Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1756-1963 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more
Image provided by: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library, Chapel Hill, NC
Newspaper Page Text
Monday, December 4, 1961 _ ,;;M’' v*l * t rn?*SS^H?Sf> V^^JplHnSß:;-'.', r /i • -Aj- iy: * ” fiiaiwiMi' - <^WM .^..^^.^,..>.~... r . w.,. ... - ' \ |7 f » %\ Yak V% \ % \\ ljk *4 ® \ v:; ''*■ n^Plt 'll ‘The Cry’ By Edvard Munch Prints On Exhibit At Ackland .. . '■■■■ - Lady Milton Pre-Xmas Fiasco Limited time only—fabu lous savings on the l>est looking “gittables” found Violent and expressive prints by the Nowegian artist, Kdvand Munch, are on view now at the Aekland Art ( enter The exhibi tion 'which lasts until the end of anywhere! Cive-a-way on 524 Lady Milton Shirts, mostly sizes 10-16. long slejeve pullover hut ton-downs, non-pullover hut ton-downs, some choir • boys dark toned solids; paisleys; small geometric prints; conversational • prints regularly to $10.95. • buy now at one for $2.99 or .*{ for $8.50. Croup imported Shetland pullover sweaters formerly to $14.05, have fun at $5.00 Iteige heather full fashion ed imported cardigan clas sic she! kinds slashed from $14.05 to SB.OO 178 wool skirts, mhstJy straight model, regularly to $25.00, have fun at SB.OO. Entire remaining stock of wool skirts in straight, box pleat and kilt models cut from $14.95 to $10.00; % $16.05 to $12.00; $18.95 to $14.00; $10.05 to $15.00; $21.05 to $17.00; $22.05 to $18.99; $24.05 to $10.00; % $26.95 to $20.05 now $21.00 Lroup shirtdresses former ly to $15.06 now $6.00; formerly to $20.60 now $10.00; formerly to $20.95 sbished to $14.09. Remaining stock of shirt dresses reduced from $12.05 to $10.00; $14.85 to $12.00; $16.05 to $13.00; $18.05 to $15.00; $10.05 to $16.00; $21.05 to $17.00; $22.05 to SIB.OO and $24.95 to SIO.OO. Perfect gift Item—Carolina glove and scarf sets cut from $6.95 to $4.09. EXTRA Sl’KClAl#—Rrae — mar cashmere and llrae- mar lambs wool sweaters re duced in time for Christ mas 514.95 lamhswooi now $10.90; $26.95 long sleeve cashmere classic pull overs cut from $26.95 to $19.99; long sleeve classic cashmere cardigans cut from $29.95 to $22.99. Women’s Hass Weejun loaf ers in Mack pointed toe; brown or black round toe, reduced from $11.95 to $8.99. All Saks Cash and Final LADY MILTON SHOP j lent by the National Gallery of! Art, Washington, 1) C. from it’s; distinguished Rosen wold Collec tion. One of the great masters of rno dern graphic art. Edvard Munchl |' 1863-1942) stands in the same re-j lat Kinship to German art as; Cezanne to French His work was one ol the basic influences on Ger man Expressionism which in turn y has had a great influence oil con-; j tem|K)rary American art. '■ The prints of Edvard Munch are; darkling mystical pictures with l • themes of illness, deaht, depravity, the demonic and evil They reflect his own unhappy life but more un- IMirtant, Munch's art bears the imprint of an unhappy age He symltoli/es the conflicts of modern i times and shifting social forces as ; the social dramas of Norway’s jjbsen, the writing of Denmark’s influential Kierkegaard, and Swe den's August Strindberg, the liter ary counterpart of Munch, show other synitorns of the conflict. Included in the exhibition are a number ol [xirtrail.s of Munch’s friends and associates, including Strindberg, several .self-portraits, and such othei subjects as "The i Sii k Child", “The Morning After", i "The Cry", "Case Scene" and I I —...Mil. - * i *** li FBI ap your foal tank mam wtli I i Quit Sour Haat ■ tM cfeaneet 1 burning heating ©S yea taa baa. ■ ! tiling at mar prLe. FOr CLEAN HEAT |QQpß|| BENNEn mi BLOOKSIDBE US E. FraakSa St. ( Ph. 942-5141 "Vampire”. Every element in Munch’s prints of these years i Iftyo'.s ami 1900 s i has an expressive (unction. He uses the wood’s own surface qua lity as part of his design. Munch attained not only technical com petence in the graphic medium but was able to use it with great cflec. tiveness in communicating hi s felt tragic view of life. The exhibition which is circulat ed by the Smithsonian Instilla tion can be seen at the Ackland Art Center Tuesdays through Fri days. 2 30 to 5 p.m. and 8 to to p m Saturdays, 10 am. to 5 pm. Sundays, 2 p.m. to 5 pm. Closed Mondays. Anderson To Talk To Presbyterians Dr Hugh Anderson, Duke Uni versity professor of Biblical Iheo logy and formerly a resident of Glasgow, Scotland, will speak at a dinner meeting of the Presbyter ian Adult Fellowship this Wednes day evening in the Fellowship Hall The title of his talk will be A Britisher's View of Hie Ameri can Church." Those desiring to attend the sup jier '?. r > cents |M*r person) are urg ed lo call the church office at 942- 3753 for reservations by not later than today. The supper will begin at 7 p m. and the talk at 7:45 p m. All adults are invited PHILOMMiICAL MEETING The Philological Club will meet at 7 .W p.m this Tuesday in the faculty lounge of the Morohead Planetarium. Raymond Adams of the UNC English DejMirtment will give a paper entitled "The Ripleys Move to Brook Farm Some Un published letters of Sophia Rip ley ” I f rL ristmas Cards One o/ the Finett Selection*. Hundred* ... Something to Pleaae | PARTY SUPPLIES l \ Everything for gain holiday fastMtlaal THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY J Like Chapel Hill By BILLY ARTHUR R53?3«5»55>3?3?3»3? Another football game I wished I could have watched was the kids’ game on the let back of Glen Lennftx Service Station last week. It had all the potential of a good game, because each side had 18 players on it. •* • « I wanted to get in touch with Lambros Andrews and called Leo’s restaurant. Mrs. Elias Eli adls answered. “How can I reach Lambros?" I asked. ‘‘You’ll find him in Samagusta. Cyprus. Greece.” she said. "Rec. kon you can reach that far. Bifly?” * * t Our children are amused every time they hear what they think is a new song—“ Last Night On the Back Porch I Loved Her Best Os All." 1 told them it wasn’t a new tune: so they wanted to know what's a back porch 1 tried to explain that probably only old fogies as I were accus tomed to back porches and front porches and porches that ran practically all the way around th house Used to be that people sat on the front porch and rocked, and ; the back |Kirch was used for washing hands and face in a washpan, then throw the water on the cannas My aunts and uncles had the j prettiest cannas in Cabarrus County. Also the back porch was where one stood to throw kitchen scraps to the dogs. Had some pretty, filled out hounds, too. And my relatives were healthy also; they lived longer than their three score ami ten. Then, both back porches and front porches became smaller, and I cited ours to the children. They said I meant front stoop and back stoop. They were correct, though when 1 was growing up a stoop was a squat. How quickly some things change! * • * I’m certainly happy to see the TV commercials embodying Christmas scenes. All through the football season I was disgusted looking at baseball players shav ing. And the toothpaste commer cials were gelling in my teeth. * * * > Y 7. Cannon says he has never raked a leaf off his yard. “I J*^^Sik3!®3®SS3s3s3SS!3t3s3!3!3!3? jj PICTURE FRAMING \ ANY SIZE ... MADE TO ORDER | | Foister’s Camara Storm 1 SPECIAL 60% OFF Now thru ChrintmiiH! or a PEARL RING "o'* >8,96 While supply lasts HENDKRSON’S WATCHMAKER and JEWELER Call *42-2150 402 w , f ranklin tit. just wait for the wind to blow them over on Ray Ritchie's and Ed Lanier's," he confesses, a * * A teen-age fad nowadays is to put Scotch tape over bangs to keep them from curling while sleeping. Recently we had a young guest at our house whose forehead and cheeks were plas tered with tape when she prepar ed for bed. Seemed to me that masking tape would be better, so I sug gested she use it instead Well, she'll never again listen to her Uncle Billy The next morning it took her an hour of time and pain to get the mask ing tape off. She lost some hair, too. Also, temper. Poet To Read Here Wednesday Evening George Garrett, young poet and novelist, will give a public read ing at 7:30 p.m. this Wednesday in the University Library's assembly loom under the auspices of the North Carolina Poetry’ Circuit. Everybody is invited. Now .1 professor of English at j Rice Institute, Houston, Tex , Mr Garrett is a winner Os the se j wanee Review’s Writing Fellow ship and the Prix de Rome. He i spent last year doing drama work with the Houston Little Theatre on a Ford Foundation fellowship The purpose of the North Caro lina Poetry Circuit is to bring younger poets to North Carolina to talk and give readings in colleges and universities. PRESBYTERIAN SERVICES Presbyterian services are held at 9 a m. and 11 a m. Sunday. I THE PORTHOLE I U now open on 0; MONDAY U also Tuesduy, Wednes- e! li day, Thursday, Friday X ft Saturday, and Sunday, ffi « Eat anytime between S S 11:30 a.i.i. and 7:30 | ',i p.m. % SFREE PARKING AVAILABLE?*] J535®dt353k3^T^53!^3tJ!3^553i5ft3^353«?3!^ e i cracy came, not from those who invoked government to advance the genera? wel fare, but from those who threaten ed the liberties guaranteed the people in the Bill of Rights and thereby prevented democratic government from meeting its responsibilities. “The time, my country men, has come,” he said in the days of Senator McCarthy, “that the «e cam paigns of knock and smear must cease if we are to perform our function and fulfill our destiny.” And he knew too that the threat to democracy came most of all from the to talitarian crusades of the 20th century. Perhaps his greatest parliamentary mo ment came on August 12, 1941, when his skill secured the passage by a single vote of the bill extending the selective service system and thereby preventing the dis solution of the American Army four months before Pearl Harbor. And to the end of his life he cared for vigor and fortitude in face of the threat of coni >e-» The Bank of Chapel Hill announces a new one-number phone system for our Main Office Rosemary Street Drive-Up Glen Lennox Office Eastgate Office CALL 942-5183 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS OUR CARRBORO BRANCH IS 9124267 .Sr jjk /Mnk Now ... in order to make banking service faster for us and easier for you, we have installed a (UaJ telephone system for all Chapel Hill offices. One calj will reach any department of our Main Office, Rosemary Street Drive-lJp, Glen Lennox Office or Eastgate Office. Our Carrboro Branch with its separate bookkeeping system will continue with its same separate telephone. But re member! One call does it all when you waht to reaeh any department of any Chapel Hill office of your home town bank ***** * 1 “ The Hill e P6w™iNm* —Sam Rayburn— (Continued from 2-B) munism. “This is not a very happy world we are living in,” he said a little white ago. “It is a dangerous world, more dan gerous to the civilization we know and love than people ever sought to exist in." He understood the dangers—and he nev er doubted the capacity of the American people “to respond to the best interests of the country when this country was in danger and in a crisis .... We will come through in a fashion that will make us all proud.” It will be a long time before people forget the powerful, somber face, the whining bald head, the stocky figure, sit ting deep in the Speaker’s chair, the heavy-lidded eyes deceptively half-closed, the laconic phrase, or, in moments of ex asperation, the snapping eyes and the pounding gavel. “The greatest ambition a man can have.” Sam Rayburn said, “is to l>e known as a just man.” He realized that ambition, and his country is deeply in his debt. Page 3-B