rome.” Italian Man nerism spread over most of Europe where its influence was also felt in sculpture, graphic arts, architecture and the deco rative arts. Hie museum is open to the public Tuesdays through Fridays from 2 to 5 n.m. and 8 to 10 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sundays, 2 to 5 p.m. Closed Mondays. Just Arrived! Large Selection of TKOISOtS ALL WOOL or ORLON & WOOL Pleated Sizes 32 to 42 or Plain Sizes 30 to 38 $12.95 to $16.95 parleys V Mens Shop 144 East Franklin

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