PAGE TWO
THE CHAPEt mill NEWS LEADER
THURSDAY, APIS
'Pa'terns Of Spring' Is Theriie
Of Oakview Home, Garden Tour
Mrs. William Moffift and Mrs.
Gray Culbreth, show chairman for
the Oakview Garden Club’s Home
and Garden Tour to be held May
1, have announced their commit
tee;
President and Honorary Chair
man, Mrs. Fred W. Ellis; Schedule,
Mrs. Alex Sessoms; Entry and
Clas.sifications: Arrangements, Mrs.
E. M. Adams; Horticulture, Mrs.
R. L. Hardison; Judges,' Mrs. W.
W. Baucom; Hospitality: Mrs. D. G.
Tarbot, Mrs. Roland McClamroch,
Jr., Mrs. Maurice E. Newton; Stag-
Horticulture, Mrs. Noel Hous-
ins
ton; Publicity, Mrs. Sam Taylor;
Tickets, Mrs. M. M. Timmons.
Tickets for the tour can be pur
chased at any of the three homes
open to the public. Children un
der 12 will be admitted free if ac
companied by parents. Hours will
be from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. May 1.
Homes to be shown include the
following: B; L. Ward, Greenwood
Road; the home and terrace of
Mrs. Earl Wynn, Greenwood Road;
the home of Mrs. Billy Arthur,
Christopher Road; and the garden
of Mrs. Noel Houston, Greenwood
Road.
AAmes. Shepard, Armstrong, Fete Miss L’/ons
Mrs. Roy Armstrong
George Shepard
and
entertained
Press Women
Coming Here
This Weekend
Mrs. I terday morning at a coffee honor-
yes- I ing Miss Mary Elizabeth Lyons,
who is engaged to marry Tom
Johnston Kearns of High Point
April 26.
The coffee was held at the Shep
ard home on Westwood Drive. The
house was decorated with yellow
flowers in a spring motif.
Miss Gay Pauley, Woman’s Page [
Editor of the United Press, will be [
the main speaker at the fifth an-;
nual Institute of North Carolina j
Press Women meeting this week-1
end at the Carolina Inn. ;
Annual press prizes for women i
of North Carolina newspapers will
, be awarded at the institute, and
a panel of editors and publishers
will discuss women in their role
on newspaper staffs.
Reed Sarratt, executive editor |
of the Winston-Salem Journal and I
Sentinel, will moderate the panel!
discussion “So You Are a News-1
paper Woman.’’ j
Miss Pauley, a native of West!
Virginia, helped set up the wo- i
men’s hews department at United
Press in New York in 1953, and
has been with UP since 1942. She
The hostesses presented Miss
Lyon's with a gift of a silver bread
tray.
Assisting in greeting and serv
ing the 50 guests who attended
the courtesy were Mrs. William
Aycock^ Mrs. Ed Hedgpeth, Mrs,
Miriam McNair, Mrs. Bruce Strowd,
Mrs. Hugh Lefler, Mrs. M. A. Hill,
Mrs, Sterling Stoudemire and Mrs.
C. P. Spruill.
THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY
Arts Festival Offers Full Schedu
1 UNC’s first Fine Arts Festival
' will begin this evening and last
through Sunday night.
The Festival will include a
Beaux Arts Ball fashioned on the
Artist’s and Model's Ball in Green
wich Village; a sidewalk art ex
hibit; a performance by the Naval
Air Cadet Choir and of “An
tigone,” the adaptation by Jean
Anouilh of Socrates’ tragedy; a
panel on “Fine Arts and Science
in Modern Education;” a concert
by William Leland, pianist; and a
foreign film.
All of the events of the long
weekend are being sponsored by
various committees of GMAB ex
cept the Sidewalk Art Exhibit and
the Beaux Arts Ball which are be-
'ng co-sponsored by the Recreation
Committee of GMAB and the Uni
versity Art Leagtie. Mary Moore
Mason is the coordinator of the
'^'estival for GMAB and Chuck Hos
kins is the adviser for the Art
League.
The Festival will begin with the
panel on “Fine Arts and Science
in Education” tonight (Thursday)
It 8 o’clock in the Main Lounge of
Graham Memorial and will feature
’hree authorities as speakers: Noel
Houston,, visiting professor of ra-
Warner Wells, translator of “Hiro- this evening a Russian film, “Ten
dio-TV-moti'On pictures at UNC' Days That Shook the World,” di-
and well-known TV and magazine ; reeled by Sergei Eisenstein, con-
writer; Dr. Gregory Ivey, head of | sidered by many the greatest film
the art department at WC; and Dr. ^ director. The film which is a pic-
FINE ARTS FESTIVAL SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Today 7:30 p.m,—Foreign Film (Russian)
World’'—Carroll Hall.
'Ten Days That Shook the
Today 8 p.m.—Panel on ''Fine Arts and Science in Modern Educa
tion" in GM Main Lounge.
Fri. 10 a.m.-S p.m.—Sidewalk Art Show—Franklin Street.
Fri. 9-12 p.m.—Beaux Arts Bail—Carolina Inn—Music by "The Em
bers"—$1.30—Not open to the public. ^
Sat. 4 p.m. and 8 p.m.—Performances of the Naval Air Cadet Choir—
Hill Hall.
Sat. 10 a.m.-S p.m.—Sidewalk Art Show—Franklin Street.
Sat. 8 p.m.—Petites Dramatique presents "Antigone" in Gerrard Hall.
Sun. 8 p.m.—Petite Musicales—William Leland, pianist, main lounge
of GM.
'Antigone" in Gerrard Hall.
Sun, 8 p.m.—2nd performance of
of Graham Memorial.
shima Diary” and member of the toral portrayal of the first days of
UNC medical school faculty. The | the Russian revolution in which
panel will be moderated by Curtis
Gans, editor of The Daily Tar
Heel.
There wilf also be a foreign film
MRS. KENNETH THOMAS HAWKINS
M iss Glenn, Mr. Hawkins Speak
Nuptial Vows In Carrboro Rites
^etites Dmmatiques Schedules
Antiqone^ Twice This Weekend
art rises above propaganda will be
shown at 7:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall.
Starting tomorrow morning at 10
o’clock and lasting until 5 p.m.
there will be a sidewalk art show
The “Antigone” of Jean Anouilh
will be presented Saturday and
Sunday night at 8 o’clock, in Ger-
Cradle Call
The wedding of Miss Mary Car- -Glenn Jr., brother of the bride,
olyn Glenn of Chapel Hill, daugh-: and Paul Tripp, both of Carrboro,
ter of Mrs. J. Wesley Thompson of i were ushers for the wedding.
Chapel Hill and Curtis Glenn S.r.
of Clarksville, Va., ■ to Kenneth
Thomas Hawkins, son of Walter
Hawkins and the late Mrs. Hawk
ins of Cedar Grove, w'as solem
nized in the Carrboro Baptist
John Webb Blocksidge
A son, John Webb, was biorn to
Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Blocksidge
Jr,, of Barclay Road on Monday
morning at Memorial Hosptial. The
has had, a state political beat in baby is named for Mrs. Blocksidge’s ; Church at 7:30 in the evening last
' Saturday.
The Rev. Henry B. Stokes, pas-
!oi' of the church, officiated at the
double-ring ceremony. The vows
Kentucky, headed a state bureau.; brother, as well as a member of
and ha.s been in the New York of- i Mr. Blocksidge’s family. They have
fice for the past 11 years. j one other child, Carol, age 11. Mr.
Officers of the N. C. Press Wo-; Blocksidge is Employed with the
men ' are Doris Dale Reynolds of i Bennett and Blocksidge firm here,
the Greensboro Daily News, Pres-1 ^
WANTED: News and pictures
about men from this community
who are in the armed forces. —
ident; Grace Laffoon of the Elkin
Tribune, Vice-President; Jane Rog
ers of the Charlotte Observer, Sec
retary; Mrs. Rosamo«d Braley of , chapel Hill News Leader
the MacDowell News, Marion,
Treasurer; and Elizabeth Peele of
Charlotte, Contest Chairman.
Phone your Classified Ad to 8-444
Open till 6 p.m, daily.
Don't Miss Sutton's
Spring Swing Sale
All Luggage
% Off
25%
Including Duffel Bags and Over-Niters
All Desk Lamps 20% Off
Bargains Galore All Thro The Store!
SUTTON'S
Drug
Store
East Franklin St.
were spoken before the church al
tar decorated with palms, seven
branched candlebra with cathedral
candles and baskets of white glad
ioli and snapdragons.
A program of organ music prior
to the nuptial vows was rendered
oy Mrs. Ira Mann^ organist.
The bride entered with her
father, who gave her in marriage.
She wore a white satin floor-
length wedding gown made on
princess lines, with sweetheart
neckline. Her full length veil of
imported silk illusion was attach
ed to a tiara of orange blossoms.
She carried a white prayer book
topped with white gardenias.
The maid of honor was Miss
Patricia Tripp of Carrboro, who
wore a pink taffeta ballerina-
length gown with an embroidered
while net over-skirt and carried a
bouquet of sprin'g flowers with
lillies predominating.
The ring bearer was Miss Ann
Butler, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
! William Butler of Durham. She
wore a pink dress similar to that
of the maid of honor, with a pina
fore of white embroidery. She car-
i ried the rings on a hand decorated
white satin pillow. -Both ttendants
wore headpieces of spring flowers.
Best man for the bridegroom
was his brother, Fred Hawkins,
now stationed at Seymour Johnson
Air Force Base, Goldsboro. Curtis
The bride’s mother chose for
her daughter’s wedd.ing a navy
blue crepe street-length dress with
navy accessories and .3 white cor
sage of carnations.
Following the wedding a recep
tion was held in the Sunday School
rooms of the church. Refresh
ments were served from a table
covered with a bridal satin cloth,
centered with a flower arrange
ment of white snapdragons and
lillies of the valley, flanked wtih
-tall white candles in crystal hold
ers. The wedding cake was cut
and served by Mrs. H. D. Maynard.
Mrs. Dalton Howard presided at
the punch bowl.
JNC Chorus
Concert Set
Tuesday Night
Spring Swing Sale
50 Watches
Famous Makes For Ladies And Men
33
% Discount
Friday And Saturday Only-Open Until 8:30 P. M. Friday
Wentworth & Sioan
East Franklin St.
Chapel Hill
GRANT FOR CORNELL STU
DY—Allen Williams, University
senior in sociology, has won a
$1,400 scholarship and will do
graduate work at Cornell Uni
versity next year. A native of
Chapel Hill, he is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Williams.
Mr. Williams is director of per
sonnel in the University and
the attorney for the University.
The University Chorus under the i
direction of Wilton Mason will
present a concert in Hill Music
Hall on Tuesday at 8 p.m. i
The program will open with one
of the finer works of the Renais
sance period in music, Palestrina’s
“Missa Brevis.” This_ Mass, first
published in 1570, will be sung un- j
accompanied and in it’s entirety.
Another religious work will com
plete the first half of the program.
With Donna Kelly, soprano soloist,
the chorus will sing the “Inflam-
matus et accensus” from Rossini’s
Stabat Mater. Pianist Robert Steel
man and organist John Shannon
will accompany the Rossini num
ber.
The second half of the program
will consist of secular compositions
of the late nineteenth and parly
twentieth centuries. The 'Trois
Chansons of Ravel, written in
1915, is the composer’s only chor
al work aside from some unpub
lished cantatas. The three songs
to be heard are “Nicolette,”
“Trois beaux oiseaux du Paradis”
and “Ronde.”
The second number will feature
as soloists: Quillian White, soprano;
Gene Strassler, tenor; Marilyn
Zschau, contralto; Harvey Miller,
baritone. Two Appalachian folk
songs, “Over Yonder” and “When
Young Men Go a-Courtin’,” will be
heard in arrangements by the
Chorus director.
Concluding the concert will be
three choruses from Moussorgsky’s
opera, Boris Godounov: Coronation
Scene, In the Tower of Kazan, and
Death of Boris. David Small will
be the bass soloist and Robert
Steelman and Dana Dixon, piano
accompanists.
Entries are still being accept
ed, until 11 p.m. topight, for the
Sidewalk Art Show this week
end. Work may be submitted with
a one dollar entry fee at the
Graham Memorial Information
Office. The show will be held on
E. Franklin St., from' the Uni-
From this act there develops a
series of tragic incidents, which
affect the lives of all the char
acters.
Starring as Antigone, the re
bellious princess, will be Amanda
Meiggs, who played the role of
St. Jean earlier this year in “The
Lark,” another play by Jean
Anouilh. Creon, the king, who has
been trapped by his duty, will be
William Dixon, seen earlier in
“These Cornfields.”
Personal Mention
(Phone 8444 For Contributions To This Column)
Mr.
and Mr.s. J. B. Johns of Asheboro and their two daughters, Bebe
and Julie, spent last Sunday here with Mrs. Johns’ mother, Mrs.
M. A. Strowd.
Arthur Roe, Joseph F. Burnett, E. C. Markham, Charles N. Reilfey and
S. Young Tyree will leave this weekend for San Francisco, Calif.,
to take part in the American Chemical Society meeting April IS
IS.
Miss Fay Culpepper spent the Easter weekend wth her family at Nags
Head.
Kennon Strowd is recovering nicely at Memorial Hospital, where he
underwent surgery last week. He has been a patient there for the
past two weeks.
Mrs. L. L. Hobbs HI and her children left yesterday to visit her moth
er, Mrs. Bernard Stephenson, in Shelby for 10 days. Mr. Hobbs
will join them this weekend.
Mr, and Mrs. 'Vic Paderick have returned from a visit with his family
in Kinston.
Dr, Newton Fischer will.be in Cincinnati, Ohio, next week to partici
pate in an intensive postgraduate course in reconstructive nasal
surgery to be presented at the University of Cincinnati College of
Medicine and Cincinnati General Hospital,
icine and Cincinnati General Hospital.
Miss Martha Meyer of Washington, D. C., spent the Easter weekend
here with her brother. Dr. Harry Meyer, Mrs. Meyer and their
three children,
and Mrs. Malcolm Lane of Charleston, West Va., visited friends
here this weekend.
and Mrs. Henry Lomax spent Easter Sunday in Charlotte wtih his
family.
Remsen Voofhis wilL arrive home from Fort Jackson, S. C., for
a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Voorhis this weekend.
Amanda Meiggs as 'Antiogne' ai
-larpld Williamson as 'Haemon'
rard Hall.
This play will be the third pre
sentation of Les Petites Dramat-
iques this year. Taken from the
classical tragedy of Sophocles, this
play tells the story of a girl who
rebels against the edict of her
uncle, the king, and
traitorous brother.
Taylor Williams will portray the
cynical Chorus, and Harold Will
iamson will be Haemon, Antigone’s
fiancee.
versify Methodist Chur
tie Dormitory.
4
which will be on disp
same hours Saturday
2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. \
Friday evening the '
Ball will take place.;
is not open to the pu'
all other Festival even
Saturday evening ti
Naval Air Cadet Choi:^
ida, who have appearei
TV shows, among the'
Sullivan Show,” wil
twice, at 4 p.m. and 8 p
Hall. .j
There will also be th
formance of “Antigone
the Petites Dramatiqui
rard Hall at 8 p.m. on^
The Festival ends S
■I
the performance at 8 j
main lounge of G.M. j
Leland, pianist, under t
ship of the Petite Mus
mittee, and the secori
ince of Antigone at 8 j
■■ard Hall.
SUNDAY PIANIST
final event of the
Fine Arts Festival pi
iam Leland will give
on the Petites Musi
gram this Sunday evi
o'clock in Graham M
Others in the cast are Beau Ryan
as Ismene, Lucy Ann Dunlap as
the nurse, Ken Callendar as Cap
tain Jonas, John Whitty as the
messenger, Barbara Dixon as Queen I
! Euridice, and John Steed and
buries her ; William Pfefferkorn as the guards.
1 No admission will be charged.
Famous For .
Rare Roas
® Imported
THE RATHSKI
A Landmark In Chi
Mr,
Mr.
Pvt.
SPRING SWING SALE
IN APPRECIATION OF STUDENT PATRONAGE AND GOOD Wll
WE ARE COOPERATING IN SPRING SWING DAYS WITH
FOLLOWING SPECIALS.
TI
ONE GROUP
ALL SPRING
SPRING DRESSES SUITS AND COA'
V3
V4
Off Regular Price
Off Regular Price
Discount On Sportswear
Including Swim Suits And Play Clothes
These Specials For Spring Swing Days Oi
Friday and Saturday“April llth and 12
of Chapel Hil