J u ' i , 1 Wednesday, January 4, 1967 Page 6 THE DAILY TAR HEEL i i -; ) i ! f f i f i i ; 5 i 5 ; : ' i- : - i f ! I ' i i t ! j j i I ) I f i. ? I ? ' ? 1 : ; f ? i- h ' I -: I . i i i " I j 'i 5 r f j 1 '! I f ; ? ; j, i t I I 1 I s I i f s I I ; , & i t I 1 1 '. ; , i i . ! f ; . i ' ! i i t r i '- i j I 1:1 i f : ! 1 i ) I ! i I i : i ! ; ; ill Special A rrangem ents : Carolina Area residents will be able to watch Carolina's visit to the College Bowl Sunday night at 5:30 over WTVD Channel 11 in Durham. The half hour contest be tween UNC and North Central College (Naperville, 111.) will be aired live from New York through arrangements with with the N. Y. advertising ag ency and General Electric, the ' show sponsor. The show will be seen in North Carolina over the fol- lowing other telvision stations: WITN-TV, Washington; and WCCB-TV, Charlotte. ; Ernest Greup of WTVD ! said "We are delighted we are able to clear this particular 1 program in the interest of the University. When CaroL'.a wins Sunday night, we will make every effort to put fu ture College Bowl programs on the air on a delayed basis. Since we have already made Mother committments, we can not. break for that time on other Sunday nights." For Sale: New Scorpion, 14 foot sailboat. Call Rob Fergu- son, 308 Avery, 968-9029. College fir sKKSr . ilfon's January Juggernaut! Winter Sweepstakes That Push The Cost of Living Down! Down! Down! Enticing savings at the season on our entire complete collection of ultra smart old school natural Group fall suits cut from to $65.00 and $80.00 to $85.00 to $75.00 and $80.00 to $70.00. Fabulous bonus on the finest hand tailored natural shoulder suit by Anthony Craig of Fifth Avenue entire collection cut from $180.00 to $125.00. Ties the major accessory that makes Milton's so much shopping fun large choice assortment of striped repps, challis, silk foulands regularly $5.00, at Juggernaut of $1.99. Fabulous double breasted wool flannel or hopsack blazers in navy or lampblack blue cut from $39.95 to a don't pass up buy of $32.50. Wool pants cut from $15.95 to $13.99; $17.95 to $15.99; $18.95 to $16.99; $19.95 to $17.99; $21.95 to $18.99 and $22.95 to $19.95. Large group belts at whopping 40 off. Group sport coats cut from $50.00 to $34.99; $55.00 to $44.99; $45.00 to $34.99. Wool blanket plaid shirts cut from $14.95 to $10.99. London Fog, Zero King, and Mighty Mac golf jackets, regularly to $20.00, take your pick at $10.99. All our car coats reduced $50.00 to $40.00; $40.00 to $30.00. Ready cuffed wash and corduroy pants to $9.95 cut to $6.99; $7.95 to $5.99; and $6.95 to $3.99. Weldon terrycloth shavecoats cut from $12.00 to $7.99. Boxer short underwear in solid oxfords and stripes to $1.75, all cut to $.99. Famous make scotch grain tassel loafers cut from $32.50 to $19.99. Perfect Time To Join Milton's Better Dressed Circles iHtlfcm'0 lotting ffiuphoarii Downtown Chapel Hill To See Bow. Members of the University of North Carolina's Bowl team are Marv Ellen Lane, junior, Chapel Hill; Craig M. Brad ley, senior, Wingate; David S. Harris, senior, Snow Hill; and Sam S. Long II. senior. Char lotte. First alternate is Don R. Lyman, . senior, Miami Shores, Fla., and spcond alter nate is Joseph C. Belden, jun ior, Port Washington, N. Y. The six members have an av erage College Entrance Exam ination Board score of 1,400 and a proiected qualitv point average of 3.3. According to Dr. Charles Wright, Bowl team coach. "They're good B students with many varied in terests, including sports and popular culture. They have quick responses and a heal thy sense of competition and I think we have a very good chance of winning." The College Bowl is an in tercollegiate same based on quck recall of facts. Each col lege presents a team of four "Varsity Scholars" who are asked questions drawn from a variety of sublets including American and Eurooean His tory, American, English and European Literature, philoso phy, science, music and art, and languages. A winning team may return to defend against the next challenger until it reaches the maximum of five wins. Each victory earns for the school a scholarship grant of $1,500 from General Electric. Five game winners receive an ad ditional $1,500 grant, making the total $9,000 plus a silver achievement bowl for the school. Gimbel Department Stores add another $1,500 grant. This vacation I promised myself I would go home and catch up on some sleep. . . height of the wearing shoulder. $95.00 to $75.00; $85.00 $60.00. Others cut from ' - 0 f ""V !;: V- -- ' -. h j V. " SB I J J GEORGIA KAY (PEACH) PEARCE, a senior from Gastonia, reigns as the 1967 Maid of Cotton, winning over contestants from 20 states. She is now on a three-week visit to New York, after which she will tour Canada, Trinidad, and Ireland. DTH Photo By Ernest H.Robl Campus Calendar WEDNESDAY The Physics Colloquium pre sents Dr. Jules Carbotte of McMaster University, who will speak on "Theory of Positron Annihilation in Me tals" today at 4 p.m. in. 25 Phillips Hall. Tea and cof fee will be served at 3:30 p.m. in the Lounge of Phil lips. "The Adventures of Asterisk," an animated color cartoon by John Hubley, will be shown this evening at 9 and 11 in The Gallery Coffee Shop in the Wesley Founda tion. A one-man show of oils and drawings by Judy Smith of Chapel Hill may be seen in the Gallery of the Wesley Foundation daily from 10 a.m. until midnight during the month of January. The Murdoch Committee will meet today and Thursday at 2 p.m. in front of the Y. All students interested in spending an afternoon with retarded children at the Murdoch Center are invited to attend. -The Mountains Don't Care'- (Continued From Page 1) City, resting and recuperat ing. On the 25th they begin their ascent of the third high est mountain in North Amer ica, Orizaba, a symmetrical volcano pointing gracefully 18,900 feet through the Mexi can sky. The climb to Orizaba's sum mit was unhampered by winds, the day being clear enough to enable the three who reached the summit to see several hundred miles to the Gulf of Mexico to the east. "It seemed as if the air was void of all oxygen," remarked John Thorne, "And I'm the kind of guy who gets sick on ferris wheels," he added as he trudged upwards to 18,000 feet above sea level. Thorne climbed with Judy Hickman, the Co-Chairman of the UNC-G outing club who nuMi ma 3 HOUR SHIRT SERVICE QUE HOUR flV THDBSB SIMTEQS! leaned "v. THURSDAY Professor William Graves of Indiana University will speak Thursday at 4 p.m. in 332 Phillips Hall on "Divisi bility in Arithmetic on El liptic Curves" for the Mathe matics Colloquium. Refresh ments will be served in the Common Room at 3:30 p.m. The Carolina Christian Fellow ship will meet for supper Thursday at 6 p.m. in the Epsilon Room of Chase Cafeteria. An informal meet ing will follow. Everyone is invited to attend. FRIDAY The Department of Linguis tics, Slavic and Oriental Languages, in co-sponsorship with the Curriculum in Comparative Literature, will hold its first lecture on Slav ic literature , and languages Friday at 8 p.m. in the Dey Hall faculty lounge. Jessee Zeldin, Associate Professor of English at Hollins . Col lege, will speak on "Heaven and Hell: Some Thoughts on the Brothers Karamazov." happened to be climbing the mountain the same day. Thorne reached the summit at 1:30 p.m., while the two Owen brothers had already climbed to the top by 11:30 earlier that morning. Coming down, the party experienced a "While-out", where the clouds rolled in, making it impossible to distingjish where the snow stopped and the clouds began. However, the clouds parted long enough to permit the climbers to see their way for a few seconds, and t h e f plodded down to safety. The journey to and from Mexico was completed in a re - outfitted 1960 VW bus. The boys drove the 2600 miles non-stop for 60 hours driving time each way. "Man,it's good to be home and to be clean again!" ad mitted one of the returned team members. CLEAHKIB! fll fi FBIBAY! For 51. E3 No Conspiracy Involved In Oswald Death, Ruby Claimed (Continued From Page 1) the hospital was for a lie de tector test which he hoped would prove once and for all that there was no conspiracy. But polygraph experts and doctors said the advanced state of his cancer and the drugs used for treating it would make such a test meaningless, r Ruby was taken to the hos pital on Dec. 9 after jail doc , tors had treated him for about three weeks for a severe cold. The hospital announced an admission diagnosis of pneu monia and listed Ruby in ser ious condition. Some 24 hours later, doctors said he had can cer. Extensive examination showed that the malignancy had invaded his pancrease, Jungs and lymph glands and was so widespread that its source could not be determin ed. Doctors said this meant that surgery and -ray treatment were impossible and that all they could do was try, with out any real hope, to arrest the cancer with chemicals. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals last November order ed a second trial for Ruby in a different city. The court said Criminal Dist. Judge Joe B. Brown of Dallas erred in not ordering the first trial moved from Dallas and in admitting police testimony about what Ruby did and said after too much time had passed for this to be considered part of the crime itself. Judge Louis Holland of Mon tague, who had taken over the case, ordered the second trial held in Wichita Falls, 135 miles northwest of Dallas, and indicated it would be set for February or March. But from the time the can cer diagnosis was announced it was evident that Ruby would never be able to stand trial again. In his first trial, Defense At torney Melvin Belli introduced voluminous testimony by psy chologists and psychiatrists and electric tracings of Ruby's brain waves all intended to prove that Ruby suffered from a rare ailment known as psy chomotor epilepsy, that brief attacks could be brought on by overpowering emotion and that in these spells he acted' as if he were functioning ra tionally , but actually was in a fugue state or blackout be having as an automation. The defense contended it was in such a blacked - out state that Ruby killed Oswald. PSYCHIATRISTS PRESENTED The prosecution presented psychiatrists who contended that Ruby knew exactly what he was doing and what it meant. At the time of the shooting, Ruby was 52, a squat, husky man who acted as his own bouncer and might unpredict ably throw a patron out of his joint for looking, "at the girls wrong" or might, like a Damon Runyon character, turn around and "give you the shirt off his back." He usually carried a pistol, Milton's M2 Shirt Juggernaut ! So terrific we single out this fabulous deal of deals to be positive you replenish your shirt wardrobe now! 583 shirts regularly $195 to $9.95 includ ing solid herringbones, dacroncotton' pimas, dacroncotton oxfords, Old School stripes, all at JUGGERNAUT of $4.49. jmiUfmfti otfong Cupboard ; i 4 i Downtown Chape! Hifl friends said, probably because he also carried large sums of money. But nobody had ever known him to use the pistol until he killed Oswald with it. Ruby said the chance that brought him face to face with Oswald was a decision to make an illegal left turn. He was on his way to the downtown Western Union of fice a block west of the po lice station, to send a money order loan to one of his strip pers who needed $25 to pay her rent. As he passed the police sta tion, he decided to make an illegal left turn across Main Street into a parking lot, he said, and as he returned to his car he decided to see what the crowd was doing in the jail basement. It was then early 11:20 a.m., and Oswald's transfer, Ruby recalled, was "supposed to be" at 10 o'clock. In a recording made secretly in his hospital room, accord ing to Gertz, who headed Ruby's final legal staff, Ruby said: "The ironic part of this is, hadn't I made an illegal turn behind the bus to the par king lot, had I gone the way I was supposed to go straight down Main St., I'd of never, I would never have met this fate because the difference in meeting this fate was 30 sec onds one way or the other." SEALS OSWALD'S LIPS Ruby fired the fatal shot at 11:20 a.m., sealed Oswald's lips, cut off the world from a chance to examine the accus ed assassin in court, intensi fied rumors of a conspiracy and became the first murder er in history to commit his crime before a nationwide tel evision audience of millions. No crime in all history was ever viewed by so many people Born March 25, 1811, in the Maxwell Street slum of Chica go, Ruby was the sixth of nine children of an immigrant. Po lish carpenter, Joe Rubenstein, and his wife, Fannie. His real name was Jake Ru benstein. , JANUARY REDUCTIONS UP TO ON FAMOUS BRANDS SUITS WERE NOW 89.50 71.50 85.00 67.95 79.50 63.50 75.00 59.95 69.50 55.50 59.95 47.95 SPECIAL GROUP 95.00 - 63.33 89.50 61.66 79.50 52.95 ALL TOP COATS Reg. 75.00 59.95 ENTIRE STOCK Reduced Up WERE NOW 25.00 19.95 23.95 19.15 22.95 18.35 21.95 . 17.55 19.95 15.95 8 Special Group Reg. 19.95 14.95 Reg. 14.95 9.95 SHIRTS Special Group Sport & Dress Shirts Values To 9.95 2.99 Entire Stock Sport Shirts Large group solid, stripe, tattersal, Tromblee Dress Shirts Values To 9.95 4.88 Velour Shirts Values To 16.95 6.99 SEMI-ANNUAL FLORSHEIM SHOE SALE Values To 37.95 NOW 21.80 Values To 28.50 NOW 17.80 OUTER WEAR Zip-Lined Coat Reg. 42.5031.88 Un-Lined Coat Reg. 35.0026.25 Serpa Lined Jacket Reg. 32.0024.88 Clothiers of . Distinction Franklin Street Alterations Extra All Sales Final His sister, Eva, nicknamed him "Sparky" because of his quick temper and the way he fought to win at anything street games or brawls with the tought Italian kids up the street. Even when he was 10, said brother Earl, "he was always getting into fights and winnin' em." His parents split up when Ruby was 12 and he was plac ed in a foster home. He dropped out of high school at 16 and worked at odd jobs like scalping tickets to sports events. In 1933, he moved to San Francisco and sold newspap er subscriptions door to door. HELD OVER! A PARAMOUNT PICTURE-TECHNICOLOR "THERE IS A ZING IN THE LANGUAGE AND A ZIP IN THE PACE . . . YOU MAY HATE YOURSELF IN THE morning, but I think you are going to enjoy 'Alfie' very much! Michael Caine's 'Alfie' is somebody you are going to carry around with you In your mind for a long time as you did Laurence Harvey's Joe Lampton or Julie Christie's Darling." Richard Schickel, Life DON'T MISS IT! 1:08, 3:06, 5:06, 7:02 & 9:00 RIALTO, DURHAM CLEARANCE V: SPORT COATS WERE NOW 59.50 46.95 55.00 43.95 49.95 39.95 45.00 35.95 39.95 31.95 35.00 . . 27.95 SPECIAL GROUP 65.00 43.33 49.95 33.30 45.00 29.95 20 OFF Reg. 69.50 55.50 WOOL SLACKS To 13 OFF WERE NOW 18.95 15.15 17.95 14.35 16.95 13.55 15.95 12.75 13.95 11.15 SWEATERS Imported Lambswool V-Neck Reg. 15.95 11.99 Cardigan Reg. 22.50 14.88 Alpaca U-Neck Reg. 25.95 14.88 Alpaca Cardigan Reg. 29.95 19.88 SPECIAL GROUP Pure Cashmere Reg. 39.50 19.75 NECK WEAR Values To 4.00 1.89 BELTS Values To 5.00 1.99 Off The Hub's January Spectacular Don't miss this once a year sale on our com plete stock of new win t er merchandise. Spectacular savings are to be found at this once a year Money Saver Sale. Suit Salo a is-- clMinn of fine fmnn rtA worsteds, chalk stripes, Gleen plaids & . . . i j solids in natural snuuiuci clothinz that guarantees a perfect fit. Reg. 59.95 NOW 47.S8 Reg. 65.00 NOW 51.88 Reg. 69.95 NOW 54.88 Reg. 75.00 NOW 58.88 Reg. S5.00 NOW 68.88 Spcrtcoa! Salo Our ever popular com plete stock of solid blaz ers, hounds toth, & bold new plaids drastically re duced for this sale. . Reg. 35.00 NOW 24.88 Reg. 39.95 NOW 29.88 Reg. 45.00 NOW 34.88 Reg. 49.95 NOW 39.88 Topcoat Salo Get ready for the cold weather ahead. Our com plete stock now at fantas tic savings. Reg. 49.95 NOW 39.88 Reg. 69.95 NOW 54.88 Reg. 75.00 NOW 58.88 Ail Weather Coat Sale Finest quality 65 Dac ron & 35 cotton either unlined or with zip-out liners from the world's finest rain wear makers. Reg. Reg. Reg. Reg. Reg. Reg. Reg. 27.95 29.95 32.50 37.50 39.95 42.50 60.00 NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW 19.88 19.88 24.88 27.88 29.88 31.88 47.88 Dross Shirt Salo Our complete stock of solid, stripes, & tattersals all our famous make tra ditional shirts greatly re duced for this spectacu lar sale. Reg. 5.95 NOW 4.48 Reg. 6.50 NOW 4.88 Reg. 6.95 NOW 5.48 Reg. 7.50 NOW 5.88 Reg. 7.95 NOW 6.48 Dross Slack Salo Our finest traditionally styled dress slacks in worsteds, hopsacks & blends, plaids & hounds tooth included. Reg. 11.95 Reg. 12.95 Reg. 13.95 Reg. 14.95 Reg. 15.95 Reg. 16.95 Reg. 17.95 Reg. 18.95 Reg. 19.95 NOW 7.88 NOW 8.88 NOW 9.88 NOW 10.88 NOW 11.88 NOW 12.88 NOW 13.88 NOW 14.88 NOW 15.88 Sweater Sale A complete selection of lamb's wool alpacas & cashmere In either V Neck or cardigan. All greatly reduced. Reg. 11.95 Reg. 12.95 Reg. 13.95 Reg. 14.95 Reg. 15.95 Reg. 16.95 Reg. 17.95 Reg. 18.95 Reg. 24.95 Reg. 27.50 Reg. 32.50 NOW 7.88 NOW 8.88 NOW 9.88 NOW 10.88 NOW 11.88 NOW 12.88 NOW 13.8? NOW 14.88 NOW 19.88 NOW 21.88 NOW 24.88 Valour Sale Be?. To 12.95 now 7.Q0 Jacket & Gar Goai Salo 20 off Shoo Salo 20 To 40 off Sporshirt Salo Vz off Many Other Tempting Buys ODD It I of c::ar:i en i I ,v fi . h ' r . ,, . L

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