Page 4 Chi Psi By BOB COLEMAN of The Dally Tar Heel Staff Sigma Nu Blue upended DU Blue, 37-27, in intramural basketball playoffs Monday. M. Higgins hit 20 points, while DlPs top man, Bennett, could only muster 9. . Bode tallied 20 and Chi Psi Blue romped over Sig Ep Blue, 62-37. John Kausen and Fletcher Willey each got 14 for the losers. Pi Kap Phi Blue got 17 points from Bill Romm and edged Beta Blue, 41-38. Chris Hartle hit 15 in defeat. DKE White was a big winner in fraternity white play with a smashing 80-13 rout of the TEP Mops. Holderness (22), Dawson (22) and Klutz (21) battled each other for high scoring honors. Phi Kap Sig White outfought Pi Kap Phi White I behind 'Bill Shivar (21) and Ed Lackey U), 54-35. Earl Jenkins led Jthe losers with 14. 5 John Yelverton's 13 points paced Chi Psi White over the tChi Phi Go Team, 45-28. Van penning dumped in 18 and Don Johnson added 11 to lead ATO JVhite I over Sigma Nu White, 43-32. T Jon Radford had 11 in Pi Kap Phi White IPs 39-29 vic tory over the Pi Lamb 11 Friday & Saturday 8:00 P.M. Indoor St&dium Featuring Frank Warner Pete Seeei Doc Watson and Others Friday, March 15 $2.50 reserveo admission; $2.00 general admission Saturday, March 14 - $1.50 general admission. All tickets on sale: Page Box Of fice or write box KM, Duke Station (enclose a self-addressed, stamped snvelope). General admission tickets (both nights) also available at Rec ord Bar In Durham, Chapel Hill, and Raleigh. Sig Ep, SUPPORT PROJECT BLUE BLOOD IT MAY SUPPORT YOU1 Sponsored by i GRANVILLE RESIDENCE COLLEGE Faculty Book Where: The Paperback Gallery When: Wednesday and Thursday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Who's Invited? Any teaching faculty member. Featured Doubleday Paperbacks, free examination copies. Come For a Browse! The Intimate Bookshop x Wrapped Sandwich 6 Y Bowl of Soup Y V Choice of Coffee, Tea or Fruit brink Y Ep), LENOIR I Stomps 62-37 Tornadoes. Dental II Blue, favorites to reach the graduate league finals, blasted Village Red, 60 23. Garrison got 20, Stone 18, and Denton notched 14. The Independent Town Bums gave up 30 points to E. Har rington, but used balance to ease by the Independent Stumps, 48-44. Mike Correll (12), James Hutchins (10) and George Womor (10) did most of the scoring. ' Law IV White trouced Village White, 59-36. Outlaw struck for 15 and Voorhees and Tomlinson pitched in 13 apiece, while the loser's S. Set tlemyer was- high with 16. Med School I Blue beat History with 14 Barham points, 42-31. Law Burglers dumped Med School White, 38-30. Jim Brown for the winners and the losers, Subir Roy each sank 10 points. The English Bards parlayed Hobson's 19 points to a 51-43 triumph over the Law III Barons and Lytch (17). Dennis Lohr's II points loom ed large in Biochemistry's 37 34 victory over Public Health II. JL The National Foundation March of Dimes has awarded One Vino Gelato (ITALIAN DESSERT) and Coffee FREE with purchase of any meal and this coupon. The Gondola 157 E. Rosemary 11:30-11:30 Mon.-Sat. 5-9 Sunday Fair! -m y . -'. Bottles Campus News Briefs $39,885 to the Department of Pediatrics at Memorial Hospital to continue the Birth. Defects Treatment Center for another year. The first grant to establish the center was made in late 1962. Since that time, 129 children have been accepted for diagnostic evaluation. Patients are selected by a team after a preliminary evaluation. Some birth defeats only need observation while the child grows and develops. Most defects are obvious others become evident as the child grows up. Evaluation and care at the center is provided by a team consisting of pediatricians, orthopedic surgeons, a social worker, a physical therapist and a medical secretary. Hardre To Lecture -At Piedmont U. Dr. Jacque Hardre,1 chairman of the University of North Carolina's Department of Romance Languages, will delvier a series of lectures in the Visiting Scholars Program of the Piedmont University Center of North Carolina March 6-8. Hardre's lecture titles are "Albert Camus and the Theater," "Surrealism i n French Literature," D e Gaulle, the Statesman and the Writer," and "The Cultural Program of the Fifth Republic." Heart Institute Gives $26,850 Grant ; The National Heart Institute has awarded about $26,850 to UNC to continue the im provement of undergraduate teaching in the area of heart and blood vessel disease. The project director is Dr. Ernest Craige, cardiologist at the UNC School of . Medicine and N.C. Memorial Hospital. The hospital's cardiac catherization laboratory partially supported by is the THE DAILY When it was still cold outside in the daytime (day before yester day) keeping bottles of beer in your window made sense. But does it now? Somebody thought so, anyhow. eeeupes M.W( grant and new apparatus to. study heart sounds has been -purchased. Morehead Offers Adult Education U Beginning this month, the Morehead Planetarium at the University of North Carolina here will again offer its popular adult education course "Introduction to Astronomv." i According to John A. Zunes, Educational Supervisor at the Morehead Planetarium, "Introduction to Astronomy" is a hobby course open to any adult, and requires no previous knowledge to the subject. , The course is designed to ' provide the "backyard astronomer" with practical in formation to add to his en joyment of the night sky, and to assist the layman desiring a better understanding of the ; nature of the, universe. , vy ' 7 The noricredit course meets in the Morehead Planetarium from 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. for eight consecutive Thursday, begin ning March 21. The first forty five minutes will be spent in the Planetarium Chamber, where the Zeiss Sky Project or will be used to learn con stellations, and study motions of the earth,, sun, moon and planets. After a 15 minute break, the class 1 will resume in a classroom in the building for an hour and fifteen minute session on the nature of celestial bodies. In addition, an outdoor viewing session using telescopes is planned, Zunes announced. Registration for the course may be made by sending your name and address to the Morehead Planetarium. Please include the $17.50 fee payable to the Morehead Planetarium to cover the complete cost of the course including the text and materials furnished each participant. PANTY HOSE tllMiiiS All Colors FISHNET HOSE ...... .75c pr. Colored jj ' , v TEXTURED HOSE 2 prs. $1 .00 a MESH & SHEER HOSE j STRETCH HOSE . 3 prs. $1.50 OPEN MON.-SAT. ' 9:30-5:30 mm TAR HEEL 3 ' f .. '- . . r - J - -"- " 'z 3- . - -i I - : DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS Large Turnout At Manly Vote Next year's officers for Man ly Dormitory were elected yesterday after an unusually large voter turnout of 85 per cent. Stuart Todd was chosen president and Jeff Noblett was elected vice president. A three tie for secretary-treasurer was reached between Doug f Robinson, Raleigh Putnam and ; Danny Collins. A runoff for the secretary , treasurer position will be held Friday. CONSERVING COUGARS PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) The Oregon State Game Com- ., mission has., stopped.; paying.' bounty for 'ceugars. ' Concerned with possible ex-'" tinction of the big cats, ahd Commission has declared cougars game animals and closed the hunting season on them for a year. 25c 25c HAPPY HOURS AT THE CAVE 2-5 ' MON.-SAT. For Coeds Specials on Food for Everyone . 75c pr. . .3 prs. $1.25 Authorities To Expound On America In Changing World. Six authorit VAVill.Oi.i, antf world affairs will take an all-day look at America's response to rapid world change here on Thursday, March 14 at the 18th annual Xorth Carolina Conference on World Affairs. The conference will be con ducted in Memorial Hall on the Carolina campus. Dr. Moye Freymann, direc tor, of the UNC Population Center, will deliver the opening UNC Student Stores Give Away Packets Packages containing sample sized toiletries were distributed free of charge to day to students passing through Y Court. Students and faculty members were asked to fill out a card requesting the reci pients name, class, and home and campus addresses. Ther service was provided by the Student Stores, ac cording to Thomas Shetley, Manager. The stores agreed to distribute the package in con nection with the Guest-Pak Company of New York. According to Shetley, the Guest-Pak Company is a market research company. They will use the cards only for the purpose of sending questionaires to the consumers to learn whether or not they pffl nrnrc KMB SEP tKSKBia fl flnm HE1. 10 f mmimwm mm mmm m IHIU ISf -bbsge OEmniraciis oi-ibb dgssmi m TODAY TONIGHT! BOBBIE GENTRY SHOW Featuring: Bobbie Gentry & Glen Campbell - with their complete touring show and a 12-piece orchestra J V 8:00 p.m. in Carmichael Auditorium UNC -$1.50 at G.M. until 6:00 p.m. Wed. All tickets $2.50 at the door. Grammy Award Winners BOBBIE GENTRY Best Vocal Performance-Female; Best New Artist; Best Contemporary Female Solo Vocal Performance; Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist or Instrumentalist(s). umhsusj GLEN CAMPBELL Best Vocal Performance-Male; Best Contemporary Male Solo Vocal Ppr SPECIAL GUESTS: Yvefte Mimieux & Christopher Jones Ana tne address at 10 a.m. His topic will be "Population Problems and Food Supply." The second of the four morn ing speakers will be Miss Marcella Martinez, attache. Permanent Mission of Jamaica to the United Nations, who w ill discuss "Human Rights." Following Miss Martinez will be Mrs. David Bradley, chairman of the foreign policy committee of the League of are still using the products in troduced in the packages, he indicated. The questionaires will be sent in about a year, Shetley estimated. "It gives our management an excellent chance to meet people and to let them meet us. It's pretty fair public rela tions," he explained. Many of the students were reluctant either to sign the cards or to accept t h e packages before they knew their contents, he said. Shetley said that he had received about 10,000 packets, and of these approximately 7500 were distributed by noon yesterday most of them to boys. There is a good chance the will be distributed again today, he indicated. rr-a, ONLY 1 1 . . an ii - - - - '. -. J- - L A.C.C. BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS Wednesday, March 6, 1963 Women Voters in the United States. Mrs. Bradley's topic will be "International Trade." The final address of the morning will focus on "Economic, Military and Technical Aid," and will be delivered by Dr. ,K a r 1 Mathiason,III, University of North Africa Association. A 12:20 luncheon at the Carolina Inn Ballroom will divide the morning and af ternoon sessions and will be concluded by remarks from Dr. Zygmut Nagorski of the Foreign Policy Association. Speakers during the af ternoon session will seek to summarize addresses made by the morning speakers. HAVE YOU GOT CHUTZPAH? m Ci itli THE HILARIOUS ADULT BOARD GAME FOR SCHLE MIELS, SHLEMA2ELS, YEN TAS AND MAVENS THATS CAUSING A LAUGH-RIOT ACROSS THE NATION. 3 to 6 players or 2 to 4 couples buy, sell, gamble, auction and bargain for a Mink Stole, Daughter Shir ley's Catered 'Wedding, a Yacht named Gevalt and 21 other possessions you cant live without CHUTZPAH isn't just a game, it's a way of life. We know where you can get it retail for &r rr $5.95 DiLLY .Annum; Eastgot Shopping Center Chopel Hill, N. C v - - - : i

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