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Semester's Movies Due By The 27th The Student Union Movies f< this semester, will be shown c Thursdays and Saturdays; so is unconfirmed, they are tentativel3 Back Street - Feb. 27 and 2 Tiger Bay - March 3 and This Gun For Hire - March 1 and 14. The Great imposter - Marc 19 and 21. The Perfect Furlough - Marc .25 and 27. Cape Fear - April 2 and 4. Coming Out Party - April and 11. Midnight Lace - April 16 an 18. Romanoff and Juliet - April 2 and 25. Thirty-Nine Steps - April 2 and May 1. Pursuit of the Graf Spee - Ma 7 and 9. All My Sons - May 14 and 11 Lavender Hill Mob - May 2 and 23. "All you've got to do is belies what you hear, and if you do thr enough, after a while you'll hen what you believe." - Dooley Foreigi Many of us are al r e a d acquainted with this w e e k' foreign student, Yuki Hartmn of Tokyo, Japan. As the gue poet in the fall issue of tl Crucible literary m a g a z i n Yuki excited much interest wit his beautiful moving p o e t ! style. Yuki leads a double life 4 sorts, sharing his time betwei Fort Jackson and the Unive sity night school. At Fort Jac] son, Yuki serves as a radio r pairman in the Communicatioi School. At Carolina, he taking undergraduate coursi in English literature, his maj< subject. Almost everything seems 1 interest Yuki. He loves to rea, to travel, to listen to classic music or jazz, and to play tl classic guitar. Art of all kind also interests him; he enjo visiting the Columbia Museu of Art. When he is relieved of dui at Fort Jackson on July 10 < this year, Yuki plans to moi ED HIENDRIICKSON, maina playecr ins Bridge in South Carollb card room. IBISEN: Letters and Speeches Edited by E v e r t Sprinchorn Associate Professor of Drama a The Experimental Theatre, Vas sar College. 384 pages. Chro nology. Index. $5.75 cloth; $2.41 p)aper. D-37. A Dranmabook. T[here has been no major editi< of Ibsen letters since 1906. Wii the publication of this book, Pr fessor Sprinchorn seeks to reme< that situation by bringing togethi material that was not availab fifty years ago. Published here I< the first time are 129 letters a included in the early edition, f of which are translated for ti first time. In chronological orde the volume cont.ains 276 letter 2 h h 3 0 y FERRANTE AND TEICIIER, 1 in Columbia Thursday, Feb. 27. T USC Stu. SIn Natior Friends y 5 n ie e, h r New YUKI HARTMAN to New York, perhaps to live in i Greenwich Village. There he e hopes to take a course in crea ls tive writing at the New School ,s for Social Research. M In the future, Yuki wants to b e c o m e a writer of short y stories, novels, and p e r h a p a >f poetry. re Pam Vestal ger of the Russell Hlouse, and Elizabe ia, preside over the Bridge tournament 's Review .thirteen speeches, four prefaces, ,and one autobiographical f rag Lment. I b s en 's letters, speeches and literary works form a vivid picture and intimate "biography" of a great and creative nineteenth-cen tury mind. This collection reveals his passionate belief in the free in dom of the human spirit, of a man h ahead of his time, who protested D- against the stifling conventions of ly his country and became a volun er tary exile for thirty years, living Ie andI working in Italy and Germany. >r Here are his thoughts as play ot wright, when lhe wrote his famous by plays. Here are letters to his wife ie and son, and to his friend, Georg r, Brandes, the famous critic, and his ., p.ulsher nationally known pianists, will be heir story is on the right. rents Par rwide Coi By PRECIOUS ZURIA "Do y'all play bridge?" Mi Elizabeth Simpson cornered us we went in to watch the brid tournament for a few minut Five tables were being used students competing in the elimin tion finals of the national intc collegiate bridge tournament in t Russell House card-playing roo The competition, sponsored the Russell House Student Unic was directed by Mrs. Simpson, life master three times over. 1:30 on Sunday, Feb. 16th t games started. On a mere 72 hours advan notice, much time and energy we spent by Mr. Ed Hendrickson m a k i n g the necessary arranj ments. The tournament direct was S o u t h Carolina's forem< woman bridge player. Elizahe Simpson has amassed one thousa life master points (luring t bridge-playing career and is ni a certified Goren and Culberts bridge teacher. The hands which were play had been prepared by the woi famous b r i d g e players, Willi Root and Rosler; they were a proved by Char1es Goren a others. These same pre-set han were played in all the other c ha Shnpson, highet-scoring woman February 16 in the Russell IIouse TIHE GONIDOL Ouar PiZZ AS A and can be i GON DE LICIOUS AME RIC FRIENDS MEET ANC OPEN 5:00 P.A CLOSE 215 PICKENS ST. Phoni lie Spec;ali.e Ferra Are( Fer rante and Teicher, the "movie theme team" who will ap pear at the Township Auditorium on Thursday, February 27, at 8:30 P.M., are innovators in the true sense. They have made the mun (lane piano duet a thing of the past, and produced in its stead a dynamic new approach to popular tandem pianistics. They've been playing as a team since their graduation from New York's Julliard School of Music, where they met when they were six-years old. In the first stage of their career they played only the classics, con centrating on the standard reper toire for two-piano teams. Their imagination and curiosity soon had them experimenting with ticipa te npe tition leges and universities which par ticipated in the national tourna ment. as A HIGH SCORES A maximum score of 100 is pos sible in such tournaments but a rarely, if ever, earned. Those who r- make between 65 and 75 points he are considered excellent players. 1 Here at Carolina the highest scoring north-south pair was com n posed of George Mahaffee, a USC n student who p 1 a y e d with Mrs. t Simpson in a state competition he last week, and Mike McKee, a Clemson student. It is permissable, incidentally, for a student from ce another college to take part. This re pair scored a total of 67 points. in Among the east - west partners e- F. B. Brewer and Charles Lipp. or man tied Alfred J. Williams, Jr. st and John M. Barry. Each of thes th pairs had totaled 49 points. ad These winners will be given at. er tractive gifts in addition to th< >w opportunity to compete in the re on gional intercollegiate competition Appropriate trophies and plaque ed marking this year's tournamen, -ld winners will be put on display it Im the Russell House. In the future p- more will be added. This was thf nd first year that USC entered thf ds competition. OTH hER USC STUDENTS Six other pairs of Carolina stu. (dents competed. They were Paul Lyell, Jr., and Jeanne Fillman, David Bloom and1 Barry Rothberg, .John H. Robinson and Ned Gwin, George H. Smith and Clara R. Mancari, Bill Clary and Pe gg y Ellis, and John Newark WVest and Kathie Staples. Two non-competi tors, Dr. Elizabeth M. Smith and Don Carstens joined to fill up the tables. The names of the regional and national champions in this nation. wide t ou rn ame nt will be an nounced in the beginning of April. Seen, 1Heard. Speheis ON CAMPUS W eil, a professor finally said it ouEt loud: Dr. Christophersen told -his English 158 class, before a quiz, "The more you w'rite, the better yjour grade." Everytime a ny b ody mnentionj Green Hetles these days, it breaki the students up. WVe can't help bw imagine them with hair down t< their eyebrows. relade "fly Iland" A TIEN "fly Iland" DOLA ITALIAN AND AN FOODS I EAT AT THE GONDOLA I. - 12:00 MIDNIGHT D MOND)AY CONPMBLA, S. C. 256-6632 in ' T o (.n" Orders.. nte A 4ommn their pianos and devising certain "gimmicks" which a l t e r e d the s o u n d of the piano, sometimes making it sound like an orchestra. For a while they enjoyed a career with this innovation which brought them before the public not only R ES HUNGRY? 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