f ! f Thursday. March j. J97Q "HE LY TAR HEEL fc- f i V Teachers Inc. i Recently Formed Three-Year Study Bern us ' V i i f i Wf! QkTi IViLVLvLi I v f ' i $ ' M ii I' if ICS r ft ope. ! i( ontmucd from Page 1) I h - 1 a, a result of low pay, frustration of struggling through the school system, or I come other reason, he said. I One of Teachers Inc.'s 1 primary objectives is to attract I worthy teachers and to place I them in concentrated patterns, j Tirim continued. This way, he I added, there will be 15-20 I teachers to stand up for each j other and work with each other, whereas one teacher standing alone would fail. 1 The second primary objective of I according to Teachers, Inc., Timm, is to 1 change the image of the f teacher's role. 'The teacher should have I community-based concerns j within the community and I should live and be part of the j community in which he is j teaching," Timm explained. The idea behind this, he j said, is that public schools are a I productive part of the community, mticiuic tuc teachers who teach in a certain community should also live in that community. As a result of this, the teachers will be more appreciative and sensitive to students in the community, Timm added. Teachers Inc. began in March, 1968 with support from various foundations and federal grants. There were three such projects in New York .City which opened the school term 1968-69, one in Washington, D.C., and one in Chapel Hill. One of the New York districts failed, while the others prospered fairly well. But from the one project which failed, Teachers Inc. learned much about what can go wrong with their plan of education, according to Timm. People coming from outside the city in which they are going to teach must not be arrogant, "I know the answer" types, he said. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guodalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, will offer, June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, historypo litical science, language and literature courses. Tuition, $1 60; board and room, $155. Write Dr. Juan B. Rael, Office of Summer Session, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721. 5-" JPSS SUMMER IS M a v vunr v mmm v n mm -.: iM AT S O UTHASVI PTO N ! Students at Southampton College are encouraged to actively support and participate in any positive new effort which seeks to improve things in this wobbly world. Of course, Southampton, with its delightful summer climate, offers countless opportunities for lighter types of involvement, too . . . like beaches . . . boating . . . golf . . . theatres ... art colonies . . . and other activities which make Southampton a synonym for what summer should be all about. This summer. . . be where it is. . x3fVe Southampton College. 1-1? TW3 FIVE-WEEK SESSIONS June 22 - July 24 July 27-August 28 Hi ACCREDITED UNDERGRADUATE COURSES IN HUMANITIES SCIENCE SOCIAL SCIENCE MARINE SCI ENCE EDUCATION plus limited grad uate offerings. Courses are open to visiting students who are in good standing at their own college. .1 Please send me Summer Program I am interested in 1st session I attend. Name College 502 W. Franklla it ..: .... I Address . ; j CitV &rm I Wtow GOODYEAR TiStSS O MiCHaiN TIHES ?m At fflM5! Rather, Timm suggested that these people come into a new area with no answers to the problems of that community, but with their first objective to become good teachers. Then, they can become acquainted enough with the community to attempt to solve some of its problems. 'This doesn't mean backing down from issues, said Timm. "It means first becoming a skilled person within the classroom, then using that skill to meet the needs of the people in the community." Ge rman By GREG LLOYD DTH Staff Writer Two UNC students have been chosen to attend the German Exchange held in Gottingen, Germany during the fall semester 1970 and the spring semester 1971. The selections committee chose Carolyn McAUaster and Keith Bridges from UNC to spend a year in Germany, sponsored by student government funds. Tommy Bello of Raleigh, N.C. was the committee's choice for first alternate. Keith Bridges, 20, a junior from Hickory N.C, explained that going abroad is simply something he; has always wanted to do to see different places and find out what the people are like. "The Exchange gives me the opportunity to be more than simply a tourist. It will allow me to know a lot oi people first-hand," Bridges said. He also wants to continue his academic studies, become more familiar with German literature, history, and language, and spend as much time traveling as he possibly can. . Upon returning to UNC after this year in Germany, Bridges plans to get a BA iii English, then, perhaps, to study English in graduate school. Bridges has been a member of Student Legislature and a participant in the Freshman and Sophomore Pi 3; ' l - Wo X K-.-.S TWO FOUR-KEEK W3KXSKCPS IN SCULPTURE, CERAMICS, PAINTING AND FILMS Concerts and lectures will be given by resident musi cians 'and visiting experts. Dormitory accommodations are available for students in academic courses and workshops. UNC rnn3 Director of the Summer Program, S O UTH A Wl PTO N COLLEGE LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY Southampton, N.Y. 11968 (516) AT3-4000 bulletin. 2nd session Year Major Chs?i! HO, M. C it CO LIP LET E CAE Students rm o hange Jbxc Honors Program. Carolyn McAUaster, 20, a sophomore from Gouverneur, N.Y., said she applied for the German Exchange "to gain international awareness through learning to know the German people and their language." Carolyn also plans to travel to many different places in Germany and Europe during her stay at Gottingen. She is presently in the' Evidence The Honor Court case of a student charged with cheating on an Economics 31 quiz was abruptly recessed due to the theft of the quiz papers from the attorney general's office 'files. The theft is currently under investigation. The case involved four students, ' all fraternity brothers, who were observed by two monitors as displaying Visitation (Continued from Page 1) recommendation to the Chancellor. He added, "I have a strong feeling that those who are requesting 24 hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week visitation will be unhappy ... I have no sympathy for those requesting 24-hour-a-day visitation." Asked if the University as a state institution is entitled to discriminate on the basis of sex, Cansler replied, "There are allkinds of discrimination on this campus, by sex, by wealth There is always going to be preferential treatment ... It is a question of whether a specific policy can be justified." NiviW - - v Religion for the Coming Age Universal Peace must have direct action to be a reality. Life is not based on futility alone. Spiritual qualities that advocate individual thought and responsi bility. A way of life that de spite malignment, dis tortion, misinterpreta tion and misunder standing has stood the test of time for over 3500 years. A way of life that deals effectively with the sometime painful act of Intermarriage. Write us for informa tion on a wa to a saner world. H Send $2.00 for "JEWISH INFORMATION' Jewish Information Society of America Dept. C. 72 East 1 1th, Chicago, 60605 0Gf-70D2 Attend '70 school of nursing, but her plans for the future are uncertain. Miss McAUaster has been active in many campus organizations. She is co-director of the Committee for the Advancement of Minority and disadvantaged Students, Project Chairman for the Walk Against Hunger, involved in the Y's tutoring program and secretary' of the American Field Service Club at UNC. Stolen In Theft Case "suspicious actions" during an optional economics test. Two students had already been tried and found not guilty before the quizzes were stolen. The theft, according to Court Chairman Bob Manekin and investigator Jim Miller must have taken place sometime between midnight March 3rd when the case was recessed and .4 p.m. March 4 th when the Court re-convened. Miller, however, seemed to feel the quizzes were taken sometime during the afternoon. Dauglitrv Picked By TIMOTHY KNOWLTON Fu Magga Crud Press Secretary Fu Magga Crud, campus elitist fraternity for cynics and Nietzschean intellectual snobs, today officially endorsed the candidacy of Timothy Daughtry for president of the Student Body. At a high-level breakfast conference in the Pine Room, Daughtry said the coveted endorsement came as "a complete and total suprise." Daughtry is president of Fu Magga Crud. . Timothy Knowlton, former presidential candidate and presently Daughtry's campaign manager, made the announcement in his capacity as Fu Magga Crud rush chairman. Knowlton said the endorsement came as a result of Daughtry's statement that "We need more of my tmi ur ! wm uuTi Filli LIOItE! Jamos Dond is bnc!i! l:10-i;42-6:14-S:46 !. 'ffev U I X-yw l -yf nv j x y. y. ' rw. "- y,' m -1 s o) ) V i y?yli - Medical researchers at UNC are beginning a three-year study that is expected !o yield the answers to some well-kept secrets about infectious mononucleosis, popularly known as the kissing disease. The project will be financed by a -Si 4 9.3 69 grant from the John A. Hartford Foundation. Inc., New York. Announcement of the grant was made March 5 by Harry B. George, president of the John A. Hartford Foundation, Inc., and J. Carlyle Sitterson. chancellor of UNC. Principal investigator in the project is Dr. Joseph S. Pagano, a virologist and co-director of the Division of Infectious Diseases and an associate professor in the departments of medicine and bacteriology and immunology, UNC School of Medicine. Co-investigator is Dr. James H. McCutchan, also a virologist and an assistant professor, department of medicine and UNC student infirmary physician. The primary aim of the three-year study is to determine exactly how infectious mononucleosis is transmitted. "Mononucleosis is widely known as the kissing disease," Drs. McCutchan and Pagano said, "but very few hard facts have been established on precisely how mono is transmitted from one person to another. "The disease is obviously very jcontagious especially for When informed of the theft, all four defendants denied any knowledge of the incident. Upon the request of the Court and the Attorney General, they all signed a statement to this fact. If they should become aware of any information regarding the theft, they would be violating the Honor Code by not reporting it. ; When asked , about the interrupted case and the one to be heard, Manekin said, "The cases will not be dropped. If the quizzes turn up, the cases will be heard. fraternity brothahs in stoont gov'mint." In his acceptance speech, Daughtry promised handout appointments for all his fraternity brothers, campaign staff and anyone who votes for him. Along a more serious tone, Daughtry said he plans to address his campaign to that 70 per cent of the student body which sees the recent student governments as ludicrous attempts by a few politicos to play ruling class supported by the funds of other students. Daughtry promised an administration seeing student government realistically as a meeting point for students with common interests, not as a closed club with its own minature power structure. In the endorsement contest, Daughtry won out over M. Mouse, the Traditionalist Party nominee. 'I "A ) 1 1 J Jlth companion problems Coo! it and get Fostex . . . the great pimple stopper. See yourself smooth and clear. Wash with Fcstex and you help remove blackheads, dry up pimples and oil, and fight germs. For the good look ... get Fostex Cake. Sold in drugstores. 3. ' 3 ttuder.t and thex explained. but the virus that caust-s it infectious " as it has is. not been ob.nt-d in the laboratory. "This is the chief question we will attempt to answer: How does the virus of mono iin an infectious stale) pass from one person to another?" "The virus that causes mono is a defective virus in that its ability to infect cells in the laboratory is defective. Unlike many other viruses which are highly infectious when studied in the laboratory, the mono virus is not able to transfer readily from one cell to another," Drs. McCutchan and Pagano said. "But we know that it must be infectious at some time and under some conditions since the disease is certainly contagious. We are going to try to catch the virus in that state in which it is most ready to transmit the disease." A second phase of the Hartford Foundation research project will be to improve diagnostic procedures so that infectious monocucleosis can be accurately identified and clearly linked with or separated from diseases that appear to be similar or related. A preliminary aim of the research will be to confirm whether the virus in question does in fact cause mono. This is important because the same virus has been repeatedly isolated from (but is not the cause of) the Burkitt's lymphoma (a malignant tumor common in Africa). "A casual relation between the mono virus and Burkitt's lymphoma has not been scientifically established," Drs. McCutchan and Pagano said. "But it is interesting to speculate and this is pure speculation that under one circumstance the virus causes harmless infectious Draeula Begin; Blood Drive Minus fangs, Roger Howell doesn't look much like the Count Draeula he portrays in the i Carolina Play makers production of "Draeula," but then, this was not excatly a dark alley. Howell and his victim, actress Mary Poe of Oak Ridge, began a two-day Red Cross blood drive at the General Telephone Company in Durham. Mrs. E.H. Johnson of Durham assisted. To encourage donations, Miss Pope and Howell of Weavervile gave out coupons good for two "Draeula" reserved seats tomorrow through March 10 at the -Playmakers Theatre in Chapel Hill. ll m- , 'V.-J Ancient Prints and .laps Ranging from 50 to 200 years old, and priced with in your reach! The Old Book Corner 137 East Rosemary Street Chapel Hill i i i j COHe mir.or.-u!eosi whereas, very rarely, in another it causes a form of cancer." Because of the cor.r,ect:on by assovia'.soa of this virus with a cancer, any information about how ihe inis i transmitted from person to person will be of considerable interesl. There may be po.vbV implications in the infections process not only of mononucleosis, but also certasn tumors." Drs, McCutchan and Pagano said. UIZ Bv TERRY CHEEK DTH Staff Writer Chairman of the Student Union recreation committee Rick Gary released Tuesday the schedule for the Carolina Union Quiz Bowl. The Quiz Bowl is a contest modeled after television's "O.K. College Bowl." The fifty-eight four-member teams will bein competition Monday, March 9, at 7:00 p.m. in the 202-201 meeting Hall. Below are the first two days' lineups. DAY & TIME TEAM Mondav, March 9 7:00--Manly vs. TEP Allstars 7t30 Non Essential Information League vs. Coates 8:00 Aycock, 34d fl. vs. Internationa Student Center 8:30 Independent 645 vs. Alpha Phi Omega 9:00 ZBT vs. Independents 9:30 Delta Upsilon 1 vs. Chi Psi Tuesday, March 10 7:00 Alexander M. of I vs. Old West 7:30 Boticelli's Boys vs. TEP Mups 8:00 Chi Psi Effete Corporation vs. TEP Flops 8:30 The Vestal Virgins vs. Delta Upsilon B 9:00 Avery Underdogs vs. Tuesday Night Bowlers 9:30 Granville 5th Floor vs. Stacy No. 2 Get a Head Start on the Weekend! Pastrami, Cherry Cheese Cakes and B-E-E-RU) 10c Off! Tonight Only i. ' ' ' ' 4 Q0-1 1 :30 HARRY'S IDTH CLASSIFIEDS j 1 " i Gibson F-25 Guitar in like new condition, with velvet-lined case $110. Call .933-2621 1969 Black Mustang: all power options, V8, AC, sports roof, 8500 miles, full ,warrenty. $2900 Call 942-3786 evenings after 8 p.m. '64 Allstate motorscooter, excellent condition, 2900 miles, one owner, $125. Call 942-2835. 3 stylish men's suits for sale wouldn't be found in second hand store Size:43 regular 23 price wanted. Contact Bob Adams 320 Teague 933-8283. FOR SALE: Harmon-Kardon SL-6 single component stereo. 55 watts with AM-FM radio and turntable. Excellent condition $125 or best offer. Call Nick Barnum at 967-1873. Only 1 left! 1962'Rambler-new tires, brakes, battery, etc. Starts and runs fine. Let's make a deal! Call Carlton now at 968-9120 1968 Yamaha 250. great acceleration like new. Phone 933-1565 or come by 310 Lewis. . For Sale: Suede Coat, size 8 or 10. Brick and board bookcase, guinea pigs and cages. 929-3256. First quality pantyhose-89 cents a pair with "fill-up"-minimum $2-at J.W. Page's American Service East gate. For sale: Women's clothes-Suraner and winter-sizes 9-11. Ail in good condition and selling for unbelievably low prices. Call 942-2541 anytime after 5:00 p.m. FOR SALE: Available June. 12x60 Luxury mobile home. Very nice court. Garden. 2 bdrm-central air-conditioning. Storage shed-patio-washer, Call 968-1217. The urce of patsen with infectious r:v;onucv;s v '.' TNCs ir.fiJT'.arv which handles 110.000 outpatient iits a ear a:u1 a-drr.its 1.700 patients per car. To help determine whether or not mono really is a hissini disease" a suspected, mono virus from several Sturces and indifferent states wiH bejhen to arious experimental animals, including subhuman primates in an at t ran sn: it t h e d i sea s MODERATOR Dr. R. Bond Dr. Bond Dr. Bert Bradley Dr. Bradlev Dr. Griffiths Dr. Griffiths Dr. C. Armitage Dr. C. Armitage Dr. ILL. Bodman Dr. Bodman Dr. R. Rust Dr. Rust English (Hunt Seat) riding lessons Special group rates for adult beginners. Sheffield Farm 942-2079. Need tutoring in Comp.-Sci 16-18, PL1, fortran or use of Call-a-Computer. Fortran or basic? CPS? Call Bob at 929-3666,5-7 p.m. FLY TO LONDON from Raleigh-Durham Airport, $235 round trip; June 5 July 4; June 12 August 1; and June 3-September 3; Also available are escorted tours of Europe or the Orient. Call FRED CHITTY 942-5309. After 5:30 p.m. INVESTMENT in modern life sometimes opportunities insurance are overlooked. the special Investigate advantages of a Northwestern Mutual Life policy for College Men. Call 942-4187. SUMMER IN EUROPE! $199. NY-London-NY. June 10-Sept. 2. N.C. EUROPEAN FLIGHT. Belt Sanders Bowl Set 933-5271. After 5 and Sat. and Sun. Wanted for this summer: Person or persons to share apartment in Atlanta. Call David at 942-2981. WANTED: Experienced sax or Trumpet player for spring and summer combo work. Preferably in-state with decent grades. Call Burt at 933-4091. '64 Lemans. 326 V8, 4 speed transmission, 8 track stereo tape, mag whee!s-$350. Less stereo and mags-SSOO. See Jin Rogers., 110 Man gum. 1962 Austin Healy convertible-new red paint, J2g clutch, new fuel pump, rack, 60 spoke wheels, Pirelli tires, new upholstery-$1100. 942-3856. RENT 2 bedroom 10x50 aircond. mobile home. Available April 1 90 per month. 929-2 S5 4 from 10-6 p.m.