Sunday, November, 24, 1963 EL 3 1-1 V r* ‘-1 ■ Lr - *<'*&!«&>,'&'' • ” '- "S *3l!Hw3WßHßKes«*';*2sSmk*\ j SR3I *ll B' iifiiß Hf^oP'^^^-- : - liHH I I |%- ~#| m is&jafjk gs&mr 1 m './.. . # . f MY;;Vw;I-, ( f# v fff¥ fil# * , BSf« *r^ Hj a pH :V ,,4;;; ;\ : -"^ ’ v f ! v - - t * /4 1 ,<« I|&'J i v3* | I «;{’• ‘' s|fe|t| ', f „ 3*«®£ 1 7 J't ' vr * ' V * * y£- «*' ‘ 1* * * -^ J * '*. k |SL H » '- v >; * s^£j,”C < 3jj gE * Jgj v 5 h||| " , s&g | / ..» >;>y - | ,’ , J ... /s'' ‘fj 1 . l '•'W ’’- w I*s-. CHRISTMAS HOUSE—Working in gifts prep aration for the coming opening of the Junior Service League's annual Christmas House are, from left, Mrs. 0. E. Brown, Mrs. J. P. Nethercutt, Mrs. Milton GUEST AUTHORS GROUP The .Guest Authors Group of the Newcomers Division of the University Woman’s Club will meet Tuesday at the home of Mrs. William Pease on Northside Drive in Dogwood Acres. Dr. Isaac Taylor will speak on Ad miral Byrd’s expedition to the Antarctic. UQSersity Hmsiand jk IflmShop PBP ■Hb: Serving Thanksgiving DINNERS from noon ’til nine Delicious dining moderate prices. CALL 489-9128 | ScHßAFprfc ft COUNTRY | .innVJ RESTAURANT Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. ,c'r>r'C'c>c>£>cS>3®£i£sS!SsSSS£*3»£s£SS!S%o£s®£i?S£!s>^ X We Invite You To Browse Around Our Museum-Like Exhibition of Different pgpgMWMj Gifts From All Over The World Ull * FREE GIFT WRAPPING * LAY AWAYS * CHARGES * MAILING QwUmU Quartet Will Play Tuesday The North Carolina String Quartet, assisted by Earl Slo cum, flute and Wilton Mason piano, will present a program of Mozart, Prokofiev, and Ber tok in Hill Music Hall Tuesday evening at 8. This Tuesday Evening Series presentation is open to the pub lic. Now in its 13th season, the North Carolina String Quartet introduces with this concert its new second violinist, Earl Wols lagel. He replaces Mrs. Alex ander Heard who resigned from the Quartet last season to ac company her husband to his Dost as chancellor of Vanderbilt University.' Mr.-AKoblwe!, a na- * five of Asheville, studied as a child with Mark Cbestney, con certmaster of the New Haven, Connecticut, Symphony Orches tra and as a student in the Insti tute of Musical Art in New York with Mme. Vera Fonaroff and Julian, aid Mrs. R. A. Black. The Christmas House booth for contributions will be open on Franklin Street for a week starting next Saturday. --Photo by Town & Country, the great violin professor Leo pold Auer. He later studied in Vienna, as a pupil of the late Geza de Kress, then head of the violin department of the Royal Con servatory of Music in Bucharest. During the Depression, Mr. Wolslagel made his way through the University here by playing as a charter member and first violinist of the North Carolina Symphony under the noted Tar Heel composer Lamar String field. In 1936 he joined the Bank ers Trust Company of New York, leaving in 1941 to begin a 21-year career with the Army Air Force. He retired as a Lt. Col onel of the Ait- Force year be— * fore last, returning to the Uni versity to earn an A.B. degree in Journalism in June, 1962. Al most immediately thereafter he -Joined the institutional advance " ment staff of Duke University. Throughout Mr. Wolslagel’s military service career he was active in music. He played with major symphony orchestra in Denver. Baltimore, Utica, N.Y., and Trenton, N.J., and organ ized an International Trio in Madrid, Spain, which performed many concerts there. Since his retirement from the FIGURE . . . your life insurance needs now while you have time, or your widow will have to when it’s too late. Matt L. Thompson Arthur Deßerry, Jr. Phone 942-4558 4®5 Franklin St. Ml E. Mata St, Carrfcoro Phone 912-7151 THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY Air Force, Mr. Wolslagel has played with the Duke and UNC Symphonies, the Triangle Little Symphony, end has been active in local chamber music groups. His home is in Chapel Hill, where he lives with his wife and two sons, 16 and 11. The three remaining members of the Quartet have played to gether since the quartet’s found ing. They are Edgar Alden, first violinist, professor of music theory and musicology at UNC and associate conductor of the UNC Symphony; Dorothy Alden, violist, director of the Chapel Hill Youth Orchestra and a grad uate