dav, December 3, Page 6 W ...f5j FOR COLD WEATHER, you can't beat an old - fashioned stocking hat. This winter will see many fashions of the past coming back in . . . like knickers for instance. The saucy model here is Ann Hutchison who likes to wrap the long end of the cap around her face and use it for a muffler. Go ahead, dress with a little eccentricity . . . winter is the time for it. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Schools To Study Stroke Death Rate Eastern North Carolina has one of the highest death rates in the U. S. from stroke. The rate among people un der 60 years of age is double the national 'average in a belt of counties extending along the Atlantic seaboard from N. C. to Georgia. The UNC School of Public Health is collaborating in a national study with the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene to find out why. The study will involve sur .vey of two areas in the U. S. with the highest death rate from strokes eastern N. C. and eastern Georgia, two areas with the lowest rates, and two intermediate areas. The study is being conduct ed to try to determine if this astonishingly high rate is real or if it can be explained by differences in the diagnostic customs of the physicians who fill out the cause of death on the death certificates. The North Carolina phase of the study is being coordinated by Dr. Phillip Spier, epidemi ologist at the UNC School of Public Health. Dr. Spiers emphasized the study is not questioning either the accuracy or the conscien tiousness of physicians in list ing the causes of death on death certificates. "We're just interested in terested in different diagnos tic practices to see if they can account for the wide varia tions in death rates from strokes across the U. S.," he said. The N. C. study will focus on a sampling of all deaths Firms Recruit On Campus The following companies will recruit on the campus during the week of Decem ber 5-9. Monday A. M. Pullen & Co.; Southern Railway Sys tem; Shell Companies; Cone Mills Corporation; Ortho -Pharmaceutical Co. Tuesday Haskins & Sells; Phillips Petroleum Co. (sum mer work also); Scott Pap er Co.; Pure Oil Company; Branch Banking & TrustingCo. Wednesday R. J. Rey nolds Tobacco Co.; Graduate School of Bus. Adm., Univer sity of Virginia; California Packing Sales Co.; Western Auto. Thursday Ryder Truck Lines, Inc.; Fieldcrest Mills, Inc.; Maryland National Bank (also summer work); Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Cfip. Friday National Security Agency; Talon, Inc.; Unilev er Limited; C. S. Lowrimore & Co. from all causes among white males and females in 1965. The first phase of the stroke study is to continue for one year. If the differences be tween high and low death rates across the country can not be explained by diagnos tic customs, a later study may. seek to find another factor to explain the dramatic differences. L, Ur' Iff WOULD YOU BELIEVE AN Alpaca stuffed owl? If not, drop by the YM-YWCA International Bazaar today or tomorrow. Committee members are, left to right, Ed Williams, Peggy Paul, Sharon Finch, and Buddy Lewis. Photo by Ben Spaulding Campus SATURDAY Anyone interested in working on the Sophomore Class newspaper, the "Sixty-Nin-er," please contact Ben White, E-8 University 1 Gar dens, at 929-3181. SUNDAY There will be a service of worship for the University community in the Chapel of uic Ycicy ruunuauon ai 11 a.m. bunday. Robert John son will deliver the sermon. The Newman Apostolate will have an important meeting . Sunday at 6:45 p.m. New of ficers will be elected and plans .will be discussed for the Dec. 11 Christmas Party. COLLEGE TEAGIIII2Q COOPERATIVE COLLEGE REGISTRY A free service of 13 denominations to some 200 church-related liberal arts colleges throughout the United States. Administrative and faculty posi tions in all areas of curriculum. Ph.D.'s preferred. Master's required. Salaries $6,000 to $19,000 plus fringe benefits. Make appointment for inter views through the Placement Bureau, 204 Gardner Hall for Monday and Tuesday, December 12 and 13. Annual Christmas Presentation Set At Morehead Planetarium By KAREN FREEMAN DTH Staff Writer The traditional "Star of Bethlehem" program present ed by the Morehead Planetar ium "will be given again this year but with few changes. Showings are at 8:30 p.m. Haiiv Saturdays at 11 a.m., VMJ J - 1, 3, 4, and 8:30 p.m.; and Inter-Racial Couple Denied Custody Of 4 CHARLOTTE (Ap) A white woman married to a Ne gro said today she would ap peal to the North Carolina Su preme Court a ruling that she is unfit to retain custody of her four children by a previous marriage to a white man. , Superior Court Judge J. William Copeland ruled Thurs day against the mother, Mrs. Betty Wilson Reid, 33, a reg istered nurse in a Charlotte hospital. The judge did not specify why he found the woman to be an unfit mother. He made the children wards of the court, and placed them in temporary custody of child welfare authorities. Three of the children are boys, aged 14, 12 and 10. The girl is 7. The father, Carl 0. Wilson Jr., a draftsman living in Long Beach, Miss., sought to take the cildren from his former wife, but Judge Copeland re jected his request. The Wil sons were married Aug. 20, 1952, and lived to gether until Sept. 3, 1963. Mrs. Reid testified she met her present husband, Robert Lee Reid, 27, at the hospital where she was working as a nurse and he as an order ly, had her first date with him in the spring of 1965, and was in love with 'him by April of that year. Calendar A folk festival featuring sing ing, dancing, and folk tales will be held Sunday night at 6 at the Presbyterian Stu dent Center. The GM All - Campus Christ mas Decorating Party will be Sunday from 2-6 p.m. in Graham Memorial. Refresh ments will be served. MONDAY The Yack Staff photographs WU1 be taken in the Yack of- fice Monday from 2-4 p.m. The Catholic Graduate Asso ciation will hold , its weekly dinner meeting Monday at 6 p.m. in the upstairs - east room in Lenoir Hall. Sister Mary Thomas will address the group on "The Sister in the Post-Conciliar World." Sundays at 2, 3, 4, and 8:30 p.m. The first two-thirds of the program takes a scientific ap proach to the "star." Senior Planetarium Narra tor, Norman W. Mattis said Monday that "of all the sci entific possibilities used the explain the 'star,' the idea of coming together of three bright planets, called a con junction, exhibits the best sup porting evidence." After the preliminary sci entific explanation the pro gram takes an abrupt turn and treats the "star" as a miracle. This last section of the pro gram retells the Christmas story with the aid of colored lights and music. "The 'Star of Bethlehem' continues to be one of the most popular of all the pro grams we present and re mains relatively unchanged from year to year. "I feel that the Christmas season is not really complete without reviewing the ideas presented in the program," says Professor Mattis. And just as the "Star of Bethlehem" program may not be subject to change, so is the Planetarium itself. With the installation of an entirely new Zeiss sky pro jector by 1968, the Morehead Planetarium will be the best equipped planetarium in the world. The new sky projector is of the first completely new de sign since 1930, and will give a more realistic projection by showing the stars as smaller and two and one half times brighter. Funds for the projector were given to the Planetarium by the Morehead Foundation in July. About $20,000 worth of accessory instruments will ac company the projector. The Planetarium has alrea dy received a new horizon projector system that will al low distortion - free, more co lorful scenes to be projected around the horizon of the Planetarium sky. "These new projectors re flect the Planetarium's con tinuing efforts to develop more XMAS Decoration Party This Sunday If you haven't been hit by the Christmas spirit yet, Gra ham Memorial has a reme dy. It's the annual All - Campus Christmas Decorating Party, sponsored by GM, at GM, and for GM on Sunday December 4 from 2-6 p.m. The entire campus is invit ed, and refreshments will be furnished to the decorators. While the actual decorating of Graham Memorial is done by the volunteers, the decor ations will be pre - planned by the GM activity boards. "STAR FULLBACK OR NOT, I HOPE HE GETS CREAMED IN SATURDAY'S GAME!" V- i. i - I 4 j li Then Treat her like a lady with CANDIES effective, impressive science education programming, said Director A. F. Jenzano. "We hope that our hundreds of thousands of visitors share our excitement, and will con tinue their regular participa tion in our science education activities." Major Tells Of His Role In Viet War "Two wars are being fought in South East Asia from the Air Force point of view," an Air Force major said yester day. "One is in South Vietnam and the other is in Laos and North Vietnam," Major Law rence D. Garrison, who re cently returned from a nine month tour of duty in South east Asia, said. Garrison, the former Com mandant of Cadets at the AFROTC Detachment at UNC, spoke to the AFROTC cadets Thursday afternoon about his duties as a reconnaissance pi ot. "In the South, it is primari ly an Army - Air Force air show. The Navy has about 10 per - cent of the air responsi bilities there. Helicopters are as thick as flies," he said. Garrison said more effort has been devoted to rescue work in the war in Vietnam than in any other war in Amer ican history. Garrison left UNC in 1965 and was assigned to the 20th Tactical Air Command recon naissance squadron at Shaw AFB which was later trans ferred to Saigon. During his nine months, he was station ed in both Thailand and South Vietnam. He flew 100 missions in South Vietnam and 66 missions in North Vietnam. The Air Force is directed by a Forward Air Controller in a spotter aircraft. Each FAC has a certain area of re sponsibility in which he flies. Here the Air Force is primar ily concerned with close air support and resupplying Army units, he said. "Most aircraft used in the North are stationed in Thai land although some are at Da Nang. Responsibilities are di vided between the Air Force and Navy. Two-thirds of the sorties in the North and all in Laos are flown by the Air Force. The Navy is responsi ble primarily for the eastern and north eastern coast of North Vietnam, he said. Garrison said half of his missions were in the Da Hong area, since reconnaissance is heavy there. He said bomb damage assessments were con ducted the same day about one or two hours after the bombs had been dropped. to Be - im T'Z AfnnrrrfA 1 ! - V . t f . 1 n 11 Store Has Cat Nap Rugs, Fat Mother Geese By DOXXA REIFSMDER Special to the DTH A fat mother goose in a blue daisy hat, a cat nap rug, and watermelon rind pickles are a few of the featured items at the Country Store. It is strictly an outlet for hand made goods from dam son preserves to Polynesian hammocks. The Junior League sponsors the store behind the Chapel Hill Barber Shop on Franklin Street, and all pro fits go to charity. Mrs. Dotty Culbreth, mana ger, says the store accepts goods on consignment from over 900 people in the U. S. At least 300 are North Caro linian consignors and 100 of these are local. Some of the most popular items are pot tery made by a Quaker fa mily from Celo, N. C., and wind chimes made by a lady in Oak Ridge, Tenn. "Consig nors are those who need us financially, occupationally, or are hobbyists," said Mrs. Culbreth. Customers who open the bright blue door are greeted by the smell of pimandor balls from Connecticut (oranges and apples stuck chock full of clov es), and Raggedy Ann, com fortably slouched in a rocking chair by the fireplace. Junior League volunteers offer them coffee and cookies while they browse. "It takes the first time just to look around and then you're so overwhelmed you don't remember what you've seen," said Mrs. Culbreth. Customers usually do their shopping on a second visit to the store. Around the walls hang pine needle baskets, knit toboggans, woolen ponchos, stuffed toys pillows, aprons and Christ mas stockings. A maple chest (antique and for sale) spills over with thick, hand knit sweaters, shawls, patchwork quilts, and mittens. Tables are littered with glazed jewelry, velvet pin-cushions, door knob co vers with bells, linen nap kins, and embroidered tea to wels. Tiny sacks of herbs and spices tied with ribbons and jeweled Christmas ornaments hang from the ceiling. Doll furniture, professionally fin ished, feature drawers fill ed with hand made toys, dolls and clothes. Puppets and stuffed animals clutter the shelves. WAMY crafts furnish many of the items sold in the store. It is a state project which seeks to keep mountain handi crafts alive. Items from WA MY include corn cob pipes, hand made fly swatters and honeysuckle vine baskets. Mrs. Culbreth notes an in crease in boys in the store. "If they see you watching them, they grin sheepishly and say, 'Gee, I'll have to tell my mom about this.' " Tad pole ties, made by a Chapel Hill lady, also draw the fel lows, says Mrs. Culbreth. The store grew out of Jr. League Christmas and rum mage sales about seven years ago. The University Baptist Church gave the women the back of the building on their property at low rent. All pro ceeds go to charity and the store is operated by Junior League volunteers. The store is closed during summer months. STUDY IN SOUTHERN FRANCE A University year in Aix-en-Provence undei the auspices of the University of Aix-Mar-seille (founded 1409). EUROPEAN AREA STUDIES FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE HONORS PROGRAM (courses in French University exclusively) ART AND ART HISTORY SOCIAL SCIENCES MEDITERRANEAN AREA STUDIES Classes in English and French satisfying curriculum and credit requirements of over 280 American Colleges and Universities. Students live in French homes. Total costs equivalent to those at private universities and colleges in the United states. "SEMESTER PROGRAM IN AYIGNON" "SUMMER PROGRAM IN AIX-EN-PROVENCE" Write: INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES (founded 1957) 2 bis. rue du Bon Pasteur AIX-EN-PROVENCE. FRANCE Telephone: France (Code 91) 27.82.39 or (Code 91) 27.69.01 A I 7PH ... if v y" i ' r r - ifei " I I ! J k , 1 I f ? j I j: p HIM ij ,ir 1 h Afternoon Sun Pours Through Fillers ... ... In New Concrete Davie Addition -DTH Photo By Jock Lauterer Sixteen Students Appointed For SP Legislative Aides Sixteen students have been appointed as members of Stu dent Party Legislative Services Committee. They are Trudy McDonough, Marcia Whicker, Sarah Jane Stewart, Cherie Lewis, Dan Murray, Joyce Davis, Kay John son, Bob Manekin, Picci Shrum, George Taylor, Randy Ber nard, Sut Sulton, Suan Patterson, Worth Baldwin, Andy Ring er and Smithy Curry. The 16 were selected from over 30 students who inter viewed for committee posts before Thanksgiving. They will serve as aids to several SP legislators. n II 1X1 IS U till USED Hall HAVE PASSED THE Volkswagen 16-Poinl Safely 6 Performance Inspection We guarantee 100 the repair or replacement of all major mechanical parts for 30 days or 1,000 miles. So if you need a second car, why not look at a 100 guaranteed one first? Engine transmission rear axle front axle assem blies. hrfke system electrical system. TC VW Squareback, in mellow Carolina Blue, -T. with matching interior, radio, heater and whitewalls An extra clean beauty. Buick Gran Sport 2-Door Hardtop. Two-tone yellow and black finish, black interior. V-8, automatic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewall tires, extra clean. JT Ford Fairlane 500 Sport Coupe. Two-tone red and white, red trim, V-8, cruisomatic drive, ra dio, heater, white tires, low mileage, extra sharp. ?A Chevrolet Impala 2-Door Hardtop. Metallic OT" blue finish, matching trim, V-8. Powerglide tranmission, power steering, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Low mileage. Rambler Classic Station Wagon. White finish, JLm beige interior: Radio, heater, whitewall tires, luggage rack. An excellent second car. 63 Plymouth Sport Fury 2-Door Hardtop. Blue finish, matching trim. V-8, automatic trans.. radio, heater, whitewall tires, extra sharp. gJO CHEVROLET Impala Super Sports Coupe. Black 03 finish, white trim, 396 V-8 engine, 4-speed transmission, radio, heater, white tires. You must see this one to appreciate. if" Mustang Coupe.' Red finish, matching trim. OD V-8, 4 speed, radio, heater, whitewall tires and knock off wheel covers. Truly a beauty and roaring to go. 61 Mercury Comet 4-Door Station Wagon. Gleam ing metallic green finish, beige interior. A fine second car. I Volkswagen "Sunroof" Sedan, white finish, red O I interior. Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Ford Fairlane 500 Town Sedan. Wimbledon white finish, red trim. V-8, Cruise-O-Matic, ra dio, heater, whitewall tires. A nice car and priced to sell. 2 Buick Wildcats 4-Door Hardtop. Tu-fone Bur 03 gundy and white finish. Black trim. Fullv equipped including factory air conditioning'. Extra clean. Triangle Misivagen, Inc. 3823 Chapel EII1 Bird. 4m N.C. Dealer No. 1345

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