j&ijijtzrun* at et'ivi/ryr vluuiuv
THURSDAY, OCTOBSR 15, 1959 SECTION TWO, PAGE 8
'CAROUSEL CAROUSERS—Mrs. Louis* La
wont of €hap*i HiW, playing th* part of Mrs.
Mutllh ownor of th* 'Carousal'—-ghfos an indig
nant star* to Chuck Nisb*t III of Charlott* »th*
Villainous Jigg*r Corigin, In th* Carolina Play
makors production of th* Broadway hit musical
•how 'Carousal,' to bo given in Memorial Hall at
Chapel Hill Oct. 23 through 25. Tickets are on
•ale at the Playmakers Business Office, 214 Aber
nefhy Hall and at Ledbetter Pickerct Store.
(UNC Photo)
Rupert Vance declares . . .
'Southern belle' of yore is now eclipsed
by career grrhand she likes it that way
r. ff.
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Gone from the South is the
•^Southern Belie” of tradition.
Kenan Prof. Rupert B, Vance
declares the career woman has
exchanged her pedestaled and
ffcptected status of yore for a new
Independence—ana she* likes it.
The UNC sociologist is one of
three Tar Heels writing chapters
)h “This is the South," published
By Rand McNally Co. of New
York.
, The others are dramatist Paul
Greed and William Powell who is
heed of the North Carolina- room
in the Louis R. Wilson Library of
ftie University in Chapel Hill.
Prof. Vance wrote On “The
Southern Family Today.’? Mr.
Powell’s topic is “The Native,” a
description of i’ie early American
Indian. Paul Green wrote on
“Symphonic Outdoor Drama.”
'Distinctive Feature'
New freedom, for the* Southern
women is a distinctive feature of
Southern life today campared
With fordier times, Prof. Vance
writes. » .•
“The emancipation of women
moves* Smith when, to girls as
to men, a period of independ
ence came to intervene between
childhood and marriage," Prof.
Vance writes.
“Formerly, a farm girl at the
age of 16 to 18 passed out of
control of her father and mother
and ini* that of • husband with
no taste of intervening freedom,
ifowfhit-college or employment
intervenes between parental con
trol and the beginning of married
life, the Sonthern girl, like her
sisters elsewhere; awakens to
ideas of her otm independence
and equality.”
Marriage Mote Stable f
Prof. “Vance points out that al
though divorce is increasing in
the South as elsewhere, “the
Southern family retrains more
statWe than its national counter
part and proportionately fewer
divorces are granted in the- South
on the wife's petition,”
Tt* University of Worth Car
olina sociologist describes the
new generation of Southern wo
man:
“Faoed, in a prospective loss of
her man to the service*, with the
independent life of the Career
Girl once advocated by feminists,
‘nice’ middle-class girls learn pot
hooks and typewriting, marry
their men, put them through col
lege, bear their babies, and live
in veteran’s villages all the
while.”
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