THE DAILY TAR HEET, Thursday1October27i Campus Calendar - !s' 1 i "the hub THE BEST DRESSED MAN Page 6 THE SP HAS nominated (left to right) Lansing Lee for vice president; Jennifer Carr for so cial chairman; Nancy Warner for secretary; Peace Corps Volunteers Gain Valuable Experience By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer A Carolina senior who is a DUNDALK the all-occasion Maincoat hv Lnnrinn Pnar J " to Here is the one coat you need to make any weather behave! Our justly-famous Dundalk by London Fog has a rich alpaca lining for the coldest days. Zip out tne lining and its a smart outer coat of exclu sive calibre cloth (Dacron & Cotton). What's more the entire coat, lining and all is com pletely wash-and-wear. Dundalk by London Fog $60.00 Clothiers of Distinction FRANKLIN STREET V? LJ Lj i:e:? m wm mi mm Wit GEORGE 0a- IT BEH m PETERS JO WIHI anil m r v i i 1 1 l I; ii It anajwuu.iiiiii.ii i..u,..raMs.... , '.:..v,....'' - ' LJ I , r j v., J t JziLJijL j ULTRA PAN AVISION TECHNICOLOR FROM WARNER BROS Pat Geise for president of the Peace Corps Volunteer feels that two years in a foreign country helping others will be of the most valuable experi ence. Joel Kaylor, a senior socio logy major from Chapel Hill said that he decided last year he wanted to join the Peace Corps after graduation and therefore applied for the ad vance training program. The first thing Joel did was take a language test which measures the ability a person has in dealing with foreign languages. Even though he took French as his language in college he wanted to go to Peru a Spanish - speaking country. In his application for the Peace Corps he listed his three preferred choices of countries and gave all the previous teaching and working experience he had had. . "Luckily I got my f i r s t choice Peru," Joel said. "I think one reason was that I had traveled through part of Latin America the summer before with a YMCA camp." This past summer Joel and one other Carolina student. Waynette Lichty, who are both going to Peru with the Peace Corps, spent ten weeks in the advanced training program at tne university of California at Berkley. Five hours every dav was spent in a concentrated study of the Spanish language. - - - - ------ ------ How To Auction A School? UPLAND. CALIF. (APU"T had a lady scratch her nose once and she bought a house in Bel Air," cautioned auc- tioner Mark Dozar. A I A . turn except tor the young man who swatted a fly and r i ugM uPland College for $510,000 the auction of the school went off in a smooth 30 minutes yesterday. Dozar said it was the first time an entire school had been auctioned. High bidder was the Salva tion Army with a $525,000 of fer. The 11-acre campus, owned y the Brethern in C h r i s t STARTS SUNDAY UflLIKE AI1YTI1I11G YOU HAVE EVER SEE!!! THE SUPER W4 V ACTIO!! SHOW OF SHOWS! o m m mm m m Ml 1MB HQ BASS CKFJSTIM IUT SAVALAS MBaWMM - - - - J L.J - f treasurer; and Ben White for Sophomore Class. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan Much time was also spent every day on Community De velopment field work consist ing of experience with the Oakland, Calif. Redevelop ment Agency. The main area of work was in a preliminary survey to the local Demon stration City Program. Seminars were also con ducted by returned Peace Corps Volunteers on area stu dies of Peru. The final area of study was readings on work of the Peace Corps in Peru and the social, political, and economic conditions of t h e country today. In June, Joel will receive two weeks more of testing and briefing at Berkley be fore he leaves the country. The next four weeks will be spent training in a Spanish speaking enviroment outside the United States. During his training last summer, Joel received $1.50 per day in addition to room and board and was set aside a salary of $75 a month. During his stay in Peru he can expect to receive about $100 a month in salary. He will also be given a couple of months to travel in the area. All of the Peace Corps Vol unteers going to Peru will probably be placed in the Peruvian Social Service Agen cies. Joel has applied to work in the National Housing Agen cy or the National Social Ser vice Agency. Church in this tree - shaded community, is 45 miles east of Los Angeles About 150 persons alumni, teachers, the school custodian, npnn'lp whn wichp1 f-hmr VioH the money to buy and serious bidders-crowded the small wooden college chapel for the auciion. "750 Who say 750? Okay, 650, who say 600?" chanted Dozar asked "four, making with the four." When the bidding reached $525,000, Dozar pleaded, "Ah, ladies and gentlemen, you have a minimum property here worth $1.5 million." The Salvation Armv savs it would like to use the facility anew $300,000 dorrmtorv gymnasium, athletic field, ?.laiSMi?oms' administra- tion building and their fur- nishmgs for an educational and conference center. r CHILDREN'S BOOK SALE! Books wounded in shipping Now Half Price 1.93-2.48 open every evening until 10 p.m. TODAY The Jewish - Christian Dia logue meets at the Hillel Foundation at 7:30 p.m. A film on population explo sion, "A Gift Of Choice," will be shown at 8 p.m. by the recent graduates of AAUW. This is open to the public. Any students interested in rid ing to New York for the Thanksgiving holidays on a chartered bus direct from Chapel Hill at a cost of $22 should contact Doug Barba at 968-9305 or 968-9062. The Carolina Christian Fel lowship meets for supper at 6 p.m. in the Epsilon Room of Chase Cafeteria. Dr. Christian Reinhold of the Research Triangle Institute and a part - time faculty member will speak at 6:30 p.m. on "The Book Revela tion in the Context of Sci- ence." Everyone is invited to attend, Girls willing to serve as cam pus guides for week-end vis itors throughout the 1966-67 year can sign up on a sheet provided by CWC at GM Information Desk. The Toronto Exchange Com mission will meet in the Grail Room from 5:15-6:30 p.m. Attendance , is manda tory. The Social Committee of the Toronto Exchange Commis sion will meet in the Wood house Room from 4:30-5:15 p.m. All members are re quired to attend. Drum section of the marching band will meet for an im portant practice at 5:15 p.m. in Hall Hall. All members please be present. The Christmas Party Commit tee will meet at 4 p.m. in Roland Parker III. GM Publicity Committee will meet at 5 p.m. in Roland Parker I. The Carolinas-Virginia Region of the National Student As sociation will hold a con ference here November 4-5 on this campus. About 30 schools will participate in the program of Educational Reform, Carolina will have six delegates and six alter nates. Anyone wishing to in- terview for the position of dueiuaie vi ueiegdte Miuuiu do so according to the fol: lowing schedule: today, Ro land Parker I, 3-5 p.m.; Monday and Tuesday, 3-5 p.m, Roland Parker II. Officer 'Litters' With Ticket Copy ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) The chairman of the City Beautiful Committee tried to arrest a policeman for littering the streets after the pouceman gave the chairman a ticket for speeding in a school zone. The carbon Daner from the ticket Patrolman G. E. Pruett was writing for Verlv M Den ney landed on the ground. The officer said it fell, the chair- man said it was thrown Denney picked it up and told the officer he was under citizens arrest for littering. Sgt. Steve Appel at police headquarters was asked to arbitrate. Denney said the sergeant did not seem too im pressed with his chairman's identification card, signed by the mavnr. Denney explained that he tri pH tn arroct rr: ii prove a point" that the city has no adequate anti-litter law and the fact that Ha was getting a sneefW HnVct ma' w x O enter uito the case. The Intimate lofcshoD I r if i .- ? ' UP CANDIDATES for snnhnm -juivn nas UIU- cers are (left to right) Chase SaimiWc treasurer; Romona Taylor for Atlas-Centaur Rocket Shatters Long-Time Scientific (APT A nSfT n Fla- iT7JrLfasen- time scientific jinx yesterday .V15" a lon- Limp SrlPtlflfir i nv 1 ana nanaea tne U.S. a new muscle to toss heavy pay loads to the moon and planets. The booster achieved Amer ica's first double ignition of high energy, hydrogen fuel ed engines in space to open a scheduled twin launching here with a smashing success. Between 6:05 p.m. and 7:05 p.m. (EST), the space agency planned to orbit a Comsat Corp. satellite aboard a three stage delta rocket to estab lish the first commercial space communications link across the Pacific Ocean. Yesterday's success not only fully qualified centaur to laun ch expensive lunar and plane tary spacecraft on tricky mis sions, but also provided con fidence for the Apollo man fn fVio requires hydrogen engines of a Saturn 5 rocket to re start in orbit to hurl three astro nauts toward the moon. The Atlas Centaur blasted off at 6:12 a.m. (EST), after burning a first time, Centaur's The sergeant said that while the city's ordinances probably would not cover the offense, the state's litter laws would. Late Hours For Women Freshmen coeds will have sign-out late permis sion tonight to attend the Bob Hope show, the Dean of Women's Office an nounced yesterday. WRC in other business: REFERRED to the co ordinating board some pro posed penalties for (1) failure to sign out for sen ior 2 a.m. late permission and (2) breaking of fresh man closed study. ANNOUNCED that resi dence halls will hold dis cussions on women's rules Oct. 31-Nov. 2. Summaries of suggestions will be ac cepted by the Rules Com mittee, the council said. mm SLEEUE BANLON SHIRTS ALPACA SWEATERS $11.75 & $13.75 HOSE 3 Pr. $125 & & PILL OUTLET sales noon Over Sutton's Prus social chair- twiri hydrogen-fueled engines down to park the vehicle m a 100-mile-high orbit. .. . There, the rocket rnastpH for 24 minutes before restart ing to send a dummy sur veyor spacecraft winging to ward a spot in space 226,000 miles away, which for test purposes represented the moon. The feat proved U.S. scien tists can now manage super cold hydrogen fuel, which must be kept at 423 degrees below zero to remain liquid but develops 40 per cent more power than chemical fuels now in use. Problems taming the fuel delayed Centaur's deve lopment about three years. The communications satel litetwice as big as Comsat's early bird spacecraft launched in 1965 over the Atlantic Ocean was built to open up the first commercial space com munications link between North America, Hawaii and Southeast Asia. , In position over the Pacific Ocean, the communications spacecraft could eventually permit the first live TV pic tures to be relayed from Viet Nam battlefields to the U.S. mainland, carry the first live TV programs from the U.S. mainland to Hawaii and im prove telephone service across the Pacific. Officially, the satellite is to be called Intelsat 2, for the International Telecommunicar tions Satellite. Consortium, a 53 nation partnership which is its owner. Comsat is the U.S. representative and mana IF YOU LIKED THE TIJUANA BRASS YOU'LL LOVE SERGIO .HIDES & BRASIL '66 Sat., Oct. 29, 6:30 P.M. Duke Indoor Stadium Tickets $2.50 & $2 At The Record Bar, At Page Box Office, And At The Door. Also Fred Smoot Appearing Of NBC-TV's "The Wack iest Ship In The Army" 0 fa? GtaSte ;- . . ,"" ... man; Sarah Mendelson for secretary; Landy Anderton for vice president; and Bob Shep pard for President. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Jinx ger for the consortium. If the switchboard space craft fails to achieve the pre cision orbit needed to station it over the Pacific, it may be placed over the Atlantic Ocean off the west coast of Africa to improve communications be tween North America and Europe and open the first space hookup with Latin Amer ica and Africa, when receiv ing stations in those parts of the world are constructed. A decision whether to posi tion Intelsat over the Atlantic or Pacific was not expected until 24 hours after launch. PEWTER j ' ' " '''' T. L. KEMP Jewelry ; 135 E. "Home of the Wiltam RESTAURANT STEAKS CIIICKEfl SEAFOOD IMPORTED and DOMESTIC BEVERAGES SPECIAL THIS WEEK COUNTRY STYLE STEAK Served with Tossed Salad (Choice of Dressing) French Fris Rolls and Butter $1.35 ng Wtlita RESTAURANT lYx MILES FROM CAMPUS PITTS BOSO ROAD Open for Breakfact, Lunch and Dinner Every Day MILES FROM CAMPUS ON PITTS E 00 ROAD .V.VAV.VAV.V.V.V.V.VAV.VAV.V.VAV.VAV.V.W IS A VEST DRESSED MAN Augment your fall and winter wardrobe with the suit of the perfectionist the 3-piecer . . . Tailored in the finest natural tra dition with softly rounded shoulders, a slight suppres sion at the waist in both vest and coat, and plain front pants All features combine for the slim look and call attention to you as a man on the go. Our selection includes chalk stripes, plaids, and basic solid tones .... from 59.85 Odd Sizes Rejoice We have a large selection of shorts, longs, and extra longs. Of Glinpol Hill MUGS Reproductions Franklin St. Old Well Charm" THE

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